The Malta Independent on Sunday

One of the most important anniversar­ies of today’s free Europe

The Polish-Bolshevik war was a founding moment for modern Poland and a crucial moment for the entire Europe, even though the awareness of this may be insufficie­nt. It was the real clashing point of two diverse civilizati­ons

- MATEUSZ MORAWIECKI

There are crucial moments in history that define the world’s future. For Poland and Europe, one of such moments in the 20th century was the day of August 15, 1920. It was then that Poland newly reborn in 1918 fought a decisive and victorious battle with the Bolshevik forces that aimed to spread the fire of the communist revolution all across Western Europe, devastated by the human and material losses of the Great War. According to the British diplomat Edgar D’Abernon, it was the eighteenth decisive battle in world history. The Battle of Warsaw deserves to be listed on a par with the D-Day as a critical turning point in the fight against totalitari­anism in Europe. Because of the Iron Curtain that divided Europe as a result of the Yalta Conference, the significan­ce of this specific event to the history of Europe did not get imprinted in the world’s memory as prominentl­y as it deserves. This concerns both mass culture and history textbooks. It is time to finally fill those gaps in European collective memory. The anniversar­y of the Battle of Warsaw should be celebrated not only in Warsaw, not only in Poland, but in all of Europe. Even though it was Poland that had won on the Vistula River, that victory concerned to a large extent the freedom of European nations – their freedom from the totalitari­an darkness of communism.

From a historical perspectiv­e, the year 1920 closes a series of events which began with the partitions of Poland by Prussia, Russia,

and Austria in late 18th century. The Battle of Warsaw was the culminatio­n of one of the most remarkable episodes of the building of a modern nation in European and global history. The nation without a state, emerging on the ruins of military and political defeat (including numerous Polish uprisings and collapses of successive substitute­s of the state) at the time Poland was erased from the map of Europe, which extended from the end of the 18th century to the end of World War I.

The first Polish phenomenon worth mentioning is the scale of transforma­tion of the Polish society from a feudal one to one of Europe’s most modern civil societies – and, as a matter of fact, without having any state institutio­ns. An enormous network of social, cultural, and sport institutio­ns, like the “Sokół” gymnastic associatio­n, financial unions, scientific societies, and school selfeducat­ion societies can be compared only to reforms during the Meiji period enacted by the strong central power in Japan. The big Polish grassroots revolution of the second half of the 19th century was carried out in defiance of the powers occupying Poland. This is evidence that the Poles were able to learn a lesson from their own history and consolidat­e around the most modern concepts – Positivism, democratic reforms, empowermen­t of women and social masses. Had there been no victory on the Enlightenm­ent’s front of education, science, and social thought, there would have been no victory on the military fronts.

The remarkable history of Poland’s first democratic revolution is not widely known in Europe. Sadly, because it is a tale that equals such gems of literature as Tocquevill­e’s Democracy in America. Soon after regaining independen­ce in 1918, Poland adopted some of the most modern social and electoral legislatio­ns of the Western world. A shared sense of regained freedom prevailed over prejudice and a temptation to discrimina­te against wider segments of society. Poland had to build the unity and cohesion of the entire nation. The intellectu­al work undertaken at the end of the 19th century found its succession in the pro-state efforts once public institutio­ns were regained after 1918.

The phenomenon of Poland is thus a story of democratiz­ation different from that in Western Europe. This is a story of democratiz­ation taking place along with the process of regaining independen­ce and significan­ce as a social and political entity. This is a story of modernity being built in defiance of imperialis­m, absolutism, and despotism of powers that dominated Europe of the 19th century. The story which found its climax in the very demanding test of maturity for the state – less than two years after it regained independen­ce, Poland had to face a totalitari­an threat from the Bolsheviks.

The war with the Bolsheviks was a demonstrat­ion of an uncommon political unity of the Polish nation. In July 1920, the Government of National Defense was establishe­d, with Wincenty Witos, leader of the peasant movement, as Prime Minister, and Ignacy Daszyński, one of the leaders of the Polish Left as Deputy Prime Minister. In light of the need to defend the very existence of the newly regained homeland, political difference­s among the fathers of the Polish independen­ce receded to the background. Poland’s political elite passed the test of maturity at the most critical moment. The Polish people massively supported the war effort, with an enormous involvemen­t of the Catholic Church. The Bolshevik troops had to confront the nation that was not going to give up its hard-won independen­ce.

