The Battle of Boernerowo, also known as the Boernerowo massacre, was a clash between a Home Army company led by Lieutenant Jerzy Terczyà Âski, codenamed Starà ¼a, and a subunit of the German 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring. The battle occurred on the morning of 2 August 1944 near the suburban settlement of Boernerowo outside Warsaw, resulting in the destruction of the Polish unit and the death of most of its soldiers.
On the first day of the Warsaw Uprising, units of the Home Army's à »oliborz Subdistrict attacked German positions in à »oliborz and Bielany, but nearly all assaults were repelled with heavy losses. As a result, the district commander, Lieutenant Colonel , codenamed à »ywiciel, decided on the evening of 1 August to withdraw his troops to the nearby Kampinos Forest. Lieutenant Starà ¼a<nowiki/>'s company, having lost contact with other units, began an independent retreat and was ambushed and destroyed by German forces at Boernerowo on the morning of 2 August. At least 73 Home Army soldiers perished in the unequal fight.
The Third Sector of Home Army's à »oliborz Subdistrict covered the Bielany area of Warsaw. One of its four line companies was the 2nd Company, commanded by Lieutenant Jerzy Terczyà Âski, codenamed Starà ¼a. Formed in the second half of 1943 under the leadership of sector commander Captain , codenamed Jeleà Â/à »ubr, the company grew due to increased recruitment in Bielany's Home Army structures. At the outbreak of the Warsaw Uprising, the company comprised three platoons: Platoon 212, led by Cadet Officer Czesà Âaw Kubzdela, codenamed Kuba; Platoon 237, commanded by Second Lieutenant Jerzy Mieczyà Âski, codenamed Dunin; and Platoon 239, led by Second Lieutenant , codenamed Zych. Many of its members were university-educated or students, earning the company the nickname "Academic Legion".
The uprising plans designated one of Starà ¼a<nowiki/>'s platoons, supported by assault sappers, to attack the "Tailoring School" buildings at 66 Zabà Âocià Âska/Marymoncka Street during the "W" Hour. The other two platoons, backed by two sapper sections, were to assault the so-called Waldlager in , then advance toward the University of Physical Education at 34 Marymoncka Street.
On the morning of 1 August 1944, Lieutenant Colonel , codenamed à »ywiciel, received orders from Home Army's Warsaw District commander, Colonel Antoni Chruà Âciel, codenamed Monter, setting the uprising's start for 5:00 PM. The à »oliborz Subdistrict units began mobilization. Around 2:00 PM, soldiers of the à »niwiarz Group clashed unexpectedly with a German gendarmerie patrol on Krasià Âski Street, triggering regular fighting across à »oliborz. These unforeseen events cost à »oliborz units the element of surprise, disrupted communications, and isolated the district from the rest of the city. Many soldiers failed to reach assembly points on time, and some weapons and ammunition were not delivered. The situation was similar in the Third Sector, where Captain à »ubr<nowiki/>'s units were cut off from the rest of à »ywiciel<nowiki/>'s forces. Many soldiers did not reach assembly points, and the 3rd Company, led by Second Lieutenant Kwarciany, was entirely isolated in Marymont and could not participate in the assault on Waldlager or the Camaldolese Church in Bielany Forest. As a result, only 400 Third Sector soldiers went into battle at the designated hour. Meanwhile, the Germans significantly reinforced their defenses in Bielany that day, increasing the garrisons of the University of Physical Education, Waldlager, and the Camaldolese Church to about 700 troops, supported by armored cars and tanks.
The 2nd Company assembled at concentration points on Leà Âna, Kiwerska, and Rajszewska streets. Due to significant absences and severe shortages of weapons, Lieutenant Starà ¼a modified the original plans, opting to attack Waldlager with his entire force. The assault launched from Podleà Âna Street. The left-flank Platoon 212 failed to cross a several-hundred-meter open stretch and was pinned down by machine-gun fire halfway. The other two platoons reached the edge of Bielany Forest but were halted by enemy fire and retreated after several minutes. Without contact with higher command, Starà ¼a attempted a second assault on Waldlager, likely hoping for support from other Third Sector units. This attempt also failed, forcing Starà ¼a to withdraw the company to its starting positions.
The uprising in à »oliborz on that day ended in near-total failure. Home Army units captured none of their key objectives, suffered heavy losses in personnel and equipment, and lost contact with district command. Under these circumstances, Lieutenant Colonel à »ywiciel, persuaded by his officers, decided during an evening briefing to withdraw all à »oliborz Home Army units to Kampinos Forest. He expected all units to be ready to march by 12:30 AM on 2 August. However, due to chaos and insubordination by some officers, the retreat was not coordinated. By 10:30 PM, most units of the Fourth Sector () left the city without waiting for the full assembly of district forces. Shortly afterward, Captain à »ubr and most Third Sector units also departed for Kampinos Forest on their own.
