Mychajło Susła - Instytut Pileckiego

A double Christmas, a double Easter: Roman Catholic and Greek Catholic. This is how Irena Próchniak remembers the celebrations in Podkamień in eastern Galicia.
As the daughter of Michał Świętojański, a Pole, and Wiktoria Świętojańska, who came from a Ruthenian family, Irena, her sister and brother all had contact with both cultures and communities, which lived side by side in peace. Michał and Wiktoria ran a carpentry workshop in the center of the town.
With the outbreak of war, Polish-Ukrainian relations began to deteriorate. The Ukrainian administration appointed by the Germans ordered the mass deportation of Poles for labor to the Reich from 1941 onwards. In 1942, Jews from Podkamień were murdered. There was a growing threat from the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA), which was attacking and killing Poles. In 1943, the Świętojańskis decided to move to Lwów. Michał went first, to prepare a place for his family. Due to an increase in attacks on fugitives by the UPA, he was unable to bring his loved ones to safety.
One day, when Wiktoria Świętojańska was preparing the house for Christ-mas in 1943, her childhood schoolmate Mykhailo Susla came to see her. He warned her: “they will come to you at night.” He hid Wiktoria and her son in a wagon, and took them and their belongings to the Brody railway station. They travelled 30 km in harsh winter conditions, through areas under UPA control. Should they be caught, both the fugitives and Susla were in danger of being murdered.
Mykhailo Susla saved the Świętojańskis’ lives. They arrived safely in Lwów and were reunited with Michał and his other daughter, and were soon joined by Irena. The Świętojańskis remained there until the end of the war. In March 1944, during an attack by the UPA on Podkamień, almost 600 Poles were killed, including many relatives of the Świętojański family. Susla survived the war and died in 1970.
On the evening before Christmas Eve, a Ukrainian came to our house. He was mother’s classmate from primary school. He was a Rusin, Mr. Susla was his name. And he said: ‘Listen, you’ve got to go! They’ll come for you at night.’ He came on horseback, with a pair of horses, and the packing began: we took whatever might be useful. We packed two bags. He took mum to Brody not by the road, but through the fields. There was a lot of snow.
See also
- Piotr Parfeniuk
awarded
Piotr Parfeniuk
(1904–1993)Although his given name was Petro, Parfeniuk used the name Piotr for the majority of his long life. Before the outbreak of the war, he met his future wife, Stanisława, from the Polish Czerwinek family.
- Antoni Nagórka (1901—1977)
awarded
Antoni Nagórka (1901—1977)
Antoni and Władysława Nagórka lived at the edge of the town. Before the war, Antoni worked for the railways, and Władysława was a housewife. During the war they saved five Jews from the Holocaust.
- Jenő Etter (1889–1973)
awarded
Jenő Etter (1889–1973)
The mayor of the Hungarian city of Esztergom received dozens of letters written in Polish. The greeting lines themselves showed the sympathy and gratefulness of the Polish refugees: “Dear Captain!”, “Dear Doctor!”. Jenő Etter understood them all.