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    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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Roman Catholic
St Sigismund parish
05-507 Słomczyn
85 Wiślana Str.
Konstancin deanery
Warsaw archdiocese, Poland

  • St SIGISMUND
    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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    XIX c., feretory
    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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    XIX c., feretory
    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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    XIX c., feretory
    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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    XIX c., feretory
    St Sigismund parish church, Słomczyn, Poland
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Martyrology of the clergy — Poland

XX century (1914 – 1989)

personal data

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  • TATARZYŃSKI John
    source: newsaints.faithweb.com
    own collection

religious status

Servant of God

surname

TATARZYŃSKI

surname
versions/aliases

TATARINSKIJ

forename(s)

John (pl. Jan)

forename(s)
versions/aliases

Ivan (pl. Iwan)

function

eparchial priest

creed

Ukrainian Greek Catholic GCmore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2013.05.19]

diocese / province

Lviv GC archeparchymore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2013.05.19]

honorary titles

Silver Cross of Civil Merit (Germ. Zivil–Verdienstkreuz) with the Crown (Austro–Hungarian Empire)more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2023.08.19]

nationality

Ukrainian

date and place
of death

06.1941

DEATH symbol

Zolochivtoday: Zolochiv urban hrom., Zolochiv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2021.12.19]

alt. dates and places
of death

10.1940

details of death

In the autumn of 1912 called up for military service in the Austro–Hungarian Imperial Army. Served in the 15th Infantry Regiment stationed in Ternopil.

After the outbreak of World War I in 07.1914, his Regiment, which was part of the 11th Infantry Division, took part in the battles near Berezhany, on the Eastern Front. After initial defeats, when the Russians occupied Eastern Galicia — part of the Crown Land and the province of the Germ. Königreich Galizien und Lodomerien (Eng. Kingdom of Galicia and Lodomeria) — the Germans and Austria–Hungary defeated the Russians in the Battle of Gorlice of 05.05.1915 and moved the front to the east. Prob. at that time completed a non‐commissioned officer course in Lviv and in c. 1916 was transferred with his regiment to the Italian front. Fought there until the end of the war in 1918, achieving the rank of non‐commissioned officer 1st class.

Due to the collapse of the Austro–Hungarian Empire, in the autumn of 1918 volunteered for service in the Galician Army HA. In it — as a soldier of the Sich Riflemen Brigade — prob. took part in the Polish–Ukrainian War of 1918‐1919, and after the Ukrainian defeat was sent to the Eastern Front (where in 11.1919 the HA was transformed into the Ukrainian Galician Army UHA), becoming the commandant of a field camp with the rank of sergeant. Fought for Kiev, with the units of the Russian Volunteer Army of General Denikin. From 02.1920 fought as in the Red Ukrainian Galician Army ChUHA, i.e. part of the former UHA, which in constantly changing alliances concluded an agreement with the Russian Bolsheviks — served in the staff of the 1st Brigade, as an officer for special tasks.

On c.27.04.1920, the 1st ChUHA Brigade was defeated by Polish troops starting the so‐called Kiev Expedition. Taken POW. Interned in the camp in Frydrykhivka on the Zbruch River. Fell ill with typhus and was quickly released (most of the ChUHA soldiers were released at that time).

In 1929 accused by Polish press of inciting local parishioners against Polish State Police.

After the German and Russian attack on Poland in 09.1939 and the beginning of World War II, after start of Russian occupation, arrested by the Russian genocidal NKVD on 30.10.1940.

Held in the prison in Pidkamin.

Then transferred to the prison in Zolochiv.

In 05.1941 sentenced to 8 years of slave labor in the Russian concentration camps Gulag.

Before being deported, however, after the German attack on 22.06.1941 on the erstwhile ally, the Russians, and the start of a panic escape by the Russian occupier, murdered — on the orders of the highest Russian authorities, as part of the so‐called NKVD prison massacres — in the prison in Zolochiv.

A group of unsuspecting prisoners were led to the bathhouse. The doors were closed. Hot steam was let in. After everyone died, the bathhouse was aired. On 01.07.1941 Germans marched into Zolochiv.

alt. details of death

According to some sources arrested as early as 10.1939 and murdered in 10.1940.

cause of death

mass murder

perpetrators

Russians

sites and events

Prison massacres — Zolochiv 06.1941Click to display the description, 06.1941 massacres (NKVD)Click to display the description, GulagClick to display the description, Ribbentrop‐MolotovClick to display the description, Pius XI's encyclicalsClick to display the description

date and place
of birth

01.07.1890

BIRTH symbol

Ivanivkatoday: Ivanivka hrom., Ternopil rai., Ternopil obl., Ukraine
more on
uk.wikipedia.org
[access: 2023.03.02]

parents

TATARZYŃSKI Michael
🞲 ?, ? — 🕆 ?, ?

