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Freedom Collection

Interviews with Andrzej Gwiazda and Joanna Duda-Gwiazda

Interviewed November 26, 2024

ANDRZEJ GWIAZDA: I was born on April 14, 1935. My parents had lived in the eastern sections of Poland and in 1940, in April 1940, we were deported. I mean, my father had fought on the front, you know, but myself with my mother and grandmother we were deported on April 13, to Siberia [an extensive geographical region in what was then the Soviet Union, constituting almost all of North Asia]. It seems that among those who were deported, the majority was the intelligentsia. But that was not a hard and fast rule – people were deported street by street [also]. And we spent six years there, we returned to Poland on June 11, 1946. And in Poland, well, I went to school, in 1948 we moved to Gdansk. And I live in Gdansk to this day.

JOANNA DUDA-GWIAZDA: I was born in the town of Krzemieniec – today this is Ukraine and at that time it was still Poland before the war [World War II]. I was born four years after Andrzej [Gwiazda], so in 1939. The Bolsheviks [Russian Communists] weren’t able to deport us to Siberia, because we managed to beat them to the punch, and smuggled ourselves across the border into the German-occupied zone [Poland was divided between Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union through the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact of 1939]. After numerous wartime adventures, we settled in the town of Nowy Sącz [Poland].

Afterwards, I went away to study in Gdansk because I wanted to be a shipbuilder. And so I became one. I graduated with a specialty in maritime machinery and power plants from the Technical University of Gdansk. And I worked very successfully and with great satisfaction in my chosen profession, up to my retirement, which I took in the year 2000. Shipbuilding in Poland was truly a leading industry, and as for myself, I suppose that the Poles are talented in that direction because this is something that requires both precision, as well as somewhat of a holistic view. Our ships were both beautiful and well-made. And, for instance, practically every year they would claim the prize of Miss Kiel Canal – meaning the most beautiful ship passing through that canal that year [Kiel Canal is located in the German state of Schlewwig-Holstein and links the North and Baltic Seas].

There were really two centers for that – you had Gdansk and Szczecin [Poland]. There was good training, the Polytechnic Institute was very good. And on that basis the fishing industry also developed. By that I mean we built fishing trawlers, processing ships, base ships. Lots and lots of people found employment in these plants, which cooperated with the shipbuilders.