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Source: Wikipedia |
Anna:
A Possible Life
By Michal
Karski
Can a person's
character ever be guessed at from a single photograph? I am probably by no
means unique when I say that I have always found faces fascinating and am invariably
drawn to the portraits in any art gallery. I don't think I'd be re-discovering
the wheel if I said that people tend to subconsciously make snap judgements
about others based solely on their looks and in fact I have no doubt that
scholarly volumes have been written on this very subject. So when we do
discover biographical information about the person depicted in a portrait, for
instance, it can sometimes be very surprising.
If I say that the
girl in the photo above was born in 1925, would it be possible to match her image
to any of the following scenarios, on the basis of what little information is
available in a single picture?
Scenario 1: Anna is
from a Polish-Jewish musical family, born and raised in Krakow. She survived
the first part of the war in hiding with her mother at the home of a Catholic
widow, but was later captured by the Germans and sent for labour to Bavaria.
After the war, she became well-known as a pianist and accompanist among the
Polish emigracja in London and is now
in her 89th year, loved and respected by all who know her.
Scenario 2: Anna was
from a Catholic Kresy family from eastern
Poland, in what is now Ukraine. After the Soviet invasion, she was transported
to the Gulag with her parents and sisters for years of hard labour. Her parents
did not survive. After the Sikorski-Maisky Pact, she joined the Anders Army,
went through the Middle East, Egypt, Palestine and Italy before arriving in
Liverpool, England. She then married and emigrated to Canada, where she raised
a family and pursued her first love of photography, exhibiting her work at many
Canadian and American art galleries. Her eyesight failed her in later years and
she turned to writing poetry. She died in 2013.
Scenario 3: Anna,
originally from Cremona in Italy had a Polish father (a former Hallerczyk) and French mother. She was a
brilliant student, spoke five languages fluently and studied psychology in
Bologna. She worked undercover for British Intelligence during the war, joining
the resistance in Holland. In 1947 she emigrated to Brazil, where she gained recognition
for her work in the field of clinical psychology. She gave her name to an
institute in Sao Paolo. She died in 2006.
Scenario 4: Anna is
an Anglo-Irish actress and poet who starred in many English and American film
and TV productions, most famously as Madame Paderewska in "Upstairs,
Downstairs". The real Polish connection in her own life was that her first
husband was a minister in the Polish wartime government-in-exile. It was
recently revealed that she was one of the code breakers at Bletchley Park. She
lives in an actors' retirement home in Hampshire where she is visited by her
many grandchildren.
Anyone who recognizes
Anna Zakrzewska from the photograph will know that none of the above scenarios
apply to her. I came across her name in a list of notable members of the Armia Krajowa
when I happened to be reading about the liberation in August 1944 of the
Gęsiówka concentration camp which the Germans had built in Warsaw.
This episode gets
scant attention in the mainstream English-speaking media, although most Poles
will know that it was the AK, the Polish resistance army, which carried out the
attack on the camp, freeing over three hundred prisoners – most of them Jewish –
in the process.
The particular unit responsible
for this action was the famous Zośka Battalion of which Anna Zakrzewska was a
member. Reading about her, I couldn't tell whether she was actually involved in
the attack on the camp at Gęsiówka or not. Her face had caught my attention
perhaps for the simple reason that she bore a passing resemblance to someone I
used to know many years ago or perhaps she just had the kind of looks which
would have graced magazine covers in any other age. What was she like in the
days before war broke out? What were her hopes and dreams?
Wikipedia lists some
notable members of the Zośka Battalion. A very few did survive the Warsaw
Uprising and lived on into old age but I was struck by the number of them who
were killed. All of them died at the time of life at which many young people
would have been enjoying a peaceful life of study at some college or university
instead of being involved in the horrors of urban warfare. The sequel to the
actual insurrection, as we know, was the crushing of Warsaw and its citizens
with unexampled brutality.
The little
information there is available about Anna Zakrzewska tells us she was cut down by
German gunfire during the uprising in August 1944.
She was just eighteen
years old when, as happened with so many others of her generation, the
possibility of any kind of life was taken from her.
Link to the Wikipedia
article on Anna Zakrzewska here.
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Source: Wikipedia |
About
the Author
Danusha asked me to
write a few words about myself. I suppose I would describe myself as a Brit of
Polish descent. I was born in Worcester in 1949 and now live in London. My
mother was painter Halina Karska and my father military historian Tadeusz
Kryska-Karski. They both found themselves in England after the war, having
followed the convoluted route taken by many Polish citizens whose lives were
thrown into turmoil by the events of 1939. My grandfather Franciszek Karski was
reportedly killed at Katyn, although I have had conflicting information about a
Franciszek Karski who did, indeed, perish in the USSR, except not at Katyn but
Uzbekistan, having already enlisted in the Anders Army.
