WhatFinger

Frank Milewski

Frank Milewski is the New York City Division President of the Polish American Congress

Most Recent Articles by Frank Milewski:

St. Stan’s Rev. Joseph Szpilski on PAC’s 2013 Honors List

Brooklyn, N.Y. .. Friends and members of Greenpoint’s St. Stanislaus Kostka Parish will be able to join the Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress (PAC) in honoring their former pastor, Rev. Joseph Szpilski C.M., at the Annual Awards Banquet the Congress holds at the Polish & Slavic Center on October 26th.
- Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Pulaski Police To Be Cited By Polish American Congress

Brooklyn N.Y. It’s going to be the Pulaski Association of the New York City Police Department who will be served with a citation when the Downstate Division of the Polish American Congress (PAC) holds its Annual Awards Banquet at Greenpoint’s Polish & Slavic Center on October 26th.
- Thursday, October 10, 2013


Price of Freedom was costly in WWII Poland

New York, N.Y… August is the month America’s Polish community annually commemorates the 1944 Warsaw Uprising (now referred to as “the Rising”) which attempted to liberate Poland’s capitol city from a five-year-long German occupation..
- Tuesday, August 6, 2013



NAZIs branded this Polish Catholic with a special Auschwitz Memento

Hitler’s SS Guards changed the name of Walter Kolodziejek (below) after he was arrested and sent to Auschwitz in the summer of 1940, just a few weeks after the Germans opened it. He was only 18 then. The day he arrived he came to be known as Auschwitz prisoner #2254 and has worn that number on his chest ever since.
- Tuesday, January 8, 2013

Modern Europe’s first democracy was Poland

New York, N.Y. .. Chet Szarejko, Vice President of the Downstate N.Y. Division of the Polish American Congress (left), and Division President Frank Milewski present Poland’s Consul General in New York, Ewa Junczyk-Ziomecka, with a copy of the newly published book, “Poland the First Democracy in Modern Europe.”
- Friday, November 16, 2012

NY Polish American Congress Hails Pulaski Cadets of America

Brooklyn, N.Y. … Among the organizations the Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress will be honoring at its 2012 Awards Banquet this October is one with ties to America’s War of Independence and, specifically, to Casimir Pulaski, the Polish officer who volunteered his services to Gen. George Washington 235 years ago.
- Thursday, September 27, 2012

A unique Auschwitz survivor reaches 90

imagePatricia Kolodziejek, a member of the Children of Polish Christian Holocaust Survivors with the Polish American Congress, wishes her dad a Happy 90th Birthday. A Polish Catholic survivor of Auschwitz, Walter Kolodziejek was sent to the death camp shortly after the Nazi’s opened it in 1940. Brooklyn, N.Y. .. Living long enough to celebrate a 90th birthday would be something special for anyone. It would be something “extra special” for anyone who had to spend several years in the Auschwitz death camp and suffer the brutality of Hitler’s SS.
- Saturday, February 25, 2012

How Polish Catholics rescued Jews in Holocaust

Queens, N.Y. -- Nowhere else is Holocaust history as distorted and as misrepresented as it is about Poland, according to Auschwitz survivor Michael Preisler, co chair of the Holocaust Documentation Committee of the Polish American Congress.
- Monday, February 13, 2012

A Gabreski Airport tribute to American’s WWII Air Ace

imageHONORING A GREAT AMERICAN HERO AT GABRESKI AIRPORT. After laying a wreath on the memorial stone in honor of U.S. Air Ace Francis S. Gabreski, Polish American Congress committee members and guests pause and reflect on his accomplishments. Shown here are: Col. Gabreski’s daughters, Frances and Patricia. In rear (left to right) are: Frank Milewski, president of the PAC’s Downstate N.Y. Division, Richard Romanski, committee chairman; Hon. Conrad Teller, mayor of Westhampton Beach and Chet Szarejko, co-chairman. Westhampton, N.Y. .. The Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress marked the 10th anniversary of the January 31, 2002 death of Col. Francis S. Gabreski with a solemn wreath-laying ceremony at the memorial stone in the Long Island airport named after him.
- Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Remembering America’s World War II Ace

