Tomasz Arciszewski

Tomasz Arciszewski

Tomasz Arciszewski (4 November 1877 - 20 November 1955) was a Polish socialist politician, a member of the Polish Socialist Party and the Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile in London from 1944 to 1947, presiding over the period when the government lost the recognition of the Western powers.

Early life

Tomasz Arciszewski was born in Sierzchów, a tiny town halfway between Warsaw and Łódź to Mikołaj Arciszewski, a veteran of the January Uprising and Helena Młynarska.

After graduating from trade schools in Lubań and Radom, Tomasz Arciszewski moved to Sosnowiec, an ever-growing centre of heavy industry of the region of Zagłębie. There in 1894 he started working as a factory worker in a steel foundry. In 1896 he joined the Polish Socialist Party (PPS) and soon afterwards took part in a strike, for which he was dismissed.

Career

Initially active in Zagłębie, he had to flee the country and between 1898 and 1900 he lived in London and Bremen, where he was one of the leaders of the "Association of Polish Socialists in Exile". Despite being endangered with arrest by the tsarist police, Arciszewski returned to Poland in August 1900 and was arrested soon afterwards.

Released in 1903, Arciszewski returned to active service in the ranks of the socialists. He became one of the PPS' members used to develop the organization and structures of illegal party in poorly-developed areas of Poland. He spent some time in Częstochowa, Piotrków and in the poorly-developed region of Podlachia.

In 1904 he joined the Organizacja Bojowa of the PPS, a revolutionary group fighting for the liberation of Poland. A close associate of Józef Piłsudski, Arciszewski moved to Warsaw, where he became the head of the local branch of his organization. With it, he organized a number of assassination attempts of various Russian high-ranking officials. He also took part in the famous Bezdany raid near Vilna (Vilnius, Lithuania), where his unit expropriated circa 200,000 roubles.

In 1906 Arciszewski, along with Piłsudski, joined the newly-found Polish Socialist Party - Revolutionary Faction, an organization of the Polish socialists oriented towards the independence of Poland rather than all-European workers' revolution. After the action of Bezdany he had to flee the Vistulan Country and settled in Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine), where he joined the Association of Active Struggle, a secret para-military organization. Shortly before the outbreak of the Great War he left the Revolutionary Faction and became a member of the internal opposition within the socialist movement.

In August 1914 he joined the Polish Legions and served with distinction in the 1st Infantry Regiment of the 1st Brigade. Promoted to the rank of Lieutenant, in 1915 he was delegated to political service in the Central Powers'-occupied Congress Poland, where he was among the most active organizers of the secret Polish Military Organization (POW). After the Act of November 5th and the proclamation of the Kingdom of Poland as part of the Central Powers' plan of Mitteleuropa, Tomasz Arciszewski entered the city council of Warsaw. There he became the founder of trade unions and the editor of various socialist newspapers.

After the collapse of Germany and Austria-Hungary at the end of World War I, on November 7 1918 Arciszewski was appointed the minister of labour and social affairs in the "Provisional Government of the Polish Republic" led by Ignacy Daszyński. After Daszyński's government passed its responsibilities to Piłsudski and the consolidation of power in all parts of Poland occurred, Arciszewski was appointed the minister of postal services and telegraphic communication in the government of Jędrzej Moraczewski. He served at that post until January 16 1919. Soon afterwards he was elected a member of the Sejm.

During the Polish-Bolshevik War he organized various workers' voluntary units and supported the sabotage beneath Russian lines. After the war, in 1922 he was again elected member of the Sejm from the Socialist lists and held his post until 1935.

One of the most prominent leaders of the socialists (between 1919 and 1939 he was the member of the Main Council of the PPS), Arciszewski gradually broke up with his former colleague Piłsudski, who abandoned the socialist ideas after Poland regained her independence. This made him one of the prominent leaders of the Centrolew coalition of centrist and leftist parties. Apart from his seat in the Sejm, between 1919 and 1934, and then from 1938 until the outbreak of World War II, Arciszewski was a member of the Warsaw's city council. Among other duties, he was also the founder of the Workers' Society of Friends of Children.

After the outbreak of the Polish Defensive War of 1939, Arciszewski took part in the defense of Warsaw as one of the commanders of the Workers' Volunteer Battalions. After the German and Soviet take-over of Poland he went underground and, together with Kazimierz Pużak, on October 16 of the same year he proclaimed the "Polish Socialist Party - Freedom, Equality, Independence" (PPS-WRN), a secret war-time continuation of the pre-war PPS. He headed that party until July of 1944. After that he entered the Council of National Unity (RJN), a quasi-parliament of the Polish Secret State headed by Jan Stanisław Jankowski.

Shortly before the outbreak of the Warsaw Uprising, Arciszewski was evacuated from Poland through an air bridge (Most III) on July 26 1944. Through Cairo he reached London, where he was one of the candidates for the seat of the president of Poland in exile. In accordance with the April Constitution of 1935, on August 7 1944 he was named by Władysław Raczkiewicz as his successor.

Critical towards the pressure of the Soviet Union and Stanisław Mikołajczyk's attempts at compromise with Joseph Stalin, Arciszewski focused on trying to convince the Allied leaders (notably Winston Churchill) to help fighting Warsaw - to little avail. After Mikołajczyk's resignation, on November 29 1944, Arciszewski became the Prime Minister of Poland and at the same time he became the minister of labour and welfare in his government.

Later life

He died on 20 November 1955 at aged 78, and is buried in Brompton Cemetery, London.


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