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Świerszczak Manko & Marynka

Righteous
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Świerszczak, Manko Świerszczak, Maryna Dukiewicz, Michał Dukiewicz, Genowefa As youngsters before the war, Jechiel Rosen and his brothers, Samuel and Henry, used to play football in a playing field adjoining a Polish cemetery, in the town of Buczacz, in the Tarnopol district. In the course of time, a friendship developed between the Rosen boys and Manko Świerszczak, a gravedigger and custodian of the cemetery, whose friendly nature soon endeared him to the boys. In June 1943, when the last of the Jews were deported from Buczacz, the Rosen brothers and their mother fled and made their way to the cemetery, where they knocked on Świerszczak’s door. Manko Świerszczak, with his wife Maryna’s approval, led the four Rosens to the cemetery where, together, they dug a bunker in which they hid. Later, they were joined by four other Jews whom Świerszczak had saved, but the newcomers left shortly after and were never heard of again. After neighbors informed the Gestapo that the Świerszczaks were buying excessive quantities of food, their house was searched. Although they Germans found no trace of the refugees, Świerszczak was arrested. Despite being tortured for several days, he did not betray his charges. In the winter, when it was too cold to stay in the bunker, the Świerszczaks dug a hiding place for the Rosens under the floorboards of the funeral parlor in the cemetery. Their willingness to endanger their lives for Jewish refugees was inspired by humanitarian motives, which overrode considerations of personal safety or economic hardship. On the contrary, they considered it an honor to save the lives of the Jewish refugees who came their way. One day, German soldiers retreating from the Red Army entered the funeral parlor. The floor collapsed under their weight and the soldiers fell through the floorboards on to the Jewish refugees. The boys’ mother was shot on the spot, but the three brothers managed to escape. After their narrow escape, the three brothers stayedwith Michał and Genowefa Dukiewicz, a peasant couple they knew, who lived in a nearby village of Podlesie, until the area was liberated by the Red Army in March 1944. After the war, the survivors immigrated to Israel while their rescuers moved to an area within the new Polish borders. On July 7, 1983, Yad Vashem recognized Maryna and Manko Świerszczak and Genowefa and Michał Dukiewicz as Righteous Among the Nations.
details.fullDetails.last_name
Świerszczak
details.fullDetails.first_name
Marynka
details.fullDetails.fate
survived
details.fullDetails.nationality
POLAND
details.fullDetails.religion
CATHOLIC
details.fullDetails.gender
Female
details.fullDetails.book_id
4038074
details.fullDetails.recognition_date
07/07/1983
details.fullDetails.commemorate
Wall of Honor
details.fullDetails.ceremony_in_yv
No
details.fullDetails.file_number
M.31.2/2644