After the failed attack on Waldlager, the 2nd Company returned to its starting positions and saw no significant combat for the rest of the day. For several hours, Lieutenant Starà ¼a unsuccessfully tried to contact higher command or neighboring units. Around midnight, a courier from Captain à »ubr delivered orders to retreat to Kampinos Forest. Starà ¼a promptly organized a muster and led his soldiers to Zuga Street, the designated assembly point for Third Sector units. A four-man rear guard under Cadet Officer Jan Ogulewicz, codenamed Boy, remained at Podleà Âna Street.
Upon arriving at Zuga Street, Starà ¼a learned that Captain à »ubr had already left for Kampinos Forest without waiting for the remaining units. Starà ¼a decided to leave the wounded at the "Nasz Dom" shelter at 42/44 Confederation Square and follow the main Third Sector forces. The march began around 2:00 AM. Second Lieutenant Zdzisà Âaw Grunwald, codenamed Zych, led the vanguard, followed by Platoons 212 and 239 with Starà ¼a at the head. The rearguard was Platoon 237, commanded by Second Lieutenant Jerzy Mieczyà Âski, codenamed Dunin. Zdzisà Âaw Grunwald estimated the column at about 120 soldiers. reported that Starà ¼a led between 130 and 150 people, including some civilians, possibly unarmed volunteers. On one of the streets in district, the soldiers found abandoned German trucks filled with cigarettes and canned food. After leaving the city, the company marched through sandy dunes known as Szwedzkie Góry, guided by the 126.5-meter right mast of the Babice transatlantic radio station. Just before dawn, they reached a cobblestone road connecting the Boernerowo telecommunications settlement to the village of Wawrzyszew.
At that time, strong enemy forces were stationed in the Boernerowo area. The settlement was occupied by about 100 Ukrainian collaborators guarding auxiliary Luftwaffe workshops (Nebenwerkstatt der Luftwaffe). A subunit of the 1st Fallschirm-Panzer Division Hermann Göring was quartered in nearby Fort II "Wawrzyszew". Maciej Bernhardt believed that Starà ¼a underestimated these threats when choosing the retreat route, as Home Army intelligence had reported the presence of a German armored unit near Boernerowo days before the uprising.
The Polish vanguard crossed the road without incident, but the main force was suddenly met with heavy machine-gun fire from both sides. In this critical situation, escape was the only chance for survival, but despite Starà ¼a<nowiki/>'s orders, most inexperienced insurgents took cover in open fields, hiding behind haystacks or natural terrain dips. Second Lieutenant Dunin, commanding the rearguard, ordered his platoon to retreat to Bielany, but only a few soldiers escaped the battlefield. Some followed the main force across the road. The Germans quickly surrounded the Polish company, and a tank arrived from Boernerowo, systematically killing survivors with turret fire or crushing them with its tracks.
Within an hour, the battle was over. A group of ten, including Starà ¼a and Zych, survived, along with an undetermined number of individual insurgents. Some vanguard soldiers were captured. The Germans forced the prisoners to dig two large graves on the battlefield, filling one with the bodies of their fallen comrades. After the first grave was filled and leveled, the prisoners were led to the edge of the second grave and executed.
On the morning of 2 August 1944, approximately 100 soldiers of Starà ¼a<nowiki/>'s company were likely killed at Boernerowo. German losses were limited to a few killed and wounded. By 2009, Janusz Trylià Âski identified the names of 64 fallen and executed insurgents and the pseudonyms of nine others. Among the dead were Second Lieutenant Jerzy Mieczyà Âski, codenamed Dunin (Platoon 237 commander), Senior Sergeant Aleksander Michalak, codenamed Gruby (deputy commander of Platoon 212), Cadet Officer Wà Âadysà Âaw Rode, codenamed Rewski (deputy commander of Platoon 239), Cadet Officer Bohdan Staromirowski, codenamed Bohdan (deputy commander of Platoon 237), and most squad leaders.
In May 1945, families of the fallen conducted private exhumations of some insurgent graves at Boernerowo, recovering about a dozen bodies buried in various Warsaw and suburban cemeteries. From 12 to 15 November 1945, the Polish Red Cross exhumed 60 bodies (52 men, 7 women, 1 unidentified) from two large graves and several smaller ones, which were then buried at the .
On 4 August 1946, a commemorative boulder was solemnly dedicated near the emptied graves. It bore the inscription:
In 1949, due to the construction of a military airport in Bemowo, the boulder was relocated to the corner of Grotowska and Westerplatte streets in Boernerowo, in front of a statue of the Virgin Mary and Child by . In the 1990s, the memorial site was enhanced with a plaque reading: