This is an important and moving guest post from a new contact that I recently made who lives in Poland. He has a private museum and is very knowledgeable about the orphans from some of the orphanges in southern Poland that were run by the Catholic nuns. He is making efforts to reunite these orphans with family members. If you know someone that might be interested in this article, please share the link with them. Thank you!! His contact email is listed after the Polish and English versions.
English Translation: Maria Eppich
The
time of war brings many human dramas. When, however, innocent
children
suffer, these dramas become even more painful. In Duszniki Zdrój
there were two houses: Parkhotel and Hygiea /currently known as Sanatorium
Zimowitz. In these houses The most dramatic scenes involving innocent children
took place.
In February 1945, two nuns, Klara Kotulska and Amalia Śnieżek from the Convent of Notre Dame Nuns from Lviv came to Bad Reinerz (Duszniki Zdroj). Here, they received those two houses and organized an orphanage. In the course of evacuation in 1945, the nuns of the Silesian Province brought here (to Duszniki Zdroj) over 100 children from Wrocław, Ciążyń, and Trestno.
The Silesian Province nuns departing for Germany took with them children of German descent. Other children of unknown origin were being cared for by the nuns who stayed. In addition, 60 infants brought to Duszniki Zdrój by the German army were left unattended, as the nurses who cared for them, left them, fleeing from the Russians. At the request of the mayor, nuns in Duszniki Zdrój took care of these infants. Some of the infants were sent to Krzydlina, some to Kłodzko, and some to Trzebnica. Until recently, almost nobody knew about the existence of this orphanage. After two years of searching archives, correspondence, and many conversations I found over 200 names of these children. Many of the employees are also known by first name and by surname.
Starved children reached Duszniki Zdrój in various transports. Many of them were dying of starvation and disease. The practice of hiding the real identity of those children after the war meant that many of them never found their real parents, as many of these children were given new names by the authorities and new dates of birth. However, after 70 years since it happened, a case is known that an orphan from Duszniki Zdroj orphanage found his true sisters (his siblings). Trauma to these children was enormous. Even now, many do not know who they really are.
The photographs show orphans and nuns who worked with them in Duszniki Zdrój. Any information about the orphanage can be sent by e-mail to Dariusz: dariuszskarbiec@gmail.com





https://arolsen-archives.org/pl/news/zaginiona-corka/
ReplyDelete