From 1939-1945 World War II raged throughout the world. Through hatred, deaths, sickness, and sadness, the world was collapsing. Irena Sendler was a Polish social worker during WWII who is credited with saving the lives of 2,500 Jewish children from the Warsaw ghetto. With her bravery, she led these kids to safety and disregarded her own.
Irena Sendler was born in Warsaw, Poland on February 15, 1910, to parents Janina Krzyżanowsk and Stanisław Krzyżanowski. She was strongly moved by the poverty and suffering she witnessed in the Warsaw Ghetto, and she organized the resistance organization to assist the Jewish population. The underground organization, Zegota, managed to smuggle out 2,500 Jewish children from the Warsaw ghetto. 33 yr old Irena Sendler was the driving force. Irena was a social worker before the holocaust, and head of the children's section. Young Irena’s father had struggled with typhus. Her family, although not Jewish, used to help the Jewish poor who had struggled with illness. “If you see someone drowning, you must help them no matter what” (Life in a Jar pg 30), is the last piece of
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Standing less than 5 ft tall, she was not one to mess with. Irena fooled the nazis by sneaking in and out every day with the “secret name” of Jolanta. Sendler and her colleagues transported Jewish children out of the Warsaw Ghetto as members of the Zegota resistance movement, hiding them in luggage, crates, and even coffins. In addition, they falsified documents to give the children new names and placed them in secure homes and orphanages outside of the ghetto. Irena saw injustice and did this out of spite. She saved strangers, risking her life for people she would most likely never come to know. Irena cared for each child and kept their family names alive in these jars, so they would never be forgotten. Elzbieta Fitkozka, a six month child, saved by Irena in carpenters from warsaw ghetto whole family killed in