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February 6, 2018

“I’m No Hero”: The Life Saving Acts of Irena Sendler

Winner of the Spring 2018 StMU History Media Award for

Best Article in the Category of “Political History”

Best Article in the Category of “World History”

At the age of twenty-nine, Irena Sendler was a social worker with the Polish welfare department when Hitler invaded Poland in September 1939, launching World War II. But before that, Sendler had a unique childhood, growing up in the Polish town of Otwock. In her small town, Irena played with the other children. It never mattered to her or her family that the other children were Jewish, and they were Roman Catholic. During college, she studied Polish literature and became active in the Polish Socialist party.1

Warsaw Ghetto boarders in November 1940 | Courtesy of Wikipedia

In October 1940, around 450,000 Jews were held in a 16-block neighborhood in Warsaw, marking the opening of the Warsaw Ghetto. The conditions that the people lived in were horrendous: packed houses, limited or no food and water, diseases running rampant.2 Hundreds of Jews were dying each week from sickness, starvation, and bullets. That same year, Irena Sendler joined the Polish Underground. Working as a social worker and working with the Polish Underground, Sendler had unique access to the ghettos given to her by city officials. Her official reason for being there was to help fight contagious diseases, because the Germans there did not want to risk getting sick themselves. Her unofficial reason for being there was to provide clothing, medicine, money, and false documents.3

Inside the Warsaw Ghetto, Sendler would often wear the Star of David on her arm, to show that she was united with the Jewish people and so that she would not draw attention to herself.4 Eventually, she began to smuggle people out of the ghetto and move them to places of safety. Between the years 1939 and 1942, Irena and her helpers made over five hundred false documents to help Jewish families escape from the ghettos.5

Polish Underground Symbol | Courtesy of Wikipedia

Sendler’s work in the Polish Underground brought her to the Council for Aid to Jews, known by the code name “Zegota.”6 This organization was dedicated to helping Jewish families and was funded in part by the Polish Government in exile in London. It was a dangerous time for people to be helping Jews. Those who were found hiding Jews were executed, along with their entire family.

By 1942, extermination camps, like Auschwitz and Treblinka, had been constructed to hold and exterminate Jews. Sendler knew that if she wanted to help more, she needed to act quickly. She was sent to the ghetto to monitor typhus. In 1917, when Sendler was just seven, her father Dr. Stanislaw Krzyzanowski had died from treating sick Jews. Her father had been the only doctor in their hometown who would treat sick Jews.7 Dr. Krzyzanowski remained a lifelong influence in her life and was the main reason behind her actions during the war.

In December of 1942, Irena Sendler was made head of Zegota’s children division, because of her previous experience smuggling false papers in and providing exits for Jews in the ghetto. The children that she rescued only knew her by her code name “Jolanta,” which Zegota gave her to deter any of the Germans from discovering their group.8

Sendler and her team of about two dozen or so, including Antoni Dzbrowski, a driver who would hide children in his lorry truck, would smuggle children out of the ghettos.9 She would ask mothers to give up their children, not being able to promise that they would survive or even make it through the ghetto gates. She gave them hope that there was a small chance for their children’s survival, a chance greater than staying in the ghetto. One mother gave up her daughter Elzbieta Ficowska, leaving her with only a small silver spoon with her name and birth date written on it.10 Other means of escape were through fake deaths. Children would be given sleeping medicine and were able to pass through because German officials were told the children died of typhus. Other children were brought to the sewer. There were reports of a dog that was taught to bark to cover the cries of babies.11 The most popular escape route, however, was through the Warsaw Municipal Law Courts, which shared an edge with the Warsaw ghetto. The courthouse had secret doors on both sides and underground corridors, and Zegota members bribed the Polish Officials who oversaw the patrolling of the corridors, so the children were able to be smuggled out unseen.12

I was taught that if you see a person drowning, you must jump into the water to save them, whether you can swim or not.13

The children who escaped were provided with false identities. Many of the children were taught Christian prayers and would live with Christian families who agreed to take them in. Some children would go to live in Catholic or non-religious convents and orphanages. Sendler would write the child’s Jewish name, their parents’ name, and the child’s new Polish name down in code to be buried in jam jars under a neighbor’s tree.14

On April 19, 1943, the Nazis began to liquidate the ghettos, which meant that the Jews who were considered able to work would be sent to concentration camps and those who were not would be killed. It took the Nazis more than a month to finish the liquidation, due to the uprising within the Warsaw ghetto. The Polish Underground was fighting outside the ghetto, aiming for German trucks. By then, only about 55,000 Jews remained alive, either from escaping or from being left in the ghettos.15

