- Jan Piwnik
Infobox Military Person
name=Jan Piwnik
nickname=Ponury
caption=Ponury (centre) and his colleagues in their camp at Wykus
rank=Major
date_of_birth=birth date|1912|8|12|mf=y
placeofbirth=Janowice,Poland
date_of_death=death date and age|1944|6|16|1912|8|12|mf=y
placeofdeath=Jewłasze,Poland , todayBelarus
profession=Police officer
serviceyears=1939
units=Polish Defensive War,World War II ,Operation Tempest
battles=
laterwork=
portrayedby=
awards=|Jan Piwnik (1912-1944;
nom de guerre "Ponury" ("Gloomy"), "Donat") was a PolishWorld War II soldier, acichociemny and a notable leader of theHome Army in theŚwiętokrzyskie Mountains area.Biography
Jan Piwnik was born
August 12 ,1912 in the village of Janowice nearOstrowiec Świętokrzyski . In 1933 he graduated from a reserve NCO artillery school inWłodzimierz Wołyński . In 1935 he joined the Polishpolice , where he served as an officer. Mobilized in 1939, in the Polish Defensive War he commanded a motorized unit of the police. After the Soviet aggression, onSeptember 23 he and his unit crossed the Hungarian border, where they were interned.Piwnik managed to escape from the internment camp and in November 1939 he arrived to
Paris , where he reported himself to thePolish Government in Exile . He joined thePolish Army recreated in France at that time and was assigned to the 4th Rifle Brigade (en cadre ). After evacuation toGreat Britain , following the French defeat, he joined thePolish 1st Independent Parachute Brigade under Gen. Sosabowski.There Piwnik was informed of creation of the
Cichociemni formation, which he joined. After receiving extensive training, he was transported to Poland onNovember 7 ,1941 . There he joined theHome Army and served at various posts. In the summer of 1942 he was assigned to head one of theWachlarz units operating fromRówne in Eastern Poland. Arrested by theGestapo , he managed to escape from the German prison and reachedWarsaw . There he was ordered to prepare a mission of extraction of his fellow Wachlarz members from the prison in Pińsk. OnJanuary 18 ,1943 , he successfully stormed the German prison, liberated all the prisoners and hostages and transported them safely to Warsaw.For his action he was promoted to ensign and in March was assigned to the
Radom -Kielce Home Army Area as the commanding officer of allKeDyw forces dislocated there. As the hilly and densely forested terrain was ideal for partisan warfare, Piwnik started to organise a large partisan unit out of many smaller, previously-existing groups. His unit, based in the forests aroundWykus , received the name of "Home Army Partisan Group "Ponury". One of the most successful units in the area, the Group successfully disrupted German transports and constantly harassed German garrisons. However, in the effect of the German counter-attack his unit suffered heavy losses and was forced to move eastwards, towards the forests near Jeleniów.In December 1943 Piwnik was dismissed from command of the partisan units and in February of the following year he was assigned to the
Nowogródek Home Army Area, where he formed a small partisan unit. After the start of theOperation Tempest , his unit was reformed into the VII battalion of the 77th Home Army Infantry Regiment and took part in many successful actions behind the German lines. He waskilled in action in a successful attack against a German troops near the village of Jewłasze nearVilnius onJune 16 ,1944 . Jan Piwnik was posthumously promoted to the rank of Major.For his actions, he was twice awarded the
Krzyż Walecznych and the IV ClassVirtuti Militari medal. After the war, his life became part of popular culture of the Świętokrzyskie area. In July 1988 his body was exhumed and transferred to a crypt in the Cystertian monastery inWąchock .Trivia
Barbara Piwnik , a notable Polish judge and former Minister of Justice, is Jan Piwnik's niece.ee also
*
Armia Krajowa
*Cichociemni
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