From the London Times via the South African Times: Irena Sendler: Saviour of the children of Warsaw’s ghetto. She was tortured and beaten, but never revealed the names of the children. See here and from the BBC with pictures as well.
When Germany invaded Poland in 1939, Irena Sendler had no doubts about how to respond.
Sendler, who has died aged 98, was a social care nurse for the Warsaw city council. She spent the next four years risking her life in the Warsaw ghetto, delivering essential supplies and, when the true purposes of Nazi policy became apparent, smuggling out as many children as she could. She saved many hundreds of lives —” perhaps as many as 2500.
Even under torture and sentence of death, she refused to reveal the whereabouts of the rescued children to the Nazi occupiers, and after escaping captivity went back to the underground, making sure that those she had hidden survived the war.
She was born in Warsaw in 1910, the only child of Dr Stanislaw Krzyzanowski.
The family moved to the nearby town of Otwock, where her father had a reputation as the only doctor who would treat Jewish patients during typhoid epidemics; he himself died of the disease in 1917.
She married Mieczyslaw Sendler and became a social worker, caring for poor Jewish families in Warsaw.
Under German occupation, conditions for the city’s 400000 Jews deteriorated rapidly, and Sendler, defying Nazi orders, began bringing them supplies.
In the summer of 1942 deportations from the ghetto to Treblinka death camp began.
Sendler joined Zegota, the Polish organisation set up to help Jews, and began getting children out . To help them hide , the children were taught Christian prayers and given new identities.
Sendler kept a careful list of their real identities in the hope that they could at some point be reunited with their families.
But in October 1943, alerted by an informer, 11 German officers arrived to arrest Sendler.
Sendler was taken to the notorious Pawiak prison, where she was methodically tortured and beaten, leaving her permanently scarred.
She never revealed the names of the children or of her underground colleagues.
Officially, she was executed in early 1944. But, in fact, Zegota had bribed a German guard to let her escape from death row.
After the liberation Sendler retrieved the list of names from where she had buried it during the Warsaw uprising of 1944, in jam jars under an apple tree in a friend’s garden.
She helped Jewish organisations to trace those few children whose families had survived the Holocaust…
Eternal rest grant onto her O Lord.
Wieczny odpoczynek racz jej dać Panie.