- The witness testifies about the situation in Mariupol, describing the destruction of civilian infrastructure and difficult living conditions in the city. Next the witness left for a village in the Donetsk Oblast, and later evacuated to Poland.
- The witness testifies about the Wola Massacre. Her husband and other men were arrested by the railway police. Four weeks later she was marched to Pruszków together with her children.
- The witness testifies in great detail about the persons arrested/murdered in the village of Kacprów. He gives their further fates and places where they were sent. He also provides a complete list of stolen items.
- The witness testifies that Edward, the son of Szczepan Wąsowski, came to him and asked for help in finding his father, who had been taken by the Germans in an unknown direction. They found a fresh grave in the forest. The witness provides no details.
- The witness testifies that first the intelligentsia were arrested, and then all the others, in various circumstances. They travelled in cattle wagons, in deplorable conditions; many children died on the way. They came to a labor camp in Vorkuta. The authorities were hostile.
- The witness testifies that he was arrested by the Gestapo on 20 November 1943 and taken first to the prison in Busko-Zdrój, and then to Kielce. He was released in December 1943.
- The witness testifies that he was stopped near the village of Skórnice and had his identity documents checked by the German gendarmerie. In the meantime, he saw the murder of Jewish men and women, who were discovered in a shelter in a barn. He then testifies that the mistress of the house was murdered for hiding Jews. He is the third witness to this crime.
- The witness testifies that he was taken for forced labor near the settlement of Skórnice, where he witnessed the murder of Jewish men and women discovered in a shelter in a barn, and then the murder of the woman who was accused of sheltering them.
- The witness testifies that her husband was arrested by Vlasov’s men [members of the Russian Liberation Army] and murdered on the way to the station in Ruda Maleniecka, because – according to the witness – Vlasov’s men had a fight during which one of them was killed.
- The witness testifies that her husband was killed on the railway tracks near the village of Kornica, while her son Stanisław was murdered in 1942 as a partisan near the village of Sielpia.
- The witness testifies that her son Edward was arrested by the gendarmerie. During an interrogation, he was brutally beaten by the Gestapo. Then he was murdered and buried in a field.
- The witness testifies that his friend, a tailor, was questioned by a Mongol in German service (SS). Eventually, the tailor was accused of being a partisan, beaten and murdered on the way to the station.
- The witness testifies that in 1943 in the village of Życiny, a few people named in the testimony were sent to Auschwitz.
- The witness testifies that in 1944, gendarmes surrounded the house of Emilia Siniarska, as three men attempted to escape from there. Zygmunt Laskoski was captured by the gendarmes, and then a Gestapo man shot him in the forehead. The witness adds that Laskoski’s grandmother was badly bitten by the Germans’ dog.
- The witness testifies that in 1944, he was stopped on the road by gendarmes standing over the body of Zygmunt Siniarski [Laskoski]. They ordered the witness to put the corpse on his cart, and then to dig a grave for the murdered man in the Jewish cemetery in Końskie.
- The witness testifies that in July 1943 in the village of Rudki, his house and that of his neighbor were surrounded. Next two boys, who were suspected of clandestine activities, were arrested. They were beaten in Rudki, and then taken to Szydłów and Chmielnik, where they were killed.
- The witness testifies that on 17 June 1943, the German gendarmerie surrounded the village of Skawa [?] and arrested her husband, who was taken hostage in exchange for their sons, who were partisans. He was beaten during interrogation by the Gestapo and then deported to Auschwitz. The witness was notified that he had died there.
- The witness testifies that on 18 December 1943, gendarmes arrived at the village and arrested several people in a roundup. The arrestees were taken to Kielce. The witness was later sent to Gross-Rosen, where he was liberated by the Americans.
- The witness testifies that partisans were surrounded in the village of Ludwików and that the unit was completely annihilated. (Ludwików is also known as Łuby Sobieńskie.) The witness shares a suspicion that it was the administrator of the village of Sobień who denounced the partisans.
- The witness testifies that she knows about the arrest and execution of people from the village of Kornica.
- The witness testifies that she was forced to go to the Szarfs’ house, and then witnessed the Germans open fire on the house and kill the two Szarf brothers.
- The witness testifies that the gendarmerie came to his village in June 1943. They surrounded the village and killed several people. The Germans were asking after partisans. Several residents were taken to Busko-Zdrój.
- The witness testifies that the gendarmerie found partisan Łuszczyński at the house of Stanisława Brzezicka. Both were arrested; he was later killed, and she was deported to a camp, from where she returned.
- The witness testifies that the Germans found partisan Łuszczyński at the house of Stanisława Brzezicka. Both were arrested by the gendarmerie: he was later killed, and she was deported to a camp, from where she returned.
