Michał Gamski
The grave of Michał Gamski at the Military Cemetery in Powazki in Warsaw
Michał Gamski (nicknamed Samuel Gamm) has been named Ajzyk Bober, pseud. Aleksander, Damian, Sergey, Versailles (born May 19, 1905 in Czerejska, died June 6, 1966 in Warsaw) - Communist activist.
The son of a Jewish mechanic, Demjan (Lejba), 1916-1920 he studied at the school and at 1916-1918 he became a carpenter. Since 1920 he served in the Soviet security forces in Borisov, 1921-1922 was a student of construction engineering in Minsk. From 1922 in Poland, he was a technician in the ceramics factory in Grodno. At the same time he worked in the KPZB in Grodno, Wolkowysko and Bialystok. He was the secretary of the District Committee (KP) of the CPC and the secretary of the trade union of construction workers in Volkovysk. Later instructor of the District Committee (KO) of the CPSU in Bialystok and the head of the Communications Department of the Central Committee (CCC) until February 1925 when, due to the search for him by the Polish police, he escaped to the USSR. First he worked in Mogilev, later he graduated from the Communist Party at the KC (b) in Odessa, and then in 1928 he illegally returned to Poland through the Free City of Gdansk after the name of Ajzyk Bober. Soon he became secretary of the CPO in Brest. On October 19, 1928, he was sentenced to six years in prison and sentenced to death in Brest, Siedlce, Koronowo, Wiśnicz and Tarnów, where he met his future wife, J. Darnica. In 1934 he was released, again he became an instructor of the CPWC Central Committee. In 1935, he was arrested again, sentenced to 10 years imprisonment, imprisoned in Vilnius, Vilnius, Grodno and Koronowo. In September 1939 he was released from prison and went to Wołkowyska, where he worked on road construction, later he was the head of the department at the municipal administration in Ciechanowiec. In 1941 he and his wife escaped to Zlatech, where he was a locksmith-plumber and then deputy director of the factory. He had several months of training for the officers of the office, and he was assigned to the Belarusian Partisan Staff in 1942, but remained in reserve due to his state of health. Adopted to the WKP (b) with a party apprenticeship since 1922. 1944 He became head of the department at the Roads and Bridges Office at the BSRR Council of Ministers, and in 1946 he was the director of the construction materials business in Mogilev (up to 1950) and later head of the economic department of the Soviet Union. In 1956 he returned with his family to Poland, was admitted to the Polish United Workers' Party, inspected OSH in Building Ceramics Plant in Grodzisk Mazowiecki, and since 1961 was a senior inspector in the Ministry of Construction and Building Materials Industry. Since 1965 on the repayment for the well-deserved. He was awarded the Order of the Second Class Labor Medal. He was buried on the military Powazki. Bibliography
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