Five days after taking office, while attending an art exhibition in the Warsaw's National Gallery of Art "Zachęta", Narutowicz was shot and killed during a conversation with a British envoy.[6][2] The assassin was a painter, Eligiusz Niewiadomski, who fired three shots at the president.[7]
Aftermath
Niewiadomski had connections with the right wing National Democratic Party.[6] During his trial, Niewiadomski stated that he wanted to kill Józef Piłsudski originally, but assassinating his ally, Narutowicz, was "a step in the fight for Polishness and for the nation."[6] Niewiadomski was sentenced to death. His state execution took place outside the Warsaw Citadel on 31 January.[8] Part of the right-wing camp perceived Niewiadomski as a hero. Nationalistic press and some historians kept portraying Niewiadomski in positive light, writing about his "heroic stand", "sacred convictions, "patriotic duty" and such.[6][9] Within months, his grave became a right-wing shrine, and "more than three hundred babies baptized in Warsaw were given the uncommon name Eligiusz".[8]
The murder of the first president of the Second Polish Republic and the angry canvassing against him revealed the fragility of democratic mechanisms in Poland at that time.[3][7]
Anna Bojarska (1 November 2010). "On Niewiadomski". In Michael Bernhard; Henryk Szlajfer (eds.). From the Polish Underground: Selections from Krytyka, 1978-1993. Penn State Press. pp. 333–352. ISBN978-0-271-04427-9.
Piotr Wróbel; Daniel Z. Stone; Stanislaus A. Blejwas; Robert Blobaum; Włodzimierz Suleja; Andrzej Friszke; Rafał Habielski (15 April 2010). M. B. B. Biskupski; James S. Pula; Piotr J. Wróbel (eds.). The Origins of Modern Polish Democracy. Polish and Polish American Studies (1 ed.). Ohio University Press. p. 376. ISBN978-0-8214-4309-5.
Kancelaria Prezydenta RP (corporate author) (2012). "Gabriel Narutowicz". Warsaw: Kancelaria Prezydenta RP. Retrieved 2014-09-17. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
Richard M. Watt (1998). Bitter Glory: Poland and Its Fate, 1918 to 1939. Hippocrene Books. p. 511. ISBN978-0781806732.
Further reading
Brykczynski, Paul (2016). Primed for Violence: Murder, Antisemitism, and Democratic Politics in Interwar Poland. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN978-0-299-30700-4.