- The witness took part in an exhumation at Gąbińska Street in Warsaw. She confirms that seven well-preserved skulls and some bones were discovered. The victims were not identified for lack of documents, pieces of clothing or body fragments.
- The witness took part in the defense of Grodno in September 1939. In July 1940, the Soviets sent him to a POW camp in Kozelsk. In May 1941, he was transferred to the Kola Peninsula. He describes among others the living conditions, the cultural life, the mutual relations between Polish POWs, the NKVD's attitude towards Poles and the Soviet propaganda.
- The witness took part in the defense of Grodno in September 1939. Next he was interned in Lithuania and sent to a POW camp in Kozelsk. After ten months he was deported to a forced labor camp in the Murmansk Oblast, where he toiled very hard. He describes among others the living conditions, the cultural life, the mutual relations between Polish POWs, the NKVD’s attitude towards the Poles, the Soviet propaganda and the unbearable conditions of life at the labor camp.
- The witness was a board member of the Central Agricultural Cooperative. In his testimony, he focuses on the problem of food supplies and the policies pursued in this regard by the occupation authorities. He also mentions the executions of people who were caught smuggling food.
- The witness was a member of the commune board in Szczytniki. The commune was persecuted by the gendarmes from Busko[-Zdrój], who would carry out arrests and searches, collect quotas and confiscate cows, among other things. In December 1943, the funeral of a military man was held in Janina. The Germans dispersed the crowd, and shooting ensued. In 1944, the Germans accidentally killed several residents of Janina. In October 1944, they captured several hundred men and sent them to labor camps.
- The witness was a nurse at the garrison hospital in Równe. In December 1939, her brother, a policeman, was arrested, while in April she was deported to Kazakhstan together with her family. They were made to perform hard physical labor. The living conditions were deplorable, they suffered hunger and mistreatment. They were issued Soviet passports. As a nurse, having overcome many difficulties and with a friend’s help, in February 1942 she joined the Anders’ Army. She worked at the hospitals in Guzar (during a typhoid outbreak), Pahlavi and Tehran.
- The witness was a soldier with the “Kampinos” Home Army Group, but did not take part in the Warsaw Uprising as he did not manage to cross into the Kampinos Forest. He hid in a bunker in Piaski (part of the Bielany district) and in mid-September was deported to Germany for forced labor.
- The witness was arrested and deported for labor in the kolkhozes in Uzbekistan. She testifies among others about the difficult living conditions, the composition of prisoners, hard labor at cotton picking and in a sawmill, interrogations and aggressive communist propaganda.
- The witness was arrested and deported to a forced labor camp in the Komi Republic. He describes strenuous work and the abuse of Poles by the authorities. The witness was sent to a hospital, where he worked as a feldsher. Medical assistance was in fact non-existent, as the doctors and feldshers had no medical training. The sick were not segregated from the healthy and the conditions were abominable, which resulted in high mortality rates.
- The witness was arrested and deported to a special settlement in the USSR for forced labor. He worked from dawn to dusk; food was insufficient. There were approx. 300 Poles in the settlement. Many people died due to abominable conditions. There was communist propaganda; they were told that Poland would never be reborn. After release he went to Jalalabad (Kyrgyzstan) and joined the Polish Army.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned first in Brześć, and then in Minsk and Chervyen. Next he was deported to Arkhangelsk, and from there to a labor camp in Vorkuta. The witness describes the conditions in prisons and camps. Following his release, he joined Anders’ Army in Guzar.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned for crossing the German-Soviet border. He was incarcerated in Rawa Ruska, Lwów and Kharkiv, as well as in forced labor camps in the Arkhangelsk Oblast. He describes the composition of prisoners, the deplorable living conditions, high mortality rate among the exiles, beatings and torture, and lack of medical assistance.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned for failure to deliver the quotas. Eventually he was sent to the Pińczów prison.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned for refusal to testify. He was deported to the camps in Komi, where he worked at railway construction (he describes the daily routine). Management was chaotic, e.g. getting clothes depended on luck. He describes the amazement of the Soviet prisoners who learned that shops in Poland were full of merchandise and nobody was oppressed by any masters. After the amnesty he was taken to a distribution point, where he and his companions were detained for a long time and then told that their papers had been lost. They went on a hunger strike and after two days got released.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned in Lwów, and later sent to the camps in Starobelsk and Vorkuta. He describes among others the arrest, cruel interrogations by the NKVD, back-breaking labor at the camp and excessive work quotas. He also gives several names of his fellow prisoners.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned in Lwów. He describes brutal interrogations, beatings and the punishment cell. Later he was sent to other prisons, and was finally deported to a labor camp in Karabas, Kazakhstan.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned in Nadwórna and Stanisławów. Later he was deported for forced labor (to Kandalaksha and Vorkuta). He describes the transport and the conditions of work, among other things. He also gives the names of several other exiles.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned in the NKVD headquarters in Czortków; he was asked about the hiding places of Polish officers. He was also severely beaten. He spent several months in prison; some inmates were mistreated to the point of being unable to get up. Later they were all put onto wagons and deported to the camps. During the journey, when someone demanded that the widows be opened, as the people inside were suffocating for lack of fresh air, they were severely beaten. He was not told where he was; he toiled in a stone quarry. Part of the testimony is missing.
