Adam Próchnik Explained

Adam Próchnik
Office:Juror of the Piotrków Trybunalski City Council
Term Start:1919
Term End:1925
Office2:Chairman of the Piotrków Trybunalski City Council
Term Start2:1925
Term End2:1931
Term Start3:4 March 1928
Term End3:16 November 1930
Term Start4:18 December 1938
Term End4:1 September 1939
Term Start5:28 October 1941
Term End5:22 May 1942
Birth Name:Adam Feliks Próchnik
Birth Date:21 August 1892
Otherparty:
    Spouse:
      Children:3
      Mother:Felicja
      Father:Izydor Próchnik
      Signature:Adam Próchnik signature.svg
      Allegiance:
        Unit:Oficerskiej Kadry Okręgowej Nr I
        Battles:

          Adam Feliks Próchnik (pronounced as /pl/; Lwów, 21 August 1892 – 22 May 1942, Warsaw) was a Polish socialist activist, politician and historian.

          Life

          Próchnik was born in Lwów, Austrian partition (now, Lviv, Ukraine) on 21 August 1892 to a middle class Jewish family.[1] His mother, née Felicja Nossig, was the sister of the sculptor and Zionist activist Alfred Nossig.[2] According to some sources, he was the extramarital son of the Polish socialist Ignacy Daszyński.[3] [4]

          While in high school he became involved in socialist activism.[1] As a student, he joined the Polish Social Democratic Party of Galicia; he supported the Polish Socialist Party – Left faction over the Polish Socialist Party – Revolutionary Faction led by Józef Piłsudski.[1]

          Before World War I he joined the pro-independence paramilitary Polish organization, the Union of Armed Struggle. With the outbreak of World War I, he was conscripted into the Austro-Hungarian Army in 1914, and was badly wounded in 1917.[1] During his convalescence in Vienna, he became a member of a secret Polish organization, the Polish Military Organisation.[1] As a member of PMO he encouraged Polish soldiers to desert from the Austrian Army and join newly created Polish formations. This resulted in a threat of court martial from the Austro-Hungarian Army, but eventually he was freed. Next, he participated in the battle of Lwów during the Polish–Ukrainian War.[1]

          In interwar Poland, Próchnik became an activist of the Polish Socialist Party and supported initiatives designed to improve the situation of the country's working class.[1] He supported the inclusion of Silesia into renascent Poland. In the 1928 legislative elections, he was elected a deputy to the Polish Sejm.[1] He steadily drifted to more extreme left position, supporting cooperation with the communists.[1] Often - under pen-name Henryk Swoboda and publishing mostly in Robotnik - published essays attacking the right-wing sanacja Polish government and the endecja faction, which he blamed for undermining the nascent Polish democracy.[1] This resulted in some of his publications being censored by the state.[1] Some of his works would appear in unabridged version only after his death, published in the People's Republic of Poland.[1]

          He worked as an archivist in Piotrków and Poznań.[1] For a time he was employed by Poland's Ministry of Culture and Religion. His attempt to enter the academic life ended when his application for a position in the University of Warsaw was rejected, due to his left wing views being unpopular among the right wing faculty there (despite a support from his candidature from professor Wacław Tokarz.[1] He nonetheless became a member of the Polish Historical Society, published in historical journals and attended professional conferences.[1]

          During World War II, in occupied Poland, Próchnik continued his political activities, supporting a PPS-affiliated underground printing press (Barykada Wolności).[1] He joined the leftist PPS group, Polish Socialists (Polscy Socjaliści), but he tried to reconcile the divisions within PPS and took part in the negotiations with the more centrist PPS-WRN.[1] He was involved in the collaborative underground effort to document Nazi crimes in Poland, worked in the underground Military History Bureau and contributed to the Kronika Okupacji project.[1] He advocated cooperation with the Soviet Union.[1] He became a member of the Political Consultative Committee. On 22 May 1942 he died of a heart attack.[1] He is buried in Evangelical-Reformed Cemetery in Warsaw.

          Tributes

          Several landmarks and organizations in Poland bear Próchnik's name.

          Works

          In his historical works, Próchnik was a strong adherent to Marxist views, and supported the dialectic materialism perspective.[1] He was interested in studying the revolutionary processes, including social movements.[1] He published numerous articles, both in academic journals and popular press, as well as several books.[1] His historical research focused on following areas: French Revolution and its Polish contemporary, the Kościuszko Uprising; the period of Polish history following the failure of the January Uprising of 1863–1864; the study of the labor movement in Poland, including a study of the women's role in the Polish labor movement (both areas in which he was a pioneer); and contemporary history of the Second Polish Republic.[1] Overall, his works are regarded as well researched and well written.[1]

          See also

          Further reading

          Notes and References

          1. Krzysztof Dunin-Wąsowicz, Adam Próchnik (1892-1942), in Peter Brock, John D. Stanley, Piotr Wróbel (ed.), Nation and history: Polish historians from the Enlightenment to the Second World War, University of Toronto Press, 2006,, Google Print, p.443-447
          2. Górnicka-Boratyńska, Aneta (1999) Chcemy całego życia. Warsaw: Fundacja Res Publica., pp. 128-147
          3. Walentyna Najdus, Ignacy Daszyński, 1866-1936, Google Print, p.508
          4. Jerzy Myśliński, Polska myśl polityczna, Czytelnik, 1986,, p.32