Recently, Yad Vashem was
honored to host Wlodek Tabaczynski and his daughter Zosia, who had come to see
the incredible restoration work carried out on the wartime diary of Wlodek's
father, Stefan (né Alfred Zielony).
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Stefan Tabaczynski (né
Alfred Zielony) and his wife Irena,
who rescued him during WWII
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Stefan/Alfred Tabaczynski with
his son, Wlodek
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In 2006, Wlodek came on his first trip to Israel and, at his cousin Alex's request, brought the diary with him. Alex immediately suggested giving the diary to Yad Vashem, in the hope that restoration experts could help the family save the deteriorating pages and even decipher some of Alfred's testimony.
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Alfred Zielony's diary:
"Little more than a mass of
singed and crumbling papers"
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Even employing the most advanced
methods of handwriting reconstruction, police identification lab equipment and the
help of antiques and other experts in Israel and abroad, we were still unable
to decipher the diary, or even say with certainty when during the war or where
it was written. Nevertheless, we were extremely satisfied that at least the
diary itself had been saved."
Last week, Wlodek Tabaczynski and his daughter Zosia came to Israel to celebrate the 100th birthday of Wlodek's cousin Alex. Dr. Gertner showed Wlodek Yad Vashem's online Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names, within seconds calling up all 18 Pages of Testimony Alex Zielony had filled out in 2008 for individual members of his family who were murdered during the Shoah. Seeing all of this information recorded for posterity was very important for Wlodek – a project manager – and Zosia, who is a teacher.
However, Wlodek was visibly moved when he was shown the diary and was able to see its pages for the first time. He recalled how his father had studied law and then practiced journalism – eventually heading the Polish Society of Journalists (PAP) after the war. "He loved to write," he explained, and asked to touch the actual pages of the diary. "I can't help it," he said. "It's just like touching my father again."
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Stefan/Alfred and Irena Tabaczynski
with their
two young sons, Wlodek and Andrzej
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As Wlodek was familiar with his father's challenging handwriting, he was able to make out a few lines from the diary. For example, there is a description of how those Jews living in the ghetto who had work certificates would gather early each morning at the checkpoint at the ghetto gates, and return in the evening, bringing with them whatever food they had managed to bargain or buy to smuggle back into the ghetto. "But the officers usually took this food away," recalled Alfred – leaving the despondent men to return empty-handed to their starving families. "For the first time, we realized that this diary was most likely written in the Warsaw ghetto itself, and describes daily life there," said Dr. Gertner.





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