- Time Period: Post-WW2 Period
- Year of Institution: 1 September 2011
- Country: Poland
The Pro Patria Medal is a civil state decoration of Poland established in 2011 and awarded by the Head of the Office for War Veterans and Victims of Oppression.
The medal is awarded by the Head of the Office for War Veterans and Victims of Oppression based upon an application with documentation from veterans and victims of oppression groups. Recommendations may also be made by departments of the Polish Government or Polish diplomatic missions and military attachés. The medal is awarded to mark special merit in strengthening and treasuring the memory of the Polish people’s fight for the independence of the Polish Republic during and following World War II.
The Pro Patria Medal Design
The medal is struck in silver metal and measures 36 mm in diameter.
The obverse depicts a crowned Polish Eagle sitting atop a saber crossed with a war scythe. The reverse bears a cross pattee above the three-line inscription PRO PATRIA 1768-1989, with a crossed laurel and oak spray below. The date 1768 represents the year of the Bar Confederation, the first rebellion to restore an independent Poland. Around the edge is the inscription “URZAD DO SPRAW KOMBATANTOW I OSOB REPRESJONOWANYCH” (“Office for War Veterans and Victims of Oppression”).
The medal hangs from a ring suspension, attached to a 38 mm crimson ribbon with a dark blue central stripe bordered by narrow white stripes. At the edges are narrow black stripes.