A desperace struggle for peace

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The Polish state has great prospects for development but it is necessary for people in politics to learn as quickly as they demoralize themselves.- Roman Dmowski

March 25, 1975 P.C/1640 C.C.Y.

Empire of Parpaldia

Polish Occupied Zone

City of Almater about 100 km north-west of Ravenna and about 180 km in a straight line east of the capital Parpaldia

Over the city of Almater a new dawn was slowly approaching which looked promising and was even worth capturing in a photo, which of course many soldiers from the garrison forces and engineering troops did if they had a camera with the simple name Ami. For the rest it meant that the sun would start to shine more, heralding a full spring.

The Almater was getting ready for another gloomy day under the Polish boot. There was a good reason for this, namely the universities, of which there was a large number in the city, which surprised the Poles when they entered the city and some of the students were very hostile to the conquerors, which attracted the attention of the Polish secret police. The city itself surrendered without a fight due to the fact that the units that were to defend the city were defeated well before it.

Of course there were attempts of resistance organized by students of universities, but all will to fight evaporated when Polish vehicles entered the city, mainly because of T-55 tanks that easily rammed the barricades. Due to youthful bravado, 10 people were killed, including the son of a well-known and respected aristocrat.

Although his son had a reputation of a troublemaker and womanizer but he was known for his devotion to his country which did not end with shouting patriotic slogans, so even his greatest enemies cannot say that he was a coward who hides from the enemy. It is a pity that Corporal Jan Kowal did not hear about this and simply ran over the poor nobleman with his tank when he did not want to leave the road and tried in a noble but stupid action to stop the tank with a sword.

But wisdom was not a characteristic of this man.

Of course it made a big fuss because how could it be that an ordinary peasant simply ran over an aristocrat (although it should say wiped out) although his father after seeing this T-55 decided that only an idiot would try to stop this damn thing with a simple sword, his opinion of his son dropped even lower when he learned that his son could easily avoid death if he just fell on the ground between tracks and waited until the machine passed over him.

In fact, they even showed him a part of infantry training in which there is an element of fighting with a tank!

Eventually, the matter was settled by one of the agents of the UB, who convinced the father to stop his actions. Of course this was not the only case in which the Urząd Bezpieczeństwa took part. It had jobs up to the ceiling of the top floor of their headquarters in Warsaw when it came to pacifying rebel sentiment in the occupied territories.

He was especially used in Almater because of the universities there. For obvious reasons, Polish agents began to carry out communist agitation among the students and carried out the procedure of first removing those few dangerous students who could threaten the peace in the future (most often this consisted of so-called 102, i.e. 100 kilometers from the city and 2 meters underground).

And those who seemed promising, that is, anyone who seriously believed in communism or saw where the political wind was blowing from, or was just a common scoundrel who could be easily kept on a leash by means of files with their crimes, were led as future administrators of Parpaldia under Polish trust.

This was not too difficult, the number of those fascinated by Polish ideology of Marxism-Leninism was surprisingly for such a short time, many of them students from poorer families from the really exploited parts of Empire.

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