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Anniversary of Warsaw Uprising
Sunday, August 5th
Mass at 12:30 PM
The Warsaw Uprising of 1944 — a heroic and tragic
63-day struggle to liberate World War 2 Warsaw from Nazi/German
occupation. Undertaken by the Home Army (Armia Krajowa, AK), the Polish
resistance group, at the time Allied troops were breaking through the
Normandy defenses and the Red Army was standing at the line of the
Vistula River.
At the end of July of 1944, Poland is in its fifth
year of German occupation. On the eastern front, German armies are in
full retreat suffering from the Red Army's spring offensive which is
approaching Warsaw's eastern suburbs. The liberation of Poland's
capital seems to be within reach. [ map
]
General
'Bor' Komorowski, commander of the Polish Underground Home Army (Armia
Krajowa, AK), sets the beginning of the uprising in Warsaw against the
German occupying forces at 'W-hour'; 5:00 p.m. on August 1, 1944. The
uprising is expected to last about a week and have the character of
mopping up and disarming operation. The insurgents, however, are
unaware that the Germans have decided to defend 'fortress' Warsaw and
to counter-attack Red Army forces to the east of the city. [
declarations
].
Warsaw's
insurgents an estimated 40,000 soldiers, including 4,000 women, have
only enough weapons for 2,500 fighters. They are facing a 15,000-strong
German garrison which will grow to a force of 30,000, armed with tanks,
planes, and artillery.
More information: www.warsawuprising.com
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