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By Brian Doyle
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| Eddy Baranski |
At about half past two on the afternoon of Wednesday, Jan. 24, 1945, a young
American named Eddy Baranski ’41 LAS shuffled into a basement
in Mauthausen, Austria. He was 27 years old. He was told to remove his clothing
and walk into the next room, where his photograph would be taken. He was told
to stand against the wall. Probably he was told to stand as motionless as possible,
so as to yield the most exact photograph. As soon as he was lined up properly
with the camera he was shot from behind, in the brain, from perhaps 3 inches
away. He died instantly. A Polish prisoner named Wilhem Ornstein then carried
Eddy into an adjacent cold storage room, where he was laid until Ornstein had
finished mopping the blood from the floor. Ornstein then carried Eddy to the
adjacent crematorium, where an Austrian prisoner named Johann Kanduth roasted
Eddy and scattered his ashes atop a vast pile of ashes of men and women and children
from around the world.
So vanished Army Air Corps Capt. Edward Baranski, whom the Nazis considered
a cunning spy, whom the Nazis had tortured so thoroughly that he could no longer
properly use his arms, whom the Nazis blamed for his role in the Slovakian revolt
against the Nazis in 1944. And so vanished Eddy Baranski from the lives of those
he left behind in Utah: among them his father, who never spoke his son’s
name again the rest of his life; and his mother, who died of grief a few months
later; and his young wife, Madeline, who had a vision of him, whole and smiling,
in the Utah darkness, at exactly the moment he died in Austria; and his daughter
Kathleen, who was 2 years old when her daddy flew off to fight Hitler, and who
spent the next 50 years fatherless, without a memory of his voice or face or
smell, without even the cold facts of his murder.
In 1993 the University of Portland admitted a young woman to the Class of
1997. Her name was Christina Lund. Intrigued by the University’s extensive
foreign study opportunities, she applied and was accepted to the University’s
oldest and largest adventure abroad, in Austria. One annual aspect of the Salzburg
Program is a trip to Mauthausen, one of the many lairs of hell operated by the
Nazis during the Second World War and the one from which legendarily no one ever
returned.
Christina’s mother Kathleen, Eddy Baranski’s daughter, decides
to visit Mauthausen while she and her husband, university regent Allen Lund,
are visiting their daughter in Salzburg.
I’d never wanted to go there before, not in 50 years, says Kathleen.
But something then made me want to go, and we went, and it was chilling. I walked
around. I found the place where he was shot, and I waited for something there,
some feeling, some message; but there was nothing.
They went home, Kathleen and Allen, and they went about their lives, but something
had changed in Kathleen, some seed opening, some cold place warming; and she
began to inquire about her father, and poke her uncle John for information about
his beloved brother, and write to the National Archives, and to museums in Europe,
and to the United States Army, and slowly, miraculously, Eddy Baranski’s
story flew back into the world, into the hearts of his children and grandchildren;
and that, says Kathleen, was his first gift to her from where he is now.
Eddy Baranski grew up in Chicago, was an all-city football player for McKinley
High and went on to college at the University of Illinois. There he joined the
Army cadet corps, sang in a quartet, led the Catholic student group and waited
tables in the student cafeteria. One day in the cafeteria he gets to talking
with a startling girl named Madeline Cleary, and pretty soon Madeline and Eddy
are head over heels in love, and they get married, and they have a baby, Kathleen,
and then right quick another baby, Gerald, and then suddenly the worst war in
the history of the world erupts, and suddenly Eddy is Lt. Edward Victor Baranski
of the Army Air Corps, and soon the young man who had been a meticulous mess
officer in Utah is an American secret agent flying into the very heart of the
Nazi juggernaut at the peak of its savagery.
Because he spoke fluent German and Slovak, legacies from his Slovakian mama,
Eddy Baranski was recruited by the mysterious OSS, the Office of Strategic Services,
the most secretive and dangerous of the Allied intelligence units in the war.
He served in North Africa, Algeria, Italy and England (where he worked with the
Czechoslovakian government in exile) before being quietly sent into Slovakia
to help with a rumored partisan uprising there. In August of 1944 the Slovakian
partisans did rebel against the Nazis, who crushed the rising immediately. Eddy
Baranski, by now an Air Corps captain, slid out of his American identity altogether
and became a Slovakian seller of firewood, living in the villages of Zvolenska
Slatina and Piest, trying to find and help partisans. On Dec. 9, 1944, the Nazi
secret police, the Gestapo, having tortured residents of Zvolenska Slatina for
news of Eddy’s whereabouts, captured him in a farmhouse in Piest and took
him eventually to Mauthausen. His friends in Piest kept Eddy’s personal
belongings secret for the next half a century: a razor, a first-aid kit, a prayer
book.
In May of 1945 a German citizen named Werner Muller dictated an extraordinary
document to an Australian lieutenant named Danny Hunter. Muller, who spoke English,
French and Italian, had been an interpreter for the Wermacht, the Nazi army under
Heinrich Himmler. Ordered to Mauthausen in October of 1944, Muller’s job
was to help with the interrogations of Allied prisoners. When Mauthausen was
freed, in May of 1944, Danny Hunter wrote down Muller’s account of his
months in hell. Muller remembered one prisoner above all: Eddy Baranski.
