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Krištopavičienė Bronislava

Righteous
null
Bronislava Krištopavičienė Bronislava Krištopavičienė was born in the Belorussian village of Kublichi in 1888. She moved to Lithuania, settled in Kaunas and remained there for the rest of her life. Her husband Povilas Krištopavičius, a Lithuanian army officer, was arrested by the Soviet authorities in 1940 and perished in a Siberian camp. Left alone with their teenaged son, Krištopavičienė secured a position as a medical nurse in one of the local hospitals, where she worked for many years. In the spring of 1944, Krištopavičienė was approached by a prewar acquaintance, a young Jewish woman named Zinaida Levina (née Sneider). In August 1941, Levina, her husband Grigoriy Levin and her parents had been imprisoned in the Kaunas ghetto. In September 1941, Levina had given birth to a baby daughter, Anita. Despite the harsh living conditions, lack of facilities for baby care and their constant hunger, the family had managed to keep Anita safe. The little girl's chatter and laughter filled their lives with meaning. Anita was hidden during the so-called “Children’s Aktia” (the murder operation of the ghetto's remaining children) launched in the ghetto on 27-28 March 1944, and now her parents were urgently looking for someone to shelter her outside of the ghetto. Krištopavičienė readily agreed to help. One evening, she entered the ghetto together with a Jewish labor brigade, and in the morning she left in the same manner, carrying a potato sack containing the toddler, put to sleep by soporific medicine. They stayed for a while with Krištopavičienė's friends, where little Anita got used to her rescuer and learned Lithuanian. In the summer they returned to Krištopavičienė's apartment in the city, where Anita was introduced as Krištopavičienė's orphaned relative. Krištopavičienė sent a note to Anita’s mother in the ghetto, letting her know that they were back in Kaunas. During the ghetto liquidation in July 1944, Levina ran away to her friend's apartment. AnotherJewish couple by the name of Kasimov also found refuge there. All of them survived to see the liberation of Kaunas by the Red Army on 1 August 1944. Grigory Levin and Josef Sneider, Anita’s father and grandfather, were deported to the Dachau concentration camp, where they both died. Her grandmother, Sterla Sneider, was killed in the Salaspils camp in Latvia. After the war, her mother’s second husband adopted five-year-old Anita, and the couple chose not to tell their daughter about her biological father. The family settled in Vilnius, but kept in constant touch with Krištopavičienė, visiting and helping her, especially following the tragic murder of her only son by nationalist bandits. Krištopavičienė passed away in Kaunas in 1969, at the age of 81. Anita Friedberg and her offspring still cherish her rescuer's memory. On December 25, 2006, Yad Vashem recognized Bronislava Krištopavičienė as Righteous Among the Nations.
Last Name
Krištopavičienė
First Name
Bronislava
Date of Birth
03/09/1899
Date of Death
14/03/1969
Nationality
LITHUANIA
Gender
Female
Profession
NURSE
Item ID
5767390
Recognition Date
25/12/2006
Commemoration
Wall of Honor
Ceremony In Yad Vashem
No
File Number
M.31.2/10985