Although Nazi Concentration Camps and Slave Labor Camps were located throughout Europe during World War II, all of the camps devoted exclusively to extermination — Chelmno, Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka — were located in Poland.
The Nazi's two multi-functional camps for forced labor and extermination — Auschwitz-Birkenau and Majdanek — were also located in Poland. Approximately three million Polish Jews died during the Holocaust. Approximately three million Poles, who were not Jews, also died, some of them killed for helping Jews.
Poland was the only country in which the penalty for helping a Jew during the German occupation was death. Nonetheless, many brave Poles tried to rescue Jews from the Nazi death machine. Some were members of the Council for Aid to Jews (code name: "Zegota"), a Polish organization formed in 1942 specifically to rescue Jews.
Other Poles were non-affiliated ordinary citizens who took extraordinary risks to help their beleaguered Jewish neighbors. More than 5,500 Poles have been awarded "Righteous Among the Nations" status by Yad Vashem, a larger number than in any other country. We will never know who all of the Righteous Gentiles were.
Below, however, are some who are known to have given their
lives for their attempts to help Gorlice area Jews.
Władisław Boczoń, author of the book in which the names and the details of the following
thirteen individuals appear, was himself a Zegota member.
The list was translated by Marjorie Rosenfeld and Eva Bednarska from page 158, Żydzi Gorliccy (The Jews of Gorlice) by Władisław Boczoń, Gorlice, 1998.
NOTE: The former Web Site http://www.holocaustforgotten.com/index.htm, which memorialized non-Jewish victims of the Holocaust, notes additionally that Stanislaw Radzik, whose name appears first on the list, was a 40-year-old farmer when he was shot on September 30, 1943, for sheltering four Jews, and that on January 26, 1944, as a result of a subsequent investigation, his wife, Maria, was murdered.
The same Web site also provided the name of Anastzja Tylawska, from Rozdziele, near Gorlice, and notes that she was shot in 1943 for sheltering Leib Jaskow from Mecina.
~May their names be blessed. May they be as a light unto the world.~
Compiled by Susan Kim Updated: May 2024 Copyright © 2023 Susan Kim |