MAN and WOMAN symbol

OKARYŃSKA Anne
🞲 ?, ? — 🕆 ?, ?

presbyter (holy orders)
ordination

27.02.1927

ORDINATION symbol

Lvivtoday: Lviv urban hrom., Lviv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2022.01.16]

St George GC cathedral churchmore on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2018.09.02]

positions held

1929 – 1939

parish priest — Hai‐Ditkovetskitoday: Brody urban hrom., Zolochiv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2022.12.16]
⋄ St Demetrius the Martyr GC parish

1927 – 1929

parish priest — Razhnivtoday: Zabolottsi hrom., Zolochiv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2022.01.16]
⋄ Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary GC parish ⋄ Brodytoday: Brody urban hrom., Zolochiv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2020.11.20]
GC deanery

from 1926

married

1922 – 1926

student — Lvivtoday: Lviv urban hrom., Lviv rai., Lviv obl., Ukraine
more on
en.wikipedia.org
[access: 2022.01.16]
⋄ philosophy and theology, Greek Catholic Theological Seminary

02.1920 – 04.1920

soldier — Red Ukrainian Galician Army ChUHA

1918 – 02.1920

soldier — Ukr. Січові стрільці (Eng. Sich Riflemen), Ukrainian Galician Army UHA — in sergeant rank

1912 – 1918

soldier — Germ. Galizisches Infanterie Regiment „Freiherr von Georgi” Nr 15 (Eng. Galician Infantry Regiment „Baron von Georgi” No. 15), Austro–Hungarian Imperial Army — in non‐commissioned officer 1st class rank

others related
in death

DURDZIEŁAClick to display biography Emilian, SZEWCZYKClick to display biography John

sites and events
descriptions

Prison massacres — Zolochiv 06.1941: After the German attack on 22.06.1941 on the erstwhile ally, the Russians, the Russians murdered the prisoners held in the prison in Zolochiv in Ukraine. Up to 750 people were held there (on the day of the German attack; and earlier on 10.06.1941 — 625; later, after the German attack, many others were accepted from nearby towns and villages, who were not even registered). All were murdered. The local population heard shots and screams coming from the prison, which the Russians tried to drown out with the roar of truck and tractor engines. When the Germans entered Zolochiv on 01.07.1941, shallowly buried mass graves were discovered. The bodies had gunshot wounds, traces of bayonet blows, blows with a blunt instrument, torture. A quarter of the victims were women, including pregnant ones. In retaliation, the inhabitants of Zolochiv killed several hundred Jews who were held responsible for the murders — prob., as in many other places, they constituted a disproportionately large group of those collaborating with the Russians and of prison guards. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2025.02.11]
)

06.1941 massacres (NKVD): After German attack of Russian‐occupied Polish territory and following that of Russia itself, before a panic escape, Russians murdered — in accordance with the genocidal order issued on 24.06.1941 by the Russian interior minister Lawrence Beria to murder all prisoners (formally „sentenced” for „counter‐revolutionary activities”, „anti‐Russian acts”, sabotage and diversion, and political prisoners „in custody”), held in NKVD‐run prisons in Russian occupied Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia — c. 40,000‐50,000 prisoners. In addition Russians murdered many thousands of victims arrested after German attack regarding them as „enemies of people” — those victims were not even entered into prisons’ registers. Most of them were murdered in massacres in the prisons themselves, the others during so‐called „death marches” when the prisoners were driven out east. After Russians departure and start of German occupation a number of spontaneous pogroms of Jews took place. Many Jews collaborated with Russians and were regarded as co‐responsible for prison massacres. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2021.12.19]
)

Gulag: The acronym Gulag comes from the Rus. Главное управление исправительно‐трудовых лагерей и колоний (Eng. Main Board of Correctional Labor Camps). The network of Russian concentration camps for slave labor was formally established by the decision of the highest Russian authorities on 27.06.1929. Control was taken over by the OGPU, the predecessor of the genocidal NKVD (from 1934) and the MGB (from 1946). Individual gulags (camps) were often established in remote, sparsely populated areas, where industrial or transport facilities important for the Russian state were built. They were modeled on the first „great construction of communism”, the White Sea‐Baltic Canal (1931‐1932), and Naftali Frenkel, of Jewish origin, is considered the creator of the system of using forced slave labor within the Gulag. He went down in history as the author of the principle „We have to squeeze everything out of the prisoner in the first three months — then nothing is there for us”. He was to be the creator, according to Alexander Solzhenitsyn, of the so‐called „Boiler system”, i.e. the dependence of food rations on working out a certain percentage of the norm. The term ZEK — prisoner — i.e. Rus. заключенный‐каналоармец (Eng. canal soldier) — was coined in the ITL BelBaltLag managed by him, and was adopted to mean a prisoner in Russian slave labor camps. Up to 12 mln prisoners were held in Gulag camps at one time, i.e. c. 5% of Russia's population. In his book „The Gulag Archipelago”, Solzhenitsyn estimated that c. 60 mln people were killed in the Gulag until 1956. Formally dissolved on 20.01.1960. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2024.04.08]
)

