Bohdan Pawłowicz

[10] In 1941, he was the Polish narrator of the documentary film Podnosimy Kotwice,[11] which can be found in its English version "Poles Weigh Anchor"[12] at the Sikorski Museum.

[13][14] From 1943 until the end of the war, he was appointed Chief of Intelligence in Brazil, officially as assistant to the Navy military attaché at the Polish Legation in Rio de Janeiro.

As he would not recognize the Soviet Communist dominance imposed on Poland after the end of World War II, he and his wife decided to stay in exile, first in Brazil and as from 1953, in the US, where they later applied for citizenship.

[1] In 1956 Pawłowicz was appointed Lublin Lecturer in Polish history and literature at Canisius College in Buffalo and as from 1957 wrote a weekly column in the Chicago published magazine Ameryka Echo.

[16] In 1961, he moved with his wife to Silver Springs, Maryland, where they worked for research offices in Washington, D.C. and where they lived until his death on May 28, 1967, in the car on his way home from a conference in New York.

Brazil),[18] short stories targeted at young people, memoirs describing his war experience, radio broadcasts, public speeches and newspaper articles.

[20] Much of his work was published in Poland, much in exile (mostly UK and US) but quite a number of writings still remain in manuscript,[21] especially his diaries, Silva Rerum or Pele Mele,[22] as he titled them, and in which, for many years, he recorded his impressions, daily life and anecdotes.