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Forgotten Odyssey

 

I've just finished watching the film that Linder has kindly sent me
It's a very good account of what happened and I shall pass it on to others that went through the Odyssey
There is a Mrs. Somhjanc that would be interested in this as her and her husband went throught that hell
at a very young ages.

It was well worth watching

Paul

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Eastern Borderlands of II RP;??
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Hoover Institution - East European section

Stefan Wisniowski
 

Dear all
I am passing on a very kind note from Irena Czernichowska that she is alive and well at the Hoover Institution - East European section. ?

As you know, that is where the various war-time collections of the Polish Armed Forces in the East (Anders Army) and the Polish Government-in-Exile and various Embassy files were archived to protect them during the Communist years. ?This is not dry historical data - the holdings are fantastic, including files on deportees stories, letters, even refugee children's school essays. ?The Poles that survived the Soviet repression insisted on documenting their horrific experiences for posterity. ?That's us!

I will follow Irene's note with a longer explanatory comment on the Hoover materials. ?For those ?new to the list who are interested, get yourself a cup of coffee and read this through. ?I have put it here in the hope that the richness of this material about the Siberian deportees and their experiences fires some of us with the enthusiasm to spend some time at Stanford or in correspondence with them to bring these experiences back to life.
--
Stefan Wisniowski
Moderator, Kresy-Siberia

----------
> From: "Czernichowska, Irene?"
> Date: Thu, 08 Nov 2001 10:05:45 -0800
> To: Stefan Wisniowski
> Subject: Re: Hello!
>
> Dear Stefan and others,
> I am here, overloaded with new responsibilities, and yes, ?it is due to
> some changes here. I feel very guilty about not responding to people, and
> hope that things will stabilize soon so that I could go back to my favorite
> subjects, and to continuation of ?my correspondences with real people.
> I hope it will be soon.
> Don't give up on me!
> Irena
>

Here is the explanatory material I promised. ?
- Stefan.

Hoover Institution Archives

Contact Information
Hoover Institution Archives
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305-6010
Phone: (650) 723-3563
Fax: (650) 725-3445
Email: archives@...

Three significant holdings:

1. Poland. Ambasada (Soviet Union) Records, 1941-1944

2. Poland. Ministerstwo Informacji i Dokumentacji Records, 1939-1945

3. Wladyslaw Anders Papers, 1939-1946

------------------------------------------------------------------------

1. ?Poland. Ambasada (Soviet Union), 1941-1944
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract.

Reports, correspondence, accounts, lists, testimonies, questionnaires, certificates, petitions, card files, maps, circulars, graphs, protocols, and clippings, relating to World War II, the Soviet occupation of Poland, the Polish-Soviet military and diplomatic agreements of 1941, the re-establishment of the Polish embassy in Moscow, Polish prisoners of war in the Soviet Union, deportations of Polish citizens to the Soviet Union, labor camps and settlements, relief work by the Polish social welfare department delegations among the deportees, the Polish armed forces formed in the Soviet Union, evacuation of Polish citizens to the Middle East, the Katyn massacre of Polish officers, and the breakdown of Polish-Soviet relations in 1943. Includes material on the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and the Soviet government, 1928-1929.

Biography.

Polish-Soviet diplomatic relations were severed with the Soviet occupation of Eastern Poland on September 17, 1939. After the German invasion of the USSR in June 1941, however, the Soviet government re-established diplomatic relations with the Polish government, then in exile in London. An agreement was signed on July 30, 1941, followed by a military accord on August 14. The Poles were allowed to re-establish an Embassy in Moscow, to form an army on Soviet territory for the common struggle against Germany, and to set up a network of Polish citizens deported to the USSR in 1939-1941.

Friction soon developed in several areas, leading to an eventual break in diplomatic relations. Of particular concern to the Polish government were the Polish deportees, many of whom were forced to accept Soviet rather than Polish citizenship. The activities of the Polish social welfare workers awoke the suspicions of the Soviet authorities, who conducted a series of arrests in June and July of 1942. Finally, the question of the fate of between 8,300 and 8,400 Polish officers who had been taken prisoner by the Soviet forces in 1939 and who were supposed to be released from the prison camps at Kozel'sk, Starobelsk and Ostashkov became a source of Polish-Soviet discord. The discovery by the Germans of mass graves of between 4,443 and 4,800 Polish officers at Katyn on April 13, 1943, seemed to confirm Polish suspicions. The Soviet authorities responded by accusing the Polish government of collaboration with the Germans. On April 25, 1943, the Soviet government broke diplomatic relations with the Polish government, and the mission of the Polish Embassy was officially terminated.

