THE JEWISH PRIEST IS BURIED: “I Want to Die as a Jew”

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IZBICA, POLAND — It was a chilly November day when Rabbi Shalom Malul, the rosh yeshiva of the AMIT Ashdod Yeshiva in Israel, a half-dozen AMIT students and a handful of other Jews helping to make a minyan, stood beside the kever of Yaffo’s Roman Catholic priest, Father Gregor Pawlowski, to recite Kaddish.

In doing so, they were abiding by the priest’s lifelong wish to be buried in accordance with halacha, adjacent to the mass grave where his mother, sisters and 1,000 other Jewish victims were shot and killed in 1942 during the Holocaust. The levayah was also attended by several hundred Roman Catholics paying their final respects to their long-standing communal leader.

Father Gregor Pawlowski was born Yaakov Hirsch Griner into an Orthodox Jewish family in Zamosc, Poland in 1931, where he spent his early childhood until the Nazi occupation and subsequent transfer of the Jewish population to Izbica’s ghetto in 1939. After Pawlowski’s narrow escape from the mass killing which claimed the lives of his mother and sisters, he was taken in by a Roman Catholic orphanage who helped to hide him and facilitated his name change ultimately securing his future. It was the church that he would devote his life to, going on to being ordained a priest and eventually immigrating to Israel where he worked with Roman Catholic communities for over 30 years.

Prior to leaving Poland, he erected a headstone alongside his mother and sister’s place of burial that read “I abandoned my family in order to save my life at the time of the Shoah, they came to take us for extermination, my life I saved and have consecrated it to the service of God and humanity.”

Upon Rabbi Malul’s encountering this stone years ago during an AMIT trip to Poland for students, he began to research the community and its author, leading him to the Roman Catholic priest in Jaffa and what would be years of friendship between the two men.

Malul remembers Father Pawlowski’s desire to return to his Jewish roots specifically at the end of his life, precipitating the fulfillment of Pawlowski’s longstanding aspiration to be buried in accordance with halacha next to his loved ones.

“Father Pawlowski would constantly remind me of his dying wish, saying that he was ‘born a Jew, lived a Catholic, and wished for a Jewish burial,” said Rabbi Malul. “Over the years, Father Pawlowski was a close friend, an invaluable asset in helping to teach our students about his community before and during the war, and the cost the war had even on those who managed to survive. In helping to uphold his wishes, Father Pawlowski was able to teach our students a remarkable lesson, both in Chessed Shel Emes and in Kiddush Hashem.”

{Matzav.com}


9 COMMENTS

  1. In this tragic story, it’s impossible to even start thinking about what the reward and what the punishment should be for this Yid. Only the Ribono Shel Olam knows. May He have rachmonus on this poor neshama.

  2. Very special story. He was a Tinok Shenishbu without a question. His yiddish spark never left him and it is special that he had the jewish burial according to Halacha; it’ll help his soul.

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