Summaries

What was really happening between Poland and Ukraine during the WWII and after that? The unique guerrilla operation in Hrubieszów highlights a climax of one of the hardest paths the nations had to take during the WWII.

Two warriors of the guerrilla movements, the one from the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) and the other from the Polish Home Army (AK), narrate on the atrocities of German and Soviet occupation in 1939-1946, argue about the mutual harms of the past, and reveal what made them unite after all they've been through.

Details

Keywords
  • world war two
  • brutality
  • massacre
  • cruelty
  • ethnic hatred
Genres
  • Drama
  • History
  • War
  • Documentary
Release date Mar 13, 2020
Countries of origin Ukraine Poland
Official sites Official Facebook
Language German Russian Ukrainian Polish
Production companies Ukrainian State Film Agency UM Group

Box office

Tech specs

Runtime 52m
Color Color Black and White
Aspect ratio

Synopsis

Two warriors of the guerrilla movements, the one from the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) and the other from the Polish Home Army (AK), narrate on the atrocities of German and Soviet occupation in 1939-1946 and argue about the mutual harms of the past.They both stood up against the Nazis, they both confronted the communists, and they both fought against each other, especially in Volyn and Helm lands. It was at the end of World War II that they did realize the Polish-Ukrainian feud was only to the advantage of the powerful leaders of the world, first Hitler, and then Stalin.The story of two partisans embodies two nations relations that evolved from hatred into mutual understanding and unity in the fight against the common enemy, the ruthless communist empire.The collaboration between the UPA and the AK is unique, profound, and symbolic; it emerged literally on the ashes that covered the Ukrainian-Polish border, the land where the WWII marched back and forth, the land where German and Soviet secret services exterminated thousands of innocent people, the land where the advancing Soviets instituted and legalized their own puppet Polish government in 1944 as an alternative to the official one based in London, the land where communists organized a horrible deportation in 1944-1946 and called it "a population exchange between Poland and Ukraine", and the land where, after all, the line between the Ukrainian and the Polish nations was virtually blurred.Under the command of UPA commander Yevhen Shtendera the UPA - WiN (former AK) joint forces undertook their most significant operation attacking the communist-controlled Polish city of Hrubieszów on the night of 27th of May, 1946.

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