Jan Komski

2,502 views. Created by USHolocaustMemorialMuseum. Sign in to edit this page

Find more information about Jan Komski

We suggest searching:

Places mentioned on this page

Share Jan's Memorial page on Facebook

About this page

Anyone can contribute to this page. Please sign in or sign up—it's free.

  • Original author: USHolocaustMemorialMuseum
  • Created Date: 13 Aug 2009
  • Modified Date:
  • Page views: 2,502 total (17 this week)

Timeline

Facts

There are no facts. Add Fact

Stories

Jan Komski

| Bircza, Poland

Jan was born to a Catholic family in the small Polish town of Bircza. His father, a World War I veteran, moved the family to Brzozow shortly after the war. Brzozow was a small manufacturing town in southeastern Poland. After graduating from secondary school, Jan enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts in Cracow.

1933-39: Cracow was a beautiful old city; we studied its remarkable churches and synagogues in my classes. By September 1939, however, the war engulfed the beauty of Cracow. I left to escape the advancing Germans, and hoped to join the Polish army, but as I neared the Soviet border I realized the Red Army was also approaching. I didn't know which way to go. Since I feared Soviet rule, I returned to Cracow and faced the German occupation.

1940-44: I joined the Polish underground and was arrested near the Hungarian border. In June 1940 I was sent to Auschwitz. Four of us devised an escape plan. Over many months we collected parts of a German army uniform, so one of us could pose as a guard. We stole documents from the camp office to forge an ID and then I painted a German uniform on a photo to complete the fraud. Our "guard" got us by the gate as a work detail in December 1942. We then gathered civilian clothing, left for us by the underground, and escaped.

Shortly after his escape, Jan was re-arrested and spent two more years in various camps. He was liberated from theDachau concentration camp by U.S. troops on April 29, 1945.

 

Comments

There are no comments. Add Comment