
Jan PIECHOTA (aka WIKTOR)
Polish 2nd Corps Cadet
Jan Piechota was born in 1928 to Walenty and Franciszka on the family farm near Sokolow, Poland. He attended school in a nearby town, while also contributing significantly to the farm's operation.
The Germans invaded Poland from the west on 1 September 1939, and the Russians invaded from the east on 17 September 1939. They divided Poland between them. In the Russian-controlled area, the plan to ethnically-cleanse the area soon took effect with the first of four mass deportations to Siberia that were carried out in 1940 and 1941.
The family were forcibly taken from their home at gunpoint, by Russian soldiers. They had been given less than an hour to pack what they could, without knowing where they were being taken. They took what they could carry and had to leave the rest behind.
They were taken to the railway station and loaded into cattle cars with 50-60 other people. This included infants, toddlers, children, teens, adults, and seniors. Most of the adults and seniors were women. The cattle car had two shelves at either end, where people could sit or sleep – the rest had to make do with the floor. There was a cast iron stove, but they soon ran out of wood to fuel it. There was also a hole in the floor that served as a toilet.
They travelled like this for weeks, and were given some water, stale bread, and watery soup, only a few times. When someone died, their bodies were cast out next to the tracks and left there. Many infants and elderly people did not survive this journey.
When they reached the work camp in Siberia, they were told that this is where they would eventually die, but in the meantime, they had to work to earn their daily ration of bread. Children as young as 13 were set to work in the forests – cutting branches from the trees that had been cut down.
Aside from the extreme cold in winter, and extreme heat in summer, they had to contend with hordes of mosquitoes and black flies, as well as infestations of bed bugs in the barracks. There were no medical facilities in these camps, and diseases ran rampant, leading to a high death toll. Jan lost his father Walenty and brother Antoni to malnutrition, exhaustion and disease. Jan had been attending the makeshift Russian school, but he quit those classes and began working in the forest to help support the family.
In June 1941, Germany turned on its ally, Russia. Stalin then quickly changed tactics and allied himself with the west so that the allies could help him defeat the Germans. This led to the signing of the Sikorski-Majewski agreement that called for the freeing of Poles imprisoned in POW camps and labour camps in the USSR, and the formation of a Polish Army in the southern USSR.
The news of this ‘amnesty’ did not reach every camp, but where it did become known, the men and boys soon made plans to make their way south to Uzbekistan to join the army. For most, this meant walking thousands of kilometres and only occasionally getting on a train for part of the journey. Many did not make it, and those who did were emaciated skeletons by the time they got there.
General Anders was in charge of the army, and he tried hard to get the Russians to provide the food and equipment they had promised. When this became more and more impossible, he negotiated the right to evacuate the army to Persia, where the British would provide what was needed.
There were 2 mass evacuations: in March/April 1942, and in September 1942. Then Stalin changed his mind and closed the borders. Those who had not been evacuated were now stuck in the USSR.
The evacuation took place by ship over the Caspian Sea to Pahlavi in Persia (now Iran). The ships that were used were oil tankers and coal ships, and other ships that were not equipped to handle passengers. They were filthy and lacked even the basic necessities, like water and latrines. The soldiers and civilians filled these ships to capacity for the 1-2 day trip. When there were storms, the situation got even worse – with most of the passengers suffering sea sickness.
Jan enlisted in the Polish JSK cadets, while his family continued their journey to Polish refugee settlements in East Africa. John studied in the cadet program at various locations in Palestine, until the war ended in 1945. He was then sent to the Polish Merchant Navy College in England, where he studied until 1947. As a qualified seaman, he began a five-year career on various freighters that took him to all corners of the globe.
John reunited with family in Winnipeg in 1952 and began a 40-year career with Dominion Bridge Co., where he managed construction teams that built structural steel bridges, buildings and towers to serve a diversity of infrastructure needs.
Canada provided John with an abundance of opportunities. Here, he met his loving wife Lucy, and together they raised their family in a manner that embraced the Canadian culture and experience, but also honoured their shared Polish heritage.
Jan Piechota (aka John Wiktor) passed away in Winnipeg on 28 April 2022, at the age of 94 years. He was buried at the Glen Lawn Memorial Gardens.
Copyright: Piechota / Wiktor family