The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery

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The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond Bravery Page 31

by Captain Witold Pilecki


  April–May

  • Great transports of Polish prisoners from Pawiak Prison—many friends arrive.

  • Difference between indoor and outdoor jobs.

  • Saving friends.

  June

  • Outbreak of the German–Bolshevik War.

  July

  • Nephew Kazimierz Radwański brought into camp.

  • Camp grows. New subcamps include Buna and Birkenau. Most of those who build them die.

  August

  • First Bolshevik prisoners of war brought in and gassed.

  Autumn

  • Two hundred inmates released.

  • Worries family might buy him out. Clandestinely sends two letters to them.

  November

  • The organization grows, based on mutual trust. Choosing leaders.

  • More than a thousand naked Bolshevik POWs herded into crematorium.

  • Church bells.

  • Sets up a fourth “five.” Begins bringing senior officers into the organization; suggests Kazimierz Rawicz as leader.

  • The political cell.

  • Carpentry and woodcarving “elite.” A warm bath in the tannery tank.

  December

  • Beaten for a “smile” that enrages an SS man.

  • Promoted in Warsaw.

  • Barbers.

  • Lining up to receive money sent by families, one could see who was still alive—only six out of his “hundred.”

  • “Seidler week.”

  Christmas 1941

  • Second Christmas in Auschwitz. Another parcel from home—no food allowed.

  19422

  Early 1942

  • Change in attitude toward Jews.

  February

  • Remaining Bolshevik POWs finished off; Bolshevik POW revolt quashed.

  • Orders from Berlin prohibit use of collective responsibility for escapes and the beating of inmates.

  • Typhus-infected lice cultivated and released onto coats of SS men.

  • Gas chambers hastily built in Rajsko-Berkenau.

  • Inspectors see only “good” view of Auschwitz. Camp tyrants hung by inmates.

  • Begins building radio transmitter; broadcasts until autumn 1942. Clandestinely sends out German cipher keys and receives medicine.

  16th of March

  • One hundred and twenty Polish women brought in for interrogation. That evening: bloody corpses in pieces with severed heads, hands, breasts.

  March

  • Another Warsaw transport brings friends and information.

  • First daily gassings of people. Two new crematoria with electric ovens.

  • Buried bodies dug up and burnt.

  • First large female transports begin.

  Spring

  • SS man Klehr kills with phenol injections.

  • Plans are developed for eventual action by the organization.

  Easter

  • Typhus taking a terrible toll.

  June

  • Superior officer Kazimierz Rawicz sent to Mauthausen, replaced by Juliusz Gilewicz.

  July

  • Second transport of priests from Auschwitz to Dachau.

  Summer

  • Transports keep coming—the numbers processed in camp now higher than 40,000. But vast majority go straight to Rajsko-Birkenau without processing, where they are gassed. Mostly Jews from France, Czechoslovakia, Holland and other European countries.

  • “Canada.”

  • Four inmates escape in the Camp Commandant’s car, dressed in SS uniforms.

  • “Sick tourists”: inmates in the hospital taken to gas chambers.

  • The Jewish “Strangler.”

  • Women all moved to Rajsko-Birkenau, where they die in terrible conditions. Great flea infestation in the women’s blocks.

  August–September

  • Tyhpus patients taken from hospital to gas chambers.

  • A new expression: “de-lifing.”

  • Ill with typhus: recovering, thanks to comrades’ care.

  • Rajsko-Birkenau bombed by air.

  • Prepares new plans for the organization in the event of military action.

  October–Autumn

  • Back to work in the tanners’ Kommando. Items left by people who had been gassed are burned, but first searched for valuables by inmates.

  • “Able to take over the camp on more or less a daily basis”—awaiting orders from Home Army High Command.

  • The different Lublin pacifications.

  • The Volksliste.

  • New transport from Pawiak Prison: surprised by inmates’ good physical condition and morale. No one in Warsaw had seriously considered that Auschwitz could represent an active asset.

  • The gold “organization.”

  Late Autumn

  • Germans begin sexual experiments on inmates.

  Christmas 1942

  • Third Christmas in Auschwitz. Parcels from home—food now allowed.

  • Daring daylight escape by inmate Bolesław Kuczbara and two Arbeitsdiensts (work assignment leaders).

  1943

  January

  • Poles on Block 27, suspected of being organized, are punished. The “educated” group is tortured, interrogated, and finally shot in March 1943. The less educated are sent to the gravel pit to be worked to death.

  • Seven inmates escape through the SS kitchen.

  • New German policy: escapees’ families will be put in camp.

  February

  • Moves to the parcel Kommando, dealing with avalanche of food parcels arriving from inmates’ families.

