Given name: Unknown Family name: Kudowska

  • YES
  • Female
  • Kudowska
  • 1920
  • Łowicz
  • Lowicz regiment commander's wife. At her request Anatol came to Lowicz on 30 August 1939 in oder to set up a hospital in a factory. During the war he was taken captive near Kutno. The woman worked as a volunteer as much as she could, during the war she took care of the children who had escaped from the Lowicz ghetto. One year after the war Anatol was taking care of her until her death.

  • activists, children, around the author, communication, care / social welfare
  • 302/204 Anatol Weksztejn, born 24 January 1874 in Lowicz, son of Michal and Maria, nee Wodzisławska, no title. The story of the author's family (pioneers of assimilation). The author's youth, school years in Kharkov, work in the ceramic industry. World War I in Lowicz and Warsaw in the Society to Help the Jewish War Victims. Internment in Germany. The inter-war period - general reflections on Zionism and baptism of Jews. The economic situation of inter-war Poland, the role of Jews in Polish economy. The author's escape to Lutsk during the Polish-German War of 1939 and his return to Warsaw. Situation in the Warsaw ghetto, criticism of the Jewish Police (Order Service). His stay on the 'Aryan side', help from friendly Poles, frequent changes of shelters. Liberation, return to Lowicz. The author was an industrialist, owner of ceramic factories in Lowicz and Boryszew, and a co-owner of artificial silk factory in Sochaczew. Typescript, pages 1-204, format: 290 x 210 mm, in Polish. <b>Archive of the Jewish Historical Institute </b>
    Tlomackie St. 3/5
    00-090 Warsaw
    phone: (48) (22) 827 92 21, fax: (48)(22) 827 83 72
    <a href="mailto:secretary@jewishinstitute.org.pl">
    secretary@jewishinstitute.org.pl</a>
    <a href="http://www.jewishinstitute.org.pl">www.jewishinstitute.org.pl</a>

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