The Polish ambassador in Moscow from 1941 to July 5, 1942 was Stanislaw Kot. After the general evacuation, when the Embassy was moved to Kuibyshev, the post was assumed by Tadeusz Romer. He remained there until July 25, 1943, although his official status had been revoked in April of that year. The Romer papers are located at the Public Archives of Canada, and a microfilm copy has been deposited at the Hoover Institution.

A major part of the activity of the Polish Embassy was the organization of a network of social welfare "delegations" administered by "hommes de confiance" appointed by the Social Welfare Department. The Embassy repre-sentatives were responsible for the physical well-being and in some cases the religious and educational care of the more than one million Polish citizens deported by the Soviet authorities to labor camps and settlements in 1939-1941. A mass southward evacuation of these deportees was effected in 1943, and many made their way to Britain via Iran. A large number were interviewed in Tehran in 1943 regarding their experiences in the USSR. The interviews themselves are a part of the General Wladyslaw Anders Collection at the Hoover Institution.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

2. Poland. Ministerstwo Informacji i Dokumentacji Records, 1939-1945
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract.

Correspondence, reports, bulletins, memoirs, and photographs, relating to conditions in Poland during World War II, deportation of Poles to the Soviet Union, the Katyn Forest Massacre, and activities of Polish armed forces and of the Polish Government-in-Exile. Includes release certificates and reports of several thousand Polish deportees released from the Soviet Union in 1941.

Introduction.

The origins of the Ministry of Information and Documentation go back to the inception of the Polish government in exile in October 1939 in Paris. At first it had neither a definite organizational structure nor a name. It was referred to as the Office (urzad) or Bureau of Information and Documentation. By April 1940, the unit was named Center of Information and Documentation, and in September 1940 the Center was reorganized into the Ministry of Information and Documentation, a designation it carried for the remainder of the war and in the years that followed.

During the early months of its existence the office, comprised of information and documentation sections, was headed by Deputy Prime Minister Stanislaw Stronski, who was directly in charge of its documentation section. The information section was headed by Minister Marian Seyda. Stanislaw Stronski was in charge of the Ministry of Information and Documentation until March 1943, when his position was taken over by Stanislaw Kot, who headed the Ministry in the cabinet of Stanislaw Mikolajczyk, until the resignation of that government in November 1944. Kot's successor was Adam Pragier, who was Minister of Information and Documentation until 1949.

The Ministry of Information and Documentation was the main information and propaganda unit of the Polish government in exile. It coordinated and facilitated the dissemination of information in support of the Polish war effort through its publishing and radio programs. The Ministry also documented and analyzed the conditions and developments in occupied Poland. One of its units, for example, the Research Section headed by Wiktor Sukiennicki, was assigned the task of systematically reviewing and summarizing the testimonies of former Polish prisoners and deportees to Soviet Russia, with a view to document the entry of the Red Army into Poland, the first weeks of Soviet occupation, the October 1939 "elections", and the consequent sovietization of the occupied territories. Thousands of original Soviet camp release certificates, statements of survivors, and detailed summaries of Soviet occupation compiled by the Research Section for every county of Eastern Poland, make up about forty percent of the volume of the Ministry's collection.

Most of the archives of the Ministry of Information and Documentation, together with those of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, were moved from London to Dublin at the end of the war, and remained in storage for more than a decade. In 1959, in keeping with the agreement reached between the Hoover Institution and Aleksander Zawisza, Minister of Foreign Affairs in the Polish government in exile, the archives were shipped to their new home at Stanford.

The collection of the Ministry of Information and Documentation in the Hoover Institution Archives occupies about 31 linear meters. A smaller portion of the Ministry's archives, 3.6 linear meters, is preserved in the Polish Institute and Sikorski Museum in London. Two Hoover collections in large measure complement the archives of the Ministry of Information. One of these is the Wladyslaw Anders Collection, consisting mostly of over 18,000 statements and reports of former Polish prisoners and deportees to Soviet Russia. The other collection is that of the Polish Government Information Center (Polskie Rzadowe Centrum Informacyjne), the New York agency of the Ministry of Information and Documentation.

