Roman Paszkowski


Roman Paszkowski was a Polish military officer. He was participant of the defensive war of 1939, wounded twice during combat, prisoner of German Oflags, prisoner of the Stalinist period, commander of the, commander of the Polish Air Defence Force, ambassador of the Polish People's Republic to Angola, voivode of Katowice Voivodeship from 1981 to 1985, chairman of the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites from 1985 to 1990, member of the Polish People's Republic Sejm of the 9th term on behalf of the Polish United Workers' Party and also served as chairman of the Polish Army Generals' Club.

Biography

Second Polish Republic and World War II

He was the son of Wacław Paszkowski – administrator of the Gułów estate – and Stefania née Oprawska. From 1925 he attended the Adam Czartoryski State Male Gymnasium in Puławy, and then the Salesian Fathers Gymnasium in Sokołów Podlaski. A graduate of the Cadet Corps No. 3 in Rawicz, where he passed his secondary school leaving exam in natural sciences and mathematics and an exam entitling him to start his studies in the second year of officer cadet school. In 1934 he began his studies at the Infantry Cadet School in Ostrów Mazowiecka. He did his internship in the. He was promoted to the rank of second lieutenant on 15 October 1936, with seniority from 15 October 1936 and 42nd place in the corps of infantry officers. The promotion was made by Brig. Gen. Emil Krukowicz-Przedrzymirski. In the years 1936–1939 he served in the in Siedlce as a platoon commander of reserve officer cadets, platoon commander in the regimental non-commissioned officer school, platoon commander of the recruit company, commander of the rifle company, commander of the sniper platoon of the 9th company, and then from March 1938 commander of the infantry company.
In the defensive war of 1939, he fought at the head of the 7th company of the 22nd Infantry Regiment of the 9th Infantry Division in the area of Lake Koronowskie, near Bydgoszcz and Kutno, in the advance zone of the XIX Panzer Corps of General Heinz Guderian. His company distinguished itself in combat, and he himself was wounded twice during the fighting. For his bravery in combat, he was awarded the Silver Cross of the Order of Virtuti Militari only after 7 years. After being captured by the Germans, he was initially kept in a field hospital in Dobrzelin, and then in a hospital near Berlin, from where he was transported to the Oflag in Braunschweig. In the years 1941–1945 he was imprisoned in Oflag II-C in Woldenberg; he participated in the camp resistance movement organized by the Home Army, and also completed a secret course for air observers.
In January 1945, the camp was gradually evacuated by the Germans towards Lübeck, where Roman Paszkowski was liberated by the British.

Military career in the Polish People's Republic

After returning to Poland, he joined the Polish Army on 25 July 1945. After completing a course for battalion commanders at the Infantry Training Centre in Rembertów, he was sent to the General Staff of the Polish People's Army. In the years 1946–1948, he was the head of the Department of Military Foreign Affairs of the General Staff of the Polish Army. From November 1948, he studied at the Świerczewski General Staff Academy, and from 1947, part-time at the.
In January 1951, he was unjustly arrested by the Military Information Service on charges of espionage for capitalist countries; for 4 years of investigation, he was subjected to physical and psychological pressure, held in a solitary cell, without contact with his family or the possibility of taking walks. He was one of the first pre-war officers arrested as part of an investigation into alleged conspiracy to overthrow the state system by force and espionage, as well as connections with the group of General Stanisław Tatar and General Jerzy Kirchmayer. By an order of the Minister of National Defense of 14 December 1951, he was dismissed from the army. In February 1955, the investigation against him was discontinued due to lack of evidence of guilt and he was released.

