European Resistance Archive/European Resistance Archive (ERA)
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I guess it was a kind of signal that when the Germans were coming, the Russians were supposed to stop.
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It took two, maybe three days, it is hard to say.
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One beautiful day I was by the river Neris,
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I was coming back and I saw that at the Josephs in front of their house,
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there was a horse, harnessed, and an open carriage, and the brother of Mrs. Lachowiczówna.
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I heard: take a horse and your carriage and go – and this carriage and a horse were left at the Josephs so that something could be saved.
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So I took the carriage and left the place.
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In the new place I reached I found only a girl. She was my age.
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She was doing whatever, was not paid for her job but could live there for free.
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It was a daughter of our herdsman.
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Melania said: I sit here by myself, it is very good you came.
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Agriculture buildings, where the workers lived, were far away.
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The house was in an orchard, the orchard was around,
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far away, and the two of us, Melania and me, were left in this twelve-room house.
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It was not too nice.
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There were no dogs so nobody could warn us even if somebody came creeping.
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After two or three days people came.
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They appeared first, the Zambrowicz family,
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Mrs. Maja Zambrowicz, the mother of Joanna, with her husband and a goat.
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She asked if they could live at my place.
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