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Leopold Socha (28 août 1909 à Lemberg - 12 mai 1946 à Gliwice, Pologne) est un employé municipal inspecteur d'égouts polonais, dans la ville autrefois polonaise de Lwów.
Leopold "Poldek" Socha (28 August 1909 – 12 May 1946) was a Polish sewage inspector in the city of Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine). During World War II, Socha used his knowledge of the city's sewage system to shelter a group of Jews from Nazi persecution and their supporters of different nationalities.
Leopold Socha lived in a poor neighborhood of Lwow (Poland) and worked as a laborer for the municipal sanitation department in maintaining the sewage system. When the Germans occupied Lwow, Socha, horrified by the Germans’ atrocities against the Jewish population, befriended Jews who had been interned in the ghetto.
9 oct. 2012 · Un égoutier, Leopold Socha, les découvre et les guides hors d'atteinte des nazis et de leurs auxiliaires ukrainiens. Contrairement à Schindler, Socha présente mal.
13 mai 2017 · Leopold Socha lived in a poor neighborhood of Lwow (Poland) and worked as a laborer for the municipal sanitation department in maintaining the sewage system. When the Germans occupied Lwow, Socha, horrified by the Germans’ atrocities against the Jewish population, befriended Jews who had been interned in the ghetto.
Story of Rescue - Socha Leopold. Share. During the occupation of Lwów, Leopold Socha, a petty thief, found employment as a city cleaner. He worked there with Stefan Wróblewski. Among their duties was maintaining the sewerage system within the ghetto area.
25 nov. 2014 · Leopold Socha, the Polish sewer worker who helped a group of Jews survive 14 months underground during the Nazi occupation, has been honored by Yad Vashem; now he may get a plaque in Lviv, Ukraine.