The man who volunteered to be sent to Auschwitz
Pilecki organized a resistance movement right under the noses of the camp’s Nazi German overseers, kapos and administrative staff
Witold Pilecki was a reserve officer in the Polish Army born on 13 May 1901 in Olonets, Russia. During World War II, while attached to a Polish resistance group, he volunteered for an operation that saw him intentionally imprisoned in Auschwitz with the goal of gathering intelligence on the camp's inner workings.
As early as 1941, his reports informed the Western Allies of the atrocities being committed at the death camp.
A significantly large group of the first Auschwitz prisoners was made of Poles who were engaged in conspiracy activities, and the first transports that arrived at the camp from Warsaw carried members of the TAP (Tajna Armia Polska; Secret Polish Army). These prisoners, among others, were going to form the backbone of the military resistance movement.
In the summer of 1940, with several members of TAP behind KL Auschwitz’s well-guarded perimeter, Major Włodarkiewicz decided it would be prudent to send an officer to the camp on an intelligence-gathering mission. At the time, little was known about what went on inside those walls. Pilecki heard of Włodarkiewicz's desire and promptly volunteered: he presented a plan to infiltrate Auschwitz, gain firsthand information about its operations, and build a resistance movement within the camp.
The operation
On 19 September 1940, Pilecki deliberately entered an area of Warsaw where the German Army was running a roundup of Polish civilians. 2,000 of them, including Pilecki, were detained that day. After two days in the former barracks of Poland’s Light Horse Guards, where prisoners suffered beatings with rubber truncheons, Pilecki was sent to Auschwitz, where he was registered with number 4859. Since he carried false identification documents, he was registered under the name of Tomasz Serafiński.
This set of photographs was taken on that day:
That autumn, Pilecki created a new organization inside the camp called the Union of Military Organization (Związek Organizacji Wojskowej or ZOW). ZOW quickly merged with another organization operating behind the camp’s walls, under the command of the Union of Armed Struggle/Home Army (Związek Walki Zbrojnej or ZWZ/AK).
This resistance organization aimed to help boost the morale of prisoners being held at Auschwitz by disseminating news from the fronts of World War II, clandestinely acquiring much-needed food, clothing, and medicine, forwarding messages from the outside, assisting in the organization of escapes and preparing their own members to take over the camp in collaboration with the partisans operating in the area.
Reports from members of the resistance movement were initially sent via prisoners released from the camp, through prisoners who managed to escape and then also by initiated civilian workers employed by the SS men during the expansion of Auschwitz. From the beginning of 1940, these reports began to arrive systematically in Warsaw.
The first message sent by Pilecki reached London on 18 March 1941. This document primarily contained a description of crimes committed by the Germans and the situation and living conditions in the camp. For this reason, from the end of June 1942, one can encounter numerous references to the murder of Jews in the gas chambers and to the rapid increase in the number of registered Jewish prisoners.
The bodies of people who were killed in the gas chambers were buried in mass graves, a practice also described in Pilecki’s message. These people did not even go through the registration procedure, which means that the number of victims is potentially larger than what we know today.
In 1942, Pilecki’s resistance movement was also broadcasting details on the number of arrivals and deaths in the camp and the inmates’ conditions using a secret radio transmitter.
In the spring of 1943, after providing intelligence on the inner workings of Auschwitz to the Western Allies for close to three years, Pilecki, sensing that he could soon be exposed and feeling that it was important that he submitted a first-hand report on the horrors he’d seen in the camp, decided that it was time to escape. For this purpose, his ZOW compatriots arranged for him to be moved to the bakers’ kommando, which worked outside the main camp (about 2 km north).
Two other prisoners with whom he intended to escape, Edward Ciesielski and Jan Redzej, were also transferred to the same kommando.
The escape
While working at the camp’s bakery, Pilecki, Ciesielski and Redzej made their escape on the night of 26/27 April 1943. The prisoners cut telephone and alarm ring wires, opened unlocked the front door with a duplicate key, and slid the bolts locking the door, open. As soon as they were outside of the bakery building, the trio barricaded the door that they’d just exited to ensure they could not be easily followed and ran east. That night, they crossed the Soła river and swam across the Vistula river before reaching a nearby forest in a boat that they had managed to find.
After taking the day after their escape to recuperate, they continued their march east, crossing the border of the General Government. After a few more days of hard travel, the trio of escapees reached Nowy Wiśnicz near Bochnia, where they established contact with the regional Headquarters of the Home Army. Speaking to the Home Army’s regional commanders, Pilecki suggested the creation of a unit that would attack the Nazi German SS garrison in Auschwitz and liberate the prisoners.
The regional command officers rejected Pilecki’s plan, saying that it would be unrealistic to assume that such an operation would be a success.
In August 1943, Pilecki reached Warsaw, where, at the General Headquarters of the Home Army, he presented an extensively detailed report concerning resistance activities and the disposition of prisoners in Auschwitz: the murder of Poles, Soviet POWs, and Jews, and the establishment of the Zigeunerlager (Gypsy camp) for Sini & Roma prisoners.
Sentenced to death
In August 1944, Pilecki fought in the Warsaw Uprising and was captured in the wake of the uprising’s collapse. As a result, he was sent to the Murnau POW camp in Bavaria. After the camp was liberated by the American military, he made his way to Italy to join the Polish Second Corps—a military unit that played an essential role during the Allies campaign in the region. Returning to Poland at the end of 1945, he performed intelligence work for the Second Corps.
On 8 May 1947, Pilecki was arrested by agents of the Ministry of Public Security (Ministerstwo Bezpieczeństwa Publicznego or MBP), Poland’s post-war communist secret police service. The pro-communist MBP were no friends to pro-western military forces like the Second Corps.
Prior to his trial, Pilecki was repeatedly tortured, but he sought to protect other prisoners and revealed no sensitive information.
On 3 March 1948, a show trial took place. Pilecki was charged with illegal border crossing, use of forged documents, not enlisting with the military, carrying illegal arms, espionage for General Władysław Anders, espionage for “foreign imperialism” (thought to be British intelligence) and planning to assassinate several officials of the Ministry of Public Security of Poland. On 15 May, he was sentenced to death.
Witold Pilecki was killed in Mokotów Prison on 25 May 1948, by a single gunshot to the back of the head.
“The game which I was now playing in Auschwitz was dangerous. This sentence does not really convey the reality; in fact, I had gone far beyond what people in the real world consider dangerous.“
- Lawrence W. Reed, Witold Pilecki: Bravery Beyond Measure
Originally published at facesofauschwitz.com in collaboration with Séamus Bellamy and Auschwitz Memorial and Museum.
A story that deserves to be told, and retold. Thank You.
Mark Manson's book, 'Everything is F*cked' starts off with the story of Pilecki, and I wondered why no one knows about this hero, why no movies have been made on him. Just amazes me-how much more he could have done if the outside world believed what he was reporting.