Józef Rzepka
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Captain Jozef Rzepka (noms de guerre "Krzysztof", "Rekin", "Stefan", "Znicz") was born in 1913 in the village of Bratkowice (present southeastern Poland). He graduated from the 1st High School in Rzeszow, then went to Warsaw, to study law at the Warsaw University.
This article is part of the series: Polish Secret State History of Poland |
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During the Polish September Campaign he fought as colonel of the Polish Army, then became a member of Zwiazek Walki Zbrojnej (later: Home Army), in the area of Rzeszow. In the summer of 1944, Rzepka was commandant of the Home Army field forces around Rzeszow, which took part in the Operation Tempest. When Red Army captured Rzeszow, he decided to continue fighting for freedom of Poland. In the night of October 7/8, 1944, Rzepka participated in a failed attempt to free members of the Home Army, which were incarcerated by the NKVD in the Rzeszow castle prison.
In mid-1940s Rzepka joined anti-Communist organization Wolnosc i Niezawislosc (WiN), in its Information Department. Some time in the fall of 1945 he moved to Upper Silesia and settled in Zabrze. There, he became a member of the 4th Headquarters of WiN, led by Lukasz Cieplinski. Arrested in 1948, he was taken to the infamous Mokotow Prison in Warsaw, together with a group of other members of WiN. Tortured, he was in 1950 sentenced to death, and as President Boleslaw Bierut did not pardon him, Rzepka was executed with a shot in the head on March 1, 1951, at 8:45 pm. His body was buried in unknown location.
In 1992, Warsaw Military Court voided the 1950 sentence and posthumously cleared Rzepka of all charges.