22,000 Poles Murdered - 8,000 Army Officers | Stalin’s Orders: Katyń 1940
Recently Added
•
14m
In April 1940, on orders signed by Joseph Stalin, the Soviet NKVD launched a secret execution operation that killed more than 22,000 Polish citizens.
Among them were approximately 8,000 Polish Army officers, around 6,000 police officers and members of other uniformed services, and nearly 8,000 civilians, including professors, priests, judges, and state officials — the intellectual and military elite of Poland.
Captured after the Soviet invasion of eastern Poland in September 1939, the prisoners were taken from camps such as Kozelsk, Starobelsk, and Ostashkov and executed in NKVD prisons and forest sites near Katyń, Kalinin, and Kharkiv. Shot one by one in the back of the head, they were buried in mass graves.
For decades, the Soviet Union denied responsibility. The truth was officially admitted only in 1990.
The Katyń massacre remains one of the most systematic and politically explosive crimes of World War II.
Up Next in Recently Added
-
Hitler’s Olympic Champion and the Roa...
On 1 August 1936, the Olympic Games open in Berlin as a global showcase for Adolf Hitler and his regime. Among the athletes elevated by Nazi propaganda is Hans Woellke, who wins gold in the shot put and becomes the first German Olympic champion in men’s athletics.
Celebrated as a symbol of stren...
-
Einsatzgruppe Killings in Yugoslavia ...
On 17 April 1941, the Kingdom of Yugoslavia collapsed after just eleven days of fighting against the Axis invasion. In the aftermath, Nazi occupation forces moved swiftly to crush resistance in Serbia. Sabotage, ambushes, and partisan attacks spread across the country, threatening German supply l...
-
Wilhelm Hosenfeld: The German Soldier...
In the ruins of Nazi-occupied Warsaw, a starving Jewish pianist was hiding alone, expecting death. His name was Władysław Szpilman. The man who saved him wore a German uniform.
Wilhelm Hosenfeld, a German soldier stationed in Warsaw, discovered Szpilman in 1944. Instead of arresting him, Hosenfe...