Tadeusz Pankiewicz
(Tadeusz Pankiewicz at his
Pharmacy inside the Krakow Ghetto in 1941.)
Tadeusz was a Polish Roman
Catholic Pharmacist operating in the Krakow Ghetto during the Nazi German
Occupation of Poland.
In 1933, he took over the
Proprietorship of the "Pod Orłem" (Under the Eagle) Pharmacy founded
in 1910 by his Father, Jozef.
The Pharmacy was situated on Plac
Zgody (formerly Mały Rynek Square) in Krakow's Podgorze District.
Its prewar clientele included
both Gentile Poles and Jews.
He was arrested by the Germans
during the Sonderaktion Krakau (when the Germans arrested Krakow’s Intellectual
Elite) on November 9, 1939 and released on December 5, 1939.
When the Germans created the
Krakow Ghetto in March 1941 his Pharmacy was within the Ghetto’s Walls.
The Germans tried to force him to
leave and start a Pharmacy outside the Ghetto, but Pankiewicz wanted to stay
inside the Ghetto and help the Jews imprisoned there.
It was the only Pharmacy
operating in the Krakow Ghetto and served its 15,000 Residents.
After he proved his
"Aryan" origin, agreed to only employ "Aryan" Personnel and
make a written statement that the Pharmacy Employees would not talk to Jews on
other than strictly medical topics, Pankiewicz was given permission to operate
the Pharmacy in the Ghetto.
Night duty in the Pharmacy was
performed exclusively by Pankiewicz, as he actually lived in the duty room at
the Pharmacy.
Tadeusz became the only Gentile
permanently residing in the Ghetto, which was a unique situation in the history
of World War II.
From the first day of the
Ghetto's existence in March 1941, he hosted its inhabitants in the Pharmacy,
creating a meeting place for the cultural and professional elites of the Ghetto
- a substitute for the free world.
He helped maintain professional
and social contacts with the world outside the walls, obtaining passes for
several Scientists, Doctors and Lawyers befriended by people locked in the
Ghetto.
The often-scarce medications and
pharmaceutical products supplied to the Ghetto's Residents, free of charge,
substantially improved their quality of life.
In effect, apart from health care
considerations, they contributed to survival itself.
He also supplied hair dyes used
by those disguising their identities and tranquilizers given to fretful
Children required to keep silent during Gestapo raids.
Tadeusz, while helping Jews, was
directly threatened several times.
One of the most dangerous
informers in the Krakow Ghetto, Szymon Szpitz, put Tadeusz's name on the list
of those sent to be deported in the autumn of 1941 for organizing illegal
meetings in the Pharmacy for Ghetto Residents and for allowing them contact
with the "Aryan" side of the city.
The intervention of Dr. Rozalia
Blau, a Surgeon from the Jewish Hospital, saved Tadeusz 's life.
During the October Deportation
(1942) he was taken out of the Pharmacy by a German Police Patrol and attached
to the transport of Jews to the Bełżec Death Camp, until SS-Sturmbannführer
Willi Haase, commanding the Deportation, allowed him to return to the Pharmacy.
After the Liquidation of the
Ghetto on March 13, 1943, he continued to the Pharmacy.
From November 1944, he supported
Artists who had escaped from the Uprising from Warsaw by inviting them to the
Pharmacy and feeding them. He also helped fellow Jews returning from exile from
the east.
He described his war Memories in
a book entitled "Pharmacy in the Krakow Ghetto", which had its first
edition in 1947.
When the Communists nationalized
Pharmacies in 1951 Tadeusz became the Manager (no longer the Owner) of the
Pharmacy his Family had created in 1910.
He stayed there until 1953 when
he moved to another State-Owned Pharmacy where he worked until he retired in
1974.
Tadeusz was watched by the Polish
Communist Secret Police from the time of his first visit to Israel in 1957
until his death because they believed he was still helping Jews as well as
Anti-Communists inside Poland.
For his activities to help and
save Jews during the War, Tadeusz was awarded the Medal "Righteous Among
the Nations" by Israel on February 10, 1983.
In April 1983, the "Pod
Orlem" Pharmacy, located at No.18 Plac Bohaterów Ghetta (Ghetto Heroes
Plaza,), opened its doors as the Museum of National Remembrance, featuring the
History of Krakow Jewry with a special focus on the Ghetto Period.
In 2003, it became affiliated
with the Municipal Historical Museum of Kraków.
The wartime activities of Tadeusz
Pankiewicz and his Staff are featured in an exhibition on the History of the
Jewish Ghetto in Krakow.
Tadeusz died in Krakow on
November 5, 1993 at the age of 84.
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