Eddy and his radioman, Daniel Pavletich, had both been imprisoned and questioned
first in Bratislava, where they told the Nazis they were American fliers. On
arrival in Mauthausen, Pavletich was interrogated without incident, remembered
Muller, but Baranski was a different story. Since this fellow seems to be so
very clever, said the Kommandant, he deserves special treatment. This one we
will hang.
When Baranski saw [Nazi officers] all crowded in the room and the chain over
the table, remembered Muller, he turned to me smiling and said I know what they
are going to do now.
They tied his hands behind his back, remembered Muller, and attached his wrists
to the chain above, which they drew upward. Although he must have been suffering
terrible pain, he kept himself wonderfully. The Kommandant did not seem to like
that and said I think the fellow still enjoys himself. They pulled his legs down
so his whole weight was hanging on his arms. In the end he couldn’t stand
it any longer. He cried and begged to be let down, but the Kommandant insisted
on keeping him suspended in that dreadful position. My eyes were filled with
tears. Baranski started praying and the Kommandant asked me what he was saying,
and when I told him he and the other officers laughed. In the end however they
let him down.
His prayers, says Eddy’s daughter Kathleen – that’s my father’s
second gift to me. At the very end of his tether, he prayed. To hear the depth
and breadth of his faith, to know that now, after not knowing that for 50 years – that
is a gift.
He was completely broken, remembers Muller. His poor hands looked dreadful.
He was offered some water but he had to hold it himself which he was incapable
of doing with his hands. It was a terrible sight how he tried at first to sip
some water with the bottle held between his arms. This was the most dreadful
half hour I have ever been through in my life and I was ashamed to be there.
And Muller remembers one more detail, before Eddy Baranski and 10 American
men and four British men and one Slovakian woman were executed naked in the basement
with the fake camera; that when he offered Baranski a cigarette after his torture,
Eddy began smiling again.
In August of 1999 Kathleen Baranski Lund and 30 of her family and friends
were honored guests of the American Embassy in Bratislava, where her father had
been interrogated by the Nazis. They visited Zvolen, where her father had landed
in a B-17 to begin his secret mission in Slovakia, and where the president of
Slovakia dedicated a monument to Eddy Baranski and his fellow Allied soldiers
who aided the 1944 rebellion against the Nazis. They went to Banska Bystrika,
where Eddy Baranski is honored in the National Museum of Slovakia. They went
to Piest, where Eddy was captured, and they went to the house where he was captured,
and there they met Maria Lakotova, who wept when she remembered Kathleen’s
father singing lullabies to her at night when she was a toddler in that house.
And finally they went to Mauthausen, and they prayed, and a priest friend celebrated
a quiet Mass at the place where so many thousands of souls fled the Earth, and
then they went home.
Your father used to sing to me at night, Maria Lakotova told Kathleen. He
would hold me on his knee and sing and sing. He was so kind and he had such a
lovely voice. But many years later I realized that he was not singing to me.
He was singing to you, Kathleen, to his little girl far away.
His songs, says Kathleen – his songs are his final gift to me. It’s
like I am finally hearing them after 50 years. I finally found my father. Now
I know he never gave up, and he prayed, and he sang, and now he’s part
of me like he never was, not for 50 years. No one ever talked about him again
after he died, so I never had a father at all. But now I do. Now I’ll have
my dad forever and ever. It’s not sad. It’s joyous. It’s a
miracle.
In 2004 the University of Portland admitted a young woman to the Class of 2008.
Her name is Noel Peterson. She is from Shadow Hills, Calif. She wants to major
in engineering. She has a quick wit and a shy smile and lives in Shipstad Hall.
Her mother is Natalie Baranski Peterson. Her grandmother is Kathleen Baranski
Lund. Her great-grandfather was a most remarkable young man, a devout youth with
a lovely voice and a ferocious courage and an irrepressible belief that his brains
and energy and creativity and finally his life could be brought to bear to destroy
a foul empire that sought to enslave the world. His name was Eddy Baranski, and
his story will never die again.
Doyle is the editor of Portland Magazine at the University of Portland, in
Oregon. He is the author of five collections of essays, notably “Leaping
and Spirited Men”; and of the books “The Wet Engine,” about
the muddle and music of hearts, and “The Grail,” about a year in
the life of an Oregon vineyard.
Editor’s note: In honor of Veteran’s
Day on Nov. 11, this story is reprinted with permission from the Spring 2005
issue of Portland Magazine from the University of Portland in Oregon.
Doyle is the editor of Portland Magazine at the University of Portland,
in Oregon. He is the author of five collections of essays, notably “Leaping
and Spirited Men”; and of the books “The Wet Engine,” about
the muddle and music of hearts, and “The Grail,” about a year in
the life of an Oregon vineyard.
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