Teresa Prekerowa
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Teresa Prekerowa, also Teresa Preker née Dobrska (30 December 1921 in Zapusta, Masovian Voivodeship, Zapusta – 19 May 1998 in Warsaw) was a Polish people, Polish historian and author of ''Konspiracyjna Rada Pomocy Żydom w Warszawie 1942-1945'' (''Żegota in Warsaw 1942-1945'') published in 1982 during the Martial law in Poland, communist military crackdown in the Polish People's Republic.


Early life and education

Prekerowa was born in Zapusta, into a family of local landowners, and raised in rural settings. During World War II, they resided in German-occupied Warsaw. Following the Soviet takeover and later, during the darkest days of Stalinism in Poland she worked at Wydawnictwo Naukowe PWN founded in 1951. In the 1970s she moved to Państwowy Instytut Wydawniczy specializing in communist literature, history, and philosophy.


Career

Prekerowa completed her off-campus university studies at the University of Warsaw in 1973 with a master's thesis about Żegota written on the advice of Władysław Bartoszewski who was her co-worker and a major supplier of reference material. Following the publication of her (already expanded) book about Żegota in 1982, in 1985 she received the title of Polish Righteous Among the Nations; Prekerowa wrote that during World War II she had run into a little girl on the street from the Warsaw Ghetto and brought her to a Catholic convent, nonetheless, she never told anybody about it including her own parents. Prekerowa wrote about the rescue of Jews by Poles during the Holocaust. She estimated that between 160,000 and 360,000 Poles assisted in hiding Jews, amounting to between 1% and 2.5% of the Polish population. She categorized them as "those who could offer help" in saving Jews directly.Teresa Prekerowa
"The Just and the Passive"
in Antony Polonsky, editor, ''My Brother's Keeper?'': Recent Polish Debates on the Holocaust. Routledge, 1989. Pages 72-74
Following the collapse of the Soviet empire, in 1992 she published ''Zarys dziejów Żydów w Polsce w latach 1939-1945'', and in 1995 received the award from the Polish PEN International, PEN Club. She died in Warsaw. Notably, Prekerowa was never in Żegota; nevertheless, her contribution to general knowledge about the Polish-Jewish relations in World War II from the Polish 'non-Jewish' perspective is considered substantial.


References


Further reading

* Władysław Bartoszewski & Michał Komar, ''Bóg, Honor, Ojczyzna. Przyjaciele znad Jordanu i Tamizy'', wyd. Warszawa, 2014. {{DEFAULTSORT:Prekerowa, Teresa 20th-century Polish historians 1921 births 1998 deaths Polish Righteous Among the Nations Polish women historians 20th-century Polish women writers Historians of the Holocaust in Poland