... Indeed, I owe my life to a brave woman whose act of incredible moral courage ensured that I lived when so many others died. When the Nazis began to assemble Jews into the Vilna Ghetto, my parents entrusted me to my Polish Catholic nanny, Bronislawa Kurpi. She took me, baptized me and raised me as a Catholic. In a world beset by brutality, cruelty and destruction, she risked her life to save me. It is this part of the Holocaust that offers hope and redemption to humanity ...
http://www.adl.org/holocaust/oped_hidden_children.asp... Children were often forced to live lives independent of their families. Many children who found refuge with others outside the ghettos had to assume new identities and conform to local religious customs that were different from their own in order to survive. Some Jewish children managed to pass as Catholics and were hidden in Catholic schools, orphanages, and convents in countries across Europe ...
http://www.bnaibrith.ca/league/hh-teachers/guide08.html... The children were entrusted to the church's care to save them from the death camps. But if the parents survived the war and came forward to reclaim their sons or daughters, the children were only to be returned "provided
have not received baptism", the Vatican ordered ... The instructions, contained in a letter dated October 20 1946, were sent by the Holy Office, the Vatican department responsible for church discipline, to the future Pope John XXIII, Angelo Roncalli, who at that time was the Holy See's envoy in Paris. The letter was published yesterday by the Italian daily Corriere della Sera ...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/secondworldwar/story/0,14058,1380532,00.html
... Therefore, he often goes to the library to page through magazines of contemporary history, among which is "Zank," a publication produced in Warsaw.
"In the May-June, 1988, issue, writer Stanislav Krajewski described in detail a story about Karol Wojtyla," Wajcer explained. This is information that is not new, but that is not widely known in Israel.
Wajcer takes up the case of a Krakow Jewish couple who in 1942, feeling endangered by the anti-Semitic persecutions, entrusted their 2-year old child to Catholic friends. At the end of the war, it was proved that the child's natural parents had died. Meanwhile, the Catholic friends had become very attached to the child and wished to baptize him. They asked the advice of Fr. Karol Wojtyla who counseled them, to their surprise, that if the natural parents wanted their son raised in the Jewish faith, that is what should happen.
The couple made all kinds of difficult research to find other relatives of the child. Finally, they located relatives in the United States who agreed to receive him. "That child became an orthodox Jew," Wajcer said ...
http://www.dailycatholic.org/issue/2000Mar/mar27jub.htm