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Henryk Glapiński alias "Klinga"
Henryk Glapiński was born on 28 December 1915 in
Częstochowa. In 1937, he graduated from the Feliks
Fabiani Gymnasium in Radomsko. He was a member
of the Gymnastic Society “Sokół”. In the years
1937–1939, he served in the military, initially at
the military academy of the 27th Infantry Regiment
in Częstochowa, and from 1938 in Komorów. Before
the outbreak of World War II, he was transferred to
the 77th Infantry Regiment in Lida.
In September 1939, he was promoted to the rank of
Second Lieutenant. From October 1939 to May 1940,
he was in Lwów and then returned to Radomsko.
At the turn of 1941 and 1942, he joined the Home Army
and became a platoon commander. In the second
half of 1942, Glapiński was appointed as the head
of the Home Army “Centre No. 1” for the town of
Radomsko, and at the end of June 1944, as the deputy
commander of the local Home Army.
He was arrested by the Gestapo in July 1944 and
was deported to the German concentration camp
Gross-Rosen. He returned to Radomsko in May
1945. He did not accept the Soviet occupation of
Poland as liberation. In February 1946, he joined
one of the largest anti-communist organizations
– the Underground Polish Army (code names
“Lasy”, “Bory”) – assuming the nom de guerre
“Klinga”. At the beginning of March 1946, he was
appointed as the head of the District Command of
the Underground Polish Army, code name “Motor”
(district of Radomsko), and in mid-March 1946 –
the chief commander of the Underground Polish
Army Stanisław Sojczyński “Warszyc” appointed
him as his adjutant. In April, Glapiński became
the commander of the partisan unit of the Society
Protection Service “Motor”, operating in the districts
of Częstochowa and Radomsko. He was responsible
for special military operations. He conducted, among
others, attacks on the outposts of the Citizens’
Militia in Silniczka and Kobiele Wielkie, capturing
dozens of weapons from the occupiers.
On the night of 19 to 20 April 1946, his unit took part
in an attack on Radomsko. While it failed to capture
the headquarters of the communist Polish Workers’ Party
and the secret police, the Polish soldiers achieved their
main objective – they seized the local prison and liberated
57 Polish patriots who were detained and tortured there.
During the retreat Glapiński’s unit stopped a vehicle of
the pro-Soviet Internal Security Corps, and confiscated
358 sets of uniforms and military equipment. On 20 April,
the soldiers of the Underground Polish Army won a battle
with the much more numerous Communist forces that
were chasing them.
In mid-May 1946, pursuant to an order of Stanisław
Sojczyński, he re-established the partisan unit of
the Society Protection Service (consisting of 30 persons),
which received a new code name – “Warszawa”. From
that point on, Glapiński was pursued by Communist
henchmen and had to escape increasingly frequent raids.
On 8 June 1946, his unit fought a battle near the village of Kamieńsk. On 16 June, “Warszyc” promoted him
to the rank of Captain.
He was arrested through the use of deception. An
agent of the Communist secret police posing as
a liaison of General Władysław Anders offered
to help Glapiński in the evacuation to the West.
On 31 August 1946, he was arrested in Warsaw by
the communist military counter-intelligence and was
handed over to the Provincial Public Security Office
in Łódź. He was sentenced to death on 17 December
1946 by the District Military Court in Łódź, an illegal
tribunal established by the occupiers. According to
official data, he was murdered on 19 February 1947,
together with Stanisław Sojczyński. The sentence was
annulled in October 1992. The remains of Henryk
Glapiński “Klinga” have not been found to this day.
Tadeusz Płużański