Elisabeth Hedwig Leja Gessler
Edward and Dora Gessler, a Jewish couple,
lived with their children, a cook and a housekeeper in the
city of Beilsko Biala in Southern Poland. In 1938, Elisabeth
Hedwig Leja, a Polish Catholic woman of ethnic German origin
(Folksdeutsche) joined the family as a nanny and caretaker of
the family’s three young children, Elek, 11, Lili, 4, and
Roman, 1.
At the outbreak of the war, rather than
join her family in safety, Elisabeth chose to remain with the
Gesslers and help them as they fled from Beilsko Biala to
Lvov. In Lvov, Dora, unable to bear the strain, committed
suicide. Elisabeth remained to assist Edward, now a widower
with three young children. Towards the end of 1941, Edward and
his son Elek escaped to Hungary. Lili and Roman remained in
the care of Elisabeth. Several months later, in March 1942,
fearing for their lives, Elisabeth, Lili and Roman fled Lvov,
and journeyed to Hungary via the Carpathian Mountains to join
Edward and Elek. Elisabeth sewed her meager valuables into the
lining of young Roman’s coat, and hired a rickety cart and two
guides to take them through the mountains. As darkness
approached, the group was stopped by the Gestapo. Elisabeth,
with her native German, successfully convinced the officers
that she was hurrying to find a doctor for her sick children.
Eventually the group was reunited with Edward and Elek in
Budapest.
Edward and Elisabeth, in possession of
forged passports, were arrested in 1944 and sent to a
concentration camp. The younger two children remained in the
care of their older brother after Elisabeth persuaded the
Germans not to arrest them as well. After using her
connections with the Catholic Church in Budapest to secure
their release from the camp, the family fled to Romania where
they remained until the end of the war.
During the entire period of the
war, Elisabeth protected the Gessler children with the utmost
devotion and love, at real risk to her own welfare. She taught
them Christian customs, dyed Lili’s hair lighter, taught them
to speak German and presented them as her own children
whenever questioned.
Elisabeth remained with Edward and the
children and they married in 1965. Edward passed away in 1978
and Elisabeth in 1983.
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More information about the Righteous Among
the Nations program is available at
<http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous/index_righteous.html>