- The witness was arrested and imprisoned in Wilejka and Ryazan. He describes the composition of prisoners, the difficult living conditions, hunger, and the cruelty and ruthlessness of the authorities towards the prisoners, especially Poles.
- The witness was arrested and incarcerated in a prison in Grodno. He was sentenced to three years of forced labor and deported to a camp on the Pechora River. He describes conditions in the prison. The Soviets were hostile towards the Poles; they beat and tortured them. There was communist propaganda; the prisoners were told that Poland was lost. After release from the camp he found himself in a kolkhoz in Nukus. He joined the Polish Army in Persia.
- The witness was arrested and incarcerated in a prison in Przemyśl, where the living conditions were terrible. Next he was deported to Russia, to Chernihiv. He performed forced labor and experienced deplorable conditions; people suffered hard toil and hunger.
- The witness was arrested and incarcerated in three NKVD prisons – in Augustów, Vitebsk and Gorky. He describes among others the living conditions and the composition of prisoners.
- The witness was arrested and interned, and then taken from Lithuania to a camp in Kozelsk. He describes the living conditions at the camp, types of work and medical assistance, as well as the authorities’ attitude towards the prisoners. After the amnesty he joined Anders’ Army.
- The witness was arrested and released twice. Arrested for the third time, he was imprisoned first in Białystok and then in Brześć, where he was sentenced to five years of hard labor. He describes the exhausting transport to the camps in the Arkhangelsk Oblast and the Komi Republic. He cites examples of abuse against the exiles and the NKVD’s ruthlessness. He describes the deplorable living conditions, hunger, back-breaking labor, high mortality rate, diseases and lack of medical assistance, as well as aggressive anti-Polish propaganda.
- The witness was arrested and sent to a sovkhoz. Next he joined the Polish Army.
- The witness was arrested as a POW and sent to several camps, which he does not describe in detail. He worked there; the NKVD favored non-Poles. He was released in August 1941 in Starobelsk and went to Totskoye.
- The witness was arrested as the commandant of the Union of Young Poland and an intelligence agent. He was imprisoned in Drohiczyn, Vitebsk, Velikiye Luki and in the Lubyanka prison in Moscow. He describes the mutual relations between prisoners. He points out that the Russians did not believe that they would ever return home, even after serving their sentence. Following his release and after a long illness, he joined the Polish Army.
- The witness was arrested at a school in Łuck. Incarcerated at the local prison, he was next sent to Kharkiv, and finally deported to Vorkuta. He describes the work, interrogations, etc. In April 1942 he reached Guzar.
- The witness was arrested at the Soviet-Lithuanian border. He was first interned in Lithuania, but after the entry of the Soviets he was arrested by the NKVD. He was sent to Kozelsk and Gryazovets, where he was imprisoned together with officers and policemen. He joined the Polish Army in Gryazovets.
- The witness was arrested at the train station in Lwów during an attempt to get to Stanisławów. She was held in several prisons in Lwów and was then deported to a labor camp in Vorkuta. She met many Polish landowners when in prison. Tortured, many of them died after brutal interrogations. On 17 September 1941 she joined the Women’s Auxiliary Service.
- The witness was arrested because he did not report to work on a holiday. He was imprisoned in Białystok and then deported to a labor camp in the Murmansk Oblast. He describes the deplorable living conditions in both the prison and the camp.
- The witness was arrested because he had deserted from the Soviet Army in 1919 and volunteered to fight in the Polish Army. He does not say much about the prison; the cells were small, he was imprisoned together with other Poles, did not have any contact with his family and could take a 13-minute walk per day.
- The witness was arrested because he kept a fragment of Piłsudski’s monument. He was sent to prison and then a labor camp, where he had to toil very hard.
- The witness was arrested because, as she claims, she registered to cross the Soviet-German border to join her parents. She was deported to the Altai Krai. She describes how Polish books were burned and replaced with Russian ones. She worked all day and spent the rest of her time queuing for bread.
- The witness was arrested by the gendarmes following a denunciation by a man whose name he gives in his testimony. Next he was taken to the Gestapo headquarters in Busko[-Zdrój], where he was beaten and tortured. He was released four weeks later.
- The witness was arrested by the gendarmes in May 1942 for failure to deliver a quota. He was incarcerated in the Pińczów prison until September.