Bibliography – Witold Pilecki

•Pilecki, Witold. “The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery”, Translated by Jarek Garliński. Introduction by Norman Davies. Aquila Polonica, 2012

•Pilecki, Witold. “Raport “W” KL Auschwitz”, Archiwum IPN, 2008

•Pilecki, Witold. “Witold’s Report from Auschwitz”, Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, 2022

•Fairweather, Jack. “The Volunteer: The True Story of the Resistance Hero Who Infiltrated Auschwitz”, W. H. Allen, 2019

•Davies, Norman. “Rising ’44: The Battle for Warsaw”, Pan Books, 2004

•Pawłowicz, Jacek. “Rotmistrz Witold Pilecki 1901–1948 / Rotamaster Witold Pilecki 1901–1948”, Warsaw: Institute of National Remembrance (IPN), 2023

•Halbwachs, Maurice. “On Collective Memor”, Translated by Lewis A. Coser. University of Chicago Press, 1992

•Cuber-Strutyńska, Ewa. “Witold Pilecki. Confronting the legend of the « volunteer to Auschwitz », Holocaust Studies and Materials, vol. 4, 2017, pp. 281–301.

•Archiwum Instytut Pileckiego

The Polish Resistance Project

What You Will Find Here – Inside the Polish Resistance Project

This website is not only about history — it’s about memory, courage, and the quiet strength of those who refused to disappear.

Welcome to The History Polish Resistance Project, a space dedicated to exploring one of the most remarkable stories of the Second World War: the moral, cultural, and military struggle of occupied Poland between 1939 and 1945.
Here, you will find history told with both academic precision and popular culture — through archives, stories, photographs, and reflection.


My Mission with Historyofpolishresistance

Is to bring the history of the Polish Underground State and the Home Army (Armia Krajowa) to life — not only as a chapter of WWII, but as a timeless testimony to the resilience of a nation and the power of human dignity.

This blog seeks to:

  • Share reliable, documented historical research in accessible language.
  • Highlight the human stories behind resistance — soldiers, teachers, couriers, civilians.
  • Preserve memory through images and archives, giving new life to forgotten witnesses.
  • Encourage reflection on freedom, morality, and remembrance in the modern world.

📰 Articles and Themes

1. Historical Overviews

  • The Birth of the Underground State – How Poland rebuilt a hidden government under occupation.
  • The Home Army: From ZWZ to AK – Structure, operations, and key figures.
  • Operation Tempest and the Warsaw Uprising – Strategy, hope, and tragedy.
  • Intelligence, sabotage, and the Allies – How the Polish underground shaped the broader war effort.

2. Biographies and Portraits

  • Heroes of the resistance: Jan Karski, Witold Pilecki, Irena Sendler, Emilia Malessa, Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski.
  • Ordinary lives in extraordinary times – teachers, nurses, scouts, messengers (Harcerska Poczta).
  • Forgotten voices: the Jewish resistance, women in the underground, and post-war persecution.

3. Thematic Studies

  • Education and Culture in the Underground – secret schools, literature, and art.
  • Faith and Morality under Occupation – ethics of resistance, compassion, survival.
  • Women of the Resistance – leadership, courage, sacrifice.
  • After 1945: Silence and Memory – communist repression and rediscovery after 1989.
  • Symbols and Identity – the white-and-red flag, the anchor (Kotwica), national remembrance.

4. Analytical Essays

  • Comparative studies with the French, Italian, and Yugoslav resistances.
  • The political and moral paradox of resistance.
  • How memory shapes national identity in post-war Poland.
  • The tension between heroism and tragedy in the Warsaw Uprising.

5. Memory and Commemoration

  • Museums and memorials (Warsaw Uprising Museum, POLIN, Pawiak Prison Museum).
  • Anniversaries and remembrance days.
  • Interviews with historians, educators, and descendants.
  • Reflections on how digital media can keep history alive.

🎞️ Visual and Multimedia Content

Archival Photography

Curated from Polish and international archives:

  • Warsaw Uprising Museum
  • Pilecki Institute
  • IPN (Institute of National Remembrance)
  • National Digital Archive (NAC)
  • POLONA Digital Library
    Each image will be contextualized, not just shown, but explained: who, where, when, and why it matters.

Historical Footage and Audio

  • Digitized wartime newsreels
  • Excerpts from veterans’ interviews
  • Radio broadcasts and underground recordings

Interactive Maps and Documents

  • Maps of resistance districts and operations
  • Scans of underground newspapers, pamphlets, and identification cards
  • Translations and annotations of original documents

Art and Educational Media

  • Illustrated timelines
  • Infographics about organization and operations
  • Educational resources for teachers and students
  • Poetry, music, and post-war art inspired by the polish resistance

Reflections and Personal Essays

Beyond history, this site will also include my personal writing, my reflections on resistance, history, courage, trauma, and the meaning of remembrance.
It will explore questions such as:

  • What does it mean to resist ?
  • How do nations rebuild their memory after silence?
  • Why does this story still speak to us today?
  • How can history be studying?
  • How can memory be preserved?
  • More questions to come!

Categories Overview

SectionDescription
History & AnalysisIn-depth studies and academic articles
Human StoriesPortraits, testimonies, letters
Visual ArchivesPhotos, documents, maps
Memory & ReflectionModern remembrance, culture, ethics
Education & ResourcesGuides for schools and history lovers

🎓My Promise as an Historian

Every article will be fact-checked, sourced, and written with respect for the people behind the history.
This is not a space for myth or propaganda — but for understanding, remembrance, and dialogue.


