Date: Fri 06-Nov-1998
Date: Fri 06-Nov-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: STEVEB
Quick Words:
vote-Rodnicki-Poland
Full Text:
One Woman's Cherished Right: The Vote
BY STEVE BIGHAM
Voters were expected to stay away from the polls in droves Tuesday. Many
people have been turned off by the nasty tone of certain campaigns. For some,
getting out to vote was too much of an inconvenience. And others simply
concluded one less vote wouldn't affect the outcome.
Wiktoria Rodnicki of Newtown voted. To her, being able to pull the lever is a
privilege -- a freedom she has not always enjoyed.
Mrs Rodnicki has seen the best and worst of both worlds. She has not always
enjoyed the freedoms that many take for granted. She grew up in a world where
there were no voting booths and the only thing you fought for was your life.
In 1939, at age 16, Mrs Rodnicki and her family were taken from their home in
Poland and forced to work in a Russian labor camp. In those early days of
World War II, Russia and Germany signed the Ribbentrop-Molotov non-aggression
pact, which secretly provided for the dismemberment of Poland into Nazi and
Soviet-controlled zones. Both invaded the eastern European nation in September
of that year, deporting several hundred thousand people.
Speaking in her broken English earlier this week, the Woodbine Lane resident
spoke of the mistreatment her family received and how both her parents died
from disease.
"It was horrible, but I was finally able to escape to Pakistan," the
77-year-old woman recounted this week.
In Pakistan, she lived in a chicken coop for more than a month as she tried to
plan her next move. Separated from her brothers and sisters, she was alone and
afraid. In time, she made her way to the Persian Gulf where she worked in a
hospital in Teheran, Iran. Eventually, she made her way to Palestine where she
enlisted in the Polish Army. During World War II she drove a truck through
Egypt and northward to Italy.
During World War II, 400,000 Poles fought under Soviet command, and 200,000
went into combat on western fronts in units loyal to the Polish government in
exile.
While in Italy she met the man she would marry, Paul Rodnicki, who had also
joined the Polish army after escaping a Russian concentration camp.
During the war, about six million Poles were killed.
After the war, the Rodnickis traveled to England where they lived for five
years. Once they were approved for American citizenship, the two made their
way to the United States in 1952. Mr Rodnicki died in 1973.
Mrs Rodnicki points to her American citizenship papers which she hangs on the
walls in her living room.
"I appreciate being able to come to the United States," she said.
Thankful to be an American, Mrs Rodnicki remains proud of her Polish heritage
and, to show her pride, has marched in the Labor Day Parade since 1982.
On Tuesday, the Newtown resident got a lift to the her polling place at the
Sandy Hook Fire Company. She was prepared, however, to walk.