
In September 1943, 17-year-old Stanisław Zalewski was arrested in Warsaw as a member of a Polish resistance group and taken to the Auschwitz-Birkenau extermination camp for labour service. From there, he was sent to Mauthausen and finally to the Gusen camp, where the prisoners were forced to work for the German armaments industry under inhumane conditions. For a long time, Stanisław Zalewski, like many other victims of Nazi terror, remained silent about his painful experiences. It was only after forty years that he began to talk about it, at events, memorial services, and in schools, and he continues to do so to this day, even at the age of 99. Now, for the first time, he tells his stirring life story in a film as a deeply impressive ‘ambassador of remembrance’.

Stanislaw Zalewski
Self

Challenging Churchill

Voices of Auschwitz

The Man Who Made Angels Fly

En enkel till Manila

8000 Stolen Futures: The Children at the Center of the A-Bomb

The American St. Nick

Heart Mountain: Three Years in a Relocation Center

Tanforan: Race Track to Assembly Center

Les Lycéens, le Traître et les Nazis

The Orphan’s Kaddish

Finest Hour: The Battle of Britain

Storm Front in Mayo

Besa: The Promise

The Last Musician of Auschwitz

Sous nos yeux

Eva: A-7063

Timber Front

People of Russia

Lancaster

The Unknown Woman