Alfreda Noncia Markowska is a Polska Roma who during World War II saved around fifty Jewish and Roma children from death in the Holocaust and the Roma Genocide. Markowska was born in a travelling Polska Roma tabor (a mobile camp) in an area around Stanisławów, in the Kresy region of the Second Polish Republic. In 1939, the German invasion of Poland caught her in Lwòw (Lviv). After the Soviet Union also invaded Poland as part of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact between Stalin and Hitler, her tabor moved to the German occupied part of Poland. In 1941 the Germans murdered all the members of her clan (65 to 85 people), including her parents and siblings, in a massacre near Biala Podlaska.
“for heroism and uncommon bravery,
for exceptional merit in saving human lives”
October 2006, President of Poland Lech Kaczyński
Alfreda was the only one to survive. She spent several days searching the local forests for the mass grave of her family. She made her way to Rozwadçw where in 1942, at the age of 16, she married. She and her husband were caught in a roundup of SS while visiting Stanisławów by Ukrainian police who handed them over to the Germans, but the couple managed to escape. Subsequently they were forced to move into Roma ghettos in Lublin, Lodz, and Belzec but they fled these as well and settled back in Rozwadów, where the Germans had organized a labor camp for Roma.
In Rozwadów Alfreda was hired on the railway and managed to obtain a work permit which gave her some protection against further arrests. She became involved in saving Jews and Roma, particularly children, from death at the hands of the Nazis. She would travel to sites of known massacres of Jewish and Roma populations and look for survivors. Markowska would bring them back to her home, hide them and obtain false documents which protected them from the Germans. An estimated fifty children were saved by her personally.
In 1944 the Soviets “liberated” the area. Because of the policy of the Red Army to forcibly conscript Roma into its ranks, Markowska along with her husband and some of the children she had saved (including some German children who sought to flee Soviet soldiers) fled westward, first into central Poland and then into the so-called “Recovered Territories” in now western Poland.