The Evaders
I was born in Poland, where before the last war religious
intolerance was not uncommon. In spite of my father’s objection to my
participation in anti-Semitic demonstrations in Warsaw, I often heaved stones on
windows of stores owned by Jews. I had no qualms about my actions, and later took
months of hardship and persecution—and a Jew—to show me how to abide by the
biblical injunction love thy neighbor as thyself.
When Hitler annexed Austria and war seemed imminent, I quit my job as an instructor of the flying club in Lyons, France, and started for home. My plane developed engine trouble and I had to land at Vienna and stat there overnight to have it repaired.
The following morning, just I stepped out of my hotel to buy
a few souvenirs before checking out, a man came running past the door and
bumped into me and sent me reeling. Outraged, I grabbed him and was about to
give him a piece of my mind when I saw that his face was white with fear.
Panting heavily, he tried to wrench himself from my grip and said “Gestapo-
Gestapo”! I only knew a little German
but understood he was running from the dreaded German secret police.
I rushed him into the lobby and upstairs to my room, pointed
to the foot of my bed and motioned him to lie down. I covered his slender,
jackknifed body with artfully draped blanket so that the tousled bed looked
empty. Then I pulled off my jacket, tie and collar so I could pretend I just
got up if the Gestapo men came. In a few minutes they did. They examined my
passport, returned it and shouted questions, to which I replied “ich
vershtei es nicht” -- I don’t understand it, a phrase I knew by heart. They
left without searching the room.
As soon as they had gone I locked the door and lifted the
blankets. The poor man let out a stream of rapid German. It was not necessary
to understand the words to comprehend his gratitude.
I got my flight chart and, by gesturing and drawing pictures
on the margin of the map explained that I had a plane and could take him out of
Austria. He pointed to Warsaw, and his expressive hands asked” would you take
me there?” I shook my head and made him understand that I have to land for fuel
in Cracow. I drew pictures of police and prison bars to illustrate that he
would be arrested upon arrival at any airport, and made it clear that we would land
in some meadow just over the Polish border and he could get off. He nodded with
satisfaction, and his narrow face and dark brown eyes again conveyed deep
thanks.
The customs and immigration of the airport waved us through
when I told him my friend wanted to see me off. My plane was warmed up and
ready for flight and quickly climbed into it and took off. We crossed
Czechoslovakia and soon saw the thin ribbon of the Vistula River and the city
of Cracow. Landing a large field by a wood near country railroad station, I
showed my companion we were on the map gave him most of my money and wished him
luck. He took my hand look at me wordlessly, and then walked rapidly into the
woods.
When I arrived at the Krakow airport there was detachment of
police waiting beside the immigration inspector. One of the police said, we
have a warrant to search the plane --you helped a man escape from Vienna.
“Go ahead and search it, incidentally what was the man
wanted for?” He was a Jew. They searched for plane and of course they let me go
for lack of evidence.
The war came, and after Poland’s short and bloody struggle
against the Germans, which I served as a fighter pilot in the Polish Air Force,
I joined the thousands of my countrymen that wanted to carry on the fight for
freedom. We crossed the border into Romania and were promptly caught and sent
to concentration camps. I finally managed to escape and joined the French Air
Force. After France collapsed I went to England and fought in the Battle of
Britain. The following June I was wounded while in a fighter sweep across the
English Channel, when the Luftwaffe hit us over Boulogne. In those early
offensive missions we were always outnumbered and outperformed by the
Luftwaffe, and our only superiority was our moral.
As we started for home I rammed an ME 109 and was hit by a
piece of it sheared- off tail I was half blind with blood. My squadron covered
my withdrawal across the channel; I was unconscious when my Spitfire crash
landed in England. I later learned that my skull had been fractured and that I
was so near-death that the head surgeon of the hospital to which I was taken
believed it will be almost useless to operate on me. When I returned to consciousness
I gradually realized that a narrow face with large brown eyes was looking down
at. Remember me? Their owner said. You saved my life in Vienna. He spoke with
only a trace of German accent.
His words ended my confusion; I recalled the sensitive face
and managed to say. How did you find me? I noticed his white smock. You work
here?
It’s a long story, he replied. After you dropped me off I
made my way to Warsaw, where an old friend aided me. Just before the war I
escaped and reached safety in Scotland. When one of your Polish squadrons distinguished
itself in the Battle of Britain, I thought you might be in it, so I wrote to
the air Ministry and found you were.
How did you know my name? It was written in the margin of
your map I remember it. H is long fingers felt cool on my wrist. Yesterday I
read the story in the newspapers about a Polish hero shooting down five enemy
planes in one day and then crash landing near this hospital. It said his
condition was considered hopeless. I immediately asked the Royal Air Force at
Edinburgh to flying my here. Why? I thought that at least I could do something
to show my gratitude you see I am a brain surgeon and I operated on you this
morning.
Amazing story!
ReplyDelete( much more meaningful than other posts here )
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hER1K2yO9vw
ReplyDeleteWhat happened to Knopfler post is the above Utube related.
I'm sorry the link is not opening on my device. If you can please write in words.
DeleteWithout litzanus though.
Those talmidei Tress-Kahn hoodlums, the oyfan they pull their scarves up, look either like Hamas street rioters or when menuvol Ehud Barak was caught sneaking into Jeffrey Epstein's dira on the Upper East Side. Israeli media asked Barak why he was trying to conceal his face. He said he was "cold". The public didn't buy it, so he had to drop out of the election campaign for Prime Minister.
ReplyDeleteMaybe a very tall mesivta bochur?
ReplyDeletehttps://dusiznies.blogspot.com/2022/01/two-orthodox-jews-viciously-beaten-in.html
Do Kanarek & Kahan have hashpoah on bochurim in England too?
Mon Jan 24, 04:38:00 PM 2022
ReplyDeleteDidyou say Epstein's Dira dort oifen east upper side?
Or was it a Briskeh Dira in Mizrach Upper Yerusholayim????
Nothing to do with "Briskehs"
ReplyDeleteBarak is actually changed from a name in Ponivizh d'Lita.
His relatives that didn't change their name are very bakant in the yeshivishe velt today.
Zet men how low a person sinks ohn Tayreh, whether as a Tzioni or as a crazed OU mashgiach who is mechalel Shabbos to pelt Tzionim with stones & bricks at Shabbos hafgonos.
Thu Jan 27, 04:50:00 PM 2022
ReplyDeleteThats what they taught him inn Brisk Chumish shiur.
Not necessarily the truth, the whole truth and all but the truth....