Preliminary processing of the collection was provided in the 1980s by the late Helena Sworakowska. Detailed processing and preservation microfilming were made possible by a generous grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities in 1997 and by matching funds from the Taube Family Foundation.

In addition, the grant provides depositing a microfilm copy of these materials in the State Archives of Poland in Warsaw

Maciej Siekierski
November 1998
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Selected box details.

RELEASE CERTIFICATES ("UDOSTOVERENIA"), 1941 August-September.
Boxes 152-184

Nearly 13,500 certificates issued by the NKVD after the Polish-Soviet agreement of July 1941, releasing Polish deportees from forced labor camps and other places of detention. Arranged alphabetically by name of deportee. Each name has also been entered on-line in a separate database, along with indication of father's name, camp name, date and place of birth, names of other family members, and box number. The names use standard Polish spelling and diacritical marks; because of that, the computer has alphabetized the names in a sequence that is not quite the correct alphabetical one. Please consult reference archivist for searches in that database. Hard copies of both databases are in separate binders.

REPORTS OF POLISH DEPORTEES, 1941.
Boxes 185-247

Nearly 12,000 questionnaires ("ankiety"), statements, and depositions of Polish deportees (as well as of some Polish prisoners of war in Box 246) collected by the Bureau of Documents of the Polish Armed Forces (Referat Historyczny Polskich Sil Zbrojnych) after evacuation to the Middle East. Arranged by name of province, and therein alphabetically by name of county. This series also includes related studies as well as copies and excerpts of some of the reports, which are filed after the orginal ones. Each name of deportee for whom we have an original report has also been entered on-line in a separate database, along with indication of profession, province, county or city, and box number (more biographical information is found in the report itself). The names use standard Polish spelling and diacritical marks; because of that, the computer has alphabetized the names in a sequence that is not quite the correct alphabetical one. Please consult reference archivist for searches in that database. Hard copies of both databases are in separate binders.
------------------------------------------------------------------------


3. ?Wladyslaw Anders Papers, 1939-1946
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abstract.

Orders, reports, card files, questionnaires, accounts, Soviet government documents and publications, photographs, microfiche, and printed matter, relating to World War II, the Polish Armed Forces in Russia, the Polish 2d Corps in Italy, Polish citizens arrested and deported under German and Soviet occupation, Polish foreign relations, the Polish government-in-exile in London, and Polish Jews.

Introductory Note.

The Wladyslaw Anders Collection is the core of the 1946 archival deposit to the Hoover Institution made by General Wladyslaw Anders, the Commander-in-Chief of the Polish Armed Forces. The collection is composed mostly of the archives of the Documents Bureau of the 2nd Polish Corps. The Bureau was established by General Anders in April 1943 to collect documentation on the 1939-1941 Soviet occupation of Eastern Poland, and the fate of the hundreds of thousands of Polish prisoners of war, labor camp inmates, and deportees, as well as to prepare materials in support of the Polish cause for the future peace conference.

The collection contains over 18,000 original personal accounts and questionnaires of former prisoners and deportees, some documents dating back to 1941, most completed later, shortly after the 1942 evacuation from the Soviet Union. The materials were once filed in one sequence numbered 1 to 18,304. Later the file was broken into two sections, one labeled as "Relacje" and the other as "Ankiety", translated loosely as "Statements" and "Reports" in the present Hoover register, but with the old numeration retained. The highest number of the "Reports" file is 15,714, and the highest number in the "Satements" file is 18,304. The "Statements" and the "Reports" files are complementary, with numbers which are lacking in one file found in the other. The documents have an alphabetical card index, occupying the first 34 boxes of the Anders Collection, comprised of over 18,000 cards, listing the name, brief biographical data, and the corresponding personal account or questionnaire number. The 18,000 plus documents contained in the next 33 boxes of the Anders Collection (boxes 35-68) represent a variety of formats. Two questionnaires, one shorter, page-long ten point form, and the second, a four-page questionnaire, were commonly used. There were also specialized questionnaires -for the clergy, for Jews, one about working conditions, etc. Some less typical materials, such as general situation reports, regional compilations, and memoirs, are also numbered with "Reports" and the "Statements". The personal accounts and questionnaires of the Anders Collection have a detailed subject index with about 250 entries on cards (boxes 89-92). There is also a card index (boxes 93-107) of several thousand names of people who died in prisons and labor camps or who were probably left behind after the 1942 evacuation to Iran. Additionally, the index includes the names of suspected collaborators and of Soviet camp and prison personnel. Besides the original accounts and questionnaires and the card indexes, the Anders Collection includes a large number of internal documents and reports collected or produced by the Documents Bureau (boxes 68-81). Finally, the Anders Collection is supplemented by materials generated by a 1951-1952 U.S. Government study of Soviet labor camps. During that time, with the permission of General Anders, the entire Anders Collection and some files of the Poland-Ambasada (Soviet Union) Collection, were loaned to the Library of Congress. In exchange, the Hoover Institution received copies of the resulting works -nearly 1,300 English language abstracts of the personal accounts from the Anders Collection (boxes 81-87), card indexes on the geography and terminology of the Soviet camp system (boxes 108-109), and a final report of the study.

