Fotografía de autor

Antonina Żabińska (1908–1971)

Autor de Ludzie i zwierzęta

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Obras de Antonina Żabińska

Ludzie i zwierzęta (2010) 1 copia

Obras relacionadas

La casa de la buena estrella (2007) — Associated Name — 4,794 copias

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Nombre canónico
Żabińska, Antonina
Otros nombres
ŻABIŃSKA, Antonina Maria
ZABINSKA, Antonina
Fecha de nacimiento
1908-07-18
Fecha de fallecimiento
1971-03-19
Lugar de sepultura
Powązki Cemetery, Warsaw, Poland
Género
female
Nacionalidad
Poland
Lugar de fallecimiento
Warsaw, Poland
Lugares de residencia
Warsaw, Poland
Tashkent, USSR
Ocupaciones
archivist
Holocaust rescuer
children's book author
diarist
short story writer
memoirist (mostrar todos 7)
nature writer
Relaciones
Żabiński, Jan (spouse)
Organizaciones
Warsaw University of Life Sciences
Warsaw Zoo
Premios y honores
Righteous Among the Nations, Yad Vashem
Order of Polonia Restituta (Commander's Cross)
Biografía breve
Antonina Żabińska, née Erdman, spent her early years in Russia, where her father Antoni worked as a railway engineer. In 1917, when she was nine years old, both of her parents were murdered in the Bolshevik Revolution. She fled to Tashkient with her aunt, who took the young orphaned girl into her care. Later, Antonina studied piano at a music conservatory. At the age 15, Antonina arrived in Warsaw, Poland, where she studied languages, drawing, and painting. To support herself while studying for a degree in archival science, she worked as a private tutor. She then got a job at the Warsaw University of Life Sciences, where she met her future husband, Jan Żabiński, then a researcher in the Department of Zoology and Animal Physiology. He became the co-founder of the Warsaw Zoo, and served as its director from 1929 to 1939. Antonina Żabińska made her literary debut with a short story, "Pamiętnik żyrafy" (Memoirs of a Giraffe), published in Moje pisemko in 1934. Another story, "Jak białowieskie rysice zostały Warszawiankami" (How Female Lynxes from the Białowieża Forest Became Warsaw Residents) appeared in 1936 as the first part of a Nature Tales series. In 1939, she published her first book, Dżolly i S-ka (Jolly and Company); a postwar edition was subtitled Z dziejów Warszawskiego Ogrodu Zoologicznego (From the History of the Warsaw Zoo). During World War II, Antonina and Jan sheltered many Jews, including Warsaw Ghetto escapees, in the emptied animal enclosures and their private home on the Warsaw Zoo grounds. For these heroic and life-saving activities, they were named Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem in 1965. After the war, Żabińska published her children's books, Rysice (Lynxes, 1948) and Borsunio (Badger, 1964). In 1968, she released her diary/memoir of the war years, Ludzie i zwierzęta (People and Animals). In 1970, she published her last book, Nasz dom w zoo (Our House in the Zoo). In 2007, American author Diane Ackerman wrote The Zookeeper's Wife, based on the diary. It was adapted into a Hollywood film of the same name in 2017. In 2008, Antonina Żabińska was posthumously honored with the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta.

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