In Polish Hero Roman Rodziewicz: Fate of a Hubal Soldier in Auschwitz, Buchenwald, and Postwar England, Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm traces the remarkable and tragic tale of Roman Rodziewicz, a true Polish hero of the Second World War. Roman’s childhood was spent in Manchuria where his father, first deported to Siberia, later worked as an engineer for a Chinese company. Following the loss of his parents early in life after returning to free Poland, Roman was trained to manage a self-sufficient estate farming and producing various livestock, vegetables, and honey. Prior to the German invasion of Poland, Roman attended military school at the Suwalki Cavalry Brigade. After the surrender of the Polish army, the partisan forces of Major Hubal continued to fight the Germans. The brave anti-German activities of the Hubal partisans beckoned Roman and he joined them. About eight months later Major Hubal was killed. Roman escaped and joined the underground as an officer fighting the German occupation forces. Captured and tortured, Roman was subsequently imprisoned in Auschwitz and later Buchenwald. After the American army rescued Roman, he joined the Polish army in Italy. At the end of World War II Roman settled in England. One of the greatest misfortunes of his life was losing contact with his fiancé Halinka, and later learning she had married believing him to be dead. Two weeks after her marriage, she received a letter from Roman that he had survived the war. They met many years later, and Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm witnessed the meeting of Halinka and Roman in Warsaw. Roman continues to live in England now having reached the age of 100 years in January 2013. Polish Hero Roman Rodziewicz explores the incredible story of one Polish soldier of World War II, and provides an illuminating contribution to the historical record of the period.
Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm,an independent scholar, is the author of many books and the recipient of numerous literary awards, including a fellowship in literature from the Delaware Divisions of Arts and a Fulbright scholarship.
Foreword by Matt DeLaMaterAcknowledgmentsPrefaceChapter 1. Early Life in ManchuriaChapter 2. Japanese OccupationChapter 3. Finally PolandChapter 4. Zofia’s Dream – Roman’s DreamChapter 5. Meeting Marshal PilsudskiChapter 6. More Education ProblemsChapter 7. Into the CavalryChapter 8. Learning to be a FarmerChapter 9. All About Bees and HoneyChapter 10. All About Lawski BródChapter 11. All About PartridgeChapter 12. Roman the HunterChapter 13. Harbinger of WarChapter 14. Decision to Join Colonel DobrawskiChapter 15. Under Major Dobrzanski’s CommandChapter 16. Hubal – The Journal of Roman RodziewiczChapter 17. Warsaw Rendez-vous – HalinaChapter 18. A Belorussian OutpostChapter 19. The Unlucky BootsChapter 20. To Jail at WolozynChapter 21. Gestapo Interrogation Chapter 22. To Prison in Stara WilejkaChapter 23. Train to Auschwitz, BirkenauChapter 24. Nightmares RelivedChapter 25. Numbered for LifeChapter 26. The Death of 30,000 Jewish WomenChapter 27. To BuchenwaldChapter 28. The Final Roll-Call-German FarewellChapter 29. Freed by AmericansChapter 30. On to ItalyChapter 31. Meeting Hubal’s Sister and WankowiczChapter 32. Letter About HalinaChapter 33. Uncertainty to ReturnChapter 34. My Best Friend in EnglandChapter 35. English MarriageChapter 36. Visiting PolandChapter 37. Meeting With HalinaEpilogue
The author does, indeed, write about the Polish military hero Roman Rodziewicz in this volume. . . .She . . . [shows] the whole man and [examines] his entire life as it unfolds in his memoir as well as in his retelling.