Background
Bierut was born Bolesław Rutkowski in Rury Jezuickie, now a part of Lublin, to Wojciech Rutkowski, a village teacher, and his wife Maria (née Biernacka).
politician president prime minister
Bierut was born Bolesław Rutkowski in Rury Jezuickie, now a part of Lublin, to Wojciech Rutkowski, a village teacher, and his wife Maria (née Biernacka).
In 1918 he took courses at the Warsaw School of Economics. From 1924-1930, he was in Moscow for training at the school of the Communist International. In 1930-1931, he was sent by the Communist International to Austria, Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria.
In 1933 he became an agent of Soviet military intelligence, the GRU, and subsequently, was sentenced in Poland to 10 years in prison for "anti-state activities" (incarcerated between 1933–1938).
The pro-Soviet Communist Party of Poland was dissolved by Joseph Stalin in 1938. Bierut avoided being caught in the Great Purge, which led to the execution of many leaders of the Communist Party of Poland in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics. After an amnesty from the Polish government in 1938 Bierut settled down in Warsaw and worked as a bookkeeper in a cooperative.
After the outbreak of World World War II, Bierut fled to Eastern Poland (soon occupied by the Red Army) in order to avoid military service. Bierut spent part of the war in the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics and was sent to head the new Polish Workers" Party in 1943.
He functioned as head of the Provisional National Council, a quasi-parliament (Krajowa Rada Narodowa), created by the pro-Soviet and Moscow-based Union of Polish Patriots, from 1944 to 1947.
Bierut played a leading role in the establishment of the Polish People"s Republic. From 1947 to 1952, he served as President and then (after the abolition of the Presidency with the creation of the People"s Republic of Poland) Prime Minister. He was also the first Secretary General of the ruling Polish United Workers Party from 1948 to 1956.
Bierut oversaw the trials of many Polish wartime military leaders, such as General Stanisław Tatar and Brigade
Bierut signed many of those death sentences. Bierut died under mysterious circumstances in Moscow on 12 March 1956 during a visit to the Soviet Union, shortly after attending the 20th Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union during which Nikita Khrushchev delivered his "Secret Speech", denouncing Stalin"s cult of personality.
His death gave rise to speculation about poisoning or suicide. Polish historian Paweł Wieczorkiewicz posited that Bierut might have had a Soviet-sent double (an People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs agent) posing as Bierut since 1943 with his full knowledge.
Wieczorkiewicz referred to an account of Piotr Jaroszewicz made soon before his death, and published by Bohdan Roliński.
The Polish President"s double was shot dead by an unidentified assassin – likely another agent wearing an People’s Commissariat of Internal Affairs uniform and killed at the scene – at the Hotel Francuski in Krakow, Poland in 1947. The real "Bierut" showed up half an hour later and calmed the security according to statement made by one of them. The assassination attempt was kept secret by the authorities.
Wieczorkiewicz himself referred to this theory as an urban legend.
Communist Party of Poland, Polish Workers" Party.
General Emil August Fieldorf, as well as 40 members of the Wolność i Niezawisłość (Freedom and Independence) organisation, various church officials, and many other opponents of the new regime including the "hero of Auschwitz", Witold Pilecki, condemned to death during secret trials.