Michał Rola-Żymierski

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Michał Żymierski
Michał Żymierski

Michał Żymierski (true name Michał Łyżwiński, pseudonym Rola; 1890-1989) was an avowed communist, Polish military officer and communist regime Marshal of Poland since 1945.

[edit] Biography

Michał Rola-Żymierski was born as Michał Łyżwiński in Kraków on September 4, 1890. In 1910 he started studies at the law faculty of the Jagiellonian University. In 1914 he joined the Polish Legions and fought with distinction on many of the most important battlefields of the Austro-Hungarian Eastern Front. After the Pledge Crisis of 1917 he retired from the Austro-Hungarian army and returned to Kraków, where he finished his law studies and graduated from the Kraków Trading School.

In 1918 he joined the reborn Polish Army and took part in the Polish-Bolshevik War. He initially commanded the II Infantry Brigade and then was promoted to the commander of the prestigious Polish Legions 2nd Infantry Division. After the war he was sent to Paris, where he graduated from Ecole Superieure de Guerre. Upon his return he was promoted to General. Żymierski served in Warsaw as the Deputy Chief of Administration of the Polish Army. During the coup of 1926 he fought on the losing government side. In 1927 he was court-martialled and found guilty on the politically motivated and trumped-up charges of bribery and embezzlement, and was demoted to private first class, expelled from the army and sentenced to 5 years in prison.

Generals Karol Świerczewski, Marian Spychalski and Michał Rola-Żymierski standing on the Nysa Łużycka river.
Generals Karol Świerczewski, Marian Spychalski and Michał Rola-Żymierski standing on the Nysa Łużycka river.
Michał Rola-Żymierski (July 24, 1945 Potsdam Conference)
Michał Rola-Żymierski (July 24, 1945 Potsdam Conference)

Upon his release in 1931 he was canvassed by the Soviet intelligence and became a secret member of the KPP. After Stalin's decision to disband the Polish Communist Party in 1938, Żymierski emigrated to France. However, shortly after the outbreak of World War II he returned to Poland and in 1943 he became the deputy commander of the Gwardia Ludowa and then (since 1944) the commander of Armia Ludowa. As such he was promoted by the communist-backed PKWN back to the rank of General and became the commander-in-chief of the Polish Army fighting alongside the Soviet Union (the Polish Armed Forces in the East). Minister of defence in Provisional Government of Republic of Poland (Rząd Tymczasowy Rzeczypospolitej Polskiej, January to June 1945). On May 3, 1945, by order of Stalin he was promoted to the rank of Marshal of Poland.

Since 1946 Żymierski was the head of the Commission of State Security. He was responsible for repressions against the former resistance fighters, members of the Polish 2nd Corps and non-communist politicians, as well as for usage of the Polish Army against the citizens of Poland in the infamous Action Wisła. Until 1949 he also held the post of Minister of National Defence. In this year he was replaced by Polish-born Soviet Marshal Konstanty Rokossowski, who received the rank of Marshal of Poland and held his office until 1956. As an effect of stalinist purges organised in Poland by Bolesław Bierut Żymierski was arrested in 1953. However, he was released in 1955 without any charges.

After the end of stalinism in Poland he held various posts, including head of the National Bank of Poland (between 1956 and 1967) the honorary head of the ZBoWiD (Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy, an organisation of Polish war veterans). He was also a member of the Polish United Workers Party and after Jaruzelski's introduction of martial law in Poland Żymierski also became the member of its Central Committee and of the Front of National Unity. He died in Warsaw on October 15, 1989. He was the last pre-WWII officer to hold a rank of Marshal of Poland.


Buławas, symbol of the Marshal of Poland
Marshals of Poland
Józef PiłsudskiFerdinand FochEdward Rydz-ŚmigłyMichał Rola-ŻymierskiKonstanty RokossowskiMarian Spychalski
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