Attack of Maziarnia Wawrzkowa

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Date24–25 March 1944
Result Polish victory
Attack of Maziarnia Wawrzkowa
Part of the Massacres of the Poles in the Volhynia and Galicia during the Polish–Ukrainian ethnic conflict in the World War II
Date24–25 March 1944
Location
Result Polish victory
Belligerents
link Polish Self–Defense
link Home Army
link Ukrainian Insurgent Army
Commanders and leaders
link Jan Lewicki 
link Józefa Późniaka
Unknown
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
21 killed[1] 12 killed[2]
7 Polish civilians killed[1]

The Attack of Maziarnia Wawrzkowa or Battle of Maziarnia Wawrzkowa took place between the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and the Home Army in the Lviv Oblast, in Maziarnia Wawrzkowa [pl], It took place on March 24–25, 1944.[3]

According to the memoirs of Franciszek Woronowski, on September 14, 1943, in Lviv, he received an order from the Command of the South-Eastern Area of the Home Army to organize the self-defense of Polish villages in the north-western part of the Tarnopol Voivodeship. The Area Command feared that the forces of the UPA, concentrated in Volhynia, might begin the massacre of the Polish population in Eastern Lesser Poland.[4]

The operational base for the self-defense was established in a triangle marked by the villages of Maziarnia Wawrzkowa, Grabowa, and Huta Połoniecka. This area included a cluster of 17 villages that were either entirely Polish or had a majority Polish population.[5][6]

Attack

The massive UPA attack on Maziarnia Wawrzkowa took place late in the evening of 24 March 1944. The village was attacked simultaneously from all sides. A Soviet partisan unit that appeared in Maziarnia around noon that day left the village after the first shots.[7][1] Maziarnia was surrounded and fired at with incendiary ammunition, which caused a fire in the thatched houses, which made an organised defence impossible. The self-defence soldiers were forced to withdraw to the last line of defence, which was the church (where civilians had taken shelter) and the buildings surrounding it. They also defended themselves behind the Ukrainian attack in individual buildings with sheet metal roofs, which the UPA failed to set on fire. Several attempts by the UPA to capture the church failed, and the attackers ended their assault on the village around 4 a.m. As a result of the all-night fight, 28 people died, including 21 members of the self-defense. Among them was the commander of the AK platoon Jan Lewicki. At least 2 defenders of Maziarnia were seriously wounded.[1] About 12 people died on the Ukrainian side.[2] The entire village burned down, except for a few buildings.[7][1]

Aftermath

References

Works cited

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