Edward Osóbka-Morawski

Edward Osóbka - Morawski ( born October 5, 1909 in Bliżyn at Skarżysko -Kamienna, then Russian Empire, † January 9, 1997 in Warsaw) was a Polish politician and the first Prime Minister of post-war Poland.

He was since 1928 a member of the Polish Socialist Party (PPS) and began studying law at the University of Warsaw, which, however, he did not graduate. In 1944 he was appointed Chairman of the Moscow launched communist Polish Committee of National Liberation ( Lublin Committee, PKWN ) and was also in charge of foreign policy and agriculture. In the subsequent Provisional Government, he served as Prime Minister ( 1944-1947 ). Osóbka - Morawski was opponents of a forced merger with the Polish Workers Party ( PPR) and lost because of his offices. Between 1947 and 1952 he was a deputy in the Sejm. After the arrival in power Władysław Gomulka and soon he was at the PZPR. From 1949 to 1968 he worked as director of the Center for the management of health resorts in Poland. After the end of communist rule in 1990, he served again briefly as Chairman of the Central Executive Committee of the revived PPS. 1992 published his memoirs Trudna droga. Fragmenty wspomnień ( A difficult road ahead. Fragments of memory ).

Edward Osóbka - Morawski | Józef Cyrankiewicz | Franciszek Trabalski

Władysław Sikorski | Stanisław Mikołajczyk | Tomasz Arciszewski | Tadeusz Komorowski | Tadeusz Tomaszewski | Roman Odzierzyński | Jerzy Hryniewski | Stanisław Mackiewicz | Hugon Hanke | Antoni Pająk | Aleksander Zawisza | Zygmunt Muchniewski | Alfred Urbanski | Kazimierz Sabbat | Edward Szczepanik

  • Prime Minister (Poland )
  • PZPR member
  • Pole
  • Born in 1909
  • Died in 1997
  • Man
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