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Visiting Info
Opening Hours:

Sunday to Thursday: ‬09:00-17:00

Fridays and Holiday eves: ‬09:00-14:00

Yad Vashem is closed on Saturdays and all Jewish Holidays.

Entrance to the Holocaust History Museum is not permitted for children under the age of 10. Babies in strollers or carriers will not be permitted to enter.

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Yad Vashem to Honor Jan and Julia Lisieczynski as Righteous Among the Nations

Holocaust Survivor to Attend Event

29 June 2010

On Wednesday, June 30, 2010, Yad Vashem will posthumously honor Jan and Julia Lisieczynski from Poland as Righteous Among the Nations. Their granddaughter Krystyna Kudiuk will receive the medal and certificate of honor on their behalf. The ceremony will take place in the presence of the survivor, Ben Zion Reiber who will meet his rescuers’ granddaughter for the first time, and H.E. Ms. Agnieszka Magdziak-Miszewska, Polish Ambassador to Israel.

A memorial ceremony in the Hall of Remembrance will be held at 12:00 followed by the awarding the medal and certificate and the unveiling of the name of the Righteous in the Garden of the Righteous at Yad Vashem. The events will take place in Polish and Hebrew.

Rescue Story

Yitzhak and Sara Reiber and their children Ben Zion, Bilha and Yehezkel lived in the city of Ludmir. After the Germans invaded, Yitzhak was sent to forced labor as a painter in the local dairy. One day, Jan Lisieczynski, the Polish manager of the dairy, asked Yitzhak to whitewash his home. Yitzhak agreed, but instead of a fee, he requested a small amount of milk and cheese as payment. Jan and Julia’s two granddaughters arrived at the Reiber’s home each day with two liters of milk and half a kilo of cheese. Even after all the Jews had been relocated to the ghetto, the girls continued to arrive with a supply of food.

The Reiber Family managed to survive the first Aktion. They hid in various places, but not together. At one point, Jan found Yitzhak and took him into his home. Meanwhile, Ben Zion and Yehezkel returned to the ghetto, in order to discover the whereabouts of their mother and sister, but discovered that they had been murdered. One day, Ben Zion received a message that a non-Jew was searching for him, and wanted to meet him near the ghetto fence. The Lisieczynskis’ son was waiting for him there, promising to take the boys to their father. After arriving at the Lisieczynskis’ home, the boys informed their father that a ghetto was being built for tradesmen. Yitzhak signed up as a painter and the family moved into the new ghetto. Occasionally Yitzhak sent his sons to the Lisieczynski’s home where they were introduced as relatives from the village.

At the beginning of December 1943, the Lisieczynski’s daughter, who was employed as the secretary of a German official, heard that the Germans were planning another Aktion and warned the Reibers. Once again Yitzhak took his children to Jan and Julia. On December 16, 1943, the Germans, together with Ukrainian military police destroyed the tradesmen’s ghetto. Yitzhak was shot and murdered on his way to work in a factory. The brothers, Yehezkel and Ben Zion were rescued, thanks to the warning they had received, by hiding in a pit under the floor of the Lisieczynski’s home. The brothers remained with the Lisieczynskis until the liberation of the Red Army on June 22, 1944.

After liberation, the Lisieczynskis left their home in Ludmir, emigrating to the Polish area. The Reiber brothers remained in the house in Ludmir, the Lisieczynskis having provided them with food. Before departing from Ludmir, Jan gave the brothers a deposit that Yitzhak had left with him at the outbreak of the war.

Julia Lisieczynski passed away in 1963, and Jan two years later in 1965. For more information on the Righteous Among the Nations Program >>>