Franciszek Paweł Raszeja


Franciszek Paweł Raszeja was a Polish orthopaedic physician and academic teacher. The brother of activist Leon Raszeja, he was killed while visiting a patient in the Warsaw Ghetto during World War II.

Biography

Raszeja was born on April 2, 1896, in Chełmno, in the family of a postal clerk, Ignacy and Maria, née Cichoń. He attended the Chełmno Junior High School, where he made friends with Kurt Schumacher, a later SPD politician and activist.
During World War I he was conscripted into the German army, fought on the eastern front, and was taken captive and held in Tashkent. In 1918, he made his way through Finland and Sweden to Poland. He took part in the Polish-Bolshevik war as a medic. After studying medicine in Münster, Kraków and Poznań and obtaining the degree of doctor of medical sciences, Raszeja worked at the university hospital in Poznań. In 1928, he was one of the five founding members of the Polish Orthopaedic and Traumatic Society. Raszeja received his postdoctoral diploma in 1931 and became the director of an orthopaedic hospital in Swarzędz. At the same time, he headed an orthopaedic polyclinic in Poznań. Raszeja led to the reopening of the orthopaedic hospital of the Poznań University in 1935 and took over its management, an action that a year later resulted in him being awarded the title of professor. He later belonged to the Polish Academic Corporation Baltia.
In September 1939, after military actions had ceased, Raszeja worked as a doctor in Warsaw and taught at the Secret University of Warsaw. Raszeja contacted Professor Ludwik Hirszfeld, who was in the Warsaw Ghetto, and organized a blood donation campaign to help the Jewish population.

Death

On July 21, 1942 he went to an apartment in a tenement house at Chłodna Street 26 in the ghetto to take care of a patient. Raszeja was murdered in the apartment alongside with his patient Abe Gutnajer, his family, two Jewish doctors and a nurse by the Gestapo under the command of SS-Sturmbannführer Hermann Höfle.

Personal life

He married Stanisława Deniszczuk in 1923. They had two daughters: Bożena and Ewa.

Honors

His name was given to the Municipal hospital in Poznań at Mickiewicz Street, one of the streets in Warsaw, Koło district, and a neighbourhood in Chełmno.