Sergiusz Piasecki
Sergiusz Piasecki was born in Lyakhavichy, Brest Region, Belarus on April 1st, 1901 and is the Novelist. At the age of 63, Sergiusz Piasecki biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
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Lover of the Great Bear, a prison memoir published in 1937, was the third most popular book in the Second Polish Republic. Piasecki's books were banned from publication in the People's Republic of Poland following World War II.
Lover of the Great Bear became one of the country's best selling books after the Soviet Union's demise in the early 1990s, according to Rzeczpospolita's daily newspaper. Many times, his other book, The Memoirs of a Red Army Officer, had already been published.
Early life
Sergiusz Piasecki was born in Lachowicze (or June 1, 1899), then in Northwestern Krai of the Russian Empire (now Brest Province, Belarus). On several occasions, Piasecki presented the latter date in the hopes of deceive the authorities. He was the illegitimate son of an impoverished Russian nobleman Michal Piasecki and a mother, Klaudia Kukalowicz, who served as a servant for the Piasecki family, whom he had never met. His stepmother, Filomena Gruszewska, who bullied him both physically and mentally, looked after him. His family spoke exclusively in Russian at home, but he didn't know Polish until he was detained.
His childhood was difficult because children at school mocked his Polish roots, calling him "Lach" (which, in loose translation, is the Russian equivalent of ethnic slur Polack). Piasecki feared the Russian school, as he later explained, and the teacher was stabbed in the seventh grade when wielding a pistol. He was sentenced to prison but not in fact finished his formal education.
After running away from jain, he moved to Moscow, where he experienced the October Revolution and watched his close friends' deaths. It was then that his dissatisfaction with communist ideology began.
During the rebellion, he went to Minsk, where he learned the criminal underworld. He served in Minsk as part of the Belarusian independence movement. Those were soon defeated, and Piasecki himself was wounded. He then joined the Polish-Belarusian Division, which had taken over Minsk and was headed east with offensive (see: Polish-Soviet War).
He attended army officers academy Szkojejechoty as a Belarusian in the 29th United Polish-Belarusian class from the 7th of April 1920 to the tenth of January 1921. He was arrested on May 12, 1921, and was demobilized on May 12, 1921.
Sergiusz Piasecki, the army's former soldier, found himself in a difficult situation. He had no education, and his father's estate remained in foreign countries. He walked the distance from Minsk to Wilno to visit his brother, who was homeless and couldn't help Sergiusz. He travelled around Wile-Szczyna, falsifying bank cheques, and participating in pornographic photoshoots. In a book called The Life of a Disarmed Man, he's related to this episode of his life.