BRONISŁAWA PIWCZYŃSKA

Warsaw, 12 July 1948. Judge Halina Wereńko, a member of the District Commission for the Investigation of German Crimes in Warsaw, interviewed the person named below as an unsworn witness. Having been advised of the criminal liability for making false statements and of the obligation to tell the truth, the witness testified as follows:


Name and surname Bronisława Piwczyńska
Date of birth 1 August 1893 in Warsaw
Parents’ names Julian and Adela, née Hopfensztand
Religious affiliation Roman Catholic
Citizenship and nationality Polish
Education Secondary
Occupation clerk at the Press Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Warsaw
Place of residence Warsaw, Saska Kępa, Zwycięzców Street 33, flat 8

In May 1943, the wife of president Czerniaków was arrested by the agents of the criminal police. She was taken away from the apartment at Bukowińska Street (I don’t remember the number), from Chłopik’s house, by the agents of the criminal police (kripo [Kriminalpolizei]). One of them was called Piegot and he was living in the Praga district at the time. I don’t know the surname of the other agent. Piegot was a blond-haired man of medium height, over 20 years old. He treated the president’s wife in a rather favorable way. The arrest was a consequence of a denunciation by Chłopik – the owner of the house, who is now deceased. President Czerniaków’s wife was taken to the Criminal Police Station at the corner of Aleje Ujazdowskie and Koszykowa Street.

The head of the department – a Pole, whose surname I don’t remember – was in charge of her case.

I don’t know which department he headed.

I know that the head of the department released president Czerniaków’s wife without handing her over to the Gestapo, despite having identified her.

I never encountered him again. I encountered Piegot for the last time in 1943. The head of the department was a broad-shouldered, tall, over 40-year-old man with a vigorous face and large, expressive, blue eyes. He was jovial and well-liked.

At this point the report was brought to a close and read out.