  • Nearly twenty thousand Gypsies brought to Birkenau; the men are finished off “Auschwitz style.”

  • Audacious inmate escape via “Diogenes’s Barrel.”

  • Investigates the sewers as possible escape route.

  7th–11th of March

  • Fakes a hernia to escape transport with five thousand Poles to other camps—his responsibility is continuity of his work in Auschwitz.

  March–Spring

  • Gets to know Jan Redzej, who is planning an escape through the bakery.

  • Abolition of morning roll call. Civilian clothing for some inmates.

  • Relationships between men (both SS and inmates) and women in the camp.

  11th–12th of April

  • Avoids another transport of twenty-five hundred Poles.

  13th of April

  • Decides to escape.

  24th of April, Holy Saturday

  • Fakes the symptoms of typhus; gets into hospital with help of Edward Ciesielski. Only one night’s opportunity for escape through bakery. Jan Redzej and Edward Ciesielski will go too.

  27th of April

  • Around 2 a.m., before the last batch of bread for the night is put in the oven, they make their move …

  27th April–2nd May

  • Fleeing to freedom.

  4th of May

  • Meets a commander of the local military underground: Tomasz Serafiński, the man under whose identity Pilecki has been in Auschwitz for nearly three years.

  July

  • General Grot (Stefan Rowecki, head of the Home Army) is arrested by the Germans.

  23rd of August

  • Back in Warsaw.

  Autumn

  • Works in one of the High Command’s cells. Keeps pressing for liberation of Auschwitz. Writes twenty-page report on Auschwitz.

  1944

  • A few post-Auschwitz experiences, including the Warsaw Uprising.

  1 This is an approximate chronology of some key experiences in Pilecki’s Report. The chronology is only approximate because in many cases, Pilecki does not give specific months or days, nor does his Report proceed in strictly chronological order.

  2 At this point in the Report, Pilecki says: “owing to a lack of time... I must write almost in shorthand.”

  Portraits of Witold Pilecki.

  Pi
lecki Family

  INDEX

  Dear Reader: Just like in a print book, we refer you to the approximate location where you can locate the term you are looking for. In this eBook edition, we have retained the page number reference and link it to the same location you would find if you were reading the print book.

  Page numbers in italics indicate illustrative material

  Code Numbers of People

  1 (Colonel Władysław Surmacki; Władek), xx, xxvii, 36–37, 59, 106, 149, 153–154, 165, 240

  2 (Captain Dr. Władysław Dering; Władek or Dziunko). See Dering, Captain Dr. Władysław

  3 (Cavalry Captain Jerzy de Virion), 37, 59, 102, 240

  4 (Second Lieutenant Alfred Stössel; Fredek), 37, 91, 116, 168, 226, 241–242

  5 (Roman Zagner), 37, 241

  6 (Second Lieutenant Tadeusz Burski; Tadek), 37, 87, 91

  7 (Captain Michał Romanowicz; Michał or Captain Michał), 47, 53–54, 56, 58

  8 (Captain Ferdynand Trojnicki; Fred), 60, 61, 64, 168

  9 (Corporal Czesław Wąsowski; Czesiek), 62–64, 104, 153

  10 (name unknown; Jurek), 64

  11 (Colonel Tadeusz Reklewski; Colonel R), 51, 81, 270–271, 291n66

  12 (Dr. Edward Nowak), 87–88

  13 (Zofia Szczerbowska), 97

  14 (Sergeant Antoni Woźniak; Antek), 104–105, 153, 240

  15 (Officer Cadet Witold Szymkowiak; Witold), 105, 186

  16 (Jan Pilecki; no relation to Witold Pilecki), 105

  17 (Władysław Kupiec; Władek), 105, 115

  18 (Bolesław Kupiec; Bolek), 105

  19 (Tadeusz Słowiaczek; Tadek), 105, 131–132, 215, 309, 311

  20 (First Lieutenant Jan Kupiec; Janek), 105

  21 (Tadeusz Pietrzykowski; Tadek), 105, 114, 206

  22 (Antoni Rosa; Antek), 105

  23 (Colonel Aleksander Stawarz), 105, 165, 184, 187

  24 (Lieutenant Colonel Karol Kumuniecki), 105, 165, 184, 232, 249

  25 (Stefan Bielecki; Czesław III), 106, 116–117, 166–167, 239–240, 322–323, 328

  26 (Officer Cadet Platoon Sergeant Stanisław Maringe; Stasiek), 106, 116, 212, 240

