Kira BanasińskaKira Banasińska (1899-2002) was the wife of Eugeniusz Banasiński , the first Polish Consul-General of Poland in Bombay.[1] She was a representative of the Polish Red Cross in India.[1] Kira cared for and helped in rehabilitating the lives of several thousand Polish children, women and old people who were refugees from Russia, who were accommodated during World War II [2] with local help in India.[1] Role in the Resettlement of Polish RefugeesWhile fleeing persecution in the erstwhile Soviet Union, thousands of malnourished Polish refugees had gathered on foot.[3] She led the movement in India to source relief and aid for the refugees.[4] She immediately initiated awareness campaigns and fundraisers in support of the refugees.[3] Banasińska facilitated their entry into India on supply trucks. She then worked with government officials in Maharashtra and Gujarat to develop dedicated settlements for the refugees.[1] In 1942, she convinced Jam Sahib Digvijaysinhji Ranjitsinhji Jadeja of Nawanagar to shelter and school 1000 refugee Polish children at his winter home in Jamnagar-Balachadi.[5][6][7] By 1943, she worked with the Jam Sahib to start construction for a family camp at a stretch of his land in Valivade, a quarter city of Kolhapur.[8][9][10] She helped move resources to build a large number of barracks to house over 6500 Poles. In 1945, the camp at Balachadi was closed and the children were transferred to the family camp in Valivade.[11] The city, situated 9 km away from Kolhapur, was home to 10,000 Polish refugees during 1943–1947.[12] Personal lifeIn 1944, Kira Banasińska and her husband left their jobs in India, and moved to London after the war. Two years later, Kira - reluctant to reside in communist Poland - returned to India. In 1958, the couple applied for Indian citizenship.[13] Role in Montessori Education Movement in IndiaBanasińska pioneered Montessori Education in India with help from industrialist JRD Tata.[14] DeathKira lived to the age of 102 and died in Hyderabad in 2002. She was buried beside her husband in St Peter's cemetery at Mahalakshmi.[13] Awards and recognitionin 1991, Banasińska was awarded the Order of Polonia Restituta, Poland's highest civilian order for her work on behalf of the children.[15] References
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