Zofia Poznańska

Zofia Poznańska, also known as Zosia, Zosha, or Sophia (8 June 1906  29 September 1942) was a Polish antifascist and resistance fighter of the Soviet-affiliated espionage group that the German Abwehr intelligence service later called the "Red Orchestra".[1][2][3]

Zofia Poznańska
Zofia Poznańska taken in Brussels in 1933
Born(1906-02-23)23 February 1906
Died29 September 1942(1942-09-29) (aged 36)
Saint-Gilles Prison
NationalityPolish, Israeli
OccupationCipher clerk, agent of GRU
Years active1933-1942

Life

Zofia Poznańska was born in Łódź, Congress Poland, Russian Empire, into the prosperous Jewish family of Mosze Poznański and Hana Poznańska, née Basz.[4] She later grew up in Kalisz, after Poland regained its independence in 1918.[2] As a youth she was a member of the left-wing Hashomer Hatzair Socialist-Zionist secular Jewish youth movement.[2] In 1925, when she was 19, Poznańska emigrated to Palestine to live and work at the Mishmar HaEmek kibbutz,[2] laying gravel to create roads.[3] After becoming disillusioned with the kibbutz and struggling to reconcile her Socialist-Zionist politics with the displacement of Arab farmers, whose land was being purchased, Poznańska moved to Tel Aviv.[2] There she met Leopold Trepper and joined his Communist cell, the Ihud movement.[2] In 1927 Poznańska joined the Palestine Communist Party.[2]

She returned to Poland on learning that her sister had fallen seriously ill. When she returned to Israel, she found that the Ihud had been suppressed by the British authorities, and she eventually moved to Paris, where she was also active in the communist movement. After French police began to put pressure on communists, she moved to Brussels.[5]

She was the cipher expert in a spy cell run by Trepper[6] under a false Belgian identity as "Anna Verlinden".[5] In October 1941 Poznańska was sent to Brussels to be a cipher clerk to Soviet GRU intelligence agent and radio operator Mikhail Makarov.[7] Poznańska lived with housewife and courier Rita Arnould at 101 Rue des Atrébates, in Etterbeek, Brussels.[7]

She was arrested by Abwehr officer Harry Piepe[8][lower-alpha 1] on the night of 12-13 December 1941.[9] Poznańska was one of the first to be arrested by the Abwehr.[10] Poznańska committed suicide by hanging on 29 September 1942 in Saint-Gilles Prison, Brussels, so that the cipher she was entrusted with would not fall into German hands.[11][12]

Legacy

In 2003, Israeli writer Yehudit Kafri published a biographical novel about Poznańska, Zosha: From the Jezreel Valley to the Red Orchestra (Jerusalem, Keter, 2003, ISBN 9789650711795),[2][13] later published in Poland in English translation by Anne Hartstein Pace (Toruń, Wydawnictwo Adam Marszałek, 2009, ISBN 9788376113388),[14] which was republished as Codename: Zosha (CreateSpace, 2014, ISBN 978-1503162365). Kafri writes in the opening: "The characters in this story are not fictitious. As for their actions, thoughts and feelings - some occurred and some could have occurred." She dedicates the English translation to Anna Orgal, who died in the 2003 Davidka Square bus bombing.[15]

Poznańska is buried in a mass grave at Saint-Gilles, Belgium, where a tombstone bearing the inscription Resistante, with her name, was erected in 1985. In Israel, a grove was dedicated to her in 1983 in Eshtaol Forest, and she was posthumously awarded a Fighters against Nazis Medal.[2]

Notes

  1. Harry Piepe uses the alias Franz Fortner in Gilles Perrault's The Red Orchestra.

References

  1. Brysac, Shareen Blair (12 October 2000). Resisting Hitler: Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra. ISBN 9780195351026.; Tyas, Stephen (25 June 2017). "SS-Major Horst Kopkow: From the Gestapo to British Intelligence".
  2. Raizen, Esther (2018). "Cementing Strategies in Yehudit Kafri's "Zosha: From the Jezreel Valley to the Red Orchestra"". Hebrew Studies. University of Texas, Austin: National Association of Professors of Hebrew (NAPH). 59: 335–358. doi:10.1353/hbr.2018.0017. JSTOR 26557801. S2CID 172041220.
  3. Livneh, Neri (23 April 2003). "A Woman Called Zosha". Amos Schocken, M. DuMont Schauberg. Haaretz. Retrieved 31 August 2020.
  4. Poznańska Zofia, Virtual Sztetl
  5. Yehudit Kafri, Zosha: From the Jezreel Valley to the Red Orchestra
  6. Ginsberg, Benjamin (4 April 2013). How the Jews Defeated Hitler: Exploding the Myth of Jewish Passivity in the Face of Nazism. ISBN 9781442222397.
  7. Kesaris, Paul. L, ed. (1979). The Rote Kapelle: the CIA's history of Soviet intelligence and espionage networks in Western Europe, 1936-1945 (pdf). Washington DC: University Publications of America. pp. 330–331. ISBN 978-0-89093-203-2.
  8. Perrault, Gilles (1969). The Red Orchestra. New York: Schocken Books. pp. 86–90. ISBN 0805209522.
  9. Brysac, Shareen Blair (12 October 2000). Resisting Hitler: Mildred Harnack and the Red Orchestra. ISBN 9780195351026.
  10. Diner, Dan (12 January 2017). Enzyklopädie jüdischer Geschichte und Kultur: Band 5: Pr-Sy (in German). Springer-Verlag. p. 265. ISBN 978-3-476-01220-3. Retrieved 15 January 2021.
  11. Tyas, Stephen (25 June 2017). "SS-Major Horst Kopkow: From the Gestapo to British Intelligence".
  12. Dallin, David J. (1955). Soviet Espionage. Yale University Press. p. 171.
  13. "Catalogue record for "Zosha ... (2003)"". Worldcat. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  14. "Catalogue record for "Zosha ... (2009)"". Worldcat. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  15. Kafri, Yehudit (2014). Codename: Zosha : from the Jezreel Valley to the Red Orchestra. CreateSpace. p. iii. ISBN 9781503162365. Text seen online via Amazon.co.uk's "Look inside"
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