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Brooklyn, NY - American Reconnects With Polish Woman Who Saved His Life During The Holocaust

Published on:   Jan 08, 2009 at 07:53 AM
News Source: Jpost By ETGAR LEFKOVITS
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Holocaust survivor William Donat kisses Righteous Among the Nations Magdalena Grodzka-Guzkowska during a ceremony honoring her at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, Tuesday. [Photo: Yad Vashem]
Holocaust survivor William Donat kisses Righteous Among the Nations Magdalena Grodzka-Guzkowska during a ceremony honoring her at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, Tuesday. [Photo: Yad Vashem]
Brooklyn, NY - Even today, more than 65 years later, 71-year-old William Donat of New York cannot forget the week in the spring of 1943 when as a boy of five he was sheltered from the clutches of the Nazis by a 17-year-old Polish girl.

The image of the "sweet, heroic young woman," as he described her Tuesday, never faded from his memory over the years, even though their time together was short.

The woman, Magdalena Grodzka-Guzkowska, was active in the Polish underground during World War II. Donat had been smuggled out of the Warsaw Ghetto, but was in desperate need of shelter after some Polish neighbors had informed on the elderly Polish couple who had been safeguarding him for some weeks. The couple managed to bribe the police into silence but were warned to get rid of the Jewish child lest they all be killed the next time.

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A short time later, the Polish teen, nicknamed Magda, appeared at the door of the home and took him to another apartment until his adopted "aunt and uncle" - his father's childless Polish coworkers who had agreed to take the child in - could find a safer place for him to hide.

"You took two chairs together and made them into a bed for me, and then you showed me the stars and said that the good spirit would watch over me," Donat told his now 84-year-old Polish rescuer at a ceremony Tuesday at Yad Vashem, where she was granted the honor of Righteous Among the Nations.

During that fateful week, as the Warsaw Ghetto was being razed, Grodzka-Guzkowska, who had similarly sequestered other Jewish children, brought Donat food every day as well as colors for drawing pictures, and boats made out of paper.

She also taught him Christian prayers and customs, to help disguise his Jewish identity.

The next week, the child was placed in a Polish orphanage outside of Warsaw, where he remained for the duration of the war.

After the war ended, he was reunited with his parents, who had managed to survive the Holocaust even though they had been separated after being sent to the Majdanek concentration camp.

The family of three moved to the United States in 1946.

Donat's reunion with the Polish woman who rescued him happened by chance. The boy's father, Alexander Donat, who had been a publisher of a Polish-language newspaper before the war, mentioned the story of the angelic Polish teen who had helped save his son's life in his memoir, The Holocaust Kingdom.

Then, two years ago, an American filmmaker who had read the book came across Grodzka-Guzkowska in Warsaw, where she was working on a project about the late Polish rescuer Irena Sendler, and he asked the elder Donat if he knew that "Magda" was still alive and living in Warsaw.

Donat quickly traveled to Warsaw with his wife to reconnect with the person who had helped save his life and then successfully worked to have her recognized by Yad Vashem.

Their second reunion in two years after more than six-and-a-half decades took place at the Jerusalem ceremony on Tuesday.

"I never thought that I would see him again," Grodzka-Guzkowska recounted, noting that he now had three children and six grandchildren of his own. "He was the only one of the children that I have been able to reconnect with."

Thinking back to those fateful days during the Holocaust, she noted that one of the other Jewish children had been very sick when she got him, and had soon died.

"He died in a warm bed and not eaten by worms or killed by the Germans," she said.

"I am so happy to have found you again after all these years," Donat concluded. "Unfortunately there were not enough people like you."


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Read Comments (6)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Jan 08, 2009 at 08:01 AM robroy560 Says:

Very touching story... may she enjoy her remaining years in peace for her kindness to the Jews.

Unfortunately there were not enough people like her. To this day many Poles still blame us for WWII. Ukranians rounded us up for bottles of vodka, and many still hate us.

2

 Jan 08, 2009 at 08:13 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #1  
robroy560 Says:

Very touching story... may she enjoy her remaining years in peace for her kindness to the Jews.

Unfortunately there were not enough people like her. To this day many Poles still blame us for WWII. Ukranians rounded us up for bottles of vodka, and many still hate us.

Many still hate us? Everyone hates us, even those that say they don't. Inside we are hated by all goyem, because we're the "chosen" one.

3

 Jan 08, 2009 at 09:48 AM Anonymous Says:

Wake up...Hashem creates good people all over...open your eyes...and ears

4

 Jan 08, 2009 at 10:06 AM Shaul Says:

Anonymous #2: "Everyone hates us"? Get a grip, man. You make all frum Jews seem like closed-minded haters. Don't you realize you're a bigger bigot than the very "goyem" you despise?

6

 Jan 08, 2009 at 11:32 AM Don Says:

Interesting point. There is to be found some chesed among the nations however.

7

 Jan 08, 2009 at 12:55 PM Heimishe Yid Says:

#4 Wake up and smell the coffee. We are hated all around the world just like dogs hate cats! Over the centuries, we have been tortured, burned, humiliated, been beaten, killed and blamed for everything under the sun! The fact remains nebach until Moshiach comes we are and will be hated just for being Yiden! Yes, there are good goyim, yes not everyone hates us but then again just look back and forward and open your eyes, ears, listen and learn and you will agree............

8

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