Foreword by Matt DeLaMater
Acknowledgments
Preface
Chapter 1. Early Life in Manchuria
Chapter 2. Japanese Occupation
Chapter 3. Finally Poland
Chapter 4. Zofia’s Dream – Roman’s Dream
Chapter 5. Meeting Marshal Pilsudski
Chapter 6. More Education Problems
Chapter 7. Into the Cavalry
Chapter 8. Learning to be a Farmer
Chapter 9. All About Bees and Honey
Chapter 10. All About Lawski Bród
Chapter 11. All About Partridge
Chapter 12. Roman the Hunter
Chapter 13. Harbinger of War
Chapter 14. Decision to Join Colonel Dobrawski
Chapter 15. Under Major Dobrzanski’s Command
Chapter 16. Hubal – The Journal of Roman Rodziewicz
Chapter 17. Warsaw Rendez-vous – Halina
Chapter 18. A Belorussian Outpost
Chapter 19. The Unlucky Boots
Chapter 20. To Jail at Wolozyn
Chapter 21. Gestapo Interrogation
Chapter 22. To Prison in Stara Wilejka
Chapter 23. Train to Auschwitz, Birkenau
Chapter 24. Nightmares Relived
Chapter 25. Numbered for Life
Chapter 26. The Death of 30,000 Jewish Women
Chapter 27. To Buchenwald
Chapter 28. The Final Roll-Call-German Farewell
Chapter 29. Freed by Americans
Chapter 30. On to Italy
Chapter 31. Meeting Hubal’s Sister and Wankowicz
Chapter 32. Letter About Halina
Chapter 33. Uncertainty to Return
Chapter 34. My Best Friend in England
Chapter 35. English Marriage
Chapter 36. Visiting Poland
Chapter 37. Meeting With Halina
Epilogue
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.
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.
*The Sarmatian Review*
I read this book about a Hubal soldier in one breath with delight.
It will make such a wonderful contribution to a greater national
recognition of what transpired during the difficult war years. It
is a story that shouldn't be forgotten, and I think
Ziolkowska-Boehm has done extremely well in providing a vivid
picture of what was taking place.
*Zbigniew Brzezinski, "Compelling, readable, and very moving!"*
Recent Polish history abounds with heroic people and deeds, and it
is a noble task of talented writers to tell their stories.
Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm takes a prominent place among them. In
a fascinating, lucid narration she tells us about another hero,
Roman Rodziewicz, born 1913 of Polish parents. His first 10 years
were spent in Manchuria; in 1923 he repatriated to Poland. After
the outbreak of WWII, he volunteered to join the first guerrilla
unit of major ‘Hubal’ Dobrzanski, and served with him until his
commander’s death. Later on he distinguished himself in many
clandestine actions. Imprisoned by the Nazis Germans, he was
liberated by the U.S. Army and spent the rest of his colorful life
in England where, now 100 years old, he resides. Ziolkowska-Boehm's
book represents a first-hand account of his heroic life.
*Jerzy Krzyzanowski, Ohio State University*
Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm has done it again— another fine book
about Polish courage and character. Polish Hero Roman Rodziewicz
carries Roman Rodziewicz— and us—from Japanese-occupied Manchuria
in the 1930s to the German invasion of Poland in 1939, and from the
unspeakable horrors of Auschwitz to, finally, the life of a brave
Polish survivor in postwar Great Britain. It is a story of
earthshaking, violent events but also a very personal story of
courage, patriotism and lost love.
*Stanley Cloud and Lynne Olson, authors of A Question of Honor: The
Kosciuszko Squadron—Forgotten Heroes of World War II*
Among all European wars, World War II stands out, and will always
do so, as the most significant and meaningful conflict since the
Western tradition stood firm against Orientalism at Actium. It was
no mere struggle over borders, but rather a conflict of ideas: of
humanism versus barbarism. But the victory of the Allies, while
reemphasizing liberal democracy and respect for the human
individual over the Hitlerite system of dehumanizing racial
exploitation, did not signify a victory for the entire continent.
For Poland, the first country of all to stand up to the Nazis in
1939, liberation in 1945 was a hollow phrase, and resulted in
merely the replacement of one totalitarianism with another.
Aleksandra Ziolkowska-Boehm's new book, Polish Hero Roman
Rodziewicz is important in that it brings to the English reader the
full diapason of the Polish situation before, during, and after the
conflict. It is a welcome addition to the American library of World
War II history, told, as always, in the inimitable and engaging
prose of a true master of reportage.
*Charles S. Kraszewski, Kings College and The Polish Institute of
Arts and Sciences*
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