Posted 7.7.08 at 12:20 am

A 1902 photograph of Irena’s parents, Janina Grzybowska and Stanislaw Krzyzanowski. Her father was a doctor who contracted typhus while caring for poor Jewish people. He died of the disease.

Irena worked for the Warsaw’s Social Welfare Department in 1941. Her position of leadership in this department allowed her to enter the Warsaw Ghetto.

Irena in 1943, after her escape from Pawiak prison.

Irena in 1949, in the office of the Social Welfare Department.

Irena with her daughter Janka in 1950, in the Lazienkowski Garden, where the tree under which she buried the jars was located.

Irena and her husband, Stefan, with Janka in 1950.

Irena and her children, Janka and Adam, in Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Poland (1958).

Irena, far left, was director of the Secondary Medical Schools, Department of the Ministry of Health. Here she attends the 1961 graduation ceremony for a nursing school in Warsaw.

Irena at the Yad Vashem complex in Israel in 1983. On her left is Wanda Rotenberg, one of Irena’s “liaison girls,” who helped her rescue children; on her right is Teresa Korner, a woman Irena saved. Yad Vashem recognized Irena as a Righteous Gentile in 1983 and planted a tree in her honor in 1989.

Irena with her granddaughter, Agnes, around 1987.

Irena receiving Poland's Order of the White Eagle.

Ania (daughter of a survivor), her mother Bieta Ficowska (who was saved by Irena), Megan Stewart, and Renata Zajdman (a child survivor) in 2002.

Renata Zajdman and Elzbieta Ficowska were saved as children. Elzbieta was saved by Irena, and Renata survived in the streets of Warsaw until she was rescued. For more on their stories, see http://www.irenasendler.org/team.asp.

The play was performed in Michigan in the summer of 2003. Here the actors pose with a child survivor. From left are Elizabeth Cambers, Kathleen Meara, Megan Felt (kneeling), Sabrina Coons, and survivor Renata Zajdman.

Irena in 2004 with Margarita Turkow, who was rescued as a child by Irena.

Pictured is a jar used in the play Life in a Jar, which has been presented almost 250 times in 17 states and three countries since its creation. Irena wrote down the names of the saved children on tissue paper and put them in two bottles, which she buried in a garden by an apple tree. She dug them up after the war and began the job of finding the children and trying to find a living parent. The original jars were broken, but the Irena Sendler Project does have a similar jar from the house where the apple tree was located.

The apple tree where the jars were buried (2005).

Irena with Janka in March 2008.

One of the last pictures of Irena, taken on May 3, 2008.

Members of Life in a Jar honor Irena’s passing with a candlelight ceremony: from left, Beth Perrey; the four who created the play, Jessica Shelton-Ripper, Sabrina Coons-Murphy, Elizabeth Cambers-Hutton, and Megan Stewart-Felt; and teacher Norm Conard.
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day’s leisurely drive, from the Avenue of the Giants in the southern part of the county, north to the Redwood Trails at Stone Lagoon. For a great overall guide to Humboldt County, check out 101 Things to Do – Humboldt.
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Quiet Heroine Irena Sendler