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・ Karol Bagh metro station
・ Karol Bahrke
・ Karol Beck
・ Karol Becker
・ Karol Berger
・ Karol Bielecki
・ Karol Biermann
・ Karol Bohdanowicz
・ Karol Borhy
・ Karol Borsuk
・ Karol Boscamp-Lasopolski
・ Karol Brassard
・ Karol Bučko
・ Karol Cariola
・ Karol Castillo
Karol Chmiel
・ Karol Chodura
・ Karol Csanyi
・ Karol d'Abancourt de Franqueville
・ Karol d'Abancourt de Franqueville (lawyer)
・ Karol d'Abancourt de Franqueville (soldier)
・ Karol D. Witkowski
・ Karol Dance
・ Karol Daniel Kadłubiec
・ Karol Dejna
・ Karol Divín
・ Karol Dobay
・ Karol Dobiaš
・ Karol Domagalski
・ Karol Dominik Przezdziecki


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Karol Chmiel : ウィキペディア英語版
Karol Chmiel

Karol Chmiel (1911–1951) was born on April 17, 1911 in the village of Zagorzyce (now in Ropczyce-Sędziszów County, Subcarpathian Voivodeship) to a peasant family of Antoni and Katarzyna née Charchut. He graduated from high school in Dębica, then joined the prestigious Jagiellonian University in Kraków, where he studied law. After graduation, in 1935, Chmiel settled in Wojslaw, a village near Mielec, his wife Irena Suchodolska was a school principal, and he worked for the Town Hall in Mielec.
==World War II==
At the beginning of the Polish September Campaign, Chmiel tried to escape east, to the area of Lwów, where his wife's family owned an estate. Unable to do so, they returned to the village of Zagorzyce, with a three-year-old son Jerzy. On January 6, 1940, Chmiel's wife died, after delivering their second son Zbigniew. After this, the boys were looked after by Irena's mother and her sisters.
As early as January 1940, Chmiel became a member of Zwiazek Walki Zbrojnej, with nom de guerre "Los". Since January 1941 he was commandant of a platoon in Zagorzyce, which was part of Dębica's District of ZWZ (later: Polish Home Army). Nominated to colonel, in 1943 he decided to move to Bataliony Chłopskie (BCh), becoming in early 1944 commandant of BCh's Dębica District. He participated in Operation Tempest activities in the area of Dębica, being member of local headquarters of the anti-German resistance.
Some time in 1944, Chmiel drove a captured German car, but he forgot to display a Polish flag on it, and was peppered with bullets by the Home Army soldiers. Shot 13 times, he was severely wounded, but managed to survive. Nevertheless, he became partly disabled.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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