Officials are expected to attend ceremonies at sites including Warsaw's Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East.
President Andrzej Duda is scheduled to attend a commemorative event in the village of Wytyczno in the east of the country, where he will pay tribute to soldiers who fought to defend Poland against the invading Red Army in September 1939.
On the eve of the anniversary, officials said that September 17, 1939 was one of the most tragic dates in recent Polish history.
At dawn on September 17, 1939, Soviet troops invaded Poland following a secret agreement with the German Third Reich.
Poland was then caught between German Nazi forces advancing from the west and Soviet forces from the east.
Following the invasion, some 250,000 Polish soldiers were captured by the Soviets, who later executed thousands of prisoners of war, public broadcaster Polish Radio’s IAR news agency has reported.
Mass deportations of the civilian population followed, with up to 1.5 million Poles transported away into the Soviet interior, mainly to Siberia and Kazakhstan, according to some estimates.
Tens of thousands of ethnic Poles killed in the former USSR before the 1939 Soviet invasion were remembered at memorial ceremonies in Warsaw last month.
A crowd of demonstrators staged a rally outside the Russian embassy in Warsaw on Wednesday evening to commemorate Polish victims of Soviet crimes and warn the world over modern-day Russia.
(gs/pk)
Source: IAR