Nazism
NKVD (Soviet secret police, later KGB),
9.1
,
18.1
NSZ. s
ee
Polish National Armed Forces
Oktogon murders (Budapest, June 1946),
7.1
,
7.2
Osóbka-Morawski, Edward,
4.1
,
6.1
Pieck, Wilhelm,
3.1
,
3.2
,
3.3
,
4.1
,
7.1
,
9.1
,
10.1
,
14.1
,
14.2
,
16.1
pogroms (anti-Semitic riots in Eastern Europe),
6.1
,
9.1
Poland
and civil society organizations,
7.1
,
7.2
creation of communist regime in,
4.1
,
4.2
Polish Bureau for the Reconstruction of the Capital (BOS),
14.1
,
14.2
Polish Bureau for Supervision of Production Aesthetics (BNEP),
14.1
,
14.2
,
14.3
Polish communist party (
also
PPR and PZPR),
3.1
,
3.2
,
3.3
,
3.4
,
4.1
,
5.1
,
5.2
,
6.1
,
6.2
,
9.1
,
9.2
,
10.1
,
12.1
,
18.1
Polish Institute of National Memory,
1.1
,
6.1
Polish “Peasants’ Party” (phony party, replacing PSL),
9.1
,
9.2
“Radio Honeybee” (Radio Pszczółka),
8.1
,
8.2
Raszyn transmitters (Warsaw suburb),
8.1
,
8.2
Polish scouting movement (
also
Szare Szeregi, Grey Ranks),
7.1
,
17.1
Polish Union of Fighting Youth (ZWM),
7.1
,
9.1
Polska Niezawisła
(
Independent Poland
, newspaper),
5.1
Polska YMCA (Polish section of Young Men’s Christian Association),
7.1
,
7.2
,
7.3
“popular fronts” (1930s, also “national fronts”),
3.1
,
3.2