Jazep Symonavič Sažyč[a] (5 September 1917 – 19 November 2007, also spelled Joseph Sazyc)[1] was a Belarusian politician and military commander.
Jazep Sažyč | |
---|---|
Язэп Сажыч | |
President of the Rada of the Belarusian Democratic Republic in exile | |
In office November 1980 – 1997 | |
Preceded by | Vincent Žuk-Hryškievič |
Succeeded by | Ivonka Survilla |
Personal details | |
Born | Haradziečna , Russian Empire (present-day Belarus) | 5 September 1917
Died | November 19, 2007 Detroit, Michigan, U.S. | (aged 90)
Political party | Belarusian Independence Party |
Alma mater | University of Marburg |
Profession | Military officer, Doctor |
Life in the Second Polish Republic
editJazep Sažyč was born in Haradziečna (now in Navahrudak district, Grodno Region). He graduated from a Polish gymnasium in Nowogródek. In 1938 he was mobilized into the Polish army where he underwent an officer training course. During the German invasion of Poland Sažyč was commander of a minor military unit. He was wounded and taken by the Germans as a POW. He was later transferred to a hospital in Łódź from where he managed to get to Białystok and later to Navahrudak. He worked as an accountant in a village store and enlisted as a student at the University of Lviv.
However, with Germany attacking the Soviet Union, Sažyč was mobilized into the Red Army. He soon deserted and returned to Lviv, where he worked at a shop and supported the Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists.
He then went back to Navahrudak where he joined Belarusian collaborators organizing military units. Sažyč served in the local pro-German police. In 1942 he was appointed commandant of the Under Officer School of the Belarusian Self Help. In February 1943 he was given the task to organize a Belarusian railway guard unit in Lida. From July 1943 he taught at an officer school in Minsk.
In early 1944 Jazep Sažyč joined the Biełaruskaja Krajovaja Abarona and, at the same time, the Belarusian Independence Party.
In emigration
editIn July 1944 Sažyč left Belarus for the Western Front in Saarbrücken. The Belarusian undercover government gave him the task to establish contacts with the French Resistance. However, as the Germans got to know about that, Sažyč was immediately transferred to Berlin. In Berlin, he was participating in training the Čorny Kot partisan troupe and was commandant of the officer school of the 30th Waffen Grenadier Division of the SS (1st Belarusian).
After the war ended he landed in Thuringia, later moved to Hessen. After that, he studied medicine at the University of Marburg.
Upon graduation, in 1950 he left for the United States, where he worked as anesthesiologist and became actively involved in the life of the Belarusian diaspora in the USA.
Jazep Sažyč was one of the founders of the Belarusian-American Association in Michigan. From 1953 he was a member of the Belarusian People's Republic government in exile; between 1980 and 1997 he was the government's president.
Notes
edit- ^ Belarusian: Язэп Сымонавіч Сажыч, romanized: Yazep Symonavich Sazhych, polonized: Jazep Symonavič Sažyč, anglicized: Joseph Sazyc
References
editExternal links
editMedia related to Jazep Sažyč at Wikimedia Commons
- (in Belarusian) Язэп Сажыч — адзіны з былых старшыняў Рады БНР, які цяпер жыве. Інтэрвію на "Радыё Свабода" - an interview with Jazep Sažyč by Radio Free Europe
- (in Belarusian) Памёр былы Старшыня Рады БНР Язэп Сажыч