PAPERS OF LATE U.S. CHIEF JUSTICE WILLIAM REHNQUIST DONATED TO HOOVER INSTITUTION STANFORD – The papers of Supreme Court justice William H. Rehnquist for the 1972 and 1973 Supreme Court terms will be opened to researchers at the Hoover Institution Archives on Monday, November 17, 2008. Rehnquist's papers from the 1974 term and his correspondence files from 1972 through 2005 will be opened by January 5, 2009.
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Jakub Berman’s Papers Received at the Hoover Institution Archives
August 11, 2008
Images from the private papers of Jakub Berman Click on the image to start the slideshow. Once the slideshow has begun, mouse over the right/left side of image to see the next/previous buttons |
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Jakub Berman (left) with Boleslaw Bierut, the first secretary of the Polish United Workers’ Party, during a holiday in the Tatra Mountains of Poland, circa 1950.
Jakub Berman papers, box 2, folder 17, Hoover Institution Archives
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Jakub Berman (fifth from left), Boleslaw Bierut (sixth from left), and Mao Zedong (seventh from left) on the official Polish Politburo visit to Beijing, 1954.
Jakub Berman papers, box 2, folder 18, Hoover Institution Archives
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The identification card issued to Jakub Berman by the Politburo of the Polish United Workers’ Party, which lists him as number 2, is signed by the first secretary and number 1, Boleslaw Bierut.
Jakub Berman papers, box 1, folder 1, Hoover Institution Archives
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The private papers of Jakub Berman, one of the most powerful Polish communist politicians of the 1944–56 period, are now available in the Hoover Institution Archives. Berman’s name is associated with the Sovietization of Poland following World War II and repressions against the opponents of the communist regime.
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Jakub Berman, one of the most powerful Polish communist politicians of the 1944–56 period.
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Berman was born in 1901 in Warsaw into a Jewish middle-class family. He completed a degree in law at Warsaw University in 1925. Three years later he joined the Polish Communist Party (KPP). After the Nazi-Soviet attack and partition of Poland in September 1939, Berman moved to the Soviet side of Poland. Initially, he worked as a newspaper editor and later became an instructor in the Comintern school, which trained activists for Josef Stalin’s new party for Polish communists, the Polish Workers’ Party. Stalin was favorably impressed with Berman’s intellectual abilities and political commitment during meetings in the Kremlin in 1943. In the summer of 1944, as the Soviet armies were driving the Germans out of occupied Poland, Berman became a Politburo member, second only to Boleslaw Bierut, an ethnic Pole of peasant origin, chosen by Stalin to lead the new Polish state. Between 1944 and 1956, Berman’s responsibilities in the Politburo included oversight of the Security Office (UB), ideology, and propaganda. During his tenure at least 200,000 people were imprisoned for real or imagined political offenses, of whom some 6,000 were executed. During the relative political “thaw” following the deaths of Stalin in 1953 and Bierut in 1956, Berman was forced to resign from the Politburo and the Central Committee. He was officially blamed for “Stalinist errors and deviations” but never prosecuted. He died in retirement in Warsaw in 1984.
The papers acquired by the Hoover Archives include selected correspondence, reminiscences, speeches, notes, and photographs. The collection is modest in size, but, along with several similar private collections of key Polish Communists and “fellow travelers” acquired during the past decade—such as Stefan Jedrychowski’s, Roman Zambrowski’s, Henryk Jablonski’s, and Edward Osobka-Morawski’s—it significantly broadens Hoover’s holdings on the origins and the early years of the Polish People’s Republic and the Sovietization of Eastern Europe.
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