Władysław fought the Nazis for our freedoms and to protect his birth country, Poland. He was captured by the Nazis and quickly escaped, travelling back to Poland from his captors in Germany, hundreds of kilometers, by night and on foot. Throughout his life, he passionately opposed the Soviet-style socialism that caused so much daily suffering during his years as a peasant farmer.
He brought his family to the United States in 1963 to leave their difficult lives as peasants under Soviet-style communism and to start a new, promising life. After only five years of factory work, Władysław and Jadwiga were able to purchase a middle-class house and furnishings, buy a new car, and provide their daughter a college education.
Loving and caring for his family and friends in Poland, he and Jadwiga sponsored many of their family and friends to come to the US. Together with a small group of other immigrant families, Władysław's family was a beginning in a new wave of Polish immigration to Copiague and Lindenhurst, New York, during the late 1960s and 1970s.
As a devoted family and religious man, he, with Jadwiga, played a critical role raising his granddaughters, as Nicole and Tania didn't have a father and Danielle and Natalja lost their mother. He will be deeply and devotedly missed by all whom he touched with his unflinching loyalty and respect for his family and tradition, his passionate story-telling, and his mischievous sense of humor.
With deep affection, loving memories, and profound gratitude, we will miss you, kochany tatuś, dziadzia, stryjek and wujek. "100 lat, 'proszę pana.'"
Services at the Lindenhurst Funeral Home, Lindenhurst, NY. Mass of Christian Burial at Our Lady of the Assumption RC Church, Copiague, NY. Interment St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, NY.
Published in NY Newsday & the FH website on Nov. 19, 2013
From SSDI - Wife
JUDY CZARNECKI
Oct 04, 1916
Oct 26, 1999
Last residence: 11757 (Lindenhurst, Suffolk, NY)
Władysław fought the Nazis for our freedoms and to protect his birth country, Poland. He was captured by the Nazis and quickly escaped, travelling back to Poland from his captors in Germany, hundreds of kilometers, by night and on foot. Throughout his life, he passionately opposed the Soviet-style socialism that caused so much daily suffering during his years as a peasant farmer.
He brought his family to the United States in 1963 to leave their difficult lives as peasants under Soviet-style communism and to start a new, promising life. After only five years of factory work, Władysław and Jadwiga were able to purchase a middle-class house and furnishings, buy a new car, and provide their daughter a college education.
Loving and caring for his family and friends in Poland, he and Jadwiga sponsored many of their family and friends to come to the US. Together with a small group of other immigrant families, Władysław's family was a beginning in a new wave of Polish immigration to Copiague and Lindenhurst, New York, during the late 1960s and 1970s.
As a devoted family and religious man, he, with Jadwiga, played a critical role raising his granddaughters, as Nicole and Tania didn't have a father and Danielle and Natalja lost their mother. He will be deeply and devotedly missed by all whom he touched with his unflinching loyalty and respect for his family and tradition, his passionate story-telling, and his mischievous sense of humor.
With deep affection, loving memories, and profound gratitude, we will miss you, kochany tatuś, dziadzia, stryjek and wujek. "100 lat, 'proszę pana.'"
Services at the Lindenhurst Funeral Home, Lindenhurst, NY. Mass of Christian Burial at Our Lady of the Assumption RC Church, Copiague, NY. Interment St. Charles Cemetery, Farmingdale, NY.
Published in NY Newsday & the FH website on Nov. 19, 2013
From SSDI - Wife
JUDY CZARNECKI
Oct 04, 1916
Oct 26, 1999
Last residence: 11757 (Lindenhurst, Suffolk, NY)
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement
Explore more
Sponsored by Ancestry
Advertisement