Battle of Vilya

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Date6 September 1943
Location
Vilya
Result See § Aftermath
Battle of Vilya
Part of the massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia and the Polish–Ukrainian ethnic conflict during World War II

Kostopol district
Date6 September 1943
Location
Vilya
Result See § Aftermath
Belligerents
link Home Army
link Soviet partisans
link Polesian Sich
Commanders and leaders
link Władysław Kochański
link Zdzisław Ostromęcki 
link Franciszek Szafran
link Petro Dolmatyuk
link Ivan Mitrynga [uk] 
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
18–23 killed
2 wounded
8 killed
15 wounded

The Battle of Vilya was an armed clash that took place on 6 September 1943 in the village of Vilya in Volhynia, between a detachment of the Home Army and a group of Soviet partisans made up of Poles and a detachment of the Polesian Sich.[1][2]

The village of Vilya, where a strong UPA outpost was located in 1943, was a base for attacks on Polish settlements, including Niemilia (Ludwipol municipality).[1] On 4 September 1943, a fight took place with armed Ukrainians while harvesting grain from the surrounding fields for Polish refugees and partisans gathered in the area of Huta Stara (Ludwipol municipality). The clash took place in the area of the destroyed Ukrainian village of Vilya, which was pacified on 28 May 1943 by the German garrison from Bystrzyce.[1]

Battle

On 6 September 1943, two sotnias and a staff group of the Polesian Sich stationed in the devastated village of Vilya in Volhynia (Ludwipol commune in the Kostopol district) came into accidental contact with a detachment of the Home Army and a Felix Dzerzhinsky detachment of Polish communist partisans, who were guarding a grain haul.[2] The Home Army part of the group was commanded by Lieutenant Zdzisław Ostromęcki "Podkowa". The commander of the communist part was platoon leader Franciszek Szafran. In total, the Polish forces initially numbered around 40 armed men.[1]

Both sides, surprised by the encounter, engaged in a battle in which the weaker Polish side initially suffered losses of 16 men. Władysław and Ewa Siemaszek report that the tide of the battle was turned by the arrival of reinforcements from a Soviet unit and a Home Army unit under Władyslaw Kochański, pseud. "Bomba".[1]

Aftermath

References

Bibliography

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