website content

Standard of the Scout Troop of Wacława Arciszowa’s Secondary School for Girls

Popularization note

Scouting played an important role in the school life of the Wacława Arciszowa Private Girls’ Gymnasium. Both the founder of the facility and the teaching staff emphasised that the involvement of students in the activities of youth organisations was very important in the upbringing process. It was argued that it influenced the socialisation and independence of young people and taught them to bear the consequences of their actions.

The first scout patrol at the Gymnasium was established in 1913, a year after the school was launched. The banner, which is in the collection of the ‘Pod Zegarem’ Martyrdom Museum, was embroidered by female scouts in 1939. As of the outbreak of World War II until 1995, it was kept by Zofia Gryga-Putz, who, through Sławomir Litwiński, donated it to the museum collections.

During the September campaign, Antoni Krzyżanowski was the director of the Gymnasium. He was arrested by the Germans on November 9th, 1939 as part of the Sonderaktion Lublin action against the Polish intelligentsia. He was imprisoned at the Lublin Castle. On December 23rd, around 5.00 p.m., along with nine other representatives of the Lublin elite, he was taken to the old Jewish cemetery in Kalinowszczyzna and shot without a trial.

Wanda Półtawska (nee Wojtasik) was one of the students and scouts of the Gymnasium. During the September campaign, she became involved in activities supporting the war efforts at the rear of the warfront. After the fall of the Polish state, she joined the resistance movement. She was arrested on February 17th, 1941 and placed in the ‘Pod Zegarem’ detention centre, then transferred to the Lublin Castle. With a death sentence, she was transported to the German concentration camp for women, Ravensbrück. In the labour camp, she was one of 74 ‘rabbits’ –victims of pseudo-medical procedures carried out by German doctors on female prisoners. She was one of the prisoners responsible for sending secret letters, written with urine, to Poland informing about the situation in the camp. She returned to Poland after the fall of Germany in 1945.

Despite imprisonment, Wanda Wojtasik continued her education at secret classes organised by Polish women in the camp. The level of classes can be evidenced by the fact that she was passed her matriculation examination after the war. As a result she was able to start her medical studies in Krakow. In 1964, she defended her PhD in psychology.

Information about the object

Information about this object

Author / creator

unknown (weaver), Wacława Arciszowa Gymnasium (Lublin; 1912-1949) (Scout Team) (school)

Dimensions

cały obiekt: height: 92 cm, width: 120 cm

Object type

identification mark

Technique

embroidery

Material

silk (natural fabric), thread

Creation time / dating

1939

Creation / finding place

powstanie: Lublin (Lublin Province)

Owner

The National Museum in Lublin

Identification number

ML/MART/627

Location / status

object is not displayed now

Add note

Edit note

0/500

Jakiś filtr
Data od:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
Data do:
Era
Wiek:
+
Rok:
+
asd