Wacław Gluth-Nowowiejski


Wacław Gluth-Nowowiejski is a former soldier of the Polish Home Army, a participant in the Warsaw Uprising, and after the war, a publicist and author.

Family

Wacław's father was Alojzy Gluth, who later added the name "Nowowiejski" after one of the characters from Henryk Sienkiewicz's novel Fire in the Steppe. Alojzy had been a member of the paramilitary organization Strzelec in the Austrian partition part of Poland and later, during World War I, served in Józef Piłsudski's Polish Legions. Wacław had three older brothers.

World War II

At the outbreak of World War II and the German invasion of Poland, in 1939, Wacław was thirteen years old. In 1944 he became a member of the Polish anti-Nazi resistance group, the Armia Krajowa. He took part in the Warsaw Uprising as a commander of the Żmija Group, fighting in the Żoliborz district. He was wounded on 14 September in Marymont. Subsequently, he hid in the ruins of the destroyed city as one of the Robinson Crusoes of Warsaw, until November 1944. He survived the war, although all three of his brothers were killed during the German occupation of Poland.

After the war

After the war, in 1948, Waclaw was arrested by the Communist authorities of the People's Republic of Poland for keeping in contact with former Home Army soldiers who had gone into anti-communist resistance and for belonging to a student group named "Keep Smiling". The secret police believed "Keep Smiling" to be an American/British spy network because of its foreign name. He was beaten and tortured during interrogation. After a show trial, he was imprisoned until 1953.
After being released, he wrote several books about his wartime experiences including Śmierć poczeka, Nie umieraj do jutra, Stolica jaskiń: z pamięci warszawskiego Robinsona and Rzeczpospolita gruzów, which was adopted into a short comic by Polish artist Jerzy Wróblewski in 1979. In the same year Gluth-Nowowiejski also wrote the story for another of Wróblewski's war related comics, Czterej na drodze śmierci.
In the 1980s he took part as a consultant in the making of several documentary films about the Warsaw Uprising.