The Paper

Categories
Lifestyle

It’s a small sheet of thin aged paper. The faded typed words are in Polish. The notation on the upper right is “Krakow, dnia 9.VII.1945”. The words acknowledge my grandmother’s ownership of property in Krakow, Poland.
The paper was among papers that I found in my mother’s files when I was cleaning out her apartment. It was among papers that I kept — even without knowing their meaning at the time.
I didn’t know how, or why, the paper had come from Krakow or why my father and mother had kept it among their papers.
My daughter is applying for Polish citizenship under a Polish law that allows citizenship to descendants of Polish citizens who were displaced and lost their citizenship in World War Two. Poland is in the European Union and Polish citizenship allows one to obtain EU citizenship. Perhaps that is the motivation among American descendants of Holocaust survivors. I believe it is also symbolic of recapturing an identity that was taken from my parents. I respect what my daughter is doing.
In the process of applying for Polish citizenship, the citizenship of my father must be proven. That aged paper from 1945 evidencing property ownership seems crucial.
And so, I put the paper in a FedEx envelope addressed to the lawyer assisting in my daughter’s application for its return to Krakow after 79 years.

Comments

Daniel Schwartz

Amazing that you kept the paper all this time and now it can serve its intended purpose once again.
Robert Intelisano

Best of luck with the citizenship process, great backstory!
Kelly Welles

Thanks for this moving and fascinating Polish/EU citizenship story. I was able to own a marketing consultancy with offices in NY, London and Paris in the late eighties, the latter two made possible because my American partner was divorced from an Italian and had EU status

Add new comment

Restricted HTML

  • Allowed HTML tags: <a href hreflang> <em> <strong> <cite> <blockquote cite> <code> <ul type> <ol start type> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <h2 id> <h3 id> <h4 id> <h5 id> <h6 id>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.