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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A minor sabotage during World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland was any underground resistance operation that involved a disruptive but relatively minor and non-violent form of defiance, such as the painting of graffiti, the manufacture of fake documents, the disrupting of German propaganda campaigns, and the like. Minor-sabotage operations often involved elements of humor. The purpose of minor-sabotage operations was primarily psychological to show Polish civilians that the resistance remained active, and thus bolster civilian morale, and to wear down…mehr

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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! A minor sabotage during World War II in Nazi-occupied Poland was any underground resistance operation that involved a disruptive but relatively minor and non-violent form of defiance, such as the painting of graffiti, the manufacture of fake documents, the disrupting of German propaganda campaigns, and the like. Minor-sabotage operations often involved elements of humor. The purpose of minor-sabotage operations was primarily psychological to show Polish civilians that the resistance remained active, and thus bolster civilian morale, and to wear down the German occupier. In September 1939, during the German invasion of Poland, after the fall of Warsaw, a young Polish student, El bieta Zahorska, tore down a German poster. Soon after, she was executed for her act; her death, however, instead of cowing others, inspired an entire new branch of Polish resistance, called minor sabotage.