Józef Jeka
Józef Jeka (1917–1958) was a Polish fighter pilot who served in the Polish Defensive War and became an ace in the Battle of Britain. In the Second World War he shot down at least eight enemy aircraft, and survived being shot down twice. In the Cold War Jeka worked for the CIA. He was killed in 1958 in an air crash on a covert mission in Indonesia. BiographyEarly yearsJózef Jeka was born in Tupadły (present-day it is part of the town Władysławowo). He was the son of Antoni and Agata Mudlaff.[1][circular reference] Józef's father was a Polish independence activist.[2][circular reference] Two Józef's brothers, Alfons and Stanisław belonged to the Pomeranian Griffin. On 1 August 1937 Józef Jeka entered the Non-Commissioned Officer's School for minors. Then he participated in a course in aircraft maintenance. After completing his flying training[3][circular reference] and then a fighter pilot course, he was assigned to Polish 141st Fighter Escadrille. World War IIDuring the September Campaign Jeka flew a PZL P.11 fighter. After the Soviet invasion of Poland he crossed the border with Romania, where he was interned. He escaped to France via Yugoslavia and Greece, on 23 October he arrived in Marseilles. On 23 February 1940 he came to England. After training in Blackpool and Carlisle[4][5] Jeka was sent to No. 238 Squadron RAF. He shot down his first plane on 15 September 1940. He became an ace on 7 October when he downed a Junkers Ju 88 (it was his 5th victory). On 5 October Jeka himself was shot down and wounded. He was hospitalized till 15 November in Shaftesbury. From 15 November 1940 to 15 December 1941 he flew in No. 306 Polish Fighter Squadron and destroyed two Bf 109. From December 1941 to March 1942 Jeka was an instructor in No. 58 Operational Training Unit based at RAF Grangemouth. He came back to his squadron on 25 May 1942. On 9 December 1942 he entered officers school. He was promoted to porucznik (lieutenant) and posted to No. 308 Polish Fighter Squadron. He later served in No. 316 Polish Fighter Squadron. On 21 May 1944 Jeka was shot down by flak over France. He parachuted to safety and hid with the help of the French Resistance. Two months later, the Allied front reached his hiding place and Jeka returned to his unit. On 25 May 1945[6] he was appointed commander of 306 squadron. On 31 December 1949 Jeka ended his service in the Polish Air Force. Cold WarAfter the Second World War ended, Jeka stayed in the RAF and served in Allied-occupied Germany. He married a British woman, and had a daughter whom he never met.[citation needed] In Germany he was invited to work for the CIA. Jeka accepted as an avowed anti-communist. From 1950 he collaborated with British and American intelligence. He flight-tested the Lockheed U-2 aircraft, and flew missions over Central and Eastern Europe.[7][circular reference] He was considered as a candidate to steal a Soviet MiG-15. The mission was cancelled, as on 5 March 1953, the Polish pilot Franciszek Jarecki landed his MiG at Bornholm. In the late 1950s Jeka served in the Angkatan Udara Revolusioner (AUREV) air force of the Permesta rebels on Sulawesi in Indonesia. AUREV was covertly equipped and manned by the CIA. On 13 April 1958, Jeka was the pilot of an AUREV Martin B-26 Marauder when it crashed on take-off from Permesta's Mapanget airbase. Jeka, his Polish navigator Jan Iżicky, and his Indonesian radio operator / observer, Minahasan, were all killed.[8] Jeka is buried in Newark-on-Trent, Nottinghamshire, England. His grave is next to the Polish section of the CWGC cemetery. Awards[9]
Virtuti Militari, Silver Cross Military promotionsPolish Air Force
Royal Air Force
References
Further reading
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