Rosenszajn, Herszkowicz, and Dworzecka families papers
http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/us-005578-irn707840-eng-irn707840_eng an entity of type: Instantiation
Rosenszajn, Herszkowicz, and Dworzecka families papers
Maria Dworzecka (born Marysia Rozenszajn, 1941- ) was born on June 19, 1941 to Izak (Wlodek) Rozenszajn (d. 1941) and Bela Rozenszajn (Bella, née Kaufman, 1909-1948). Bela Rozenszajn was born in 1909 in Pinsk (now Belarus) and had been active in the Communist party since 1929. Bela moved to Warsaw, Poland where she met Izak Rozenszajn. After the start of World War II, they fled to Białystok, Poland which was located within the Soviet sector. Their daughter Marysia was born in the Białystok ghetto on June 19, 1941. Three days later, Germany launched a surprise invasion of the Soviet Union. Eight days after his daughter’s birth, Izak was either killed during the “Red Friday” massacre on June 27, 1941, or in the bombing of Białystok also in June 1941. In February 1943, Bela and her daughter escaped from the Białystok ghetto using false identification papers issued under the false name Paulina Pakulska. They settled in Tykocin, Poland where Bela worked as a laundress for two unidentified Polish communist women. In November 1943, the two Polish women were killed by members of the Narodowe Siły Zbrojne (NSZ), a nationalist and anti-Semitic underground military organization. Afterwards, Bela was arrested by the Gestapo and is believed to have been sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp where she passed as a Polish political prisoner. Two year old Marysia was left by herself in Tykocin. According to family lore, she was discovered wandering the street by Lucyna and Wacław Białowarczuk, teachers without any children of their own. Recognizing Maria as an orphaned Jewish child, the Białowarczuks cared for her throughout the war. Bela Rozenszajn survived imprisonment in Auschwitz and Ravensbrück concentration camps. In April 1945 she was transferred from Ravensbrück to Gothenburg, Sweden through the Folke Bernadotte initiative. After recovering in Sweden, Bela returned to Tykocin in February 1946, where she was reunited with her daughter. Bela and Maria moved to Warsaw, Poland in May 1946. Two years later, Bela Rozenszajn was killed in a car accident. Maria lived with her maternal uncle, Marian Komanski (Mosze Kaufman) and his family for a period of time. Eventually ten year old Maria was adopted by friends of her mother, Alicja Dworzecka (formerly Sala Herszkowicz) and her husband, Arkadiusz Dworzecki. Maria remained in close contact with her wartime rescuers, the Białowarczuks. Maria stayed in Poland until 1968 and then immigrated to the United States. On October 1, 1990 Lucyna and Waclaw Białowarczuk were recognized by Yad Vashem as Righteous among the Nations. Alicja Dworzecka (Ala / Sala, born Laja Sala Herszkowicz) is the daughter of Jankel Herszkowicz (d.1944) and Chaja Gitla Herszkowicz (née Fortunska). She was born May 22, 1912 in Łódź, Poland, where her father worked as a merchant. Alicja had two brothers: Dawid (b. 1910) and Moniek (b. 1914). Alicja married Antoni Grosman in 1938. Soon after the German invasion of Poland the couple fled to the Soviet Union. Antoni was arrested and deported to a Soviet labor camp, where he perished. Alicja settled temporarily in Kokanda, Uzbekistan. In 1943 she joined a newly formed division of the Polish Army in the Soviet Union. She remained with the unit until reaching Warsaw, Poland in 1945. Alicja is the sole survivor of her immediate family. Her mother and younger brother died in the Łódź ghetto; her father was deported to Auschwitz concentration camp and killed in August 1944; and her older brother perished in a labor camp in Germany. Soon after her arrival in Warsaw, Alicja met and later married Arkadiusz Dworzecki. Arkadiusz Dworzecki was born on June 11, 1910 to Jakub and Helena Dworzecki. He had two siblings: Wita (b. 1912) and Lulek (b. 1914). They lived in Vilna, Poland (now Vilna, Lithuania). Arkadiusz studied chemistry at the university in Warsaw during the late 1930s. With the outbreak of World War II, he returned to Vilna. Months later he was sent to work at an ammunition factory in the Ural Mountains by the Soviet authorities who were then in control of Vilna. His parents, who remained in Vilna, perished in the ghetto. His sister, Wita, died while fighting with the partisans in the forests. His brother Lulek’s fate is unknown. After the war Arkadiusz returned to Warsaw, Poland where he met and married Sala Herszkowicz in July 1945. After the death of their friend Bela Kaufman (also known as Paula Pakulska), the Dworzeckis adopted Bela’s daughter ten year old daughter, Marysia (now Maria Dworzecka).
Rosenszajn, Herszkowicz, and Dworzecka families papers