Two other Hoover Institution collections include original depositions of Polish soldiers and civilians, former prisoners and deportees in the Soviet Union. These are the Poland-Ministerstwo Informacji i Dokumentacji Collection, and the Poland-Ambasada (Soviet Union) Collection. Most of the holdings of the Documents Bureau were filmed in 1945-1946 in Italy, before the transfer of the archives to the Hoover Institution. These microfilms are now part of the Col. Wincenty Bakiewicz Collection in the Archives of the Polish Institute and the Sikorski Museum in London. The personal papers of General Anders are also at the Polish Institute.

Maciej Siekierski
June 1998
------------------------------------------------------------------------


Poland family reunion.

 

hello.
Please read the story on my family's reunion in Poland this summer in your Sunday paper Parade magazine November 18th!
This summer we had a reunion within a reunion with the Dabrowski family we never knew we had! my fathers? 2 sons from his first marriage he never mentioned!my late fathers sister (79) from Drawsko Pomorskie who found out for the first time her brother Romuald had 2 sons living in Poland! 1 daughter in the USA and another son and a daughter living in Israel.I found and met most of my 18 new family members in Poland between Wroclaw, Pilchowice, Sczezin and Drawsko Pomorskie.
Nadia Larsen Tucson Arizona.
By the way one of my brothers ,Michal, the one our father never got to meet as he was arrested beforehand, desperately needs a new pacemaker, my mission is to have Medtronic donate a pacemaker for him!


Re: List of Polish properties 1919-1939

Barbara Johnson
 

Good morning. My computer tells me that this page cannot be found?
Regards
BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: 08 9273 8261
Mobile: 0409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...

tedmor@... 6/11/01 9:14:53 pm >>>

Bogdan Wilamowski wrote:

Dear Colleauges,I came across this web page, whilst searching for some of my surnames, and felt it consistent with the group.Title: "Wykaz czesci majatkow polskich w Republice Litewskiej 1919-1939 It is an alphabetic site, in Polish only. The site is part of the holdings in the University of Torun..follow the links some of which are in English..you may find an ancestor who was an authour..I do believe that the University does have further information on the Kresy/Belarus area...Good LuckKind RegardsBogdan ..(Derby, East Midlands UK)
Very interesting material. Thank you sir. The link works just fine with MS Internet Explorer
but some Netscape browsers may have trouble with it (e.g., Netscape 4.7). If your
browser returns a "page not found" error, use the link

and proceed navigating through publikacje etc.

Thanks,
Ted Morawski


+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ KRESY-SIBERIA GROUP
+ Research, Remembrance, Recognition
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Websites:
+ http:/www.AForgottenOdyssey.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Replies to this message will go directly to the full list.
+ Send e-mails to: Kresy-Siberia@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To SUBSCRIBE, send an e-mail to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-owner@...
+ saying who you are and your interest in the group
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To UNSUBSCRIBE from this group, send an email to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-unsubscribe@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to


Re: Welcome Barbara Johnson

Barbara Johnson
 

Thanks Stefan.
BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: 08 9273 8261
Mobile: 0409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...

swisniowski@... 6/11/01 7:46:00 pm >>>
Please welcome another Aussie to the group. Have you all had a chance to
see the Australian Immigration Department's website book about one group of
Sybiracy refugees that came here?



