I was born in Tomaszów Lubelski, a small town where half of the population before the war was Jewish. Tomaszów is located only a few kilometers away from Bełżec, a place of extermination of almost half a million Jews. Nevertheless, I learned about the former inhabitants of my hometown and their fate quite late, as this subject was not present at school or at home. It was only during my history studies that I started to deepen my knowledge, read memoirs, testimonies and research studies, trying to understand the scale of this tragedy. When the State Museum at Majdanek was looking for candidates to train as guides, I had no doubt I needed to apply. I learned a lot there. But it was only my friendship with an outstanding historian, Robert Kuwałek, an expert on issues related to Jewish Lublin, which instilled in me passion to study the history and culture of Jews. Thanks to him, I understood that statistics and numbers, all aspects of the Holocaust and its process or names of the perpetrators are not everything. All this is of course important, but the most important are individual people and their stories. And the memory about the Jewish neighbors who vanished. Robert inspired me and a group of friends to establish the Well of Memory Association in Lublin in 2008, which remains active today.
Agata Radkowska-Parka
Lublin