Tadeusz Michejda Explained

Tadeusz Michejda
Office:Minister of Health of Poland
Term Start:February 1947
Term End:10 January 1951
Primeminister:Józef Cyrankiewicz
Predecessor:Franciszek Litwin
Successor:Jerzy Sztachelski
Office2:Member of the Polish Senate
Term Start2:1930
Term End2:1935
Office3:Member of the State National Council
Term Start3:1945
Term End3:1946
Office4:Member of the Sejm
Term Start4:1947
Term End4:1952
Birth Date:26 September 1879
Birth Place:Nawsie, Austria-Hungary
Death Place:Warsaw, Poland
Resting Place:Rakowicki Cemetery, Kraków
Nationality:Polish
Occupation:Physician

Tadeusz Michejda (26 September 1879 in Nawsie – 18 May 1956 in Warsaw) was a Polish physician and politician.

Biography

Tadeusz Michejda was born on 26 September 1879 in Nawsie to Franciszek Michejda, a Lutheran pastor, and Anna Roiczek.[1] He graduated from a state gymnasium in Cieszyn and later studied medicine at universities in Kraków, Prague and Vienna. After graduation, Michejda worked as a doctor in Vienna and Tuchów, later becoming a municipal doctor in Horní Suchá.[2]

After World War I he was a member of Rada Narodowa Księstwa Cieszyńskego (National Council of the Duchy of Cieszyn) and worked on preparations to hold a plebiscite in Cieszyn Silesia. In 1920 Cieszyn Silesia was divided between Czechoslovakia and Poland. His hometown and the workplace fell to Czechoslovakia and Michejda left the Trans-Olza area as he was an active pro-Polish activist; he stayed in Poland, where he worked many years in several localities, including Działdowo, as a doctor. He was a senator in the Polish Senate for the National Workers' Party from 1930 to 1935, deputy in the State National Council in 1945–1946 and deputy in the Sejm from 1947 to 1952. Michejda was also a Minister of Health from 1947 to 1951 and a Minister without Portfolio from 1951 to 1952. Michejda was since 1950 a member of the Democratic Party, and a vice-chairman of the Polish Red Cross. Tadeusz Michejda died in Warsaw and is buried at the Rakowicki Cemetery in Kraków.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Józef. Golec. Stefania. Bojda. Stefania Bojda. Słownik biograficzny ziemi cieszyńskiej. 2. Cieszyn. 1995. 143.
  2. Brożek. Krzysztof. Polscy lekarze na Śląsku Cieszyńskim na przełomie XIX i XX wieku (do 1920 r.). Medycyna Nowożytna. 9/1. 96. 2002. pl.