- Special Courts
: "This is an article on the Polish special courts during
World War II . For information on the infamous German special courts during the same period see:Sondergerichte "Special Courts (Polish "Sądy Specjalne") were the underground
court s organized by the Polish Government in Exile duringWorld War II in occupiedPoland . The courts determinedpunishment s for the citizens of Poland who were subject to the Polish law before the war.History
After the Polish Defense War of 1939 the German authorities of the General Gouvernment mobilized all the pre-war Polish
police men to the German service. The so-called Navy-Blue Police ("Policja granatowa", nick-named after the colour of their uniforms) were used as an auxiliary unit of theGestapo andKripo , yet they had no means of executing law and order in the occupied country. At the same time the German police forces and courts were more interested in persecution of Jews and members of Polishintelligentsia and underground rather than common criminals.That is why on
April 16 ,1940 , the Polish Government in Exile inLondon decided that the underground Polish courts be created for persecution of criminalists, traitors,informant s and collaborators. Contrary to common belief, the Special Courts tried only the pre-war citizens of Poland who were legally subjects of the Polish law. No citizens of other states (including members of the occupying forces ofGermany andUSSR ) were ever sentenced by the Special Courts. However, at times such claims were made by theBureau of Information and Propaganda forpropaganda reasons; nevertheless, executions of members of theSS andGestapo were treated as elements of partisan warfare. The reason for such policy was a belief that the agendas of thePolish Secret State should act as if the occupation and dismemberment of Poland never happened.Polish special underground courts reviewed about 10,000Klaus-Peter Friedrich. Collaboration in a "Land without a Quisling": Patterns of Cooperation with the Nazi German Occupation Regime in Poland during World War II. "Slavic Review", Vol. 64, No. 4, (Winter, 2005), pp. 711-746.] -17,000 [John Connelly, Slavic Review, Vol. 64, No. 4 (Winter, 2005), pp. 771-781 ] cases of collaboration, sentenced over 3,500 individuals to death (2,500 executions were carried out; many others were sentenced to punishments like beatings or finesStanisław Salmonowicz, "Polskie Państwo Podziemne", Wydawnictwa Szkolne i Pedagogiczne, Warszawa, 1994, ISBN 930205500X] ).
Debate
There is an on-going debate whether the World War II Polish Special Courts were lawful and obeyed the elementary
law s. According to the historians working for theInstitute of National Remembrance the courts fulfilled the five basic conditions:
# The courts operated in the name of the Polish State and were subject to both pre-war Polish law and the wartimelegislation .
# The courts penalized mostly themisdeed s included in the pre-war Polish law. Most of the trials were related either tohigh treason orcollaboration .
# There are no sources that would claim that the Special Courts sentenced anyone without sufficient evidence ofguilt .
# The Special Courts were always trying to reach the lawful verdict. 40% of all thejudicial procedure s ended up with thedefendant s found not guilty. 25% of the verdicts werecapital punishment , while the rest included lash,infamy ,banishment or fines. In many cases the prosecution was suspended until the final liberation.
# All of the procedures of the Polish law were obeyed. The only exception to that rule was the case of the so-called "preemptive liquidation", when a person known for being a German spy or collaborator had to be executed before he could denunciate the resistance net.However, some German historians claim that after 1939 Poland did not exist, and the execution of Polish law on German-held territory was therefore against international law. These claims remain controversial, since the annexation of Poland in 1939 was unilateral and acknowledged only by the
Axis Powers and theUSSR (which later declared its pact with Germany null and void).ee also
*
Państwowy Korpus Bezpieczeństwa Notes
Further reading
*Leszek Gondek, "Polska karząca", Warszawa, 1988
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