Col Palus points to the file of one ongoing investigation, that of “M K”, a man personally responsible for the torture and beating of his victims.“M K,” he notes drily, “is not Jewish. And we have spent a great deal more time on his case than we have on the case of Mrs Brus.”
While his office cannot release all of the military prosecutor’s evidence against Mrs Brus — that must await the trial and extradition hearings — Col Palus is happy to spell out some of the circumstances of Gen Fieldorf’s arrest and execution.
He says that Mrs Brus is not being accused of breaking the law retrospectively: he claims she violated laws which applied at the time, illegally extending Gen Fieldorf’s arrest without charging him or producing any evidence.
Nor, he says, is anyone in Poland confused about the role of civil and military courts.
The General was initially charged with violating a law against the “use of force with the aim of changing the character of the Polish state”.
Later, the charge was changed, and the General was declared to be a “fascist-Hitlerite criminal”.
The change meant that he would be tried by a civil, not a military court, and that if found guilty he would be put to death.
The Polish military prosecutor’s office now believes that those who arrested Gen Fieldorf, those who sentenced him, and those who moved his case from a military to a civil court, knew from the moment of his arrest that he was intended to die. There are documents and witnesses of these events, Col Palus says, as well as evidence of “other activities”.
When I spoke to Mrs Brus, I asked her whether she got involved much in other cases.
“What, do you think I sat there and drank coffee?” she laughed.
“We were very busy in those days.” Indeed.
When he was in prison for 18 months without trial in the 1950s, another Home Army hero, Wladyslaw Bartoszewski — now chairman of Poland’s Senate Foreign Relations Committee – remembers being shown blank, undated arrest warrants with Helena Wolinska’s signature on them, proof he could be kept in prison indefinitely.
“She was a very important military prosecutor,” says Col Palus.
As for her declaration of innocence, “they all say that. All of them say they are innocent until they are confronted with their victims, and some of them keep saying it even then.” In Poland, the accusations against Helena Danielak-Wolinska-Brus are not especially controversial.
She is too ordinary, her life story sounds too familiar.
Look at it slightly differently, however, and it is possible to see how her story might take on other nuances in Britain.
It is true, for example, that she is a victim of Hitler: most of her family died in Treblinka.
It is also true that she was again victimised as a Jew in 1968, that she was expelled from the Polish Communist Party and lost her job teaching at Warsaw’s Higher Communist Party School during internal party faction fighting, which culminated in a wave of anti-Semitism.
Hence her decision to emigrate to Britain — many Polish Jewish communists emigrated at that time — and hence, perhaps, her professed admiration for Britain: Britain was kind to her at a time when to be a Polish Jewish communist was no longer such an attractive proposition.
It is true that she was a war hero of sorts: she escaped from the Warsaw ghetto, and later escaped again from a train headed for a concentration camp.
“I slipped off and just walked away slowly,” she says. “I knew I would die anyway if I stayed on the train. But they didn’t shoot.” Eventually, she came to be in charge of the office of the General Staff of the communist People’s Army, and was afterwards duly decorated by communist Poland, and, according to her husband, by communist Hungary as well.
It is also true, however, that many Poles deeply resent Jews who use their Jewishness as an excuse when they are accused of other crimes.
Maria Fieldorf Czarska, the General’s daughter, says bitterly that she doubts Mrs Brus will ever come to trial: “She will say she is old, she will say she is ill, she will say we are anti-Semitic.” More than one person points out a curious irony: Senator Bartoszewski, whom Mrs Brus arrested, is best known for having led the Home Army division which was responsible for rescuing Jews. He is also an Auschwitz survivor, and now an honorary citizen of Israel.
“Senator Bartoszewski,” scoffs Mrs Brus, “I never heard as much about him then as I do now.” This may well be true. After all, most of the Home Army officers senior to Senator Bartoszewski were put to death round about the time Mrs Brus was walking the halls of the Ministry of Defence in her military prosecutor’s uniform.
This Polish view matters, because it is Polish justice which is at stake. This isn’t an Anglo-Saxon debate, any more than is the debate about the extradition of General Pinochet: the exploration of a totalitarian past isn’t a British passion. One Polish government official formulates the problem like this: “Just because Jews were victims of crimes against humanity, does that mean they cannot be tried for crimes against humanity themselves?” That is not a British question, and few British people would ask it.
But now it will be Britain’s problem to resolve.
© Telegraph Newspapers Ltd