Regards,
Stefan

--
I would like to introduce myself to the Group. My name is Barbara Johnson
(Kuriata), I live in Perth Western Australia and both of my parents and
their parents were sent to Siberia during the Second World War. We have a
very strong Polish Community here in Perth with a strong Siberian Group
called Kolo Sybirak¨®w. My Aunt is a keen member and has fuelled my
interest. I am looking forward to receiving and sharing information about
our people in Poland, Siberia and later. Regards BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: +61 8 9273 8261
Mobile: +61 409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...



+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ KRESY-SIBERIA GROUP
+ Research, Remembrance, Recognition
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Websites:
+ http:/www.AForgottenOdyssey.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Replies to this message will go directly to the full list.
+ Send e-mails to: Kresy-Siberia@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To SUBSCRIBE, send an e-mail to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-owner@...
+ saying who you are and your interest in the group
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To UNSUBSCRIBE from this group, send an email to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-unsubscribe@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to


List of Polish properties 1919-1939

Bogdan Wilamowski
 

¿ªÔÆÌåÓý

Dear?Colleauges,
I came across this web page, whilst searching for some of my surnames, and?felt it?consistent with the group.
Title: "Wykaz czesci majatkow polskich w Republice Litewskiej 1919-1939
?
It is an alphabetic site,?in Polish only. The site is part of the holdings?in the University of Torun..follow the links some of which are in English..you may find an ancestor who was an authour..I do believe that the University does have further information on the Kresy/Belarus area...
Good Luck
Kind Regards
Bogdan ..(Derby, East Midlands UK) ????????


Re: List of Polish properties 1919-1939

 

Bogdan Wilamowski wrote:

Dear Colleauges,I came across this web page, whilst searching for some of my surnames, and felt it consistent with the group.Title: "Wykaz czesci majatkow polskich w Republice Litewskiej 1919-1939 It is an alphabetic site, in Polish only. The site is part of the holdings in the University of Torun..follow the links some of which are in English..you may find an ancestor who was an authour..I do believe that the University does have further information on the Kresy/Belarus area...Good LuckKind RegardsBogdan ..(Derby, East Midlands UK)
Very interesting material. Thank you sir. The link works just fine with MS Internet Explorer
but some Netscape browsers may have trouble with it (e.g., Netscape 4.7). If your
browser returns a "page not found" error, use the link

and proceed navigating through publikacje etc.

Thanks,
Ted Morawski


Re: Welcome Barbara Johnson

 

Stefan Wisniowski wrote:

Please welcome another Aussie to the group. Have you all had a chance to
see the Australian Immigration Department's website book about one group of
Sybiracy refugees that came here?



Regards,
Stefan

--
I would like to introduce myself to the Group. My name is Barbara Johnson
(Kuriata), I live in Perth Western Australia and both of my parents and
their parents were sent to Siberia during the Second World War. We have a
very strong Polish Community here in Perth with a strong Siberian Group
called Kolo Sybirakw. My Aunt is a keen member and has fuelled my
interest. I am looking forward to receiving and sharing information about
our people in Poland, Siberia and later. Regards BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: +61 8 9273 8261
Mobile: +61 409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...
Hello Barbara,

I was interested in what you wrote and hope read more of your letters. Reading
the website which Stefan linked above, I learned that some of the refugees from
camps in Africa were resettled in Australia. I wasn't aware of that. I did know
that some of them went to England because my mother-in-law and her family
(Bortkiewicz) did so. I don't know the name of their camp in Africa but I
know it was near Mt. Ngorongoro in Kenya I think.

As to those who went to Australia, I'd like to mention that some later also
settled there from Lebanon after the Polish refugee community in that
country was dispersed by further resettlement in 1950. While my family were
shipped to a camp in England, some others did choose to go to Australia.
Among these was my little childhood friend from Beirut, Tereska Perlowska.
I met her again one last time in the 60's in New York when she was in the
course of a round-the-world trip which I understand is somewhat of a tradition
among young Australians. Perhaps you may have heard of her in your community.

Welcome,
Ted Morawski


Welcome Barbara Johnson

Stefan Wisniowski
 

Please welcome another Aussie to the group. Have you all had a chance to
see the Australian Immigration Department's website book about one group of
Sybiracy refugees that came here?



