European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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and this park, Agrykola, that is how we call it nowadays, I knew it as well as my own pocket.
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And barracks were connected with this park Agrykola.
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Then we started organizing, apart from financial assistance, also clothes, food, escapes.
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But after the first escape we helped with, the Germans realized that somebody was missing, from then on strong repressions started.
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We then decided to bring dead bodies from hospitals.
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And we took them… on the carriage we took dead bodies.
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At the same time, this hospital, it had to be repaired and my father managed to help with that and he delivered the building material.
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Bricks, cements, sand.
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And we took it, we took the dead body and then the amount of people was correct.
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It was important that the actual number of prisoners was correct.
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This one who was to escape had a number, prisoners did not have any photographs, were not catalogued,
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so we were putting those numbers to a different person and helping them escape.
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They were escaping by carriage, sometimes they had to go through barbed wire or shrubs.
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And it took quite long till the time of hospital liquidation.
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Introduction; the Scout organization
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My name is Stanisław Baranowski.
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I was born on 16th November 1924 in Warsaw.
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If the war had not broken out, I would have gone to aircraft and mechanical school to become a pilot.
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It was my dream.
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In 1939 I was at the scout camp.
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