For myself, I lived
in Munich, Germany from 1957 to 1966, where my parents – primarily my father –
worked for Radio Free Europe. Returning to England, I studied for a German and
English degree at the University of London (Queen Mary College) and after a
fairly hectic and varied working life am now retired and catching up on films
and books and writing the occasional essay and radio drama. I am married and we
have one son.
The liberation of The German camp on Gesiowka Street was a fascinating event. The Armia Krajowa used a captured German tank to wipe out eight watchtowers that surrounded the camp. Want to know more? Please click on my name in this specific posting.
ReplyDeleteThat is a glorious and yet little known page in the history of Home Army. Thank You, Mr. Peczkis for reminding me about that event. By the way, have You heard about NSZ brigade and the concentration camp in Holýšov? Some 700 female prisoners liberated, about 200 SS-guards were forced to surrender. Casualties- 2 wounded.
DeleteMore informations about liberation of Gęsiowka, links below.
http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/othercamps/gesiowka.html
http://www.warsawuprising.com/savejews.htm
My pleasure.
DeleteYes, Lukasz, I most certainly heard of the NSZ raid on Holyszow, a Nazi-German subcamp of Flossenburg concentration camp. In fact, I reviewed a book authored by the commander of the Brygada Swietokrszyska of the NSZ. To see my review, please click on my name in this specific posting.
The liberation of the camp saved a large group of Jewish women from a horrible death. The Germans had set up gasoline-filled cans around the Jewish women's barracks, ready to torch them at the approach of the Allied armies.
The NSZ's prompt action thwarted the Germans. So much for the well-worn myth, prominent in Jewish memoirs and in Communist propaganda, that demonizes the NSZ as systematically anti-Semitic and out to kill Jews.
From Facebook:
ReplyDeleteAndrew Polaski
From the Mongolian invasions of the 13th century to the Soviet occupation, Polish history is filled with stories of the bravery and determination of a people who would never back down. This is one good example.
From Facebook:
ReplyDeleteSaul Rosenberg
Enjoyed reading all of it.
From Facebook
ReplyDeleteMarnie Delano
Thank you Danusha. As always, profound & enriching.
From Facebook:
ReplyDeleteBozena Brzeczek Masters
Interesting blog. My father was in the Zośka batallion. I went to the Zośka area at Powązki cemetery this year on the anniversary of the Uprising. Very moving.
As it happens, I've just discovered that Bożena was Anna's second name, I also read that she was born in Toruń. but I can't find very much more than that.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting the various reactions, Danusha. I feel like a real Luddite, not being on Facebook. Maybe I'll have to bite the bullet and join the 21st century sometime. Also congrats on the upcoming Polish version of your book, but I won't comment about the cover since I've already expressed my opinion on that particular subject elsewhere.
Michal, yes, please do join facebook, so you can salute and communicate with your fans.
DeleteAlso, please remind me of what you said about the cover. Thank you
Here's what I said in the review of your book:
Delete"My single reservation about Dr Goska’s book concerns the cover painting and echoes what Sue Knight also referred to recently on this blog. People do, unfortunately, judge a book by its cover and the picture of Millet’s peasant with the hoe is rather off-putting (in my humble opinion), therefore may I suggest that perhaps a second edition would substitute the famous ‘Bociany’ by Chelmoński, with its overtones of innocent simplicity rather than just brutishness, which would be an implied and pointed contrast to the book’s title?"
Another thing in favour of the 'Bociany' painting, and particularly if you're considering a Polish edition, is that it's a picture which I think would be very familiar to many people and therefore attract a potential readership straight away.
But, of course, you may disagree with me completely and whatever you decide, I wish you the very best with your project. Yours is an insightful and in many ways a ground-breaking work which deserves a wide readership.
Can I add, by way of a PS, that, although scenarios 3 and 4 are completely fictitious, nevertheless the first scenario is very loosely based on the life and career of Maria Drue, well known to the older generation of London Poles, and the second is also loosely based on my own mother's life, with the difference that it was her sisters who emigrated to the USA and Canada, whereas she stayed behind in the UK until the family moved to Munich. We hope to be constructing a website devoted to her paintings in the near future.
DeleteThank you for the history lesson.
ReplyDeleteWere you perhaps at the YMCA summer camp in Laussa, O.Ö. Austria with your brother at some time in the mid 1960s?
ReplyDelete...Baran
Please note: above question addressed to Michal Karski.
DeleteHey Baran! Only just read your post. Yes, that's me. Maybe get in touch with me via Danusha? What are you up to nowadays?
Delete