Vasyl Sydor
Vasyl Sydor | |
---|---|
Vasyl Sydor | |
Born |
Spasiv, Austria-Hungary | February 24, 1910
Died |
April 14, 1949 39) Rozhniativ Raion, Ukrainian SSR | (aged
Cause of death | Killed in combat with Soviet troops |
Nationality | Ukrainian |
Other names | Shelest, Vyshyty, Konrad, Zov |
Organization | Ukrainian Insurgent Army |
Political party | OUN-revolutionary |
Vasyl Sydor (Ukrainian: Василь Сидор); born in Spasiv (Спасів), 24 February 1910; died 14 April 1949 in Rozhniativ Raion – colonel of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), political activist, soldier of the Nachtigall Battalion, commandant of Sotnia 201 Schutzmannschaft auxiliary police, vice-commander of UPA and leader of UPA-West for Eastern Galicia during World War II. Sydor was killed in combat with Soviet troops in the Limnytsia River Valley.[1]
Political significance
On September 1, 1944, Vasyl Sydor (Shelest) as the UPA commander for Eastern Galicia, issued an order to end "mass anti-Polish actions" within the borders of postwar Poland, thereby focusing on resistance rather than ethnic cleansing.[2] Murders of civilians continued, but only in retaliation.[3] From then on, UPA units began concentrating on attacking those who served with the pro-Soviet forces (although it took several months for the orders to reach individual commanders in the field).[2] In 1945 the AK issued a manifesto calling for an end to fighting between Poles and Ukrainians and for cooperation, printed it in 7,500 copies and distributed it in the surrounding villages.[4] At the same time, the leadership of UPA in the region made similar moves aimed at the same goal. After mediation by Catholic and Orthodox clergy, a meeting was arranged in Puszcza Solska (Solska Forest) between the commanders of both groups.[4] The top commander on the Polish side was Marian Gołębiewski (Ster) and on the Ukrainian side Jurij Lopatynsky (Szejk).[2] On the night of 27 May 1946 AK-WiN and UPA conducted their one-and-only joint operation against the communist forces of UB and NKVD in Hrubieszów. They parted their ways the next morning after a successful attack.[2]
References
- ↑ "Sydor, Vasyl" at online Encyclopedia of Ukraine
- 1 2 3 4 "Biuletyn IPN, Nr 8, September 2001, pg. 25-32". (1.14 MB) (1.14 MB)
- ↑ Timothy Snyder, "The Reconstruction of Nations," (PDF). (5.74 MB) Yale University Press, New Haven, 2003. (5.74 MB)
- 1 2 Rąkowski, Grzegorz. Polska egzotyczna: przewodnik, Part 2 (in Polish). p. 244.