Kresy
The name Kresy (Polish for "borderlands") is used by Poles to refer to the eastern part of Poland in the inter-war period. These territories bordered the Soviet Union on the east, Lithuania on the north, and Romania on the south.
Kresy approximately correspond to the territory to the East of the Curzon line.
During 1921—1939 (Second Polish Republic), Kresy comprised of the following voivodships (from North to South and then to the West, see the 1939 map in the Voivodships of Poland article).
- Wilno Voivodship, capital Wilno (now Vilnius, Lithuania)
- Polesie Voivodship, capital Brześć nad Bugiem (now Brest, Belarus)
- Wolhynian Voivodship, capital Łuck, now Lutsk, Ukraine)
- Tarnopol Voivodship, capital Tarnopol (now in Ukraine)
- Stanisławów Voivodship, capital Stanisławów (now Ivano-Frankivs'k, Ukraine)
- Lwów Voivodship, capital Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine)
The territory of Kresy constituted over 40% of the Second Polish Republic.
The majority of urban population was Polish; but the overall majority was non-Polish: Ukrainian, Belarussian, Lithuanian and Jewish. Polish inhabitants of this region, known in Polish as Kresowiacy, had their distinct culture with accent and customs influenced by the presence of ethnic minorities.
As a consequence of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact, the Soviet Union occupied Kresy on September 17, 1939. After the Second World War the Kresy territory was officially ceded to the Soviet Union (Ukrainian, Byelorussian and Lithuanian Socialist Soviet Republics) and most of the Polish population was transferred to Poland's Recovered Territories.
After the German invasion, a significant part of the Kresy population was transferred to Germany as workforce (Ostarbeiter, "Eastern workers"). By the end of the WWII they were placed in camps for displaced persons in the post-war Germany. Soviet representatives attempted to filter out persons of Belarusian and Ukrainian nationality from camps located in the Western occupation zones, in order to transfer them to the Soviet Union. Many of those from Kresy who already have had an experience of Soviet life sought to avoid this kind of "repatriation". In particular, some camps that hosted Belarusians used terms White Ruthenians and Krivichs in their documentation.