Polish flag over the Berlin Victory Column on May 2, 1945 - Instytut Pileckiego
02.05.2025 (Fri)
Polish flag over the Berlin Victory Column on May 2, 1945
The 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division was part of General Zygmunt Berling’s army created in the Soviet Union in 1943 by a decision of Joseph Stalin. Its command, political and educational corps were dominated by Soviet officers, Polish communists and their collaborators, who were preparing to take over Poland. Private soldiers were initially recruited mainly from among Poles deported deep into the Soviet Union from the occupied Polish eastern territories. These were people for whom fighting in the ranks of Berling’s army was a chance to escape the USSR and undertake armed resistance to the Third Reich. They often paid the highest price for this opportunity, dying by the thousands on the hellish Eastern Front.
The Red Army command greatly desired the participation of Poles in the capture of Berlin; they wanted in this way to demonstrate the Polish-Soviet brotherhood of arms and strengthen the legitimacy of the emerging communist Poland based on a joint struggle against Nazism at the side of the USSR. At the same time, in the eyes of rank-and-file soldiers, the battle for Berlin marked the symbolic end of hostilities in the capital of a regime that had been responsible for aggression against their homeland six years earlier.
On the morning of 2 May 1945, a group of Polish soldiers from the 1st Tadeusz Kościuszko Infantry Division hung the red-and-white flag atop the Victory Column, a symbolic act that highlighted Poland’s contribution in the defeat of Nazi Germany. By hanging the Polish flag in conquered Berlin, rank-and-file Polish soldiers fulfilled the dreams of many compatriots who had been fighting on all fronts of the Second World War since 1939. Determining who exactly was responsible for hanging the flag has been a matter of debate over the years, however, it was most likely Lt. Mikołaj Troicki, Platoon Sergeant Kazimierz Otap, Cpl. Antoni Jabłoński, and Gunners Eugeniusz Mierzejewski and Aleksander Karpowicz. Their experiences, including deportation to the USSR and participation in defensive battles in September 1939, epitomized the fate of a section of Polish society during the war.
In 1945, Polish soldiers fought to the west and northwest of the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin. The combat unfolded in the districts of Charlottenburg and Tiergarten, near the Technical University, the Tiergarten S-Bahn station, the Charlottenburg Gate, the German Opera, and Karl-August-Platz.
For many years after the war, their role in the battle for the German capital went unrecognized. It was not until 1 September 2021 that a Monument to Polish Liberators was unveiled at Ernst-Reuter-Platz, beside the Technical University campus. The monument honors the male and female soldiers of the First Polish Army who took part in the battle for Berlin.
Earlier, during the Cold War, the Memorial to Polish Soldiers and German Anti-Fascists was inaugurated in 1972 in Friedrichshain Park, located in East Berlin – the capital of the former German Democratic Republic. This memorial reflected the East German and Polish communist governments’ desire to commemorate communist fighters who resisted the Third Reich. In 1995, a plaque was added to the site to dedicate it to all Polish soldiers who fought on various fronts during the Second World War, as well as all members of the German resistance.
Photo: Polish flag in Berlin 02.05.1945 over the Berlin Victory Column (Siegessäule) when Red Army and Polish Army after fierce fights against Nazis together conquered Berlin that was the seat of criminal Nazi regime in Germany. Visible building of Schloss Bellevue https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Polish_flag_1945_Berlin.jpg (Polish Army, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons).
See also
- On better protection against crimes against humanity: Summary of the international conference “The Roots of Crimes Against Humanity”
News
On better protection against crimes against humanity: Summary of the international conference “The Roots of Crimes Against Humanity”
The international conference “The Roots of Crimes Against Humanity: Bridging the Normative Gap” successfully concluded at the Pilecki Institute in Warsaw. Organized on the 20th and 21st of April 2026, in cooperation with the Polish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the event aimed to provide historical and academic foundations for the first-ever United Nations Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of Crimes Against Humanity.
