St. Petersburg to China
In 1907, he was released from prison with a so-called
wolf ticket, which prevented him from finding a job or leaving Russia. At that time he devoted himself to writing. His novel
V ludskoi pyli (
In Human Dust), in which he described his several years' stay in Russian prisons, gained him much popularity in Russia. His popularity allowed him to return to St Petersburg in 1908. There he continued to write books and at the same time headed the
Society of the Gold and Platinum Industry and several newspapers and journals, both in Russian and in Polish. After the outbreak of
World War I, Ossendowski published several more books, including a science fiction novel, a propaganda novel on German spies in Russia and a brochure describing German and Austro-Hungarian
war crimes. After the outbreak of the
February Revolution of 1917, Ossendowski moved yet again, to
Siberia, this time to
Omsk, where he started giving lectures at the local university. After the
October Revolution and the outbreak of the
Russian Civil War, he also got involved in the counterrevolutionary Russian government led by Supreme Governor Admiral
Aleksandr Kolchak. He served at various posts, among others as an
intelligence officer, an envoy to the intervention corps from the United States and an assistant to the
Polish 5th Rifle Division of Maj.
Walerian Czuma. In 1918 he was responsible for the transfer of many tsarist and
White Russian documents to the Entente, including proofs (many apparently forged) of German support (confirmed later from German archives) for Lenin and his
Bolsheviks (so-called
Sisson Documents). After Kolchak's defeat in 1920, Ossendowski joined a group of Poles and White Russians trying to escape from communist-controlled Siberia to India through
Mongolia, China and
Tibet. After a journey of several thousand miles, the group reached Chinese-controlled Mongolia, only to be stopped there by the takeover of the country led by mysterious Baron
Roman Ungern von Sternberg. The Baron was a mystic who was fascinated by the beliefs and religions of the Far East such as
Buddhism and "who believed himself to be a
reincarnation of
Kangchendzönga, the Mongolian god of war." Ungern-Sternberg's philosophy was an exceptionally muddled mixture of
Russian nationalism with Chinese and Mongol beliefs. However, he also proved to be an exceptional military commander, and his forces grew rapidly. Ossendowski joined the baron's army as a commanding officer of one of the self-defense troops. He also briefly became Ungern's political advisor and chief of intelligence. Little is known of his service at the latter post, which adds to Ossendowski's legend as a mysterious person. In late 1920, he was sent with a diplomatic mission to Japan and then the US, never to return to Mongolia. Some writers believe that Ossendowski was one of the people who hid the semimythical treasures of Baron
Roman von Ungern-Sternberg. After his arrival in New York City, Ossendowski started to work for the Polish diplomatic service and possibly as a spy. At the same time, in late 1921 he published his first book in English:
Beasts, Men and Gods. The description of his travels during the Russian Civil War and the campaigns led by the
Bloody Baron became a striking success and a bestseller. In 1923, it was translated into Polish and then into several other languages. ==Back to Poland==