Further military career

After his release in 1955, in the years 1955–1957 he worked as deputy director of a department in the Ministry of Agriculture. After the political changes in Poland in October 1956, he wrote a report for re-admission to service in the Polish People's Army. In accordance with the order of the Ministry of National Defense, in January 1957 he was re-admitted to the army and appointed head of the Military School of the Warsaw University of Technology. In September 1957, after passing the last exams, he received a diploma of graduation from the Świerczewski General Staff Academy of the Polish People's Army. In turn, he received a diploma of graduation from the Main School of Foreign Service in December 1956.
From August 1957, he served in the Air Force and Anti-Aircraft Defense of the Country Area. He was successively commander of the Central Command Post of the Commander of the Air Force and OPL OK, chief of staff of the Anti-Aircraft Defense of the Country Area and commander of the 1st Anti-Aircraft Defense Corps of the Country Area. In 1960, he completed an individual pilot training course and obtained the title of military pilot. His instructors were later generals and. He flew TS-8 Bies and Jak-12 aircraft. On 22 September 1961, by resolution of the State Council, he was promoted to brigadier general. The nomination was presented on 29 September 1961, in the Belweder Palace by the chairman of the State Council of the Polish People's Republic, Aleksander Zawadzki.
After the establishment of the Polish Air Defence Force in July 1962 as a separate branch of the armed forces, he was appointed deputy commander of these forces for combat training, and then for line matters. On 28 July 1967, he took over as commander of the National Air Defense Forces, replacing the dismissed general. He contributed to the significant development of these forces. On 9 October 1968, he was promoted to division general. The nomination was presented to him in the Belweder Palace on 12 October 1968 by the chairman of the State Council of the Polish People's Republic, Marshal of Poland Marian Spychalski. On 3 October 1989, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant General. The nomination was presented to him in the Belweder palace on 9 October 1989 by the President of the Polish People's Republic, Wojciech Jaruzelski. In November 1985, he was officially bid farewell by the Minister of National Defense, Florian Siwicki, in connection with the end of his professional military service and in January 1986 he was retired. In total, he served in the Polish Armed Forces for 57 years, of which 25 years in the rank of general.
He was a member of the Polish Workers' Party 1946 to 1948 and a member of the Polish United Workers' Party from 1948 to the collapse of the Polish People's Republic 1990. In the years 1976–1980 he was on leave from the army due to being appointed by the State Council to the position of the Polish People's Republic ambassador to Angola, and from 1979 also to the Islands of São Tomé and Príncipe. During martial law on 16 December 1981, after the Pacification of Wujek mine, he was appointed by Prime Minister Wojciech Jaruzelski to the position of Katowice voivode. In the position of voivode he contributed to calming the mood in Silesia, for which he received, among other things, thanks from the bishop of the Katowice diocese, Herbert Bednorz. From September 1983 he was the chairman of the Convention of Voivodes. In January 1984 he became a member of the executive of the Provincial Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party in Katowice, from which he resigned in May 1985 due to the end of his work in Katowice.
From 17 May 1985 to 28 February 1990 he served as chairman of the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites. He was th initiator of the commemoration of officers murdered in the east. In April 1989 he organized the first pilgrimage of the Katyn Families to Katyn and the transport of urns from the Katyn Polish War Cemetery to Warsaw and their ceremonial deposition at Powązki Cemetery and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. On his initiative, the Commission for Commemorating the Victims of Stalinism was established at the Council, headed by. He made a major contribution to commemorating the combat deeds of the Polish Armed Forces in the West. One of the main patrons of the construction of the in Wola Gułowska.
In addition, in 1985–1989, he was a member of the Sejm of the Polish People's Republic of the 9th term and chairman of the Sejm's Constitutional Accountability Committee. In 1974–1979 and 1985–1990, he was a member of the Supreme Council of the Society of [Fighters for Freedom and Democracy], in 1986 vice-chairman of the Honorary Committee of the Encyclopedia of National Remembrance. In 1986–1989, he was a member of the National Grunwald Committee. Chairman of the Honorary Committee for the Reconstruction of the Piast Castle in Racibórz. On 11 November 1988 he joined the Honorary Committee for the Celebration of the 70th Anniversary of Poland Regaining Independence, chaired by the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party, Wojciech Jaruzelski. In 1989 he became a member of the Commission for the Revalorization of the Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv and the Commission for the Care and Ordering of the Rasos Cemetery in Vilnius. In 1989 he was a member of the Citizens' Committee for the Revalorization of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw, chaired by Brig. Gen. Stanisław Skalski and chairman of the Social Committee of the Monte Cassino Monument Foundation in Zabrze. In 1989 he ran for the Senate of the Polish People's Republic from the Warsaw voivodeship. From February 1990 to February 1991 he was vice-chairman of the Council for the Protection of Memory of Combat and Martyrdom of the new term.
He was a sports aviation activist, in 1964–1968 president, and since 1968 honorary president of the.
Since 1990 he has been active in the veterans' community. In 1996, he was one of the group of generals – co-founders of the Polish Army Generals' Club, and in the years 1996–1998 he was the first president of the Polish Army Generals' Club. He was also vice-president of the Foundation of Awards and Distinctions named after the Heroes of the Parachute Tower operating in Katowice, the aim of which was to commemorate the heroism of Silesian scouts during the fighting in September 1939.

Commemoration of the Katyn Massacre

He was the first representative of the Polish People's Republic to officially visit Katyn. In 1987, he spoke in the weekly "Panorama" that everywhere where Poles died on the territory of the Soviet Union, monuments and commemorative plaques must be erected. He also mentioned the number of 15,000 Polish officers and stated: "We must tell our grandchildren the truth". On 5 April 1989, he organized a trip to Katyn by special plane of a state delegation and a group of Katyn families. A mass was held there and soil was collected from the mass graves. On 18 April 1989, it was placed in the niche of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and under the Katyn monument at the Powązki Military Cemetery. In the autumn of 1989, the Council for the Protection of Struggle and Martyrdom Sites, under his chairmanship, organized the first special train to Katyn for the families of the murdered.
He died on 16 August 1998 in Katowice, where he participated in the ordination jubilee of a priest friend. On 20 August, Bishop of Tarnów celebrated a funeral mass for the general in the Archcathedral of Christ the King in Katowice.
He was buried on 21 August 1998 with full honors at the Powązki Military Cemetery in Warsaw. The funeral ceremony was preceded by a mass in the military cathedral of the Polish Army in Warsaw, celebrated by the military bishop of the Polish Army, Maj. Gen. Sławoj Leszek Głódź. The mass was attended by a delegation of clergy from Katowice representing Archbishop Damian Zimoń. The funeral was attended by, among others, former President of Poland Wojciech Jaruzelski, former Prime Minister of the Polish People's Republic, Zbigniew Messner, former First Secretary of the Central Committee of the Polish United Workers' Party Stanisław Kania, generals, representatives of pilots from all over the country. The funeral ceremonies were conducted by the Deputy Dean of the Polish Army, Rev. Colonel. Funeral speeches were delivered by: Maj. Gen. Jarosław Bielecki – on behalf of the General Staff of the Polish Army, Lt. Gen. Pilot Jerzy Gotowała – on behalf of the soldiers of the Air Force and Air Defence, and Brig. Gen. Dr. Jan Celek – on behalf of the Generals' Club of the Polish Army.

Awards