Izrael Ajzenman / Julian Kaniewski
After the war, Ajzenman found work in Poznań at the Provincial Office of Public Security. His superiors knew he was a thug, but the communist authorities of the time needed such people. Many brutal, conscienceless partisans who sympathised with communism (or simply happened to be operating under the banner of the communist armies) were thus given a chance for a new career in the post-war reality.
Ajzenman was given the perfect opportunity to continue to use his position for his own ends, exactly as he had done before the war. He was soon indicted by his own party for abuse of power, overly severe beatings of 'suspects' for private purposes, personal searches for his own benefit, stealing from prisoners. There was even an allegation of attempted rape of a child. It should be mentioned that the party, whose power was based on the use of degenerates and sadists, did not often convict its own people. Ajzenman must therefore have been an exceptionally greedy and disobedient subordinate. He awaited sentencing in Warsaw's Mokotov prisonThe Detention Centre in Warsaw-Mokotów, also known as Rakowiecka Prison or Mokotov Prison - a prison located in Warsaw at 37 Rakowiecka Street. Until March 1945 it was administered by the Soviet authorities, then it was taken over by the Ministry of Public Security. Many political prisoners were murdered here, especially during the Stalinist terror, and their bodies were buried secretly..
While staying in prison with Polish heroes of the anti-communist underground, he worked for Major Józef Różański as a snitch. He hoped that working as a snitch would help him get a lighter sentence. It paid off. In view of the convict's special merits (...) such as derailing trains, 44 battles fought, releasing 80 people (...) his imprisonment and suffering for communism
, he was sentenced to only three years in prison but was released after a year. The court's justification for such a low sentence was obviously untrue. He never "suffered" for communism: he never stayed in prisons, was never arrested and certainly was not a hero of the fighting against the Germans.
He changed his name to Julian Kaniewski. He wanted to cut himself off from his criminal past. He had worked in various institutions and establishments, but had always committed malfeasance for which he had never received adequate punishment. He was even expelled from the PZPRPolish United Workers' Party (polish: Polska Zjednoczona Partia Robotnicza - PZPR) - communist monoparty established in 1948. Also referred to as real-socialist, ruling in the Polish People's Republic in 1948–1989. It existed until 1990. It followed the ideology of Marxism-Leninism. During its existence, the PZPR was a mass party, leading a centrally managed and bureaucratic economy, exercising state power in a totalitarian manner, seeking totalitarian control of all spheres of social life. for two years for bribery.
He died in Lublin on 19 December 1965. Julek, in the pages of history written by Jewish historians, went down as a hero, a Jewish partisan bravely fighting the fascists. Acts of murder, rape and robbery with no military basis were presented as combat actions carried out on behalf of the GLPeople’s Guard (GL, polish: Gwardia Ludowa) – an underground communist armed organization, created by the communist Polish Workers’ Party in German-occupied Poland, sponsored by the Soviet Union, and aimed to armed fight against the German occupier. and ALPeople’s Army (AL, polish: Armia Ludowa) – a communist guerrilla set up to fight Nazi Germany in occupied Poland, support the Red Army and help in creating a pro-Soviet communist government in Poland.. Even Szymon DatnerSzymon Datner (born 2 February 1902 in Kraków, died 8 December 1989 in Warsaw) was a well-known and respected Polish historian of Jewish origin. He mainly researched issues related to the Holocaust and the Jedwabne murder. His two daughters out of three died during the Holocaust. wrote about him in this way as late as the 1980s.