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Leah Rygier holds her daughter Wanda in an orphanage where they were hiding. A Polish woman holding another baby is standing next to her.

Photograph | Digitized | Photograph Number: 57919

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    Leah Rygier holds her daughter Wanda in an orphanage where they were hiding. A Polish woman holding another baby is standing next to her.
    Leah Rygier holds her daughter Wanda in an orphanage where they were hiding.  A Polish woman holding another baby is standing next to her.

    Overview

    Caption
    Leah Rygier holds her daughter Wanda in an orphanage where they were hiding. A Polish woman holding another baby is standing next to her.
    Date
    1943
    Locale
    Warsaw, Poland
    Variant Locale
    Warszawa
    Varshava
    Warschau
    Photo Credit
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Deborah Stocker

    Rights & Restrictions

    Photo Source
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Copyright: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
    Provenance: Deborah Stocker

    Keywords & Subjects

    Photo Designation
    RESCUERS & RESCUED -- Poland

    Administrative Notes

    Biography
    Deborah Stocker (born Wanda Katarzyna Szymeczko) is the daughter of Josef Rygier and Leah Bottner Rygier. Her parents were originally from eastern Poland but moved to Warsaw before the war. Josef worked as a businessman and Leah as a midwife. After the war they were imprisoned briefly in the Warsaw ghetto before obtaining false papers, under the names Michal and Franciszka Szymeczko, which allowed them to escape to the Aryan side. Sometime in late 1942, Josef was rounded up as a Pole and sent to a labor camp in Germany. Left alone and in her last trimester of a pregnancy, Leah went to the Dom Kziedza Buduena Convent and Orphanage. She told them she had recently come from the countryside and asked whether she could deliver her baby there. Wanda was born in the orphanage on February 11, 1943. Leah and Wanda were allowed to stay together for approximately six to eight months. Afterwards, Wanda was sent to another orphanage on the outskirts of Warsaw, and Leah hid in the Polish countryside supporting herself by working both as a farmhand and as a midwife. After the war, Josef returned from Germany and found Leah at a prearranged meeting place in Warsaw. Towards the end of 1945, Wanda’s parents picked her up from the orphanage and the family moved to Liegnitz. There, the family continued to live under their assumed names, and Josef supported the family by running a small general store. Leah gave birth to a second daughter, Ela, in 1947, and three years later the family immigrated to Canada where Leah’s brother was living. Both Leah and Josef’s parents had been living in the Soviet zone at the start of the war. All four were deported to Siberia, and only Leah’s parents survived. Leah’s brother, Ephraim Bottner, survived the war as a member of the Polish underground.
    Record last modified:
    2008-08-13 00:00:00
    This page:
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