  27 (First Lieutenant Jerzy Poraziński; Jurek), 106, 116, 212

  28 (Warrant Officer Szczepan Rzeczkowski; Szczepan), 106, 280

  29 (First Lieutenant Włodzimierz Makaliński; Włodek), 106, 117, 163, 204, 240

  30 (Captain Eugeniusz Triebling; Geniek), 106, 217–218

  31 (Karol Świętorzecki), 24, 113

  32 (Leszek Cenzartowicz), 114

  33 (Stanisław Kocjan), 116

  34 (name unknown), 116, 240

  35 (Officer Cadet Remigiusz Niewiarowski), 116, 240

  36 (Stanisław Arct), 116, 241

  37 (name unknown), 116, 241

  38 (Major Chmielewski, first name unknown; Sęp II), 117, 241

  39 (Kazimierz Radwański; Kazio; nephew of Pilecki), 120, 184, 225, 250, 270, 271

  40 (Platoon Sergeant Tadeusz Szydlik), 120–121, 291

  41 (Stanisław Stawiszyński), 106n29, 121, 207, 233, 239, 241

  42 (Tadeusz Lech), 121, 128–129

  43 (Antoni Koszczyński), 121

  44 (Wincenty Gawron; Wicek), 21, 106n29, 121, 128, 141, 150, 165–167, 322, 328

  45 (Stanisław Gutkiewicz), 106n29, 121, 128, 150, 163

  46 (Wiktor Śniegucki), 121

  47 (name unknown), 125

  48 (Stanisław Ozimek; Stach), 125, 241

  49 (Jan Dangel; Janek), 125, 241, 347

  50 (Jan Mielcarek; Wernyhora), 129, 216, 217

  52 (Tadeusz Myszkowski; Tadek), 128, 167, 168, 215

  53 (Józef Chramiec), 129, 217

  54 (Stefan Gaik), 129, 217

  55 (Mieczysław Wagner), 129

  56 (Zbigniew Różak), 129

  57 (Edward Ciesielski; Edek), xlix, 129, 224–225, 254, 299, 319, 323, 325, 328. See also escape of Pilecki from Auschwitz

  58 (Andrzej Marduła), 129, 217

  59 (Henryk Bartosiewicz). See Bartosiewicz, Henryk

  60 (Captain Stanisław Kazuba), 138, 183, 227, 292

  61 (Second Lieutenant Konstanty Piekarski), 138, 145, 168, 183, 226, 228, 244, 266, 271

  62 (Colonel Jan Karcz), 138, 160–163, 167–168, 207–208

  63 (Lieutenant Colonel Jerzy Zalewski), 138

  64 (Lieutenant Colonel Kazimierz Rawicz; in camp as Jan Hilkner), lii, 139, 140, 162, 163, 183–184, 186

  65 (name unknown), 139

  66 (name unknown), 139

  67 (Second Lieutenant Czesław Darkowski), 139, 186

  68 (Mieczysław Januszewski), 139, 166, 168

  69 (Professor Roman Rybarski; former member of Parliament), 139, 150, 166

  70 (Stanisław Dubois; former member of Parliament), 139, 150, 187

  71 (Jan Mosdorf; former member of Parliament, per Pilecki), 139, 216, 217

  72 (Konstanty Jagiełło; former member of Parliament, per Pilecki), 139

  73 (Piotr Kownacki; former member of Parliament), 139, 216, 217

  74 (Kiliański, first name unknown; former member of Parliament), 139

  75 (Stefan Niebudek; former member of Parliament), 139

  76 (First Lieutenant Bernard Świerczyna), 140, 184, 225–226, 240, 243, 249, 275, 291, 292

  77 (Zbigniew Ruszczyński), 140, 168, 243

  78 (name unknown), 140

  79 (name unknown), 140

  80 (Alfred Włodarczyk), 70, 150, 218, 221, 291

  81 (Alojz Pohl), 150

  82 (Major Jan Włodarkiewicz; Janek W.), xlvi, 17, 125, 146

  83 (Dr. Helena Pawłowska), 152–153, 321

  84 (Lieutenant Tomasz Serafiński; Tomek). See Serafiński, Lieutenant Tomasz

  85 (Major Zygmunt Bohdanowski; Bohdan), 146, 165, 183, 184, 227, 241, 250, 274, 275

