Marian Brandys
- Birth Date:
- 25.01.1912
- Death date:
- 20.11.1998
- Length of life:
- 86
- Days since birth:
- 41232
- Years since birth:
- 112
- Days since death:
- 9522
- Years since death:
- 26
- Extra names:
- Marian Brandys
- Categories:
- WWII participant , Writer
- Nationality:
- pole, jew
- Cemetery:
- Laski - Cmentarz leśny (zakładowy)
Marian Brandys (25 January 1912 – 20 November 1998) was a Polish writer and screenwriter born in Wiesbaden into an assimilated Jewish family of Polish intelligencia. Brandys grew up in Łódź. His father owned a banking establishment. The prosperity allowed Marian, and his younger brother Kazimierz, to attend the best private school for boys anywhere around, sponsored by the merchants' club Zgromadzenie Kupców Miasta Łodzi.
In the Second Polish Republic Brandys graduated from the Law Faculty of Warsaw University and worked in the courts before the invasion of Poland of 1939. He took part in the September Campaign as the commander of a mounted platoon of machine guns for the Independent Operational Group Polesie led by General Franciszek Kleeberg. Brandys spent the war years at the II-C Woldenberg prisoner of war camp for Polish officers near Zielona Góra. He joined the communist party upon the Soviet takeover of Poland and worked as reporter in Warsaw since 1949. Brandys debuted as a book-writer during the Stalinism in Poland with his propagandist Początek opowieści (Beginning of a Story) about the factory workers of Nowa Huta. After Stalinism, he focused on writing historical and children's novels. He quit the communist party in 1966. He was an older brother of the much more popular Polish writer Kazimierz Brandys, author of heart-wrenching Miasto niepokonane about the two Warsaw Uprisings.
Source: wikipedia.org
No places
Relations
Relation name | Relation type | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Kazimierz Brandys | Brother | ||
2 | Maria Zenowicz | Sister in-law | ||
3 | Franciszek Walicki | Familiar | ||
4 | Franciszek Kleeberg | Commander |
01.09.1939 | Invasion of Poland
The Invasion of Poland, also known as the September Campaign or 1939 Defensive War (Polish: Kampania wrześniowa or Wojna obronna 1939 roku) in Poland and the Poland Campaign (German: Polenfeldzug) or Fall Weiß (Case White) in Germany, was an invasion of Poland by Germany, the Soviet Union, and a small Slovak contingent that marked the beginning of World War II in Europe. The German invasion began on 1 September 1939, one week after the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, while the Soviet invasion commenced on 17 September following the Molotov-Tōgō agreement which terminated the Russian and Japanese hostilities (Nomonhan incident) in the east on 16 September. The campaign ended on 6 October with Germany and the Soviet Union dividing and annexing the whole of Poland.