Book cover of Gunnar Almstedt’s and Eyvind Johnson’s Warszawa! and photo of the main square of Warsaw’s Old Town, Rynek Starego Miasta, Strona Zakrzewskiego, end of August 1944. Photo: Ewa Faryaszewska. Collage by Hanna Aspegren.

Book cover of Gunnar Almstedt’s and Eyvind Johnson’s Warszawa! and photo of the main square of Warsaw’s Old Town, Rynek Starego Miasta, Strona Zakrzewskiego, end of August 1944. Photo: Ewa Faryaszewska. Collage by Hanna Aspegren.

Features THE WARSAW UPRISING OF 1944 IN THE EYES OF CONTEMPORARY SWEDISH INTELLECTUALS

The revolt that lasted 63 days was a desperate attempt to push back the German enemy before the Red Army crossed the Vistula River. Once it was quashed, the Poles counted their losses in hundreds of thousands: It is estimated that roughly 15 000 Polish soldiers who followed orders from the government-in-exile in London perished, hundreds of whom had already fought during the April 1943 uprising of the Warsaw ghetto. 150 000—170 000 civilians lost their lives, 65 000 of them in organized massacres. A contemporary Swedish reaction to the Warsaw uprising was published in September 1944 in Warszawa! [Warsaw!]. The editor of the anti-Nazi newspaper Trots allt! [In spite of everything!] and left-wing politician Ture Nerman wrote: "In the history of this time and age, Warsaw stands as one of the most heroic in humanity’s struggle for freedom."

Published in the printed edition of Baltic Worlds BW 2025:1 pages 21-24
Published on balticworlds.com on April 16, 2025

article as pdf No Comments on THE WARSAW UPRISING OF 1944 IN THE EYES OF CONTEMPORARY SWEDISH INTELLECTUALS Share
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Pusha
  • TwitThis
  • Google
  • LinkedIn
  • Digg
  • Maila artikeln!
  • Skriv ut artikeln!

[…]The revolt that lasted 63 days was a desperate attempt to push back the German enemy before the Red Army crossed the Vistula River. Once it was quashed, the Poles counted their losses in hundreds of thousands: It is estimated that roughly 15 000 Polish soldiers who followed orders from the government-in-exile in London perished, hundreds of whom had already fought during the April 1943 uprising of the Warsaw ghetto. 150 000—170 000 civilians lost their lives, 65 000 of them in organized massacres.
A contemporary Swedish reaction to the Warsaw uprising was published in September 1944 in Warszawa! [Warsaw!]. The editor of the anti-Nazi newspaper Trots allt! [In spite of everything!] and left-wing politician Ture Nerman wrote: “In the history of this time and age, Warsaw stands as one of the most heroic in humanity’s struggle for freedom.[…]”

Download the full text as a pdf in the upper right corner.

 

  • Features

    Features offer in-depth accounts of issues related to the region without prior peer-review process.

    Would you like to contribute to Baltic Worlds? Click here!