Adolf Rudnicki

Polish author
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Quick Facts
Born:
February 19, 1912, Warsaw, Poland, Russian Empire [now in Poland]
Died:
November 14, 1990, Warsaw, Poland (aged 78)

Adolf Rudnicki (born February 19, 1912, Warsaw, Poland, Russian Empire [now in Poland]—died November 14, 1990, Warsaw, Poland) was a Polish novelist and essayist noted for his depictions of the Holocaust in Nazi-occupied Poland.

Born into a Jewish family, Rudnicki was educated in Warsaw and worked as a bank clerk. Mobilized in the Polish army in 1939, he fought in the September campaign and was taken prisoner by the Germans. He escaped and crossed to Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine), in the Soviet-occupied zone of Poland, where he contributed to Nowe widnokręgi (“New Horizons”), a communist periodical. When the Germans occupied Lwów in 1941, Rudnicki returned to Warsaw, living there under a false identity. He worked in the Resistance movement and took part in the Warsaw Uprising of 1944. After the war he settled in Łódz, joining the Marxist literary group Kuźnica (“The Forge”). Kuźnica gradually superimposed its ideology on Polish literature, which led in 1949 to the proclamation that writers must adhere to the Soviet style of Socialist Realism.

Rudnicki first appeared on the literary scene with several novels about social problems. In Szczury (1932; “Rats”) he depicted the drabness of everyday life in the sort of small provincial town where many Polish Jews lived. His novel Żołnierze (1933; “Soldiers”) is a sombre, naturalistic picture of life in an army barracks. Niekochana (1937; “Unloved”) and the novella Lato (1938; “Summer”) encouraged critics to classify him as a psychological novelist.

Rudnicki undertook to write an epic cycle of novels and short stories tentatively called Epoka pieców (“The Epoch of the Ovens”). Eventually collected in Żywe i martwe morze (1952; The Dead and the Living Sea), these works offered a moving testament to the “nation of Polish Jews” and how they died during the Holocaust. In 1953 Rudnicki began publishing weekly essays in literary periodicals, later collected in several volumes of Niebieskie kartki (1956–58; “Blue Pages”). After the anti-Semitic campaign of the communist regime in 1968, he moved to Paris.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.