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Poland 1951, Hilary Minc has a 6 year plan to get German industry working again and build a Socialist Dream city in Nova Huta

I like a good communist 5 year(well in this case 6 year) plan stamp that tells the people what their leaders will be doing for them. Promises can be measured against results. At the end of this 6 year plan, Hilary Minc, the architect of it, was tossed out of the Politburo, so there were consequences for failure. So slip on your smoking jacket, fill your pipe, take your first sip of your adult beverage, and sit back in your most comfortable chair. Welcome to todays offering from The Philatelists.

This stamp presents an understandably misleading picture of the 6 year plan. Constructing of urban apartment blocks was actually slowing under this plan. The last plan had been about rebuilding. This plan was about redeveloping industry and a communist dream city in Crackow. Chemical factories and utopias for bigshots might be a little too honest to put on the stamps.

Todays stamp is issue A193, a 30 Groszy stamp issued by Poland in 1951. It was a 6 stamp issue in various denominations. According to the Scott catalog, the stamp is worth 25 cents.

The first 3 year plan from 1947 -1949 had gone reasonably well and concentrated on rebuilding the cities after the damage of the war. For the next one, more ambition was shown. Much assistance from the Soviets would be involved and Stalin personally picked Hilary Minc to lead the effort. He was a Jew that had gone east to avoid the Germans during the war and joined fellow travelers in Russia in forming the Union of Polish Patriots that sought to replace the prewar Polish regime with a Jewish, communist one post war.

Hilary Minc

Who he was had a great deal of influence on what was in the plan. There was a special emphasis on getting old German industry in the former German territory working again but without Germans. The chemical works that had once belonged to IG Farben and the synthetic rubber plant Buna Werke. These plants had been closely associated with forced mostly Jewish labor from Auschwitz during the war. It was thus very important that the previous crimes there be revenged by Jewish ownership. Understandable until you remember Poland is a large majority Catholic country. The Soviet help was still industrial but at least more aimed at the people with help with steel mills and car factories, see https://the-philatelist.com/2019/03/11/philatelist-2-parter-polish-pontoon-today-versus-tomorrows-german-fintail/  .

A six year plan should also include a vision of a better future. The area of Crackow known as Nowa Huta was singled out for redevelopment. The model city was designed to resemble Paris. Remember the Union of “Polish” Patriots had lived much of their life in exile, and lefty exile in Europe means much time in Paris.

Nowa Huta, socialist dream city

The 6 year plan was not much of a success. Poland was falling behind economically. They even had to reintroduce some rationing because agriculture was being neglected and mismanaged. The formerly German industry was no longer using Jewish labor, just Jewish management. In October 1956 workers rose up in strike and protest demanding a more Polish route to socialism. The protest centered on Wroclaw, the former German city of Breslau. In response there was a purge in the higher ups of Polish leadership. It was marketed as a repudiation of Stalinists, but hit pretty hard on the Union of “Polish” Patriots. Hilary Minc was even forced out of the communist party.

Well my drink is empty and I will ask that my stories be judged as a body of work and that I not be purged. Come again tomorrow for another story that can be learned from stamp collecting.