Pilsudski's death in May 1935 had left …

Years: 1936 - 1936
June
Pilsudski's death in May 1935 had left Poland as a dictatorship without a dictator, and a decomposition of the sanacja regime ensued.

Attempts to pass on Pilsudski's mantle to the new commander in chief, Marshal Edward Smigly-Rydz, are unsuccessful, as is the artificial creation of a governmental party—the Camp of National Unity.

The peasant parties (now united); the increasingly chauvinist National Party, with its fascist splinter party, the National Radical Camp; and the socialists all oppose the regime and show success in municipal elections.

Socioeconomic tension is translated into peasant strikes in the countryside and riots in towns.

Smigly-Rydz orders Jews to be segregated in university classrooms.

Cardinal August Hlond, newly appointed Primate of Poland, on February 29, 1936, declared in a pastoral letter that since Jews are usurers, slave traders and frauds, Poles should boycott their businesses.

Prime Minister Felicjan Slawoj-Skladkowski on June 4, endorses an "economic war" against the Jews.

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