Irena Iłłakowicz
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Irena Morzycka-Iłłakowicz | |
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Born | |
Died | October 4, 1943 | (aged 37)
Irena Morzycka-Iłłakowicz (also as Iłłakowiczowa, July 26, 1906 – October 4, 1943) was a Polish second Lieutenant of the National Armed Forces and intelligence agent. The daughter of Bolesław Morzycki and Władysława Zakrzewska and the sister of Jerzy, she was also a polyglot who spoke seven languages: Polish, French, English, Persian, Finnish, German and Russian.
Biography[]
She was born in Berlin. After 1917, when the October Revolution began, she moved with her family to Finland. After returning to Second Polish Republic (which had regained independence in the aftermath of the First World War) she attended a school led by the Sisters of the Holy Heart of Jesus in Zbylitowska Góra. Afterwards she studied humanities at Grenoble University in France. In Paris she married – son of the prince[who?] of Iran. For a period they lived together in a palace in Persia. Irena was a person accustomed to frequent meetings with family and friends. Persia, a long way from home, became arduous for her. After two years, with permission from her husband, she secretly left and went to Teheran. Polish diplomats in Teheran made it possible for her return to Poland. After a period in Poland, she again went to Paris where she met . They married on 23 October 1934 in Warsaw. On 25 June 1936 she bore their only child – daughter Ligia.
In October 1939, after both the German invasion of Poland on 1 September and Soviet invasion of Poland on 17 September, Irena Iłłakowiczowa joined the Polish resistance movement; particularly she co-operated with Organizacja Wojskowa Związek Jaszczurczy. During the Nazi Occupation of Poland she assumed the name Barbara Zawisza. Irena and her husband Jerzy lived at different addresses in order to avoided being arrested by the Gestapo. She started service as an Intelligence agent in the intelligence unit "Zachód" ("West"). These assignments were to conduct military, economic and information reconnaissance. Department II of Organizacja Wojskowa Związek Jaszczurczy, in agreement with Department of Związek Walki Zbrojnej – Armia Krajowa, controlled sub-section "Zachód". Speaking German fluently, Irena went to Berlin, where the contact point of branch of sub-section "Zachód" was located.
Between 1941 and 1942, her section was destroyed by the Germans. The outcome of this action were the numerous arrests of underground activists. Irena was arrested by the Gestapo on 7 October 1942. They placed her at Pawiak. She underwent harsh interrogations but revealed nothing. Other colleagues, knowing her role in intelligence, sent her a vial of cyanide, but she didn't use it. Her husband arranged for her to be freed from prison. A bribed guard put her in the group of non-political prisoners to be transported to the Majdanek camp. While there, a group of NSZ fighters from Pomerania freed her from the camp. Dressed in Gestapo uniforms, they came to the camp and presented a falsified document saying that Irena was to be brought to Warsaw for more interrogation. This event was documented in a Delegatura Rządu report.
After a short stay in the Lublin area, Irena found herself in Klarysek-Janówek. Later she came back to Warsaw and stayed with Dr. Miłodroska at Filtrowa street. She started working on the Soviet intelligence network in Poland. Her husband was to be sent to London as the representative of TNRP (command of the National Armed Forces). He wanted to take her with him, but the command decided against it. She was to be sent with ("Jan"). Nine days before the trip, on the night of 4 October 1943, Irena was summoned to a meeting on an important issue. She suspected a provocation, but thinking it too important, went to the meeting. In case she did not return, she asked Dr. Miłodroska to notify her contact.
Irena was murdered in unknown circumstances. Jerzy, her husband, started searching for her and found her body in the infirmary at Oczki street. Her body was found in Pole Mokotowskie. Irena's murderers remain unknown. In the days before her death she was involved in intelligence activities against a radio contact point in Otwock which actively supported Soviet parachutists sent to Poland. Accusations were directed at the NKVD or the PPR.
Irena was buried at Powązki under the name of Barbara Zawisza. Because the Gestapo often sent agents to family funerals (and other ceremonies), her husband participated in the ceremony dressed as a gravedigger and her mother as cemetery helper. In 1948 her mother placed a plaque with Irena's true name on her grave.
On 20 May 1944, by order of the commander of the National Armed Forces, Irena was promoted to second Lieutenant. In 1995 she was posthumously decorated with the (nr 1-95-59).
Bibliography[]
- Sylwetki kobiet-żołnierzy. Służba Polek na frontach II wojny światowej, część 7 pod redakcją Krystyny Kabzińskiej. Fundacja "Archiwum i Muzeum Pomorskie Armii Krajowej oraz Wojskowej Służby Polek", Toruń 2007. ISBN 83-88693-02-6, p. 138-143.
External links[]
- The Doomed soldiers - Polish Underground Soldiers 1944-1963 - The Untold Story
- National Armed Forces Historical Brief
- (in Polish) Antykomunistyczne Podziemie Zbrojne po 1944 roku
- (in Polish) Organizacja Wojskowa Związek Jaszczurczy in PWN Encyklopedia
- (in Polish) Związek Jaszczurczy
- (in Polish) Związek Jaszczurczy i „Grupa Szańca”[permanent dead link]
- (in Polish) Z kart Historii Wywiadu "Zachod" ZJ i NSZ
- 1906 births
- 1943 deaths
- People from Berlin
- Burials at Powązki Cemetery
- National Armed Forces members
- Polish military personnel killed in World War II
- Polish female soldiers
- Polish expatriates in Germany
- Female resistance members of World War II
- Polish women in World War II resistance