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Polish Museum in Howick, Auckland, New Zealand |
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The museum is filled with books, costumes and Polish relics, It
is open to the public, both for individual visitors and group bookings,
and is an excellent educational resource for schools. All groups
will be warmly welcomed .
The location of the Polish Heritage Trust Museum is 125 Elliot
Street, Howick.
Opening hours are:
| Tuesday to Friday |
9am - 5pm |
| Sunday |
12 noon - 5pm |
Please phone 533 3530 for further details and also read Polish
Museum page on this website
View pictures of the Museum
Honorary Consul's Tale of Survival
John Roy is a living example of endurance and survival.
The Honorary Polish Consul for New Zealand and retired businessman
was born Jan Wojciechowski in Poland.
He was six when Russians Stalin invaded his homeland.
John and his parents, his brother and three sisters were farming
land in the east of Poland at the time.
On February 10, 1940, the family and nearly 250,000 other people
from eastern Poland were sent to slave labour camps in Siberia and
the Arctic Circle.
But before the family left, John's father was taken away. They
later found out he had been shot.
The family spent 18 months in Siberia where they were put to work
clearing the forest. In 1941 the family was allowed to leave the
camp and was sent to Iran.
There John's mother became ill with tuberculosis and died in hospital.
John and two of his sisters were shipped to New Zealand in 1944,
leaving one sister behind in Iran and their brother in the air force.
They arrived in Wellington along with New Zealand soldiers returning
from the Middle East and about 800 other refugee children.
"We were given ice cream and comics to read and all these things
we'd never had," Mr Roy says.
He clearly remembers reaching his new homeland. "My first impression
of Wellington harbour was all the little houses on top of the hills
with red roofs," he says.
The children were sent to a Wairarapa camp, known as "Little Poland".
They stayed there for two years. The young refugees were granted
permanent residency and taught how to speak English. Mr Roy was
then sent to boarding school at St Patrick's College, in Silverstream.
He came to Howick 36 years ago. Mr Roy, who is married with six
children, is now deeply involved in promoting Poland here. He formed
the Polish Heritage Trust to teach New Zealanders about Polish history
and wrote a book about his early life.
Mr. Roy recently set up a Polish museum on Elliot St. as part of
his promotional work.
"It gives people of Polish origin a place to put their mementoes
if they want to," he says.
He is gathering items of interest, including books from a Polish
soldier who fought at Monte Cassino.
He plans to give presentations about Polish history and literature
to schools in the area, he says.
Museum a Tribute to Polish History
John Roy was only six when Stalin's armies invaded his Polish
homeland.
The boy and his family were sent to a Siberian labour camp where
they lived in horrific conditions. One in 10 people died on the
six-week train journey to the camp in 1940.
But in 1944, young John came to New Zealand along with 800 other
Polish refugee children.
Today, Mr. Roy lives in Howick, where he has set up a museum to
teach New Zealanders about Polish history.
The museum is filled with books, costumes and Polish relics. It
is open to the public, both for individual visitors and group bookings,
and is an excellent educational resource for schools. All groups
will be warmly welcomed .
The location of the Polish Heritage Trust Museum is 125 Elliot
Street Howick, opening hours are Tuesday to Friday 9 to 5 and Sundays
12 to 5.
Please phone 533 3530 for further details and also read Polish
Museum page on this website.
Polish story: John Roy wants others to learn
about his Polish homeland through a new museum in Howick. |
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Tale to tell: John Roy, formerly Jan Wojciechowski,
has told the story of his early life in his book 'A Strange
Outcome'. |
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Foreign land: Costumes, books and relics fill
the museum set up in honour of the history, tradition and
culture of Poland. |
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interview for Eastern Courier,
Auckland, 28. 5. 2004;
CATHERINE MYHRE ©Photos: JASON DORDAY
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