“Secret Services Are Meant To Serve”: State Violence in the Autobiographic Memory of Secret Police Officers in Communist Poland Cover Image
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“Secret Services Are Meant To Serve”: State Violence in the Autobiographic Memory of Secret Police Officers in Communist Poland
“Secret Services Are Meant To Serve”: State Violence in the Autobiographic Memory of Secret Police Officers in Communist Poland

Author(s): Piotr Osęka
Subject(s): Political history, Social history, Political behavior, Politics and society, Social Theory, Studies in violence and power, History of Communism, Sociology of Politics
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: secret police; communism; perpetrators; oral history; violence;

Summary/Abstract: The secret police, along with the political apparatus of a ruling party or administration, created the backbone of communist regimes and constituted the main tool of State violence. The state of the art within studies on the Polish security apparatus—albeit extremely rich—is entirely focused on archival documents. What is missing from the research on the secret police in Poland is an oral history approach. This article is a pioneer attempt at revealing the operative methods of the Służba Bezpieczeństwa (SB) through interviews with former officers. It aims at reconstructing the mechanism that led the officers to victimize dissidents and how they created moral justifications for their deeds. Asking about their career track, successes and failures, relationships with other officers, private life, and details of daily duty, I tried to glean what made the interviewees become perpetrators.

  • Issue Year: 37/2023
  • Issue No: 04
  • Page Range: 1227-1248
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English