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David (Yorek) Plonski
David Plonski (A.K.A “Yorek”) was born
in Warsaw, Poland in 1926 to a family of three children. In his
early childhood, his family moved to Otwock, a suburb of Warsaw.
With the outbreak of the war, Yorek and
his sister—who both looked “Aryan” and spoke fluent Polish—assumed
financial responsibility for the family, trading food and goods in
the Warsaw markets. In 1940, with the establishment of the Warsaw
ghetto, 14-year old Yorek became the family’s sole supporter,
smuggling kosher meat into the ghetto, at great peril and with much
abuse from Polish youths.
In 1942, the ghetto’s size was reduced;
the frequency of aktions increased, and life became
progressively more unbearable. Smuggling became increasingly
difficult and dangerous (possible only through the ghetto walls),
but Yorek continued to smuggle in goods.
On 18 August 1942, Yorek returned to
Otwock from “work” to find his parents packing. They told him that
they were being sent on one of the transports. His mother began
screaming hysterically that he must leave, and pushed him out of the
window. Yorek fled his family’s house and never returned. The
following day the Jews of Otwock were killed and Yorek never saw his
family again.
Yorek escaped to Warsaw and slept in the
cemetery. There he met Dr. Levy Wilwesky, who organized a group of
underground fighters. Yorek was recruited as a gofer, responsible
for purchasing and smuggling weapons and ammunition, and
transmitting information.
In April 1943, on the eve of the
Passover, a member of the Polish underground notified Wilwesky’s
group that German troops were approaching the Warsaw ghetto for the
purpose of final liquidation. Upon entering the ghetto, the German
forces were attacked by Jewish underground fighters. The fighting
continued for several days; the ghetto was razed and many Jews
killed. The remaining members of Wilewsky’s group hid in a bunker.
On 11 May 1943, the Soviet army bombed
Warsaw causing Yorek and the remaining members of Wilewsky’s group
to escape to the sewers. A while later, Yorek was sent to seek
shelter on the Aryan side of the city with one of his friends.
During a raid, Yorek’s friend was captured and killed; Yorek
escaped, leading his few remaining comrades through the sewers to
the Aryan side of the city, aided by the Polish underground.
Soon after, Yorek learned of children
who sold cigarettes and newspapers in Three Crosses Square in Warsaw
and joined them as a cigarette merchant.
With the outbreak of
the Polish revolt in August 1944, Yorek fled to Lublin with
forged Aryan papers. After the war he moved to Lodz. He joined
Ha-Shomer ha-Tsa’ir movement and helped search for Jewish
orphans. In 1948, Yorek made aliyah, and fought in the War of
Independence. He joined the founders of Kibbutz Megiddo and met
Alexandra, also a Holocaust survivor. They married and had three
children. Their son, Eitan, was killed during the Yom Kippur
War. |