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Henryk Flame „Bartek”

Henryk Flame was born on 15 January 1918 in Fryštát
in Zaolzie. At the Bielsko Industrial School, he obtained
the profession of aircraft mechanic locksmith. In 1936,
he volunteered for the army and enrolled at the Aviation
NCO School for Minors in Bydgoszcz. He graduated
in 1939 with the rank of corporal pilot, and was then
assigned to the 123rd Fighter Squadron of the 2nd Air
Force Regiment.
In the defence war, as a pilot of the 123rd Fighter
Squadron assigned to the Pursuit Brigade, he defended
the skies over Warsaw. On 1 September 1939, in the first
air battle of the Second World War, in the vicinity of
Zakroczym, Cpl. Flame’s plane was shot at while trying
to shield his commanding officer. The pilot was forced
to land.
After 17 September, he was shot down by the Russians
near Stanisławów, but survived and managed to cross
the border into Hungary. There he was interned, but
again he was fortunate enough to escape from the
camp. Denounced by a Hungarian farmer, he was sent
to a German prisoner of war camp. After his release,
he returned to his family home in Czechowice, where
he founded the Scouting Home Army, which was active
in intelligence work and sabotage.
Having been called up to the German army in the autumn
of 1943, and facing the risk of his cover being exposed and
subsequent arrest, Flame escaped into the forest, together
with his subordinates, where he organised an independent
partisan unit operating in the Podbeskidzie region.
In October 1944, he was sworn in as a soldier of the National
Armed Forces (NSZ).
In February 1945, after Czechowice was seized by the Soviets,
he revealed himself at the behest of the NSZ command and
became the head of the local police station, which he staffed
with his own men. In April 1945, Flame escaped with his men
into the nearby forests and began to reconstitute partisan
units of the NSZ 7th Silesian-Cieszyn District. From then on,
he used the pseudonym “Bartek”. From May 1945 to February
1947, he headed the largest unit of anti-communist resistance
fighters in the Cieszyn Silesia region, consisting of more than
300 well-armed and uniformed soldiers. The unit carried out
about 340 armed raids against the communists. The most
famous one took place on 3 May 1946. The unit occupied
the town of Wisła, where they organised a two-hour parade
on the 155th anniversary of the adoption of the first modern
European constitution − the Constitution of 3 May 1791.
As a result of a communist provocation, most of Henryk
Flame’s soldiers were transported by secret police officers to the
Opole region and
murdered there.
Their commander, after
the communists announced an amnesty, seeing no
possibility of further resistance, revealed himself on
11 March 1947 in Cieszyn. He then tried to establish what
had happened to his subordinates, and when he learned
of their fate, he searched for the site of the communist
crime.
The act of “Bartek” revealing himself was a huge success
for the communists, overshadowed, however, by the fact
that Flame had benefited from the amnesty and was
therefore granted immunity. According to them, he
should bear the punishment, so another provocation
was prepared.
The assassination of Henryk Flame was carried out
on 1 December 1947 in Zabrzeg near Czechowice.
The assassin was a local policeman, Rudolf Dadak, who
was never tried for his crime.
Tadeusz Płużański