Abstract This article analyzes the amazing evolution of Krystyna Bierzyńska (1928–2025) after World War II, focusing primarily on her settlement in the United States and the diverse identities she adopted over the next seventy-four years. Qualified to enter America in 1951 as an Allied co-combatant with her first husband, Evgenii (Genek) Boruszczak, she opted to settle in Southern California, where she hoped to blaze her own trail as an American citizen without being pigeonholed as a traditional Polish immigrant. Here Krystyna temporarily succeeded in bringing together her fellow émigrés with her new American neighbors. After the collapse of her first and second marriages, Krystyna relied on American female friends to navigate her life as a divorced mother of two. Ultimately, this Polish American felt secure enough to reveal her Jewish roots and experience in the Holocaust to a wide array of audiences.
Beth Holmgren (Thu,) studied this question.
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