European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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I tell him: ‘Don’t be silly, I’ll get cuts.’
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And he: ‘It won’t matter to you anyway, as soon as you bite it you die.’ It was cyanide.
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My task, as they later told me, was to walk along the pavement in the same way
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as the watch guard did guarding those trucks.
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He was quite visible wearing a white coat.
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It was October, but the Germans cared about their soldiers, they dressed them well.
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And this guard would mostly walk from Dobra street in the direction of the city, then to the right and back.
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I was supposed to walk on the opposite side of the street, seeing his white coat.
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They told me to smoke a cigarette and, watching the spark from my cigarette, they knew where I was and thus were the guard was.
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Depending how far away he moved, they were able to plant the firebombs, usually between the wheel and the mudguard.
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Rubber is flammable. If this catches fire, then there’s no stopping it.
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It worked out fine. We were able to see if we had succeeded only the following day.
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I used to go to school at Powiśle, in Sewerynów street and I had this friend there who lived at 3, Trzeciego Maja Alley,
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that’s right opposite the place where those German trucks were stationed.
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And this friend, Jurek Suchanek from the scout troops and my classmate, told me:
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‘You’re not gonna believe this: last night there was a huge affair in our street!
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They were shooting around at midnight, there was a huge fire under the bridge!
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Some saboteurs burned the trucks! The Germans were shooting! The whole commotion! The ambulance sirens!’
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And I asked: ‘Well, did they catch those guys?’
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‘No, I guess not! Anyways, they got really mad because 12 or 13 trucks got burnt.’
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