- Recap of the 5th edition of the Pilecki Institute International Teachers and Educators Program (ITEP)
News
Recap of the 5th edition of the Pilecki Institute International Teachers and Educators Program (ITEP)
This year's online conference focused on the post-war decade of 1945–1955 – a time of rebuilding devastated countries, the beginning of the Cold War, and the birth of a new international order.
- Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya visits the Augustów Roundup Memorial House
News
Belarusian opposition leader Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya visits the Augustów Roundup Memorial House
On 22 April 2026, Sviatlana Tsikhanouskaya, leader of the Belarusian democratic opposition, visited the Augustów Roundup Memorial House.
- Research cooperation between the International Centre for War Crimes Trials (ICWC) and the Pilecki Institute
News
Research cooperation between the International Centre for War Crimes Trials (ICWC) and the Pilecki Institute
The Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor has entered into official cooperation with the International Centre for War Crimes Trials (ICWC) at Philipps University in Marburg.
- Researchers from the Pilecki Institute at BASEES 2026 in Birmingham
News
Researchers from the Pilecki Institute at BASEES 2026 in Birmingham
On 10–12 April, the BASEES 2026 Annual Conference was held in Birmingham; the international academic meeting was organized by the British Association for Slavonic and East European Studies.
- Research Visit of Luke Marlow from Aston University at the Pilecki Institute
News
Research Visit of Luke Marlow from Aston University at the Pilecki Institute
From 13 April to 8 May 2026, Luke Marlow, a doctoral researcher at Aston University, will be undertaking a research visit at the Pilecki Institute. The visit is carried out as a part of the Midlands Graduate School Doctoral Training Partnership and is funded by the Economic and Social Research Council.
- New Pilecki Awards Committee Appointed
News
New Pilecki Awards Committee Appointed
Pursuant to the Regulations of the Competition and the Operating Regulations of the Awards Committee, on 1 April 2026, the Acting Director of the Pilecki Institute, Karol Madaj, appointed the Awards Committee for the 6th edition of the Witold Pilecki International Book Award. The eight-member Awards Committee includes three permanent members representing the Pilecki family, the Pilecki Institute, and the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, as well as members appointed each time by written decision of the Director of the Institute.
- Announcement | Competition for a research scholarship titled “The Provenance of Cultural Property Lost During the Nazi Occupation of Poland”
News
Announcement | Competition for a research scholarship titled “The Provenance of Cultural Property Lost During the Nazi Occupation of Poland”
Announcement of a competition for scholarships at the Witold Pilecki Institute of Solidarity and Valor, branch office in Berlin.
- Second debate in the “Berlin in Warsaw” series. Discussion on reparations and compensation [video]
News
Second debate in the “Berlin in Warsaw” series. Discussion on reparations and compensation [video]
“Compensation, damages, reparations: what is realistic, what is symbolic?” This was the title of the second debate in the “Berlin in Warsaw” series. Experts on Polish-German relations presented different perspectives on the difficult relationship between the two nations.
- 24 March | National Day of Remembrance of Poles Who Saved Jews Under German Occupation
News
24 March | National Day of Remembrance of Poles Who Saved Jews Under German Occupation
In 2018, the President of the Republic of Poland established 24 March as the National Day of Remembrance of Poles Who Saved Jews Under German Occupation. It serves as a commemoration of all Polish citizens who risked their lives to help Jews during the German occupation.
- Pilecki in NYC. The debate “Lessons from Nuremberg for the 21st Century”
News
Pilecki in NYC. The debate “Lessons from Nuremberg for the 21st Century”
The debate “Lessons from Nuremberg for the 21st Century” focused on the legacy of the Nuremberg Trials and their real impact on the development of contemporary international law and the methods of prosecuting war criminals.
- The Pilecki Institute has inaugurated its activities in New York
News
The Pilecki Institute has inaugurated its activities in New York
As an institution dedicated to researching the two totalitarian systems of the 20th century, the Pilecki Institute has the privilege of representing a historical experience that American society has never directly undergone.