PROGRESS FORMING HOLOCAUST
SURVIVOR CHILDREN’S GROUP
New York (PMN)--The Downstate New
York Division of the Polish American Congress (PAC) recently
announced it is forming a new unit to be known as the "Children of
Polish Christian Holocaust Survivors." Named to lead it is Eva
Preisler-Grabicki, daughter of Auschwitz survivor, Michael Preisler,
co-chair of the PAC’s Holocaust Documentation Committee.
"Children of Polish Christian
Holocaust Survivors" is being organized as a PAC committee. Its
members will honor the memory of their parents and grandparents who
suffered the terror of the German occupation of Poland in World War
II to assure that the facts of their tragedy will not be forgotten
or trivialized.
Eva
Preisler is an assistant principal in a New York City public school.
Her father, Michael Preisler, is currently the foremost spokesman of
the PAC on matters concerning the ordeal of Polish Christians at the
hands of the Nazis. Preisler spent over three years as a prisoner of
Hitler's SS in Auschwitz. He has agreed to act as advisor to the
children's group.
The majority of the members
participating in the creation of the new committee are children of
Auschwitz survivors. Their first meeting took place in Brooklyn, New
York, and included Eva Preisler, Barbara Wierbicki, Andrew Kaminski
and Rev. Peter Zendzian.
Like Eva Preisler, Barbara
Wierbicki's father was also an Auschwitz survivor. He was among the
first Polish prisoners in Auschwitz and spent nearly five years
there.
The Nazis began operations in
Auschwitz in June 1940. In the first two years of its existence,
most of the prisoners in Auschwitz were Polish Catholics, according
to Michael Preisler who was there at the time.
Wierbicki's father arrived at the
camp with the second transport of Polish prisoners that same month.
Once there, he was branded with the number 3470. Somewhat later, her
uncle was arrested and also sent to Auschwitz where he joined her
father. Wierbicki is an attorney with a prominent New York City law
firm.
Another member with a father who
survived Auschwitz is Andrew Kaminski. Although they never met while
they were together in Auschwitz, Kaminski's father and Michael
Preisler were both liberated by the U.S. Army the same day, May 6,
1945 after they were transferred from Auschwitz to the Ebensee
concentration camp in Austria. Kaminski is an attorney with his own
law firm in Greenpoint, Brooklyn.
Also one of the "Children of
Polish Christian Holocaust Survivors" is Rev. Peter Zendzian, pastor
of Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church in Maspeth, N.Y. As in so many
Polish families that had gone through the trauma of the German
occupation, nobody in his ever wanted to relive the memory by
talking about it. Despite such reluctance and the fact he was only
seven years old when his father died, Father Zendzian did eventually
learn his father had ended up in a Nazi camp along with two of his
brothers.
As a priest, Father Zendzian feels
"too little" is being said about the suffering the Nazis inflicted
on the Catholic Church and its members during the occupation. As a
member of the children's committee, he will also act as its
chaplain.
Information about the "Children of
Polish Christian Holocaust Survivors" can be obtained by writing to
the Polish American Congress, 177 Kent St., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11222 or
calling (718) 349-9689