[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
1948. This collection is often called the Onyshkevych Papers because they were used in the military trial against him and because
each document carries his signature. (Myroslav Onyshkevych was the military commander of the UPA Ukrainian Insurgent
Army Military Okruha Nr. 6 Sian .) These are underground documents and only two microfilm reels belong to the Counter-
Insurgency category. Call Number: DK/508/.79/P482/1990 MICR mfm reel. 1-16.
2. A group of documents from the Archive of Misiia UPA in Germany. These documents cover the period 1943-1951 and
were brought by couriers from Ukraine. They were in the possession of Dr. Lev Rebet, a noted Ukrainian revolutionary, who was
assassinated by a Soviet agent. A list of these documents is available, but due to their fragile nature they cannot be made available
at this time.
248 COLD WAR INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PROJECT BULLETIN 10
3. The third group of documents is contained in 28 volumes of the Litopys UPA (Chronicle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army),
Old Series, edited by P.J. Potichnyj and Ie. Shtendera (Toronto: Litopys, 1976-1997). These volumes contain underground
documents that were deposited in the Archive of the ZP UHVR (Foreign Representation of the Supreme Ukrainian Liberation
Council) of New York City. Each volume has an introduction and summaries of documents in English as well as an index. A
New Series of the Litopys UPA, which is based on the rich archival holdings in Ukraine has appeared in a volume that was
published in Kiev in 1995 through the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Chief Archival Directorate of the
Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, is also part of the PJP Collection. The Litopys UPA is currently being prepared for the Internet
and can be reached at the following address: http://www.infoukes.com/commercial/litopys-upa/inderx.html.
4. The fourth group contains the published and as yet unpublished materials of the Litopys UPA, such as memoir materials,
which contain very interesting, personal accounts of the underground struggle. These papers are currently being processed and
will be available to scholars in the near future.
5. The fifth group of documents contains archival holdings of the two veteran organizations of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army
of the USA and Canada. Of special interest are the papers of Wolodymyr Makar, who played a visible role in the anti-German
resistance, and especially his wide correspondence with various Ukrainian political figures. These materials are in the process of
being classified and will be available to scholars sometime in the near future.
6. The sixth item is immediately and completely accessible. This is a microfilm of the Toronto newspaper Homin Ukrainy,
and includes some 50 reels. It contains much that is of direct value to the collection, such as the special page Voiats ka Vatra ,
edited by the late Wolodymyr Makar.
Counter-Insurgency in Ukraine
1. The first group of materials covers the years 1941-1945 and pertains to the counter-insurgency activities of the German
occupational forces. These documents, some 100 reels of microfilm, come mostly from the National Archives of the United
States in Washington, D.C., and represent a portion of the documents that were seized by the Allies at the end of World War II.
These documents can be used almost immediately. They contain not only counter-insurgency material, but also some under-
ground material in German translation. Here one will also find a wealth of material on the activities of the notorious
Einsatzgruppen against the Jews and Ukrainians. Some materials from this collection have already been published in three
volumes under the title: The UPA in Light of German Documents in the Litopys UPA series. There are also a number of paper
documents that come from various German archives, mostly from Koblenz, but they still need to be catalogued.
2. The second group of the Counter-Insurgency documents comes directly from Soviet archives. This collection of over
150,000 pages of documents, on 428 reels of film, covers the activities of the NKVD-NKGB, and the MVD-MGB internal forces
of the Ukrainian Okrug against the Ukrainian Liberation Movement during the years 1944-1954. After Ukraine proclaimed
independence in August 1990, this archive was removed to Moscow. With the assistance of the Ukrainian Government, a
microfilm copy of the archive was returned to Kiev. A second complete copy of this invaluable archive is now a part of the PJP
Collection. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
zanotowane.pl doc.pisz.pl pdf.pisz.pl ocenkijessi.opx.pl
1948. This collection is often called the Onyshkevych Papers because they were used in the military trial against him and because
each document carries his signature. (Myroslav Onyshkevych was the military commander of the UPA Ukrainian Insurgent
Army Military Okruha Nr. 6 Sian .) These are underground documents and only two microfilm reels belong to the Counter-
Insurgency category. Call Number: DK/508/.79/P482/1990 MICR mfm reel. 1-16.
2. A group of documents from the Archive of Misiia UPA in Germany. These documents cover the period 1943-1951 and
were brought by couriers from Ukraine. They were in the possession of Dr. Lev Rebet, a noted Ukrainian revolutionary, who was
assassinated by a Soviet agent. A list of these documents is available, but due to their fragile nature they cannot be made available
at this time.
248 COLD WAR INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PROJECT BULLETIN 10
3. The third group of documents is contained in 28 volumes of the Litopys UPA (Chronicle of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army),
Old Series, edited by P.J. Potichnyj and Ie. Shtendera (Toronto: Litopys, 1976-1997). These volumes contain underground
documents that were deposited in the Archive of the ZP UHVR (Foreign Representation of the Supreme Ukrainian Liberation
Council) of New York City. Each volume has an introduction and summaries of documents in English as well as an index. A
New Series of the Litopys UPA, which is based on the rich archival holdings in Ukraine has appeared in a volume that was
published in Kiev in 1995 through the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine and the Chief Archival Directorate of the
Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine, is also part of the PJP Collection. The Litopys UPA is currently being prepared for the Internet
and can be reached at the following address: http://www.infoukes.com/commercial/litopys-upa/inderx.html.
4. The fourth group contains the published and as yet unpublished materials of the Litopys UPA, such as memoir materials,
which contain very interesting, personal accounts of the underground struggle. These papers are currently being processed and
will be available to scholars in the near future.
5. The fifth group of documents contains archival holdings of the two veteran organizations of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army
of the USA and Canada. Of special interest are the papers of Wolodymyr Makar, who played a visible role in the anti-German
resistance, and especially his wide correspondence with various Ukrainian political figures. These materials are in the process of
being classified and will be available to scholars sometime in the near future.
6. The sixth item is immediately and completely accessible. This is a microfilm of the Toronto newspaper Homin Ukrainy,
and includes some 50 reels. It contains much that is of direct value to the collection, such as the special page Voiats ka Vatra ,
edited by the late Wolodymyr Makar.
Counter-Insurgency in Ukraine
1. The first group of materials covers the years 1941-1945 and pertains to the counter-insurgency activities of the German
occupational forces. These documents, some 100 reels of microfilm, come mostly from the National Archives of the United
States in Washington, D.C., and represent a portion of the documents that were seized by the Allies at the end of World War II.
These documents can be used almost immediately. They contain not only counter-insurgency material, but also some under-
ground material in German translation. Here one will also find a wealth of material on the activities of the notorious
Einsatzgruppen against the Jews and Ukrainians. Some materials from this collection have already been published in three
volumes under the title: The UPA in Light of German Documents in the Litopys UPA series. There are also a number of paper
documents that come from various German archives, mostly from Koblenz, but they still need to be catalogued.
2. The second group of the Counter-Insurgency documents comes directly from Soviet archives. This collection of over
150,000 pages of documents, on 428 reels of film, covers the activities of the NKVD-NKGB, and the MVD-MGB internal forces
of the Ukrainian Okrug against the Ukrainian Liberation Movement during the years 1944-1954. After Ukraine proclaimed
independence in August 1990, this archive was removed to Moscow. With the assistance of the Ukrainian Government, a
microfilm copy of the archive was returned to Kiev. A second complete copy of this invaluable archive is now a part of the PJP
Collection. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]