imageThis January, 2001 photo shows U.S. Air Ace Col. Francis S. Gabreski (left), at the annual post-Christmas observance (Oplatek) the Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress held at the Polonaise Terrace in Brooklyn. The Congress used the occasion to also celebrate the late Col. Gabreski’s 82nd birthday. Pictured with him are: PAC President Frank Milewski (center) and Vice President Chet Szarejko. Brooklyn, N.Y. .. The Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress announced it will hold a wreath-laying ceremony at the Francis S. Gabreski Airport in Westhampton, Long Island on Sunday, January 29th at 1:00 p.m. to honor the memory of America’s top World War II Air Ace in Europe for whom the airport is named. It will mark the 10th anniversary of his death in 2002.
- Tuesday, January 24, 2012

For Polish Americans, Christmas is more than just one day

imageBrooklyn, N.Y. .. In America’s Polish community, Christmas is more than just one day. It’s a season. They don’t merely sing about the twelve days of Christmas. They observe them. When the Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress holds its annual Christmas party – the “Oplatek” – it customarily does it on the twelfth day, Epiphany Sunday. Epiphany Sunday commemorates the visit the Wise Men from the East paid to the “Little Town of Bethlehem.” Deviating a bit from the script this year, however, one of the visitors who came to the Polish American Congress “Oplatek” was someone from the West. The Northwest, to be precise.
- Thursday, January 12, 2012



20th Century’s nightmare began in Poland in 1939

imageMichael Preisler, Auschwitz #22213: “The Germans created and operated Auschwitz as a death factory but a lot of American media call it a Polish camp, not a German camp.” Brooklyn, N.Y. … One of the 20th century’s most tragic dates was September 1, 1939 when Nazi Germany started World War II by invading Poland and plunging the world into a blood bath that lasted six long and cruel years.
- Wednesday, August 17, 2011

First Auschwitz Prisoners Were Polish Christians

imageMs. Cosby (left) is shown as she submits her application for membership in the Downstate N.Y. Division of the Polish American Congress to President Frank Milewski (right) and Andrew Kaminski, co-chair of the Children of Polish Christian Holocaust Survivors, himself the son of an Auschwitz survivor. Brooklyn N.Y… Flag Day, June 14th, is that special day intended to remind Americans they should honor their country by displaying its flag from their homes and public places. When Polish Americans raise the Stars and Stripes on Flag Day, many of them can’t help recalling what that date in 1940 symbolizes for some of their families or relatives who lived in German-occupied Poland in World War II. The occupation was not yet ten months old when Hitler and his Nazis opened the gates of Auschwitz to begin their barbaric orgy of torture and murder that was to last there for nearly five long and cruel years.
- Monday, June 20, 2011

Polish American Congress Salvages a Piece of Long Island Ethnic History

Port Washington, N.Y. … “One man’s junk is another man’s treasure.” It’s an old saying with a lot of truth in it, especially among people who deal in antiques like Chet Szarejko. Szarejko is vice president of the Downstate New York Division of the Polish American Congress and chairman of the organization’s Political Activities Committee.
- Thursday, March 10, 2011

A kick in the face for helping a Jew

imageFlushing, N.Y...It was hard to realize that the elderly and attractive Polish lady speaking at New York City's Queens College observance of International Holocaust Remembrance Day once had her face disfigured by a kick from a German SS guard while she was a prisoner in a World War II concentration camp. Wanda Wos-Lorenc was only 16 when it happened. Even to this day, she considers herself very lucky because it could have been a bullet instead of a boot. That was what so many Polish Christians who tried helping Jews were likely to get from the Germans.
- Sunday, February 27, 2011

Sponsored