Auschwitz Survivors Are Honored at Polish Ceremony
This article is from the archive of The New York Sun before the launch of its new website in 2022. The Sun has neither altered nor updated such articles but will seek to correct any errors, mis-categorizations or other problems introduced during transfer.

OSWIECIM, Poland — Dozens of people who lived near Auschwitz and risked their lives to help inmates at the Nazi death camp were honored Saturday on the 62nd anniversary of the camp’s liberation.
At a ceremony outside the site, Holocaust survivors and local residents listened to a letter from President Kaczynski in which he said the world has underestimated the determination of people outside the camp to save prisoners.
“World public opinion has often held that the residents of the area were completely indifferent to the fate of the prisoners,” Mr. Kaczynski said in the letter, which denounced “such unjust statements.”
A presidential aide, Undersecretary of State Ewa Junczyk-Ziomecka, pinned medals on about 40 people from the town of Oswiecim, where Auschwitz is located, and surrounding villages.
Nazi Germany set up Auschwitz after occupying Poland, at first mostly imprisoning political prisoners. However, it was later expanded into a complex where as many as 1.5 million people were murdered, most of them Jews, but also Gypsies, Roman Catholics who opposed the Nazi regime, homosexuals, and others.
The camp was liberated January 27, 1945 by the advancing Soviet army.