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Rescuers and Aid Providers: View Other Stories of Rescue in the Area

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Help Was Extended to: View Other Stories of Rescue in the Area

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The Ryszewski Family

Henryk Ryszewski Father
born 1900 – died 1972

Irena Ryszewska née Bobowska Mother
born 1900 – died 1981

Zofia Brusikiewicz née Ryszewska Daughter
born 14 May 1927 in Bydgoszcz (kujawsko-pomorskie)

Recognized as the Righteous Among the Nations:

7 March 1983

  • Zofia Brusikiewicz née Ryszewska
  • Irena Ryszewska née Bobowska
  • Henryk Ryszewski

Help Was Extended to:

Aleksander Artmanowicz

Róża Lewin

Ludwik Opal

Marian Kasman

Lipa Szymkiewicz

Leon Funt
died 1944 in Pruszków (mazowieckie)

Funt

Linak Funt Husband

Icchak Pinalis

Pinalis

Anna Lewin

Story of Rescue

November 2008, Teresa Torańska

“There were thirteen of them. Well, the place was crowded,” laughs Zofia, “for we were five people, in addition. My sister, my baby brother and I, we were unaware of the danger. And the parents? One Jew, or thirteen, what was the difference? The punishment was the same.”

They were hiding in the three-room apartment owned by her parents. It was in Warsaw, at Nowy Wjazd Street, in front of the Royal Castle. Artmanowicz – a bookseller, a very nice gentleman – was the first to arrive. He came in the end of 1941. There was one four-year-old child, the rest of them were middle-aged and elder people.

“We had family-like relations. Everybody would cook, eat and go to sleep together. The palliasses and mattresses were being spread in the rooms for the night and stored in the unused bathroom during the day.”

The heart of the group was Ania, a wonderful person. She had breast cancer, but she would not let the others know that she was suffering. Some gentleman from “Żegota” was bringing her morphine.

“They tried not to disturb,” Zofia recalls. “We used to play hearts in the evenings. I remember no quarrels, no stinging, no tensions.”

“The neighbors suspected something. Once the Germans were in the building. In the bathroom we had a wardrobe that went from the floor to the ceiling. It had a passage inside. There was some space behind the wardrobe, everybody could fit into it and wait until the danger was over.”

Where were the money from? Who had some, would give some; who had none, would give none. “Moreover, my sister was taking away anything she could to the bazaar in Praga district. She was selling things.” They had some gold, one could sell it and exchange for food.

“Their fate was terrible,” she says. “ two years in hiding.”

And then there was the Uprising, the house was set on fire and everybody went their own way.

All of them survived, except one who was shot by the Germans in the camp in Pruszków.

An article from the album “Recalling Forgotten History for Poles who Rescued Jews During the Holocaust,“ Warsaw 2008
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