Stanisław Wygodzki Explained

Stanisław Wygodzki
Pronunciation:staˈɲiswaf vɨˈɡɔd͡zkʲi
Birth Date:13 January 1907
Birth Place:Będzin
Death Place:Tel Aviv
Nationality:Polish-Israeli
Occupation:writer

Stanisław Wygodzki (pronounced as /pl/) (13 January 1907 in Będzin, Poland – 9 May 1992 in Tel Aviv, Israel) was a Polish writer of Jewish origin.

Life

He published his first volume of poetry in 1933 before the Nazi occupation of Poland, during which Wygodzki was first interred in the Bedzin ghetto and later in the concentration camps of Auschwitz, Dachau, Oranienburg and Sachsenhausen. During the war he was issued Paraguayan passport by Ładoś Group.[1]

His health impacted by his experiences, Wygodzki did not resume publishing until 1947, following which he became a successful writer, publishing poetry, short stories and one novel. Wygodzki, who lost his wife, daughter and parents in Auschwitz, was one of four winners of the 1969 "Remembrance Award", awarded annually by the World Federation of Bergen-Belsen Associations for "excellence in literature on the Nazi atrocities against European Jewry".[2] A communist in his youth who was briefly imprisoned in Poland as an adult for his communist activities, Wygodzki resettled in Israel in 1968 in response to antisemitism in the Communist Party in Poland.

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Ładoś List - results of research as of 24 October 2019. 24 October 2019. Pilecki Institute. 94. 2020-04-07.
  2. Staff (February 25, 1969) "Holocaust Books receive honors; 4 who wrote on atrocities by Nazis win awards". The New York Times. P. 40.