Halina Maria Auderska (3 July 1904 – 21 February 2000) was a Polish screenwriter, writer, lexicographer and politician who served as a member of Parliament of the Polish People's Republic of the 8th and 9th term..[1] The granddaughter of a Siberian exile, she was the daughter of Roman, an engineer, and Helena, née Janelli.
Initially, she was home-schooled, then studied at a Polish grammar school in Odessa named after Aleksander Jabłonowski.
She graduated in Polish philology from the University of Warsaw and studied pedagogy.
During World War II, she was a medic in Warsaw and a soldier of the Union of Armed Struggle-Home Army, codenamed Nowicka.
In 1964 she signed the letter of Polish writers protesting against the letter 34, expressing protest against the organized campaign conducted in the Western press and on the waves of the sabotage radio station Free Europe, denigration of the People's Republic of Poland.