Gustaw Przeczek (Polish pronunciation: ['gustaf 'p??t???k]; 30 May 1913 – 21 February 1974) was a Polish writer, poet, teacher and activist from the Zaolzie region of Cieszyn Silesia.
He was born in a large coal miner's family in the village of Lazy which lies in the coal basin.
He graduated from schools in Orlowa and Lazy and in 1933 from a teachers' seminary in Ostrava.
Przeczek later taught as a teacher in Polish schools in Bystrzyca and Lazy.
During World War II he was arrested during mass arrests of Polish intelligentsia and in 1940-1945 incarcerated in Dachau and KL Gusen I concentration camp.
In the latter camp Przeczek was forced to quarry granite in Gusen and Kastenhofen stone pits.After the war he administered a Polish school in Orlowa and in 1951-1970 was a director of the Polish elementary school in Trzyniec.
Przeczek leaned towards communism and in 1954-1960 was a member of the National Assembly of Czechoslovakia from the Communist Party.
He was there a member of the Cultural Committee.
He was also active in several cultural and literary organizations, most notably the Polish Cultural and Educational Union and its Literary-Artistic Section.
Przeczek edited and contributed to Polish magazines for children Jutrzenka and Ogniwo, and wrote several textbooks for Polish schools in Czechoslovakia.
He was also a member of Polish editorial staff of the Profil publishing house in Ostrava.
Przeczek wrote poetry, prose and also plays.
His literary work is influenced by his incarceration in Nazi concentration camps.
In KL Gusen I (Mauthausen) Przeczek met other poets, Poles Konstanty Cwierk, Mieczyslaw Paszkiewicz, Grzegorz Timofiejew and Zdzislaw Wróblewski; and Czech Raimund Habrina.
They wrote poems on a paper from cement bags; these poems spread among inmates and were recited.
Przeczek's first works after his return focused on the life in the concentration camp.