San Diego Union-Tribune

MAN RESCUED JEWS DURING HOLOCAUST

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Jozef Walaszczyk, a member of the Polish resistance who rescued dozens of Jews during the Nazi German occupation of Poland during World War II, has died aged 102.

Walaszczyk died June 20, according to the Institute of National Remembranc­e, a Polish state historical body.

Walaszczyk fell in love during the war with a Jewish woman, Irena Front, only learning that she was Jewish when German Gestapo forces searched a hotel where he was staying with her.

He helped her hide and tried to distract the Gestapo men by pretending to be sick. He later arranged for Front to get false documents, even entering into a fictitious marriage with her.

Soon after that, the Gestapo arrested Front and 20 other Jews.

“If something was to be done, it had to be done for them all. I had to arrange for a kilogram of gold by 5 p.m. — and it was already noon. Only then would the Germans forget about the incident and release the Jews,” Walaszczyk recalled in an interview.

Walaszczyk managed to collect and pay the required ransom, thereby saving the lives of 21 people.

He also employed 30 Jews in a potato flour factory that he had been tasked with managing due to his knowledge of the German language. He kept them alive by bribing a German official. Most of those he employed survived the war.

In all, he said he rescued 53 Jews.

He was also involved in the Polish undergroun­d that resisted the German occupation of Poland.

Walaszczyk was honored in 2002 as a “Righteous Among the Nations” by Yad Vashem, Israel’s Holocaust memorial and museum.

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