Regards,
Stefan

--
I would like to introduce myself to the Group. My name is Barbara Johnson
(Kuriata), I live in Perth Western Australia and both of my parents and
their parents were sent to Siberia during the Second World War. We have a
very strong Polish Community here in Perth with a strong Siberian Group
called Kolo Sybirak¨®w. My Aunt is a keen member and has fuelled my
interest. I am looking forward to receiving and sharing information about
our people in Poland, Siberia and later. Regards BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: +61 8 9273 8261
Mobile: +61 409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...


Re: FW: Romanowski info

Barbara Johnson
 

Thank you for your e-mail but what photos? I have not sent you any photos!
Regards
BJ

Barbara B Johnson
Senior Records Officer
Records Management Services
Edith Cowan University
Telephone: 08 9273 8261
Mobile: 0409 371 800
E-mail: b.johnson@...

swisniowski@... 6/11/01 11:07:16 am >>>
Hi Barbara,
Thanks for your photos. I think that Steve will be able to put the photos
on the sites in the next few days. Meanwhile, they should be openable from
your message posting on our website.

The girl's name that was cut off on the inscription is Jadzia (short for
Jadwiga, from the German "Hedwig", and after the Polish Queen who married
Lithuanian King Jagiello to unite Poland and Lithuania into a commonwealth).

I am forwarding your information about your family to the group, with the
request that anybody who can provide some further information them or on
what may have happened to them. any theories folks?

Good luck,

--
Stefan Wisniowski
Moderator, Kresy-Siberia

----------
From: Bjproko@...
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2001 10:27:26 EST
To: swisniowski@...
Cc: bjproko@...
Subject: Romanowski info

Hi Stefan,

Here's what I know about who these people are, and the Siberia connection:

My paternal grandmother, Anna Blaszko Prokopowicz (1893-1976), received these
photos from her sister, Maria Blaszko Romanowski. Anna, Maria and their
younger brother, Bronislaw Blaszko, were born in Bastuny, Belarus, a small
village north of Lida, near today's Belarus-Lithuania border. Until 1945,
this area was within the borders of eastern Poland.

Anna emigrated to the US in 1913, settling in Worcester, Massachusetts. Maria
and Bronislaw remained in Belarus. The family was Polish-Lithuanian Roman
Catholic.

"A remembrance from Siberia" is inscribed in Polish on the reverse of the
photo of Maria Blaszko Romanowski and her daughters, Jadri (?) and
Stanislawa. The date indicates the photo was mailed 30 July 1947 from
Paczkow. (There is a Paczkow in southern Poland; perhaps they had been
relocated there by 1947. There may be other explanations.)

The other photo is Maria's husband, first name unknown, Romanowski. It is
undated. I don't know whether he and the couple's son, Jan, also were sent to
Siberia.

**

Stefan, if you can include my email addresses (bjproko@...,
bjproko@...) when you post these, I would be very grateful. My hope
is that someone will see them and perhaps have some knowledge of this family,
even in terms of the deportation from that area, which still would have been
eastern Poland during World War II.

Many thanks,
Barbara Proko
(originally Prokopowicz)

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ KRESY-SIBERIA GROUP
+ Research, Remembrance, Recognition
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Websites:
+ http:/www.AForgottenOdyssey.com
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ Replies to this message will go directly to the full list.
+ Send e-mails to: Kresy-Siberia@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To SUBSCRIBE, send an e-mail to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-owner@...
+ saying who you are and your interest in the group
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
+ To UNSUBSCRIBE from this group, send an email to:
+ Kresy-Siberia-unsubscribe@...
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to


FW: Leonard Kruk

Stefan Wisniowski
 

Thanks Janie
I will forward your photo to Steve for the websites, and your story to the
group - in case anybody has some other connections with Leonard or Karol.
Regards,
Stefan
----------

From: JMicchelli@...
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2001 09:09:22 EST
To: swisniowski@...
Subject: Leonard Kruk

Attached is a picture of my father's cousin Leonard Kruk (1897-1969). He
served in Anders Army, I think he was a corporal (?) Irena from Stanford
University had sent me the papers and I forwarded them to his nephew in
Poland, I'm sure he was interested. In my notes from Karol, his nephew, I
have that he and his family were taken to Siberia, he lost a wife and
daughter. A son and daughter returned to Poland, the son died about 30 years
ago, no one seems to know where he was buried, his daughter is still alive,
although I don't think Karol has contact with her. Leonard moved to England
and that is where he died.

