Gabriel Narutowicz, first President of Poland, was assassinated exactly 100 years ago, five days after inauguration.

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  1. Gabriel Narutowicz, the first president of Poland after regaining independence, was assassinated on 16 December 1922, five days after taking office, aged 57.[1] He was fatally shot by Eligiusz Niewiadomski, an artist and art critic, while visiting an exhibition at Warsaw’s Zachęta gallery.

    Poland regained independence in 1918 in the aftermath of World War I. Soon afterwards, Gabriel Narutowicz, professor of engineering, became one of the left-wing leaders in the Sejm (Polish parliament).[2] Following the 1921 March Constitution of Poland and the November 1922 Polish legislative election, Narutowicz was elected the first president of Poland in the Polish presidential election, 9 December 1922.[3] His election was not accepted by the right-wing nationalist endecja faction, which staged a number of protests.[3] Narutowicz’s forthcoming murder would be the culmination of an aggressive, right wing and anti-semitic propaganda campaign vilifying him; in the background of street protests he was described, by a hostile press, an atheist, a Freemason and a Jew.[4][3][5]

    Five days after taking office, while attending an art exhibition in the Warsaw’s National Gallery of Art “Zachęta”, Narutowicz was assassinated during a conversation with a British envoy.[6][2] The assassin was a painter, Eligiusz Niewiadomski, who fired three shots at the president.[7]

    Niewiadomski had connections with the right wing National Democratic Party.[6] During his trial, Niewiadomski stated that he wanted to kill Józef Piłsudski originally, but assassinating his ally, Narutowicz, was “a step in the fight for Polishness and for the nation.”[6] Niewiadomski was sentenced to death. His state execution took place outside the Warsaw Citadel on 31 January.[8] Part of the right-wing camp perceived Niewiadomski as a hero. Nationalistic press and some historians kept portraying Niewiadomski in positive light, writing about his “heroic stand”, “sacred convictions, “patriotic duty” and such.[6][9] Within months, his grave became a right-wing shrine, and “more than three hundred babies baptized in Warsaw were given the uncommon name Eligiusz”.[8]

    The murder of the first president of the Second Polish Republic and the angry canvassing against him revealed the fragility of democratic mechanisms in Poland at that time.[3][7]

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assassination_of_Gabriel_Narutowicz

  2. Question to me countrymen, is it just me but was there a noticeable effort this past few months to try to downplay Endecja connections to the entire affair and play off Niewiadomski as just a madman with a gun.

    I don’t know if maybe I just haven’t notice it before but I swear in the last few weeks I have seen several articles about how innocent National democrats were.

  3. Considering that his brother Stanislovas Narutavičius was a signatory of Lithuanian independence there is a universe where interwar period relations between Poland and Lithuania goes completely different. Alas, we do not live in that universe.

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