Klinicki Eugeniusz & Klinicka Maria (Arnold); Brother: Zygmunt ; Sister: Klinicka Anna ; Brother: Marian
Klinicki Eugeniusz & Klinicka Maria (Arnold); Brother: Zygmunt ; Sister: Klinicka Anna ; Brother: Marian
Righteous
Klinicki Eugeniusz
Klinicka Maria
Klinicki Marian
Klinicki Zygmunt
Klinicka Anna
In November 1942, with the liquidation of the Brańsk ghetto in the Białystok district, Zygmunt Klinicki and his brother, Marian, helped Shoshana and Zeew Alperin and Chana and Abram Finkelsztajn escape, and took them home to their parents, Eugeniusz and Maria, who lived on a humble estate on the city outskirts. Although the arrangement was meant to be a temporary one, the Klinickis, guided by humanitarian motives, which overrode considerations of personal safety or economic hardship, agreed to let them stay. The Klinickis, their two sons and daughter, Anna, looked after the four refugees devotedly, without expecting anything in return. The Alperins and Finkelsztajns stayed with the Klinickis until July 1944, when the area was liberated by the Red Army, and after the war immigrated to Israel.
On December 13, 1995, Yad Vashem recognized Maria and Eugeniusz Klinicki, and their children Marian, Zygmunt, and Anna, as Righteous Among the Nations.
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