True to their word, the Nazis were dedicated to capturing and killing all those who were aiding Jewish people. A member of the underground was caught and tortured, and he gave up Sendler’s name and address. On October 20, 1943, the Nazi Gestapo raided Sendler’s apartment and arrested her. Sendler was taken to the notorious Pawiak Prison in Warsaw, a place where many went in, but few left alive.16 At the prison, she was first asked to reveal the names of people she worked with, the names of children she saved, and her current living arrangement, but she remained silent. Then she was tortured, her feet and then legs were broken with the use of clubs. She still did not talk. She was beaten and tortured more, but she never spoke a word. After realizing that she would never tell them anything, the Nazis publicly announced her death. She was sentenced to die by firing squad. Unknown to her, Zegota had been working on her escape. The organization bribed a German guard to release her on the morning of her execution and the guard followed through. The Germans did not want to admit officially that she had escape, so Sendler was listed on public bulletin boards as among those executed.17

Irena Sendler on Christmas Eve of 1944 | Courtesy of The Book Haven

Irena Sendler then went into hiding like the children that she had been sent to rescue. However, she managed to continue her work under a different name. When World War II finally ended in 1945, she hoped to reunite many of the 2,500 children taken out of the Ghetto with their parents. Irena Sendler dug up the jars, but by that point the Ghetto was largely empty. Many of the Jewish parents had died during the Holocaust, and few were able to find their children. Most of the ghetto families had died in the ghetto or in the nearby Treblinka death camp.

Between the years 1940 and 1943, Irena “Jolanta” Sendler and her team smuggled about 2,500 children out of the Warsaw ghetto.18 The total estimated lives that Sendler saved was about 3,000.

Irena Sendler’s struggle did not end when the war ended. After the war, Poland became a Soviet ally and fell under Communist rule. Irena was able to start using her real name once again and leave her life of hiding, but she faced harassment because of her work with Zegota, which also held many anti-communist beliefs.19 She married and got pregnant, but due to the harassment and stress, her son was born prematurely and died. Sendler continued her social work by founding and funding orphanages and nursing homes.

The term ‘heroine’ irritates me greatly. The opposite is true. I continue to have pangs of conscience that I did so little.20

Irena Sendler in 2005, age 93 | Courtesy of PBS

The first official recognition of her actions during the war came in 1965, when she was named one of the Righteous Among the Nations. Irena Sendler was one of the first to be awarded this title. However, she was not able to receive the medal until 1983, when she obtained a passport to travel to Israel. In 2000, a group of students from Kansas created a play called Life in a Jar. In 2003 she was honored with the Order of the White Eagle, Poland’s most esteemed award given to civilians and military for their actions.21 In 2007, she was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize, but lost to Al Gore’s presentation of Global Warming. She died in 2008, at the age of 98. But her story did not end with her death. In 2009, the film The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler was released.

  1. Antony Polonsky, “Obituary: Irena Sendler: Polish social worker who saved around 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis,” The Guardian, May 14, 2008 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/may/14/secondworldwar.poland.
  2. Joachim Wieler, “Remembering Irena Sendler: A Mother Courage honored as most distinguished social worker of IFSW,” International Social Work 51 (November 2008): 835.
  3. Ronald Smelser, Learning About the Holocaust: A Student’s Guide-Irena Sendler (2001), 6-7.
  4. Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2008, s.v. “Irena Sendler.”
  5. Elaine Woo, “Irena Sendler, 98; saved 2,500 children in the Holocaust,” Los Angeles Times, May 13, 2008 http://archive.boston.com/bostonglobe/obituaries/articles/2008/05/13/irena_sendler_98_saved_2500_children_in_the_holocaust/?page=2.
  6. Pulgarin Bilvao and Lissette Paola,” Irena Sendler: A Nurse Example of Love of Freedom,” Investigacion & Educacion En Enfermeria 30, no. 2 (July 2012).
  7. “Call Her the Nazis’ Nightmare; Act with Courage: Irena Sendler saved thousands of kids from the Warsaw ghetto,” Investor’s Business Daily February 4, 2004.
  8. Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2008, s.v. “Irena Sendler.”
  9. Antony Polonsky, “Obituary: Irena Sendler: Polish social worker who saved around 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis,” The Guardian, May 14, 2008. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/may/14/secondworldwar.poland.
  10. Maggie Jones, “The Smuggler,” The New York Times December 27, 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/28/magazine/28sendler-t.html.
  11. “Call Her the Nazis’ Nightmare; Act with Courage: Irena Sendler saved thousands of kids from the Warsaw ghetto,” Investor’s Business Daily, February 4, 2004.
  12. Dennis Hevesi, “Irena Sendler, 98, Lifeline to Young Jews,” New York Times May 13, 2008 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/13/world/europe/13sendler.html.
  13. “Meet Unsung Hero Irena Sendler,” Lowell Milken Center for Unsung Heroes, June 11, 2014 https://lowellmilkencenter.org/irena-sendler.
  14. Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2008, s.v. “Irena Sendler.”
  15. Dennis Hevesi, “Irena Sendler, 98, Lifeline to Young Jews,” New York Times, May 13, 2008 http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/13/world/europe/13sendler.html.
  16. Joachim Wieler, “Remembering Irena Sendler: A Mother Courage honored as most distinguished social worker of IFSW,” International Social Work 51 (November 2008): 836.
  17. Rosemary Feitelberg, “Irena Sendler: Heroine of the  Holocaust,” WWD: Women’s Wear Daily 195, no. 65 (March 27, 2008): 19.
  18. Joachim Wieler, “Remembering Irena Sendler: A Mother Courage honoured as most distinguished social worker of IFSW,” International Social Work 51 (Nov, 2008): 835.
  19. Joachim Wieler, “Remembering Irena Sendler: A Mother Courage honored as most distinguished social worker of IFSW,” International Social Work 51 (November 2008): 837.
  20. Richard Pendlebury, “The ‘female Schindler’ who saved 2,500 Jewish children but died wishing she’d rescued more,” Daily Mail Online, May 22, 2008 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-1021048/Female-Schindler-Irena-Sendler-saved-2-500-Jewish-children-died-aged-98.html.
  21. Antony Polonsky, “Obituary: Irena Sendler: Polish social worker who saved around 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazis” The Guardian, May 14, 2008 https://www.theguardian.com/world/2008/may/14/secondworldwar.poland.

