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==External links==
==External links==
* Kazimierz Sabbat webpage at the [http://www.president.pl/x.node?id=474 President of the Republic of Poland] website
* Kazimierz Sabbat webpage at the [http://www.president.pl/x.node?id=474 President of the Republic of Poland] website
* [http://www.czujduch.zhr.pl/cd2/sabbat.html About Sabbat scouting activity] {{dead link|date=October 2016}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20090218182106/http://www.czujduch.zhr.pl:80/cd2/sabbat.html About Sabbat scouting activity]


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 00:16, 30 November 2016

Kazimierz Sabbat
President of the Republic of Poland
5th President in Exile
In office
8 April 1986 – 19 July 1989
Prime MinisterEdward Szczepanik
Preceded byEdward Bernard Raczyński
Succeeded byRyszard Kaczorowski
Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland
14th Prime Minister in Exile
In office
5 August 1976 – 8 April 1986
PresidentStanisław Ostrowski
Edward Bernard Raczyński
Preceded byAlfred Urbański
Succeeded byEdward Szczepanik
Personal details
Born
Kazimierz Aleksander Sabbat

(1913-02-27)27 February 1913
Bielany Kapitulne, then Russian Empire, now Poland
Died19 July 1989(1989-07-19) (aged 76)
London, England
Political partyNone
SpouseAnna Sulik
ProfessionBusinessman, politician

Kazimierz Aleksander Sabbat[1] (27 February 1913 – 19 July 1989), was President of Poland in Exile from 8 April 1986 until his death, 19 July 1989, after serving (from 1976) as Prime Minister of the Polish Government in Exile.

Early life

Sabbat was born on 27 February 1913 in Bieliny Kapitulne, at the foot of the Lysa Gora mountain. Sabbat completed secondary school in Mielec, and studied Law at the Warsaw University shortly before the World War II. He was a Scout, and remained dedicated to the concept of Scouting, even in his later life while in exile.

Wartime

After a short service in the Navy, Sabbat was directed to the Motorized Brigade of Stanisław Maczek. Wounded during the Polish retreat, he managed to reach Great Britain where he was directed to the British General Staff as officer responsible for youth.

Post war

After being discharged from the army in 1948, he started up his own successful business in England. He later worked for the Scouting Organization and the Association of Polish Veterans on a voluntary basis.

As an executive of the National Union he managed the Treasury Division, and in 1976 became the Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile. He attempted to unite the various émigré circles and created ever stronger links with the opposition movement in Poland, which benefited from the Government in exile's moral and material help through different Funds.

Grave of President Kazimierz Sabbat

He became President of the Republic of Poland (in Exile) in 1986 succeeding Edward Raczyński. He died in London, aged 76, in 1989. Coincidentally, on the same day Wojciech Jaruzelski was elected by a still unfree Parliament as the first President of the country since the 1950s. Ryszard Kaczorowski, Minister of Domestic Affairs and designated successor, took office in exile and on 22 December 1990, after the first free and fair elections in Poland since the war, handed his powers and the insignia of the Polish Second Republic to President-elect Lech Wałęsa.

Sabbat is buried on Gunnersbury Cemetery in London, along with Anna Sabbat, who died on 28 April 2015. Their children all still live in areas near to London. He has eight grandchildren.

Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of the Republic of Poland in Exile
1976–1986
Succeeded by
Preceded by President of the Republic of Poland in exile
1986–1989
Succeeded by

References

(Note: This site is derivative of the above link)