Polish National Department

Polish National Department (PND, Polish: Wydział Narodowy Polski, WNP) was a major organization of Polish-American Polish diaspora in United States around and after World War I.[1] Originally the Polish Central Relief Committee and based in Chicago, it organized relief for war-torn and newly independent Second Polish Republic. Prominent activists included world-famous pianist and future prime minister of Poland, Ignacy Jan Paderewski and former Illinois Treasurer John F. Smulski.[2]

PND was aligned to Polish endecja faction of Roman Dmowski, and opposed to Committee of National Defense (CND, Komitet Obrony Narodowej, KON), aligned to Józef Piłsudski's faction.

Notes

  1. Adam Walaszek, POLISH IMMIGRANTS IN THE USA AND THEIR HOMELAND 1914-1923
  2. Maciej Sierkierski, Helena Paderewska: Memoirs, 1910-1920 (Hoover Institution Press 2015) pp. 54, 115 ISBN 978-0-8179-1864-4

Further reading

  • M. B. B. Biskupski, "The Polish National Department, 1916-1925: A Review Essay," Polish American Studies 47, no. 2 (1991): 81-86.
gollark: Obviously "allergies" are just another form of their mind control.
gollark: The tractors are, similar to the bees, microscopic.
gollark: The government just doesn't tractor-beam the sun.
gollark: That's a ridiculous conspiracy theory, it's tractor beams, not magnets.
gollark: They can tractor-beam it from above, obviously. You probably have exposed non-metal parts.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.