The Governor was treated by physicians and went home, while Piłsudski, as planned, proceeded to Lwów's Great Theatre, where he received an
ovation from the gathered public. The wounded and badly
contused Fedak was taken under police escort to a
hospital. Immediately interrogated by the police, he falsely stated that he had wanted to shoot only the Governor, whom he considered an enemy of the Ukrainian people, and had planned to then hand his pistol over to Chief of State Piłsudski. After the performance at the Great Theater, a
banquet was held at the provincial administrative offices, with the wounded Governor Grabowski in attendance. The attack led to mass arrests of UVO members in Galicia. Fedak was sentenced to six years in prison. He was released in 1924 in a prisoners' exchange and escaped abroad. He lived in France and Germany. In 1937, he came back to Ukraine and was arrested. After the
German occupation of Poland in September 1939, he escaped from prison again. Subsequently, he became a member of the
OUN-M, and joined the
Einsatzgruppe C as a
translator in the summer of 1941. His main duties were translating documents from Russian and Ukrainian into German and participating in arrests. It is known that Fedak was one of the interpreters of the
Sondercommando 4A and participated in the massacre of
Babyn Yar. He possibly redacted and/or translated the public notice displayed around the city on 28 September 1941 ordering all Kievan Jews in Russian, Ukrainian and German to assemble for supposed resettlement. According to testimonies from post-war trials in Western Germany, during the shooting at Babyn Yar, he was patrolling the road which led to the massacre site. According to the Russian secret service
SVR, while he was working as an interpreter for the Germans, Fedak delivered information about German spies behind the Russian lines and Nazi
Abwehr structures active in Kyiv to Soviet intelligence agent
Ivan Kudrya (1912–1942) present in Kyiv at the time, until he was discovered in July 1942. From 1943 to 1945 Fedak served in the
SS Division "Galicia". Toward the end of
World War II he disappeared without trace in
Berlin. ==See also==