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Jan Nowak (1913–2005)

Autor de Courier from Warsaw

13 Obras 70 Miembros 0 Reseñas

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Obras de Jan Nowak

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Otros nombres
Nowak-Jeziorański, Jan
Jeziorański, Zdzisław (Forme polonaise)
Fecha de nacimiento
1913-05-15
Fecha de fallecimiento
2005-01-21
Lugar de sepultura
Cimetière communal de Powązki, Varsovie, Pologne
Género
male
Nacionalidad
Pologne
USA
País (para mapa)
Pologne
Lugar de nacimiento
Berlin, Allemagne
Lugar de fallecimiento
Varsovie, Pologne
Lugares de residencia
Warsaw, Poland
Munich, Germany
Washington, D.C., USA
Educación
Université Adam-Mickiewicz de Poznań
Ocupaciones
Journaliste
Politicien
resistance fighter
radio broadcaster
television writer and presenter
author (mostrar todos 8)
memoirist
academic
Relaciones
Brzezinski, Zbigniew (colleague)
Organizaciones
Radio Free Europe
BBC Radio
U.S. National Security Agency
Premios y honores
Virtuti Militari, la plus haute distinction militaire en Pologne (1944)
Commandeur avec étoile de l'ordre du Mérite de la République de Pologne (1993)
Chevalier de l'ordre de l'Aigle blanc, la plus haute distinction civile en Pologne (1994)
Krzyż Walecznych (médaille militaire)
Officier de l'ordre Polonia Restituta
Médaille présidentielle de la Liberté (1996, la plus haute distinction civile aux États-Unis) (mostrar todos 10)
Grand-croix de l'ordre du grand-duc Gediminas (la plus haute distinction civile en Lituanie)
Citoyen d'honneur de Varsovie
Université jagellonne de Cracovie, Pologne (Docteur honoris causa)
Presidential Medal of Freedom (1996)
Biografía breve
Jan Nowak or Nowak-Jeziorański was born Zdzisław Antoni Jeziorański to a Polish family in Berlin, Germany. He attended gymnasium (high school) in Warsaw. After completing his doctoral studies in economics in 1936 at the University of Poznań, he joined the faculty as a teaching assistant. At the start of World War II, he left academe to fight in the Polish Army. He was taken prisoner by the Germans, but managed to escape and return to Warsaw. He quickly joined the Polish Resistance and became the main organizer of Action N, a top-secret psychological warfare unit targeting German officers with propaganda materials. It was about this time that he took the nom de guerre Jan Nowak, which he later added to his own. In 1942, he undertook daring and grueling courier missions for the underground between Warsaw and Stockholm. The following year, he became an emissary between the commanders in Poland and the Polish government-in-exile and Allies in London, "the Courier from Warsaw." In July 1944, he returned to Warsaw only a few days before the Warsaw Uprising began, and took an active part in the fight against the Nazis. He also organized daily radio broadcasts to maintain contact with the Allied countries. He married his wife Greta, also a courier for the Resistance. Shortly before the fall of the city, he was ordered by the Home Army's commander-in-chief Tadeusz Bór-Komorowski to leave and make his way to London. He managed to escape, and brought with him a large number of intelligence documents and photos. For his bravery, he received the Virtuti Militari, the highest Polish military medal. After the war, Nowak-Jeziorański stayed in the West, working in London and then in Munich and Washington, DC. He was one of the most notable personalities of the Polish Section of the BBC. In 1952, he also became head of the Polish Service of Radio Free Europe, a position he held for 25 years during the Cold War. Afterwards, he became national director of the Polish American Congress and an advisor to the U.S. National Security Agency during the Carter Administration. In the 1990s, he returned to Poland and worked as a television writer/presenter. Many of his books, published abroad and in Poland after 1989, were bestsellers, and he won prestigious Polish literary awards, including the Kisiel Award (1999) and Ksawery Pruszyński Memorial Prize of the Polish PEN Club (2001). In 1996, he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton for his work to promote democracy around the world. Nowak's memoir, Courier from Warsaw, was published in 1982 with a foreword by Zbigniew Brzezinski.

Miembros

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Estadísticas

Obras
13
Miembros
70
Popularidad
#248,179
ISBNs
17
Idiomas
2

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