Blanka Rosenstiel | |
Birth Name: | Blanka Wdowiak |
Birth Date: | 1931 |
Birth Place: | Warsaw, Poland |
Organization: | American Institute of Polish Culture (AIPC);Chopin Foundation of the United States |
Spouse: | Lewis S. Rosenstiel |
Blanka Aldona Rosenstiel (born 1931) is a Polish American philanthropist. She currently serves as the president, chairwoman, and chief executive of The American Institute of Polish Culture (AIPC) and president of the Chopin Foundation of the United States.
Blanka Aldona Rosenstiel (née Wdowiak) was born in Warsaw, Poland in 1931 to Wacław Wdowiak, a postal worker, and Irena Wdowiak (née Karaszewka).[1] She was born into a Catholic family.[2] In 1944 during the Warsaw Uprising, her father was taken to Auschwitz concentration camp, and Rosenstiel, her mother, and one of her two brothers became slave laborers at the Frankfurt railroad station, laying bricks. Other members of her family were also taken to other labor and concentration camps. Rosenstiel, her mother, and her brother were liberated from Niederhausen concentration camp in 1945 by the Allied Powers. However, her father died in Magdeburg labor camp in Germany.[3]
Rosenstiel has stated about the experience, “Those were difficult years, but somehow and against all odds, a few of us survived. Although my mother deplored the years we lost without schooling, she instilled in us optimism and positive thinking. She convinced us that the future would be better, brighter and successful".
Rosenstiel and her family did not return to Poland following their liberation, as Poland was now under Soviet control. Her family lived in Trier for a time, before moving to Luxembourg, where she did radio work. The family then moved to Brussels, Belgium, where Rosenstiel was a cabaret singer and studied art. In 1956, she moved to the United States.[4]
In 1972, Rosenstiel founded The American Institute of Polish Culture (AIPC). She was inspired by her interest in the arts, dedication to helping young artists succeed, and her desire to promote both Polish history and heritage and Polish-American culture. She currently serves as the President, chairman, and Chief Executive.[5] In 1975, in collaboration with the University of Miami's School of Music, she presented the First National Chopin Piano Competition of the United States in Miami. The success of this competition inspired Rosenstiel to establish the Chopin Foundation of the United States in 1977.[6] She currently serves the president of the foundation.[7]
Following the death of her husband, Lewis S. Rosenstie
Alongside AIPC, Rosenstiel helped establish the permanent Kosciuszko Chair of Polish Studies at the University of Virginia in 1998. The ownership of this chair was given back to AIPC after a period of inactivity, and then given to the Institute of World Politics to carry out the mission.[8] Each year the Institute awards scholarships in the field of journalism, communication, or public relations to talented students of Polish origin.
She currently serves as Honorary Consul for the Polish government in Miami, Florida, an honor which was awarded in 1998. She was the first Polish Consul in the history of Florida.[9]
In 2013, Rosenstiel stated her plan to invest up to PLN200m in Polish companies by 2014.[10] By September 2013, her investment vehicle Polish American Investment Fund (PAIF) had already spent over PLN7m on stakes in six firms in the Warsaw Stock Exchange's main market and the NewConnect platform, including the IdeaTFI fund.[11] In December 2013, she was appointed to the supervisory board of Dom Maklerski IDMSA, a consulting firm.[12] By February 2014, the PAIF also invested in Global Energy, Mostostal Export, and United, and about 10% of the promised PLN200m was spent.
In 1963, she met her future husband Lewis S. Rosenstiel, the founder and chair of Schenley Industries and philanthropist, when she was 32 and he was 72. She states that they were both in love with one another. "He was a brilliant and fascinating man—not what some people are saying now," she says. "He was a businessman and very generous. He gave away $100 million to charities in his lifetime." They were married from 1967 until his death on January 21, 1976.[13]
She currently resides in Miami Beach, Florida during the winter and in Charlottesville, Virginia during the summer. In Charlottesville, she lives on a 1790 Colonial mansion on her 1,400-acre Blandemar Farm and raises horses. She was awarded Doctor honoris causa (Dr.h.c.) from the International Fine Arts College in Miami in 1976 and Dr. humane letters from Alliance College in Cambridge Spring, Pennsylvania in 1978.[14] She can speak Polish, English, French, German, and Spanish, and her hobbies include sculpting, painting, and swimming.