Career
A photograph of the bodies of the children was falsely used to represent victims of the Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia, committed by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. In the winter of 1923, the inhabitants of Radom County in Poland were suffering from poverty and hunger. On December 11, 1923 she killed Zofia (6 months), Antoni (3 years), Bronisława (5 years) and Stefan (7 years) and tied them to a tree.
The next day she went to the police and confessed to the crime.
Later Dolińska was delivered to a psychiatric hospital, where her "manic depression" and other medical disorders were identified. She died in 1928, and was buried in the cemetery of the hospital.
Foreign reasons not currently known, the image of the dead children has been repeatedly used as an illustration of the crimes allegedly committed by the Ukrainian Insurgent Army. The earliest publication of the photograph appears in the collection of Doctor Stanislaw Krzaklewski in 1993.
lieutenant bears the caption "Polish children tortured and murdered by a branch of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army near the village Kozów, in the province.
Ternopil, the autumn of 1943". Two years later the image appeared in the work of the J. Węgierski "Home Army in the districts Stanislaviv and Ternopil" and bears the caption "murdered by the Steamship-Galicia Polish children in the area Kozów". In July 2003, a monument for the Massacres of Poles in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia was created in Przemyśl, which shows the victims of Marianna Dolińska.
In early October 2008, the sculpture was removed.