Historiography centered on Polish Americans during World War II is extensive and detailed, covering many groups with varying political affiliations. Donald Pienkos and others have presented meticulous studies of the work of the Polish National Council as well as the formation and wartime role of the Polish American Congress, both in English and in Polish. Waclaw Jedrzejewicz sketched the role of the National Committee of Americans of Polish Descent (KNAPP), while Polish historian Slawomir Cenckiewicz has also presented various articles in Polish regarding this group, its key figures, as well as the monitoring of American Polonia by communist Poland’s security apparatus. Articles have also presented the activities of leftist Polonia, while Don Binkowski provided a two-volume compendium centered on Leo Krzycki, the Polish American labor leader and close associate of several leftist Poles. Boleslaw Gebert also provides a Polish-language memoir of his own work in the United States.1