Prison on Łącki Street


The National Museum-Memorial of Victims of the Occupation Regimes, or the Prison on Łącki is a former detention center in Lviv that throughout the 20th century was primarily used as a political prison of the Polish, Soviet and Nazi regimes.
The museum houses a main office of the Center for Research of Liberation Movement.

Name

The prison's name comes the former name of the street upon which the main entrance was located. Formerly known in Polish as ulica Eliasza Łąckiego, and today known in Ukrainian as vulytsia Karla Bryullova, the road is a side street of the main thoroughfare, vulytsia Stepana Bandery. Łącki Street was named after Eliasz Łącki who was a Polish war hero of the 1672-76 Polish–Ottoman War during the 1672 siege of Lwów.

History

The building complex was built in 1889-1890 at the intersection of ulica Sapiehy and ulica Kopernika on the project of architect Józef Kajetan Janowski. It is built in a Neo-Renaissance style and originally was designed for Austro-Hungarian Gendarmerie's main office in the city. The portion where the prison was actually located was built soon after World War I in 1918-1920 when Lviv was part of the Second Polish Republic.
The prison portion housed the Fourth Department of the State Police Main Commandant's Office, one duty of which included a fight against "anti-government" organizations such as Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists, Communist Party of Western Ukraine and others. Unofficially the prison was intended for political prisoners. In 1935 the investigating department of police were quartered in the building, while the prison was turned into a detention center.
With the start of World War II in 1939 and partition of the Second Polish Republic between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union, the prison was transformed into the NKVD Prison No.1 which was designed to accommodate 1,500 prisoners. The regional administration of NKVD took up quarters in the building. During the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, the NKVD agents shot about 1,000 prisoners.
During 1941-1944 the building was used as a Gestapo detention center and housed an office of Einsatzgruppen of Sicherheitsdienst. From July 21 to 26, 1941 former Polish Prime Minister Kazimierz Bartel was imprisoned here.

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