Follow this history on Instagram

Follow @historyofpolishresistance for daily visual history:

  • Archival photos and documents
  • Short biographies and quotes
  • Mini historical threads (carousel format)
  • “Then & Now” comparisons
  • Educational posts about key moments and heroes

🕊️ Final Words to conclude

To remember is to resist forgetting.

This project is dedicated to those who carried freedom in their hearts when the world around them fell silent.
Their courage built an invisible Poland — one that still lives in memory, and now, in these pages.

Why Remember? The Meaning of the Polish Resistance Today

Why Remember? The Meaning of the Polish Resistance Today

In September 1939, Poland was wiped off the map — but not from the hearts of its people. Beneath the terror of occupation, an entire underground nation was born. Today, their story reminds us that freedom is not given — it is guarded, even in the darkest times.


🇵🇱 A Nation That Refused to Disappear

When Nazi Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, followed by the Soviet Union from the east two weeks later, the Polish Republic ceased to exist as a state. But the idea of Poland — its culture, laws, and sense of identity — survived.
While the occupiers tried to erase every trace of independence, Poles quietly began to rebuild their nation in secret.

Out of this defiance emerged the Polish Underground State (Polskie Państwo Podziemne) — a unique phenomenon in wartime Europe.
It recreated an entire government structure beneath occupation: courts of law, education systems, a press, and, most famously, an army — the Armia Krajowa (Home Army) — loyal to the Polish Government-in-Exile in London.

By 1944, the Home Army had nearly 400,000 members, organized into 130 districts and more than 6,000 active platoons.
It carried out acts of sabotage, protected civilians, transmitted intelligence to the Allies, and prepared for a national uprising.


⛓️‍💥 The Moral Face of Resistance

The Polish resistance was more than a military movement; it was a moral and civic revolution.
In a world where truth was outlawed, Poles insisted on living according to their own principles: law, education, compassion, and loyalty to a free state.

Teachers held underground classes, risking execution.
Clandestine presses printed banned books and newspapers.
Couriers crossed occupied Europe carrying secret reports — among them Jan Karski, who brought eyewitness testimony of the Holocaust to the West.

This was resistance not only with weapons, but with values — proof that even in the face of total oppression, humanity could survive through integrity and courage.


🧱 The Tragedy of Warsaw

The story reached its most tragic chapter with the Warsaw Uprising of August–October 1944.
For 63 days, thousands of young men and women fought to liberate the capital before Soviet troops arrived.
The city became a battlefield — and then a cemetery.

Around 16,000 fighters and 200,000 civilians were killed. The city was systematically destroyed by German forces; by the end, 85% of Warsaw lay in ruins.
The Red Army, positioned just across the Vistula River, did not intervene — a decision that shaped Poland’s post-war fate.

The Uprising remains one of the most powerful symbols of both heroism and heartbreak in European history.


📖 Silence and Rediscovery

When the war ended in 1945, Poland was “liberated” by the Soviet Union but not truly free.
The new communist regime regarded the Home Army as a political enemy. Thousands of veterans were imprisoned, executed, or forced into silence.

For decades, official history books erased their story.
Yet in families, in whispers, and in secret photographs, memory survived.

After 1989, with the fall of communism, the truth returned to public life. Museums, archives, and commemorations began to restore the legacy of those who had fought for a Poland that was democratic, sovereign, and just.


🕯️Why Remember

To remember the Polish Resistance is not simply to revisit the past.
It is to acknowledge a profound truth: that freedom, dignity, and law can survive even under tyranny.

The men and women of the underground proved that resistance is not only an act of war — it is an act of faith in humanity.
Their legacy is universal. It belongs not only to Poland, but to everyone who believes that justice and conscience are worth defending.

History survives when we choose to remember and when we refuse to be silent.

Follow @historyofpolishresistance for more to come!

Exploring Hidden Histories: Introducing HISTORY OF POLISH RESISTANCE

In recent years, the study of World War II has continued to expand beyond the well-known narratives of major battles and political leaders. Increasingly, scholars and the wider public alike have turned their attention to stories that were marginalized, silenced, or overshadowed by dominant historiographies.

Historyofpolishresistance.com seeks to contribute to this essential work of recovery and dissemination, by combining rigorous historical research with accessible communication.

The project is led by a historian whose research focuses primarily on the Polish resistance during the Second World War. Poland’s wartime history remains a field both crucial and underrepresented in the international academic conversation. By examining networks of resistance, clandestine operations, and overlooked groups such as the Pluton Głuchoniemych (the Deaf-Mute Platoon), this work aims to challenge established narratives and broaden our understanding of how ordinary individuals, often forgotten, shaped extraordinary chapters of history.

History of Polish Resistance serves not only as a platform for original articles based on archival research and scholarly analysis, but also as a space of public history. The ambition is twofold: to share well-documented insights with specialists in the field, and at the same time to offer engaging, reliable resources to a broader audience interested in the cultural, social, and human dimensions of the war.

What distinguishes this initiative is the balance between academic precision and the responsibility of communication. Each article is grounded in evidence, with a strong emphasis on critical engagement with sources, yet written in a way that invites readers beyond academia to discover, question, and reflect.

Ultimately, this website seeks to foster dialogue: between past and present, between scholarly research and public interest, and between individual stories and collective memory. By bringing hidden histories to light, it aspires not only to honor those who resisted oppression, but also to contribute to contemporary discussions about resilience, solidarity, and the ways in which societies remember.