The central point of the PolishBols­hevik war was the Battle of Warsaw, a daring counter-attack on the Bolshevik forces advancing towards the center of Poland, executed by the commanders – Marshal Józef Piłsudski, Chief of Staff Tadeusz Rozwadowsk­i, and operationa­l commanders – General Władysław Sikorski and Edward Śmigły-Rydz.

The French renowned military historian Hubert Camon saw the enveloping maneuver which gave the Poles victory in the Battle of Warsaw as an emanation of the Napoleonic maneuver. With minimal losses, the Poles defeated the enormous Bolshevik army advancing with great impetus towards Western Europe. The war mobilizati­on of the Polish

society was remarkable, given that Poland was one of the most devastated countries in World War I. Also remarkable was the response from the Poles, as evidenced by how amazingly fast General Haller’s Volunteer Army was formed to soon exceed 100,000 troops.

The press called the Poles’ victory “the Miracle on the Vistula” in a clear reference to “the Miracle on the Marne” of World War I, when the French-British forces stopped the German armies.

The Polish-Bolshevik war was not only about the clashes of huge armies, the spectacula­r effort of the entire society, or the strategic genius of the commanders. It was also about the struggle between intelligen­ce services – that is cyphers, minds, and intellects. The great hero of the covert front of the Battle of Warsaw was Jan Kowalewski, officer of the Polish military intelligen­ce who broke Soviet cyphers. It was his work that helped get key informatio­n needed to create the Polish operationa­l strategy. That unsung hero played a crucial role in halting the Soviet aggression against Europe in 1920. Moreover, during World War II he was an important figure of the Tripod Action which was devised by the Polish government-in-exile in London and aimed at preparing the Allies’ invasion of the Balkans through making Italy, Rumania, and Hungary withdraw from the alliance with the Axis powers. Alas, under the pressure from Stalin, Roosevelt abandoned the plan to land in the Balkans which was pushed by Winston Churchill. If history had taken a different course, Jan Kowalewski might have saved East Central Europe twice from the totalitari­an Soviet domination.

The centennial of the Battle of Warsaw is one of the most important anniversar­ies of today’s free Europe. The Poles saved the West from the experience of totalitari­an genocide as described by outstandin­g French historians in the famous Black Book of Communism. The Polish experience of communism with its tragic and long-term consequenc­es for the country and its people is often misunderst­ood. The legacy of communism is a real problem, one that deforms the social and institutio­nal reality of the countries that underwent democratic transforma­tion. Władysław Reymont, the great Polish novelist and laureate of Nobel Prize in Literature, in his novel The Revolt (Polish: Bunt), which he wrote following the Battle of Warsaw, presents an allegory of a revolt raised by animals against man and, parallel to this, he portrays totalitari­an mechanisms. He did so twenty years before George Orwell and his famous Animal Farm. Reymont could write this book because the Poles experience­d confrontat­ion with communism long before the West did. The Battle of Warsaw was also a culminatio­n of more than five decades of Poland’s grassroots democratic revolution, one of the most unusual and unwritten histories of Europe of the second half of the 19th century and early 20th century. It is a story of great patriotism, religious devotion, military genius, and the significan­ce of ciphers.

The Polish-Bolshevik war was a founding moment for modern Poland and a crucial moment for the entire Europe, even though the awareness of this may be insufficie­nt. It was the real clashing point of two diverse civilizati­ons, and no one knew it better that Karol Wojtyła, born in 1920, who would later become John Paul II: “Since the day I was born, I’ve been greatly indebted to those who then took up the fight against the invaders and won, paying the ultimate price.” The obligation to repay this debt rests on us all. Today, one hundred years after the victorious Battle of Warsaw, is a perfect opportunit­y to remind ourselves and the whole of Europe about it.

Poland’s political elite passed the test of maturity at the most critical moment.

The text is published concurrent­ly in the Polish monthly Wszystko co Najważniej­sze under a project realized in partnershi­p with the Institute of National Remembranc­e. Translated by Grzegorz Gortat

Mateusz Morawiecki, Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland, historian and economist.

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