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Memories of World War II and the Participation of Polish Airmen

This exhibition, sponsored by The Assembly House and The Assembly House Trust, will showcase the Polish squadrons 303 and 302, video interviews from 307 and those who associated with Monte Cassino and Siberia. There will also be an exhibition on Auschwitz.

There is free admission to this event, which will be held in the Noverre Ballroom.

During the Second World War, the Royal Air Force welcomed into its ranks thousands of exiles from German-occupied Poland. Polish personnel served in all RAF commands and in all theatres, and earned a reputation for exceptional courage and devotion to duty. Tragically, though the Poles fought so hard to liberate Europe from tyranny, it would be many years before their own country would again be free.

This exhibition tells the inspirational story of the Polish Air Force in the Second World War and is presented by the Norfolk International Languages School.

With the outbreak of war, on 1st September 1939, the Polish Air Force’s 300 obsolete aircraft were opposed by the German Luftwaffe equipped with over 1,300 modern fighters and bombers. Despite this, the highly-trained Polish pilots fought well, and in the brief campaign shot down 126 enemy aircraft. Following the Soviet invasion and German victory, most of the Polish airmen escaped to France to continue the war.

During the Battle of France, Poles serving in the French Air Force destroyed 56 German aircraft but, in June 1940, France too, was defeated. Some 8,400 Polish airmen were evacuated to the United Kingdom, which they now called Wyspa Ostatniej Nadziei or “The Island of Last Hope.”


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Candlelight Concerts: Vivaldi's Four Seasons

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12 November

Assembly House: free tour