Wiera Gran - Collaboration Case

Collaboration Case

After the war, in 1945, Gran was accused by Marek Edelman, Jonas Turkow and others of collaboration while in the Warsaw Ghetto and later, outside of the Ghetto on the "aryan" side of the wall - in the Hotel Polski. In 1947, the Citizen's Court of the Central Committee of Polish Jews (Sąd Obywatelski przy Centralnym Komitecie Żydów Polskich) heard the case and Gran was found not guilty in 1949 (the case was dropped by the Committee's lawyers for lack of incriminating evidence).

The Jewish Historical Institute (Żydowski Instytut Historyczny) in Warsaw holds documents from that period. In Israel, she was also accused of collaboration with German Gestapo by Jonas Turkow, Adolf Berman and Pesach Burstein and boycotted. She attempted to clear her name in courts there but the trial was finally suspended in 1982 causing her to lose the case.

In her book Sztafeta Oszczerców published in 1980 in Paris, Gran gives her own account of events and argues her innocence accusing Jonas Turkow of collaboration with Gestapo.

Irena Sendlerowa says in 1983 as a member of the AK (National Army): "Wiera Gran - was a cabaret actress in the ghetto. She also appeared on the so-called "Aryan" side in "Cafe Mocca" in the Marszalkowska street, and worked with Leon Skosowski, Adam Zurawin, Koenig, Wlodarski, Mark Rozenberg and Franciszaka Manowna for the Gestapo. Adam Zurawin Skosowski and Leon were sentenced to death in 1943 by the Polish and Jewish underground movement. Skosowskis sentence was carried out in Warsaw by the members of underground organizations. Zurawin escaped. After the shooting of Skosowski, Wiera Gran hid in Warsaw-Babice (Boernerowo) under the name - Jezierska."

This information and the underground army (AK) reports were not known to the courts in 1946-47, when deliberating over Wiera Gran's guilt.., It is proven that her husband, Kazimierz Jezierski at the time was employed by the Polish Ministry of State Security, helping in execution of Pilecki, Nil a.o. political prisoners of the Stalinist period, the victims of a judiciary murder. Antoni Marianowicz, at this time 16-years old, considers the accusations to be profoundly idiotic, but Marianowicz says himself in his book, that he stayed most of the wartime outside of the ghetto in the "aryan" Warsaw. Marianowicz claims Wiera Gran was a "singer and only a singer" and was known to him for her philanthropy..

Very special affidavit was given in Tel Aviv in 1971 regarding Wiera Gran. and later donated to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

A personal opinion is made by journalist Joanna Szczęsna in 2010 Gazeta Wyborcza Szczęsna posits that the accusations against Gran were based on personal animosities between Gran and Jonas Turkow and Władyslaw Szpilman. Joanna Szczęsna in Gazeta Wyborcza informs that Gran accuses Szpilman and Polanski of planning to kill Wiera Gran and it is possible that Władyslaw Szpilman saw Gran in person collaborating with the s.c. Gestapo "13" - a group of Jewish day traders in the Warsaw Ghetto supported by Germans. Gran was very closely related to some policemen and members of the "13" (Gancwajch and Skosowski). Szczęsna quotes, from documents preserved in the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw, statements made by Grans friends such as Jerzy Jurandot, Krystyna Żywulska and Izabela Czajka-Stachowicz, all of whom claimed that the accusations against Wiera Gran were based on hearsay.

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