Helena Piasecka collection
Extent and Medium
folder
1
Creator(s)
- Helena Piasecka
Biographical History
Helena Piasecka (1914-2006) was born Helena Karolewska on October 2, 1914 in Żuromin, Poland to Helena (née Baranski) and Jakub Karolewski. She had two sisters: Władysława Karolewska (later Władysława Łapińska), and Henryka Karolewska (later Henryka Szawarin). She was Roman Catholic, and married to Edward Piasecki. After Germany and Russia invaded Poland in September 1939, Helena and her husband were in Lublin, Poland with her sisters Władysława and Henryka, and were active in the anti-German resistance movement. On February 13, 1941 Helena and her husband, along with her sisters and brother-in-law, were arrested by the Gestapo. The sisters were detained in Lublin prison and interrogated and beaten. Henryka was eventually released, and Helena and Władysława were deported to Ravensbrück on September 23, 1941. Helena’s husband and brother-in-law were both deported to Auschwitz where they were murdered. Beginning on August 14, 1942 she and her sister were subjected to multiple medical experiments involving infectious wounds on her legs. They were part of a group of women sometimes referred to as “Ravensbrück Lapins,” so-called because they were experimented on. Helena and Władysława both survived Ravensbrück and later appeared as witnesses during the Doctors Trial at Nuremburg in 1946. Helena immigrated to the United States in 1949 and settled in Cleveland, Ohio.
Archival History
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
Acquisition
The Helena Piasecka collection was donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum by Maria Szonert and Bonnie Glance in 2006. Bonnie Glance is the grand-niece of Helena Piasecka.
Scope and Content
The collection contains photocopies of documents, photographs, and newspaper clippings related to Helena Piasecka, a Roman Catholic woman originally of Żuromin, Poland, who was imprisoned at Ravensbrück, and was a victim of medical experimentation.
System of Arrangement
The collection is arranged as a single folder.
Corporate Bodies
Subjects
- War crime trials--Germany--Nuremberg.
- Human experimentation in medicine.
Genre
- Clippings.
- Photographs.
- Document