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Jerzy Borejsza (Polish pronunciation: [ˈjɛʐɨ bɔˈrɛjʂa]; born Beniamin Goldberg; 14 July 1905 in Warsaw – 19 January 1952 in Warsaw) was a Polish communist activist and writer. During the Stalinist period of communist Poland, he was chief of a state press and publishing syndicate.

Jerzy Borejsza
Born1905
Warsaw, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died1952 (aged 46)
Warsaw, Polish People's Republic
Other namesBeniamin Goldberg
CitizenshipPolish
OccupationHead of the communist press
Known forCo-founder of Union of Polish Patriots
Political partyCommunist Party of Poland (1929–1938)
Polish Workers' Party (1942–1948)

Biography


Borejsza was born as Beniamin Goldberg to a Polish Jewish family.[1] He was an older brother of Józef Różański – later a member of the Soviet NKVD and high-ranking interrogator in the Ministry of Public Security of Poland.[2] As a youth, Borejsza sympathized with the Zionist radical left and anarchic political factions.[2][3] After he got in trouble with the Polish authorities, his father sponsored his residence in France.[3] Borejsza studied engineering, then Hispanic culture at the Sorbonne, and remained deeply involved with the politics and activism of anarchism.[3]

After his studies, Borejsza returned home and was briefly enlisted in the Polish Army in the late 1920s.[3] In 1929, he joined the Communist Party of Poland (KPP).[1] In the Second Polish Republic, he was imprisoned several times in the years 1933–1935 for agitation and political propaganda.[3]

After the Soviet invasion of Poland of 1939, Borejsza became a vocal supporter of the Soviet communist regime, publishing Polish language translations of Soviet propaganda.[4] He served as director of the Ossolineum Institute in Lwów (Lviv) in 1939–1940.[1][3] After the war, as Lviv was transferred to the Ukrainian SSR, he aided the transport of most of Ossolineum archives to Wrocław. He was one of the founders of the Union of Polish Patriots – an organization from which the communist government of post-war Poland in part originated.[3] Borejsza served with the rank of major in the Red Army, and then in the Polish First Army.[1][3]

He joined the new pro-Soviet Polish communist party, the Polish Workers' Party,[1] and became a deputy to the State National Council.[3] He organized much of communist propaganda in post-war Poland and was a leading figure in the implementation of state control and censorship in the area of culture.[2][3][5][6][7] He created the giant publishing house Czytelnik ('The Reader').[1] Borejsza favored a moderate approach to culture control, which he called a "gentle revolution".[6] He supported establishing cultural relations with the West, and himself traveled to United States and the United Kingdom.[3] In 1948, he was one of the main organizers of the World Congress of Intellectuals in Defense of Peace in Wrocław.[3] He fell out of favor with the Stalinist hardliners who saw him as too independent, too hard to influence, and not radical enough. His political role diminished in the late 1940s, particularly after the disabling injuries he suffered in a car accident in 1949.[2][3][6]

Borejsza received the Order of Polonia Restituta.[3] He was buried at the Powązki Cemetery in Warsaw.[3]


Works



Quotes



See also



Notes


  1. (in Polish) Borejsza Jerzy at WIEM Encyklopedia
  2. Marci Shore, Caviar and ashes: a Warsaw generation's life and death in Marxism, 1918–1968, Yale University Press, 2006, ISBN 0-300-11092-8, Google Print, p. xvii
  3. (in Polish) Jerzy Borejsza at Dia-pozytyw
  4. Piotrowski, Tadeusz (1997). "Polish Collaboration". Poland's Holocaust: Ethnic Strife, Collaboration with Occupying Forces and Genocide in the Second Republic, 1918–1947. McFarland & Company. pp. 78. ISBN 0-7864-0371-3. Google Print, p.78
  5. (in Polish) JERZY BOREJSZA in Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego
  6. Andrzej Paczkowski, Jane Cave, The spring will be ours: Poland and the Poles from occupation to freedom, Penn State Press, 2003, ISBN 0-271-02308-2, Google Print, p.193
  7. Tomas Venclova, Aleksander Wat: life and art of an iconoclast, Yale University Press, 1996 ISBN 0-300-06406-3, Google Print, p.193
  8. Czesław Miłosz and Madeline Levine, Milosz's ABC's, Macmillan, 2002, ISBN 0-374-52795-4, Google Print, p.67
  9. As cited by Franaszek
  10. Jan Kott, Still Alive: An Autobiographical Essay, Yale University Press, 1994, ISBN 0-300-10561-4, Google Print, p.172-173

Further reading





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