The fourth period (1926–1932), from Piłsudski's return to power in the
May 1926 Coup to the conclusion of the
1932 Polish-Soviet Nonaggression Pact, was the period of the most determined, organized and active collaboration with Promethean organizations. Important events in this period included:
General Promethean affairs • the creation of an in Warsaw, with a program in
Near and
Far Eastern studies, the Institute being treated as a political instrument for general Promethean matters; • the establishment, at the Eastern Institute, of an Orientalist Youth Circle, a youth organization dedicated to general Promethean affairs, with offices in
Kraków,
Vilnius and
Harbin; • the founding of a quarterly, (
The East), devoted to Promethean affairs; • the establishment of academic scholarships for Promethean students at
Warsaw,
Vilnius,
Poznań,
Kraków,
Paris,
Berlin and
Cairo; • the founding of four Promethean clubs, in
Warsaw,
Paris,
Helsinki and
Harbin; • the founding, in
Paris and
Helsinki, of the propaganda monthlies,
Promethee and
Prometheus; • the establishment of collaborative links with
France-Orient in
Paris.
Ukrainian affairs • the organization of a military staff for the
Ukrainian People's Republic, including an organizational-operational section (subordinate to Poland's Gen.
Julian Stachiewicz), an intelligence section (subordinate to Poland's Section II), and a propaganda section (subordinate to the Polish General Staff's Office Z); • the recruitment of
Petlurist Ukrainian officers as contract officers for the
Polish Army; • the creation of three separate
press agencies: in
Warsaw ("A.T.E."),
Paris ("Ofinor") and
Bucharest ("Ukraintag"); • the founding of a
Polish-Ukrainian Bulletin; • the creation in Warsaw of a Ukrainian Institute of Learning; • the founding of a General Ukrainian Council coordinating Petlurist émigré centers in European countries. This period saw the following notable political events in
Caucasus affairs: • the December 7, 1930,
assassination in Paris, by the
Soviets, of the Georgian minister
Noe Ramishvili; and • pronouncements by
Shalva Eliava, the "Soviet governor of Caucasus", at the 1930 Georgian communist congress in
Tiflis, that the national movement in the Caucasus was under the influence of the Caucasus National Committee. The growing revolutionary ferment in the
Caucasus, especially in Azerbaijan, collaboratively engaged all the Caucasus national elements.
Cossack affairs A successful campaign was waged that helped stimulate a separatist movement among many
Cossack émigré groups. This injected a substantial political diversion into
White Russian émigré ranks. This Prometheist period also witnessed a development that was independent of the movement, but which would ultimately play a role in regard to it. There was heightened diversionary activity in
Poland by the
OUN (
Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists), supported by both
Germany and
Czechoslovakia and even by
Lithuania. There were many acts of
expropriation and
sabotage against the Polish community and government by members of OUN combat units in southeastern Poland. This in turn led to "pacification" operations by the Polish authorities against the Polish-Ukrainian community. Moreover, the
Soviet Union sought to an equal degree to exploit Poland's internal disarray—indeed, in 1921–1931, to a greater degree than the Germans. Soviet communist propaganda in Poland's Eastern Borderlands (), combined with a pro-Ukrainian Soviet attitude toward Soviet Ukraine, created strong pro-Soviet sentiment among Polish Ukrainians. This sentiment would persist until the subsequent mass
Soviet resettlements,
arrests,
executions and
famines of 1933–1938. The period 1926–1932 was marked by the participation of a large number of Poles in the Promethean endeavor: • at the
Foreign Ministry:
Tadeusz Hołówko, Tadeusz Schaetzel, Stanisław Hempel, Adam Tarnowski, Mirosław Arciszewski, Roman Knoll, Juliusz Łukasiewicz, Marian Szumlakowski,
Stanisław Zaċwilichowski, Jan Gawroński, Zygmunt Mostowski, Władysław Zaleski, Kazimierz Marian Wyszyński, Karol Dubicz-Penther, Władysław Pelc, Ksawery Zalewski, Władysław Wolski, Piotr Kurnicki, Wacław Knoll; • at the
General Staff: Brig. Gen.
Julian Stachiewicz, Col.
Tadeusz Schaetzel, Col.
Tadeusz Pełczyński, Col.
Józef Englicht, Maj.
Edmund Charaszkiewicz, Maj. Włodzimierz Dąbrowski, Maj. Stanisław Gliński, Maj. Jerzy Krzymowski, Maj. Karol Krzewski-Lilienfeld, Capt. Stefan Nowaczek, Capt. Jan Rybczyński, Lt. Jan Helcman, Józef Skarżyński, Aleksander Eugeniusz Piwnicki, Stefan Sipa, Lt. Antoni Zaręba; • at the
Ministry of Internal Affairs: Henryk Suchanek-Suchecki, Stanisław Łaniecki, Emil Miśkiewicz; • at the
Ministry of Education: Aleksander Kawałkowski, Franciszek Salezy Potocki, Zdzisław Meyer, Juliusz Znaniecki, Adam Miłobędzki; • in the
socio-political sphere: Senator Stanisław Siedlecki (president of the Eastern Institute), Wacław Sieroszewski, Stanisław Trzeciak, Antoni Wincenty Kwiatkowski, Antoni Około-Kułak, Prof. Olgierd Górka (general secretary and director of the Eastern Institute), Stanisław Korwin-Pawłowski (general secretary of the Eastern Institute), Bolesław Bielawski, Stanisław Józef Paprocki (director of the Institute for Study of National Minority Affairs), Leon Wasilewski, Włodzimierz Bączkowski, Feliks Ibiański-Zahora, Wacław Wincenty Łypacewicz, Władysław Wielhorski (director of the
Institute for Study of Eastern Europe, in
Vilnius), Marian Świechowski, Prof. Jan Kucharzewski, Prof.
Marceli Handelsman, Prof. Stanisław Poniatowski, Prof. Ludwik Kolankowski, Prof.
Oskar Halecki, Prof. Stanisław Franciszek Zajączkowski, Prof. Józef Ujejski, Prof.
Stanisław Szober,
Andrzej Strug, Marian Malinowski, Alfred Szczęsny Wielopolski, Wojciech Stpiczyński, Józef Łobodowski, Prof. Marian Zdziechowski, Władysław Woydyno. Additionally, thanks to
Tadeusz Hołówko's exceptional leadership in Promethean matters, a number of Polish
government ministers participated indirectly or directly:
Walery Sławek,
Aleksander Prystor,
August Zaleski,
Janusz Jędrzejewicz,
Wacław Jędrzejewicz,
Bronisław Pieracki,
Adam Koc,
Stefan Starzyński,
Marian Zyndram-Kościałkowski. A separate category of Promethean ideological endeavor comprised the work of
Adam Skwarczyński. In this period (1926–1932), favorable political circumstances within and without Poland, adequate financing and, above all, full mutual confidence among all the participants, led to an exceptional level of Promethean activity—in the conduct of
propaganda within the Promethean countries, in the political efforts of the Promethean
émigrés, and in propaganda outside Poland. == Fifth period (1933–1939) ==