Vancouver Sun

‘It’s like a miracle’

HOLOCAUST SURVIVOR FINALLY FINDS RESCUERS’ KIN

- Joseph Brean

Three quarters of a century ago in Poland, Nazi soldiers forcibly separated a Jewish woman from her husband. She and her children, two young sons and a daughter, were forced toward a train station, bound for certain death at Sobibor exterminat­ion camp.

For the time and place, the mother was unusually educated and politicall­y aware. She knew what was happening. She held back a bit, took her 13-year-old daughter’s belongings, tossed them into a ditch, then looked her square in the face.

“I don’t believe the whole world’s gone mad. There’s got to be someone who will help you,” she said. “If you survive, I will, through you.”

Then she pushed her daughter off the road and told her to run.

For Janina Zak-Krasucki, 62, a supervisor of special education for the New Jersey Department of Education, the Jewish girl her Polish Catholic grandparen­ts saved from the Holocaust always existed on the edges of her memory.

It was a story that was retold in the summers when Zak-Krasucki would spend holidays at their house outside Lublin, eastern Poland’s largest city. Sometimes she would see mysterious packages of Western clothes postmarked from America, as if in thanks for some long ago kindness.

“I grew up on these stories,” she said in an interview.

One name stuck with her. Rozia, or Rose.

But time went on. ZakKrasuck­i immigrated to America in 1981, when Poland was still under Soviet control. Her grandfathe­r Stanislaw Jablonski, the key to the story, died in 1972, and the remaining evidence was too slim to chase down. A research visit to the archives of Israel’s Holocaust museum Yad Vashem turned up nothing.

A few weeks ago, however, Zak-Krasucki’s sister in Poland phoned excitedly to say she had just heard a radio interview with a woman talking about her survival during the Holocaust. They scrambled to find the interview online, and when they did, it was obvious: “The woman was talking about my grandparen­ts,” Zak-Krasucki said.

The woman is Rose Lipszyc, now 89, who lives in Toronto and is active in Holocaust education, sharing her personal story of survival against the odds, a story in which Zak-Krasucki’s grandparen­ts Stanislaw and Maria Jablonski play a central, inspiring role.

Their first meeting, like a long-awaited reunion of people who had never actually met, was a happy affair at Lipszyc’s home the other weekend. Lipszyc was surrounded by her large family, who would not exist but for this wartime bravery.

“We just could not stop talking,” Zak-Krasucki said.

“My whole family perished,” she said in an interview.

Lipszyc was born Rozia Handelsman in 1929 in Lublin, where there were many thousands of Jews, nearly all of them killed.

By October 1942, her family’s house had been confiscate­d, the ghetto liquidated, and Lipszyc was living in the countrysid­e. Posters went up, ordering Jews to congregate in a marketplac­e, where men and childless women were separated from mothers and children.

Lipszyc and her mother and brothers were marched toward the train station, bound for Sobibor, an exterminat­ion camp where most were murdered that same day.

Luck enters the story at this point, however, because Lipszyc was freckle-faced and fair. Shortly after her mother shoved her and told her to go, she was ordered to march on by a German soldier bringing up the rear.

“Are you a Jew?” he asked the little girl, who was frozen silent in “absolute fear.”

Some bystander then yelled out: “Can’t you see she’s a Polish girl?”

“He left me standing there, the last guard,” Lipszyc said. So she started running, maybe 15 kilometres. “I don’t know how I found my way.”

She was bound for a familiar home. Her father had done work for the Jablonskis, who had three daughters, including Zak-Krasucki’s mother, with whom Rose had played with in summertime. To Lipszyc’s surprise, when she got to his house, her maternal grandmothe­r was already there. “We’re looking for you,” she said. “It’s like a miracle.”

One mystery remained after the recent meeting in Toronto, however. Those care packages from America didn’t come from Rose. And so Zak-Krasucki and her sister have been casting back to other old war stories.

“I think my quest is not yet finished,” Zak-Krasucki said.

 ?? NICK KOZAK FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Rose Lipszyc, left, and Janina Zak-Krasucki embracing at a reunion of families at Rose’s home in Toronto. Lipszyc, 89, was shepherded to safety by Zak-Krasucki’s Polish Catholic grandparen­ts during the Holocaust.
NICK KOZAK FOR POSTMEDIA NEWS Rose Lipszyc, left, and Janina Zak-Krasucki embracing at a reunion of families at Rose’s home in Toronto. Lipszyc, 89, was shepherded to safety by Zak-Krasucki’s Polish Catholic grandparen­ts during the Holocaust.
 ?? COURTESY ROSE LIPSZYC ?? A photograph of Rose Lipszyc and her family taken in Poland when Rose was a little girl (Rose is on the far right next to her mother, who is holding a baby).
COURTESY ROSE LIPSZYC A photograph of Rose Lipszyc and her family taken in Poland when Rose was a little girl (Rose is on the far right next to her mother, who is holding a baby).
 ??  ?? A photograph of Stanislaw Jablonski and his immediate family.
A photograph of Stanislaw Jablonski and his immediate family.

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