Bolesław Gebert Explained

Bolesław Gebert
Ambassador From:Poland
Country:Turkey
Term Start:20 June 1960
Term End:12 September 1967
Predecessor:Kazimierz Dorosz
Successor:Stanisław Piotrowski
Birth Date:22 July 1895
Birth Place:Tykocin
Nationality:Polish
Spouse:Elvira Koenig, Krystyna Poznańska-Gebert
Party:Polish United Workers' Party
Children:Armand Gebert, Konstanty Gebert
Alma Mater:Main School of Planning and Statistics
Resting Place:Powązki Military Cemetery, Warsaw

Bolesław Konstanty "Bill" Gebert (22 July 1895 – 13 February 1986) was a top Communist Party official, remembered as one of the organization's top Polish-language speaking leaders. He was a Soviet agent during the years of World War II and was an official of the Polish Communist government after the war.

Background

Bolesław Konstanty Gebert was born July 22, 1895, in Tatary, near Tykocin, in the Białystok region, near the current border of Poland and Belarus. His family were farmers who lost their noble status and landed estates after Gebert's grandfather, Adolf Gebert, took part in the January Uprising in 1863–1864.

Gebert's father, Konstanty Gebert (1856–1941), was a soldier in the Polish Legions in World War I and later fought in the Polish–Soviet War, taking part in the defence of Warsaw. A farmer by trade, he was an active member of the peasant Polish People's Party "Wyzwolenie", for which he was imprisoned in 1923. He continued his military service during the Invasion of Poland in 1939 and was a prisoner of war in the Kozielsk Soviet camp. After his release, Konstanty Gebert was a member of the Home Army resistance movement during World War II, along with three of his four brothers, Mieczysław, Henryk, and Aleksander. The latter brother and Bill Gebert's uncle, Aleksander Gebert, was later persecuted for his resistance service by the Communists in post-War Poland.[1]

Career

Gebert immigrated from Poland to the United States prior to the Russian Revolution and found work as a miner.

Political career

By 1915, Gebert was an active member of the Socialist Party of America working in the SPA's Polish Federation. He took part in the creation of the Kosciuszko League. In 1919, he was active in the Left Wing Section of the Socialist Party and became a founding member of the Communist Party of the USA (CPUsA), for which he edited a Polish socialist newspaper. In the Palmer Raids at year-end 1919, he was arrested but not deported.

In 1920, Gebert was named to the governing Central Executive Committee of the CPA as an ostensible representative of the Polish Communist Federation in the wake of the deportation of Polish leader Daniel Elbaum. By that time, he was in Detroit, Michigan and editor of the three primary Polish-language publications: Głos Robotniczy (Workers' Voice), Trybuna Robotnicza (The Workers' Tribune), and Głos Ludowy (People's Voice).[2] In 1929, he served as Secretary of the Polish Bureau of the Workers (Communist) Party and was a fraternal delegate to the party's 6th National Convention, held in New York City in March 1929.[3]

In 1932, Gebert co-founded the Polonia Society from an existing Polish-language section of the International Workers Order (IWO). He also became a national officer of the IWO. Up to the mid-1930s, he also served as organizer of the CPUSA's Chicago and Pittsburgh districts.[4] (Later, Louis F. Budenz described of a conflict between Gebert and Morris Childs, District Organizer for Illinois, over Gebert's intrusion into Chicago and, in particular, over a "Czech comrade who was doing vital underground work for Gebert.")

In 1936 Gebert helped found the Steel Workers Organizing Committee (SWOC) of the Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO), for which he organized fraternal organizations of foreign-born Americans.[5] Toward year-end, he organized a conference of fraternal organizations in Pittsburgh — a gathering attended by 447 representatives of various national origins, addressed by Philip Murray and greeted by John L. Lewis.[6]

During the 1930s, Gebert was a frequent contributor to the theoretical monthly of the CPUSA, The Communist.[7]

Gebert appears in nine intercepted NKGB messages between May and October 1944.[8] Gebert was the contact of fellow Soviet agent, Oskar Lange, a Polish economist who was a personal emissary from President Franklin D. Roosevelt to Joseph Stalin on the "Polish question". Another Venona message reports Gebert's demand for a $500 balance the KGB still owed him on a one thousand dollar contract to publish a Polish-language book.

After World War II, Gebert returned to the now Communist-dominated Poland, where he assumed a leading position in the state-controlled labor unions. From 1949 to 1950, Gebert was Secretary of the World Peace Council and from 1950 to 1957, the editor of Glosu Pracy.

He returned to the United States in 1950 as United Nations representative of the World Federation of Trade Unions.

From 1960 to 1967 Gebert served as the Polish People's Republic's Ambassador to Turkey.

Personal life and death

Gebert married two times. In 1920 in the US, he married Romanian-born Elvira Koenig (1898–1974); they had one son, Armand Gebert (1922–2009), a journalist who lived and died in Detroit. Later in Poland, he married Krystyna Poznańska-Gebert (1916–1991), of Jewish origin; they had two children: a daughter and son, Konstanty Gebert (born 1953), a Polish journalist and Jewish activist.

Gebert died age 90 on February 13, 1986, in Warsaw.

Works

Books
Articles

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Wspomnienie o Konstantym Gebercie . 2020-06-15 . 2017-11-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20171107221825/http://bpmonki.pl/wspomnienie-o-konstantym-gebercie . dead .
  2. Robbie Terman, Finding Aid for the Don Binkowski Papers, Walter P. Reuther Library, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI, 2008.
  3. Russian State Archive for Socio-Political History (RGASPI), fond 515, opis 1, delo 1600, list 11. Available on microfilm as "Files of the Communist Party of the USA in the Comintern Archives," IDC Publishers, reel 122.
  4. Randi Stroch's Red Chicago: American Communism at Its Grassroots, 1928–35 refers to Bill Gebert in 1931 as "Chicago's leading Communist Party official" (pg. 31), which is an accurate description of the District Organizer's role as supervisor, dues collector, cheerleader, and the conduit of directives from the party center.
  5. Book: Ottanelli , Fraser M. . The Communist Party of the United States: From the Depression to World War II. Rutgers University Press. 143. 1991. 9780813516134. 20 June 2020.
  6. Fraser M. Ottanelli, The Communist Party of the United States: From the Depression to World War II, pp. 143–144.
  7. According to Joel Seidman's 1969 Communism in the United States — A Bibliography, Bill Gebert published articles in the following issues of The Communist: August, September, December 1933; July 1934; September 1935; January, March, June, August 1936; May, October 1937; February 1938; May 1939. Gebert's contributions seem to have ceased abruptly at this juncture.
  8. Bolesław Gebert's cover name, as assigned by Soviet intelligence and deciphered in Venona project transcripts, was ATAMAN. Gebert was a contact of the mysterious unidentified KHAN (also SELIM KHAN). Gebert is referenced in the following Venona decrypts: 700 KGB New York to Moscow, 17 May 1944; 759–760 KGB New York to Moscow, 27 May 1944; 761 KGB New York to Moscow, 27 May 1944; 763 KGB New York to Moscow, 29 May 1944; 823 KGB New York to Moscow, 7 June 1944; 928 KGB New York to Moscow, 1 July 1944; 956, 957 KGB New York to Moscow, 6 July 1944; 1229 KGB New York to Moscow, 29 August 1944 ; 1410 KGB New York to Moscow, 6 October 1944.