  86 (Aleksander Paliński), 154, 325

  87 (Father Zygmunt Ruszczak), 157

  88 (Captain Tadeusz Dziedzic), 160, 239

  89 (Karel Stransky), 163

  90 (Officer Cadet, name unknown), 165, 243, 252

  91 (Corporal Stanisław Polkowski), 165, 216, 217

  92 (Wacław Weszke), 165, 216, 281, 292

  93 (name unknown), 165

  94 (Officer Cadet, name unknown), 165, 216, 217, 243

  95 (name unknown), 165, 216

  96 (Tadeusz Stulgiński), 165

  97 (Jan Machnowski; Janek), 140–141, 165

  98 (First Lieutenant, name unknown), 166, 292

  99 (Officer Cadet, name unknown), 166, 292

  100 (name unknown), 166, 223, 224

  101 (Witold Kosztowny), 166, 224, 252–254, 291

  102 (Dr. Rudolf Diem), 166, 244

  103 (name unknown), 166

  104 (Józef Putek; former member of Parliament), 167

  105 (Edward Berlin), 167, 239

  106 (name unknown), 167, 216, 276

  107 (name unknown), 167

  108 (Stanisław Dobrowolski), 167, 239, 241

  109 (Second Lieutenant, name unknown), 167

  110 (Andrzej Makowski-Gąsienica), 167, 266

  111 (name unknown), 167, 215–217, 222

  112 (Officer Cadet Stanisław Jaster), 168, 204

  113 (Sokołowski, first name unknown), 168

  114 (Captain Tadeusz Paolone), 183, 227, 291n66

  115 (First Lieutenant, name unknown), 183

  116 (Captain Zygmunt Pawłowicz; in camp as Julian Trzęsimiech), 183–184, 227, 327

  117 (First Lieutenant Eugeniusz Zaturski), 184, 240, 241, 243, 250

  118 (name unknown), 184, 226, 266, 292

  119 (Cavalry Sergeant Jan Miksa), 184, 186

  120 (Dr. Zygmunt Zakrzewski), 184, 241

  121 (Colonel Juliusz Gilewicz), xx, 186–187, 226–228, 244, 275

  122 (Lieutenant Colonel Teofil Dziama), 187, 232, 292

  123 (Senior Uhlan Stefan Stępień), 204

  124 (Captain Tadeusz Chrościcki; father), 212, 241

  125 (Tadeusz Lucjan Chrościcki; son), 212–213, 241

&n
bsp; 126 (Tadeusz Czechowski), 217

  127 (name unknown), 215

  128 (name unknown), 218

  129 (Leon Kukiełka), 218, 226, 239, 241

  130 (name unknown), 218, 226, 241

  131 (name unknown), 218, 241

  132 (name unknown), 218

  133 (name unknown), 218

  134 (name unknown), 218

  135 (name unknown), 218

  136 (name unknown), 218

  137 (name unknown), 218

  138 (name unknown), 218, 240, 274

  139 (name unknown), 218

  140 (name unknown), 218

  141 (name unknown), 218

  142 (lawyer, name unknown), 218, 249

  143 (name unknown), 218

  144 (name unknown), 218

  145 (Dr., name unknown), 224, 226

  146 (Captain Dr. Henryk Suchnicki), 224, 226, 239

  147 (name unknown), 226

  148 (name unknown), 226

  149 (name unknown), 226, 273

  150 (Major Edward Gött-Getyński), 227, 249

  151 (name unknown), 232

  152 (name unknown), 232

  153 (name unknown), 232

  154 (name unknown), 232

  155 (name unknown), 232

  156 (Second Lieutenant Stanisław Wierzbicki; Stasiek), 232, 239–242, 250–251, 274

  157 (Czesław Sikora), 239, 241, 242

  158 (Zygmunt Ważyński), 239–242, 320

  159 (Captain Stanisław Machowski), 240, 274

  160 (Father Kuc), 240, 320, 321

  161 (Bolesław Kuczbara), 244–245, 275, 324

  162 (Cavalry Captain Włodzimierz Koliński), 249

  163 (Second Lieutenant Mieczysław Koliński), 249

  164 (Second Lieutenant Edmund Zabawski), 259, 276, 283, 317–318

  165 (Second Lieutenant Henryk Szklarz), 259

  166 (Platoon Sergeant, name unknown), 259

  167 (Second Lieutenant Aleksander Bugajski; Olek), 259–262, 265–266, 280, 289, 326

  168 (First Lieutenant Witold Wierusz), 260–262, 265

  169 (Stanisław Barański), 271

  170 (Jan Redzej; Jasiek, Jasio, Jaś, Janek; in camp as Jan Retko), xlix, 276–277, 299, 319, 323, 325, 328. See also escape of Pilecki from Auschwitz

  171 (name unknown), 282

  172 (Janusz Młynarski), 284, 286

  173 (Dr. Władysław Fejkiel), 287

  174 (Second Lieutenant Jan Olszowski), 293

  175 (Piotr Mazurkiewicz), 314–315

  176 (Mr. and Mrs. Obora), 318–319

 

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