Given name: Unknown Family name: Bielenki (9)

  • (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) YES
  • (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) Male
  • (2) Andrzej /Owsiej/ , (3) Owsiej , (8) Owsiej , (9) Owsiej
  • (1) Bielenki , (2) Bielenki , (3) Bieleńki , (4) Bieleńki , (5) Bielenki , (6) Bielenki , (7) Bieleńki , (8) Bieleńki , (9) Bieleńki
  • (9) 1943
  • (9) Poniatów
    • (4) No data
  • (1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) No information, (4) From Warsaw
    • (4) Jewish
    • (4) higher
  • (1)

    A doctor, he lives (?) sees patients at Leszno Street No. 13

    (2)

    A prominent physiologist, doctor. He was born in a poor family in the Eastern borderlands. He graduated from a Russian gymnasium (junior high school) there. He studied medicine in Warsaw. In 1918- Spanish influenza, he gained an enormous medical practice as a young doctor. He worked as the first assistant at doctor Lewin's internal ward in the Jewish Czyste Hospital. From 1921- the most sought-after doctor in the Jewish street. He had a great influence on the sick, he was good, sensible and amusing. In 1926 he became the head of the internal ward in the Jewish Czyste Hospital. Until 1939 he was the most sought-after doctor in Poland. He had the final word in lung diseases, was invited to conferences. He had a fantastic hearing and a great experience. Polite, cultural, friendly. The patients and his colleagues loved him. His flat resembled a real museum. He liked paintings, especially Jewish. In the ghetto he worked in the Jewish Czyste Hospital - Leszno, Gesia Street No. 6. Internal medicine section at the Judenrat courses. The head of the tuberculosis ward in the Czyste hospital- in Stawki Street.

    (3)

    At the beginning of the uprising he was totally depressed, and voluntarily left his hideout in order to report at the Umschlag.

    (4)

    Probably a senior registrar. He belonged to the older generation of Warsaw doctors.

    (5)

    A doctor, conductor Pulman's brother-in-law, concerts in his house.

    (6)

    Captain of the Polish Army, he took part in the defence of Warsaw as a volunteer. In the ghetto, during the epidemic he was a senior registrar, a member of the Health Council.

    (7)

    Head of the internal ward in the hospital at Gesia Street No. 6.

    (8)

    A Jewish doctor, he died in 1943 in a POW camp in Poniatowa, where he was sent from the Warsaw ghetto. On his behalf Georg Richter wrote a letter to the SS (Czerniakow's entry from 8 April 1940).

    (9)

    A famous Jewish doctor. He died in 1943 in the POW's camp in Poniatowa, where he was deported from the Warsaw ghetto. In April 1940 Czerniakow intervened on his behalf in the SS.

    • (4) in the ghetto, deportation
    • (1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9) physicians
    • (4) physicians, medical
  • (1)

    Warsaw Telephone Directory 1939 (SASTW - Spis Abonentow Sieci Telefonicznej m.st. Warszawy 1939) : Bielenki, A., doctor, Szpitalna Street No. 5, telephone number: 2-62-03

    (2)

    Tall, with luxuriant, black hair and expressive eyes. Stabholz in his writings calls him Bielenski. He is mentioned in many other testimonies, inter alia IIop2YV03/439, IIop2YV03/396, IIop2YV033/648, Iop2YV03/2358.

  • (2)

    Tursz, M;

    (3)

    Polisiuk; testimony 301-5061

    (8)

    Czerniakow, Adam; Adama Czerniakowa dziennik getta warszawskiego. 6 IX 1939 - 23 VII 1942, (The Warsaw Diary of Adam Czerniakow)

    (9)

    Czerniakow, Adam, Adama Czerniakowa dziennik getta warszawskiego. 6 IX 1939 - 23 VII 1942, (The Warsaw Diary of Adam Czerniakow)

  • (1) og40, (4) 71,108, (5) 172, (6) 249,269,275, (7) 159, (8, 9) 103