Ga direct naar: Hoofdnavigatie
Ga direct naar: Inhoud
Alle bronnen

Sketchbook of drawings created postwar by a former Polish soldier, POW, and refugee

Notebook of color sketches created by Benedykt Filipiak postwar about his experiences in Poland and Germany during the war and in Germany and the United States after the war. Benedykt, 15, was a Polish Catholic youth attending the Polish Officer Cadet College when Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. He went into active service, was captured, and sent to Stalag XIB. He escaped and joined the Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa.) as a resistance fighter. From August-October 1944, he fought in the Warsaw Uprising and was captured by the Germans during the failed battle to liberate Warsaw. He was sent to a POW camp near Hannover which was liberated by American forces in late spring 1945. He joined the US Army of Occupation in 1946 and emigrated to the US in 1949. No restrictions on access Benedykt Filipiak was born on August 25, 1924, in Tczew Poland, to Roman Catholic parents, Bronislawa and Bronislaw Filipiak. His father was a diesel engineer and estimator for the Polish government. He had 2 brothers and a sister. Benedykt studied basic engineering in Warsaw from 1935-1938. He entered the Polish Officer Cadet College in 1938. The Germans invaded Poland on September 1, 1939, and Benedykt went into active service. He was captured in November and sent to Stalag XIB prisoner of war camp outside Fallingbostel, Germany, and assigned prisoner number 140379. He worked in a smeltery as a crane operator and mechanic and at a Messerschmitt factory repairing aircraft. In 1942, Benedykt bribed a guard with his Red Cross package and escaped with 4 other prisoners. He returned to Warsaw and joined the underground Polish Home Army (Armia Krajowa) as a lieutenant. He participated in acts of sabotage. From August to October 1944, he fought against the Germans in the Warsaw Uprising, a failed attempt to liberate Warsaw. He was interned in a German prisoner of war camp outside Hannover, Germany, where he operated coal mining equipment. He was liberated in the late spring of 1945 by American forces. Opposed to the Communist occupation of Poland, Benedykt stayed in Germany. He was placed in a displaced persons camp, where he worked as a teacher. His brothers were killed by the Germans during the war, but his parents and sister survived. In 1946, the American authorities recognized his service in the Polish Home Army, fighting against enemies of the United States, and allowed Benedykt to join the United States Army of Occupation. He held the rank of captain and was in charge of the motor pool. In 1949, Benedykt requested to emigrate to the United States and was sponsored by the US under the Displaced Person’s Act of 1948. He sailed on the General J.H. McRae from Bremerhaven, Germany, and arrived in New York on December 17, 1949. Benedykt moved to Butte, Montana, and worked as a miner for the Anaconda Copper Mining Company. He joined the U.S. Army in 1951 and was assigned to the 30th Engineers Topographical Battalion at the Presidio of San Francisco. In San Francisco, he married and became a citizen on December 21, 1951. He was discharged in 1954 and began a career in the printing industry. He married and had a son and daughter. Benedykt died on January 4, 2001, in Upper Lake, California, at age 76.

Collectie
  • EHRI
Type
  • Archief
Rechten
Identificatienummer van European Holocaust Research Infrastructure
  • us-005578-irn38262
Trefwoorden
  • Art
  • World War, 1939-1945--Prisoners and prisons, German.
Disclaimer over kwetsend taalgebruik

Bij bronnen vindt u soms teksten met termen die we tegenwoordig niet meer zouden gebruiken, omdat ze als kwetsend of uitsluitend worden ervaren.Lees meer

Ontvang onze nieuwsbrief
Tweewekelijks geven we je een overzicht van de meest interessante en relevante onderwerpen, artikelen en bronnen van dit moment.
Ministerie van volksgezondheid, welzijn en sportVFonds
Contact

Vijzelstraat 32
1017 HL Amsterdam

info@oorlogsbronnen.nlPers en media
Deze website is bekroond met:Deze website is bekroond met 3 DIA awardsDeze website is bekroond met 4 Lovie awards