Ribbentrop‐Molotov: Genocidal Russian‐German alliance pact between Russian leader Joseph Stalin and German leader Adolf Hitler signed on 23.08.1939 in Moscow by respective foreign ministers, Mr. Vyacheslav Molotov for Russia and Joachim von Ribbentrop for Germany. The pact sanctioned and was the direct cause of joint Russian and German invasion of Poland and the outbreak of the World War II in 09.1939. In a political sense, the pact was an attempt to restore the status quo ante before 1914, with one exception, namely the „commercial” exchange of the so‐called „Kingdom of Poland”, which in 1914 was part of the Russian Empire, fore Eastern Galicia (today's western Ukraine), in 1914 belonging to the Austro‐Hungarian Empire. Galicia, including Lviv, was to be taken over by the Russians, the „Kingdom of Poland” — under the name of the General Governorate — Germany. The resultant „war was one of the greatest calamities and dramas of humanity in history, for two atheistic and anti‐Christian ideologies — national and international socialism — rejected God and His fifth Decalogue commandment: Thou shall not kill!” (Abp Stanislav Gądecki, 01.09.2019). The decisions taken — backed up by the betrayal of the formal allies of Poland, France and Germany, which on 12.09.1939, at a joint conference in Abbeville, decided not to provide aid to attacked Poland and not to take military action against Germany (a clear breach of treaty obligations with Poland) — were on 28.09.1939 slightly altered and made more precise when a treaty on „German‐Russian boundaries and friendship” was agreed by the same murderous signatories. One of its findings was establishment of spheres of influence in Central and Eastern Europe and in consequence IV partition of Poland. In one of its secret annexes agreed, that: „the Signatories will not tolerate on its respective territories any Polish propaganda that affects the territory of the other Side. On their respective territories they will suppress all such propaganda and inform each other of the measures taken to accomplish it”. The agreements resulted in a series of meeting between two genocidal organization representing both sides — German Gestapo and Russian NKVD when coordination of efforts to exterminate Polish intelligentsia and Polish leading classes (in Germany called «Intelligenzaktion», in Russia took the form of Katyń massacres) where discussed. Resulted in deaths of hundreds of thousands of Polish intelligentsia, including thousands of priests presented here, and tens of millions of ordinary people,. The results of this Russian‐German pact lasted till 1989 and are still in evidence even today. (more on: en.wikipedia.orgClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2015.09.30]
)

Pius XI's encyclicals: Facing the creation of two totalitarian systems in Europe, which seemed to compete with each other, though there were more similarities than contradictions between them, Pope Pius XI issued in 03.1937 (within 5 days) two encyclicals. In the „Mit brennender Sorge” (Eng. „With Burning Concern”) published on 14.03.1938, condemned the national socialism prevailing in Germany. The Pope wrote: „Whoever, following the old Germanic‐pre‐Christian beliefs, puts various impersonal fate in the place of a personal God, denies the wisdom of God and Providence […], whoever exalts earthly values: race or nation, or state, or state system, representatives of state power or other fundamental values of human society, […] and makes them the highest standard of all values, including religious ones, and idolizes them, this one […] is far from true faith in God and from a worldview corresponding to such faith”. On 19.03.1937, published „Divini Redemptoris” (Eng. „Divine Redeemer”), in which criticized Russian communism, dialectical materialism and the class struggle theory. The Pope wrote: „Communism deprives man of freedom, and therefore the spiritual basis of all life norms. It deprives the human person of all his dignity and any moral support with which he could resist the onslaught of blind passions […] This is the new gospel that Bolshevik and godless communism preaches as a message of salvation and redemption of humanity”… Pius XI demanded that the established human law be subjected to the natural law of God , recommended the implementation of the ideal of a Christian state and society, and called on Catholics to resist. Two years later, National Socialist Germany and Communist Russia came together and started World War II. (more on: www.vatican.vaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.05.28]
, www.vatican.vaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2023.05.28]
)

sources

personal:
old.ugcc.org.uaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.09.21]
, missiopc.blogspot.comClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.09.21]
, www.svoboda-news.comClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2020.01.26]
, synod.ugcc.uaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2025.02.11]
, magazine.lds.lviv.uaClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.03.21]

original images:
newsaints.faithweb.comClick to attempt to display webpage
[access: 2014.03.21]

LETTER to CUSTODIAN/ADMINISTRATOR

If you have an Email client on your communicator/computer — such as Mozilla Thunderbird, Windows Mail or Microsoft Outlook, described at WikipediaPatrz:
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MARTYROLOGY: TATARZYŃSKI John

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