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(February 14, 2008 - Jerusalem) Jozef and Rozalia Streker,
Righteous Among the Nations from Poland, will be posthumously
honored at Yad Vashem on Sunday, February 17, 2008 for
rescuing Moty Stromer during the Holocaust. A memorial
ceremony will be held in the Hall of Remembrance at 11:00,
followed by the recognition ceremony in the Yad Vashem
Synagogue at 11:20 and the unveiling of the names of the
Righteous in the Garden of the Righteous. The ceremony
will take place in English and Polish, in the presence of
Stanislaw Briks, grandson, and Eugeniusz Piatek,
great-grandson of the Righteous, both from Poland; Sue Stromer
Talansky and Nina Gaspar, of the USA, daughters of Moty
Stromer; and Polish Ambassador to Israel Agnieszka
Magdziak-Miszewska.
In
addition to the recognition ceremony, the wartime diary of
Moty Stromer, Memoirs of an Unfortunate Person, written
while he was in hiding with the Strekers, will be launched.
Published as part of Yad Vashem’s Holocaust Survivors Memoir
Project, it has been translated from its original Yiddish into
English.
The events are open to the press in coordination with the
Media Relations Department: 02 6443410.
The Rescue Story
Moty (Marek) Stromer was born in Kamionka-Strumilowa, near
Lvov, Poland, in 1910. The Stromers had a liquor business in
Kamionka, and also ran a small retail business in the town.
Moty worked in the family business, and lived in Kamionka with
his parents, siblings and extended family until the outbreak
of the war. After the murder of his grandfather and great
uncle, Moty fled to Lvov, where he was incarcerated in the
ghetto with his married sister Zlata and her family. From
there Moty was sent to the Janowska forced labor camp.
Moty
managed to escape and headed back to Kamionka, where he found
refuge at the farm of Jozef and Rozalia Streker, ethnic
Germans living with their daughter Helena in a rural area
called Jagonia. Mr. Streker had been a regular customer of the
Stromers before the war, and had once borrowed some money from
his Jewish business acquaintances. The Strekers hid Moty in
the attic of one of their barns, and took care of all his
needs. To alleviate Moty’s boredom and loneliness, the
Strekers had him peel and cut up potatoes for the livestock
and also brought him a blank ledger book and a pencil. He
began to write a diary - a poignant memoir describing his
experiences since the beginning of the war.
Hiding Moty placed the Strekers in grave danger, but even when
a relative appeared one day at the farm wearing an SS uniform,
they were undeterred. He remained hidden by the Strekers from
the summer of 1943 until the spring of 1944, almost an entire
year. He left towards the end of the war when the Strekers
were forced to abandon the farm and move westward.
Moty
kept in contact with the Strekers after the war, and after
they died, with their daughter Helena. Moty passed away in
1993. Most of the Stromer family was murdered during the
Holocaust, including Moty’s mother Gittel, father Shaul,
sister Zlata and her family, his grandparents, aunts, uncles
and cousins.
To
date, 22,211 individuals have been recognized as Righteous
Among the Nations, including 6,066 from Poland. For more
information about the Righteous Among the Nations program: <http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/index_righteous.html>
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