(October 7, 2008 - Jerusalem)
Wladyslaw Panczyszyn, Righteous Among the Nations from Poland,
will be posthumously honored at Yad Vashem, on Sunday October
12, 2008, for rescuing Jews during the Holocaust. A memorial
ceremony will take place in the Hall of Remembrance at 11:00,
followed by the unveiling of the name of the Righteous in the
Garden of the Righteous Among the Nations at 11:20, in the
presence of Carmella Ben Natan and Avi Schweitzer of Israel,
children of the late survivor Rosa Schweitzer, Irena Gorniak
of Poland, daughter of the late Righteous and the late
survivor, Helena Reinharz Panczyszyn, a representative from
the Polish embassy, family members and friends. The medal and
certificate of honor will be presented to Irena Gorniak on her
late father’s behalf by Irena Steinfeldt, Director of the
Department of the Righteous Among the Nations.
The events are open to the press in coordination with the
Media Relations Department: 02 644 3410.
The Rescue Story
Wladyslaw Panczyszyn was born in Lubaczow, Poland, to a large
family. His parents bought a home in Drohobycz, in Galicia and
the family moved there. In 1939, Wladyslaw married his Jewish
neighbor, Helena Reinharz.
In 1941, the Germans captured the area where Wladyslaw was
living and the murder of the Jews began. Wladyslaw began to
work in any way possible to help the Reinharz family. He would
enter the ghetto to give the family money and food, ignoring
the danger to his own life. When the ghetto was destroyed, the
only surviving members of his wife’s family were her sister
Rosa and a brother who was in hiding elsewhere (to whom
Wladyslaw had been providing food). Helena’s parents and a
younger sister were murdered.
Wladyslaw decided to take action to save his sister-in-law,
Rosa. He smuggled her into his home and hid her in a hole
under the floor. But hiding Rosa placed the Panczyszyn family
in danger from all sides, not only from neighbors, but also
from close family members. Wladyslaw’s sister-in-law, his
brother’s wife, strenuously objected to his marriage to a
Jewish woman, and the family feared that she would inform on
them.
As the risk to the family increased, Wladyslaw, Helena and
their 2-year-old daughter, Irena, moved to Boryslaw. Once
there, Wladyslaw placed his daughter in hiding with a
colleague from work, while Helena and Rosa hid behind a wall
that was built in a storeroom near their home. Soon after,
Wladyslaw built a new hiding place in the attic of his home.
One day a fire broke out in the Panczyszyn’s kitchen,
attracting a great deal of attention and threatening the
safety of the women’s hiding place. Feeling that she was
endangering his life, Rosa wanted to leave Wladyslaw’s house,
but he insisted that she remain. Wladyslaw hid Helena and Rosa
for a year and a half, taking care of all their needs during
that entire time.
Contact:
Estee Yaari / Foreign Media
Liaison / Yad Vashem