The connection we have with Karol, is that Leonard's sister, Zofia (Karol's
mother), was widowed at a young age, and she married my mother's uncle, who
was raising my mother (aged 15 yrs.) because she was an orphan. So Karol and
my mom grew up together (or at least lived under the same roof for about 4
years). Wish I had more to offer,
janie :-)


FW: Romanowski info

Stefan Wisniowski
 

Hi Barbara,
Thanks for your photos. I think that Steve will be able to put the photos
on the sites in the next few days. Meanwhile, they should be openable from
your message posting on our website.

The girl's name that was cut off on the inscription is Jadzia (short for
Jadwiga, from the German "Hedwig", and after the Polish Queen who married
Lithuanian King Jagiello to unite Poland and Lithuania into a commonwealth).

I am forwarding your information about your family to the group, with the
request that anybody who can provide some further information them or on
what may have happened to them. any theories folks?

Good luck,

--
Stefan Wisniowski
Moderator, Kresy-Siberia

----------

From: Bjproko@...
Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2001 10:27:26 EST
To: swisniowski@...
Cc: bjproko@...
Subject: Romanowski info

Hi Stefan,

Here's what I know about who these people are, and the Siberia connection:

My paternal grandmother, Anna Blaszko Prokopowicz (1893-1976), received these
photos from her sister, Maria Blaszko Romanowski. Anna, Maria and their
younger brother, Bronislaw Blaszko, were born in Bastuny, Belarus, a small
village north of Lida, near today's Belarus-Lithuania border. Until 1945,
this area was within the borders of eastern Poland.

Anna emigrated to the US in 1913, settling in Worcester, Massachusetts. Maria
and Bronislaw remained in Belarus. The family was Polish-Lithuanian Roman
Catholic.

"A remembrance from Siberia" is inscribed in Polish on the reverse of the
photo of Maria Blaszko Romanowski and her daughters, Jadri (?) and
Stanislawa. The date indicates the photo was mailed 30 July 1947 from
Paczkow. (There is a Paczkow in southern Poland; perhaps they had been
relocated there by 1947. There may be other explanations.)

The other photo is Maria's husband, first name unknown, Romanowski. It is
undated. I don't know whether he and the couple's son, Jan, also were sent to
Siberia.

**

Stefan, if you can include my email addresses (bjproko@...,
bjproko@...) when you post these, I would be very grateful. My hope
is that someone will see them and perhaps have some knowledge of this family,
even in terms of the deportation from that area, which still would have been
eastern Poland during World War II.

Many thanks,
Barbara Proko
(originally Prokopowicz)


Re: Photographs for www.aforgottenodyssey.com

 

Steve Roy wrote:


If anyone has scanned photographs they wish to appear on the
ForgottenOdyssey web site, please email them to me with a few words on
people/places/dates etc. for a caption and I'll start to post them on
the site.

Thanks

Steve
steve@...
OK Steve. I sent you 8 jpegs on the children in Persia. Let me
know if there any problems or if you need any help.

Best,

Ted Morawski


Photographs for www.aforgottenodyssey.com

Steve Roy
 

If anyone has scanned photographs they wish to appear on the
ForgottenOdyssey web site, please email them to me with a few words on
people/places/dates etc. for a caption and I'll start to post them on
the site.

Thanks

Steve
steve@...


grace@... wrote:


Stefan et al,
I have one photograph that may be of interest to the group - of my
grandmother with a whole bunch of other people (mostly women and
children with a few older men added) at the camp in Kazakhstan.

Grace


photo from Siberia

Barbara Proko
 

I have one photo that my grandmother received from her sister, dated 1947 with the message "Greetings from Siberia." It is a small portrait of the sister with her daughters. This photo was my only clue to that family's existence. I would be very happy to share it online. Maybe somehow it will yield more clues that way.

Many thanks for the kind offer,

Barbara Proko

_________________________________________________________________
Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at


Re: Jan Birkner

 

Stefan et al,
I have one photograph that may be of interest to the group - of my
grandmother with a whole bunch of other people (mostly women and
children with a few older men added) at the camp in Kazakhstan.