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Auroara-Juhl Nikkels

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114 comments

  • Luis Morales

    Wow, this is an incredible story of the bravery of Irena Sendler. I have never heard of Irena Sendler, but what she did for those children cannot be described using words. It is remarkable to think that Irena and the Zegota helped so many Jewish people and their families by doing what was morally right even in the face of danger. This article was great at explaining the obstacles that Irena had to overcome to help Jewish people at a time like this. Great article.

  • Matthew Wyatt

    This is an interesting article about a woman I unfortunately knew nothing about. The whole time I read, I thought to myself “How has this story not been made into a movie yet?” only to read your last sentence and find that it has, I just somehow missed it. My first recommendation to improve the strength of the piece is to either cut or elaborate on the part about her father. As it stands, the detail seems to come out of nowhere, popping up in the middle of a narrative revolving around the events of 1942 with almost no tie-in. Also, the section about the Warsaw Uprising seems bare, and could benefit from a little more detail. All told, this is a fascinating article that I believe could only be made better by including even more information.

  • Iris Henderson

    This story of the heroism of Irena Sedler is remarkable. I have heard this story before but never in this great of detail. I want to genuinely thank the author for sharing this amazing story of this even more amazing woman. Irena and the Zegota helped so many Jewish people and their families by doing what was morally right even in the face of danger. We need more people like this and we need to share more stories like this as well.

  • Christopher Martinez

    In high school I heard of Irena Sendler but only had her named mention in class and never had a story told behind it. Its great to learn of a story like this and how at times of tragedy light can still shine above. This article was great at explaining the obstacles she had to overcome to help jewish people at a time like this. She was polish but even when she wasn’t going to be affected by hitlers action she still stepped in and put her life on the line to help people in need. Being able to save 3,000 people maybe not have been as much as she wanted hut she still saved countless lives at a time and need for help.

  • Miranda Alamilla

    The definition of an underrated and under appreciated hero: Irena Sendler. Not only was she a hero in the midst of the reign of Hitler, she was an inspiration to many people. Although many of us, before reading this, did not know who she was; I feel that it is agreed that Irena Sendler is a true inspiration. She had the courage to help people at a dangerous and the strength to never reveal the ones that she helped. Beautifully written, congrats Aurora.

  • Hector Garcia

    It’s incredible to read of how Irena Sendler was able to persevere in one of the most horrible moments in history. It saddens me to read that she wasn’t able to obtain the Nobel Peace Prize from 2007. She seemed like a courageous woman who decided to stand up for the little guy. It was also breathtaking to read of how she managed to save the lives of 2,500 Jewish children.

  • Brandon Martinez

    This was really interesting to read! Everything from the title to the story it was really great. I never knew about this story and it was fun to read about it. Sendler was a hero to many people during the war and it is sad that not too many have heard about this story. More people neee to read this article as it delivers a great and interesting story to read about. Sendler was a hero and her actions should be learned by others.

  • Vanessa Tombo

    While reading this phenomenal written article I was shocked after reading the quote ” I was taught that if you see a person drowning, you must jump into the water to save them, whether you can swim or.” I once heard my father tell his friends that when he was in grade school he saw a classmate fall into lake Kivu though he did not know how to swim he jumped into the river. By the grace of God, he saved his classmate. My father made a similar comment as the one in the quote. What a small world we live in.

  • Tyler Sleeter

    Great article with so much information. I had heard stories of a woman that smuggled children out of the ghetto during World War II, but I had never heard of Irena Sendler, nor did I know this was the same woman. It is always heart-warming to read stories of heroism during barbaric times and this story is no different. Irena Sendler did what she knew was the right thing to do, to rescue the children from certain death, even if it meant risking her own life. I especially liked reading how she kept track of the children in code, buried in jam jars under a tree. She used what she had to do what she could to protect people that needed protecting.

  • Cheyanne Redman

    To start off the title really grabbed my attention, I had never heard of Irena Sendler prior to reading this article, but I happy I did. She demonstrates the true meaning of a hero, she helped so many people, and continued to help even after being caught by not compromising them. That is something that I feel draws the line between a real hero and someone who just wants to look good, and she definitely without a doubt was a hero for so many.

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