Grace


Ted,
Once again, you have amazing things to share with us. I will
consider your
kind offer of putting your photos on the group site. Do any of the
other
group members have photos they could share?
--
Stefan Wisniowski
Moderator, Kresy-Siberia
...
Not to be presumptive, I will begin preparing a rudimentary
website posting
some of them on one of the servers available to me - primarily
for the purpose
of allowing interested individuals to download any of these
photographs which
may be pertinent to their own or their family's histories. Now, I
know that
Yahoo discussion groups allow posting of images in storage space
dedicated
for images in each group. So here is my question to our moderator:

Stefan, if you prefer that I post some of these photographs to
this group's
storage space - you of course have first rights by my obligation
of membership
which you kindly permitted.

My best wishes to all,
Ted Morawski


Re: Jan Birkner

 

Ted,
what a generous offer!! It would add a whole new dimension to the web-site,
I personally only have one photo to offer...........
janie


Re: Jan Birkner

Stefan Wisniowski
 

Ted,
Once again, you have amazing things to share with us. I will consider your
kind offer of putting your photos on the group site. Do any of the other
group members have photos they could share?
--
Stefan Wisniowski
Moderator, Kresy-Siberia

...
Not to be presumptive, I will begin preparing a rudimentary website posting
some of them on one of the servers available to me - primarily for the purpose
of allowing interested individuals to download any of these photographs which
may be pertinent to their own or their family's histories. Now, I know that
Yahoo discussion groups allow posting of images in storage space dedicated
for images in each group. So here is my question to our moderator:

Stefan, if you prefer that I post some of these photographs to this group's
storage space - you of course have first rights by my obligation of membership
which you kindly permitted.

My best wishes to all,
Ted Morawski


Re: Unable to deliver your message

 

rwtruksa@... wrote:

Czesc Stefan
( ... )
Does any one of Your group know about pomnik in Norylsk, Northern Russia?
Perhaps this will be helpful. The Charitable Foundation of the Polish Canadian
Congress has issued a financial statement for the period 1996-1998 in which
they list the following line item under the heading - Aid To Poles In Former
Soviet Union:

Sybirak's Association in Gdansk (funds were sent for the plaques for
the obelisk in Norylsk commemorating our countrymen murdered or
perished in Siberia)

The entire financial statement is available on the web at the following URL:


That is of course a terse line item from a financial statement, but maybe
through further follow-up with the Canadian Polish Congress and the
recipient organization in Gdansk, you may find more information.

Regards,
Ted Morawski


Re: Jan Birkner

 

JCBSERV@... wrote:

( ... )
This is a great list, and the website is
wonderful! Keep up the good work.

Jan Birkner
Until the message above, I did not know about that website.
Allow me to agree that it is wonderful. It proved to be particularly
significant to me personally as I followed a link to "The Invited"
about orphans who were sent to New Zealand from Iran (Persia).

My mother (Wiktoria Morawska) was enrolled in the Polish military
women's auxiliary forces (PSK - Pomocnicza Sluzba Kobiet). As a
formally educated school teacher, she was tasked with organizing and
running some of those orphanages.

Following the link mentioned above, I came across a photograph

which includes Polish Army major Dymowski and father Tomasik.

Now, major Dymowski was my godfather and father Tomasik was the
priest who babtised me. From what my mother told me, major Dymowski
dediced to return to Poland after the surrender of Nazi Germany, and no further
word was heard from him. Prior arrangements of further correspondence proved
to be of no avail. My mom and her friends assumed that he may have been
quietly liquidated. If that was not the case, I would very much appreciate
information from anyone knowledgeable about his further history.

This brings me to a question for Stefan, our gracious moderator. I have
some more photographs of the children in the orphanages, major Dymowski,
father Tomasik, and scenes in Syberia, Lebanon, and England.

Not to be presumptive, I will begin preparing a rudimentary website posting
some of them on one of the servers available to me - primarily for the purpose
of allowing interested individuals to download any of these photographs which
may be pertinent to their own or their family's histories. Now, I know that
Yahoo discussion groups allow posting of images in storage space dedicated
for images in each group. So here is my question to our moderator:

Stefan, if you prefer that I post some of these photographs to this group's
storage space - you of course have first rights by my obligation of membership
which you kindly permitted.

My best wishes to all,
Ted Morawski