Szczepan Bradło (died 1960) was a Polish farmer who lived in Lubcza, a village in Tarnów Voivodeship, with his wife Klara (d. 1953), daughter Franciszka and sons: Antoni, Eugeniusz and Tadeusz.
According to the Yad Vashem deposition, two Jews from Slotowa who were forced to leave their hideout at the home of a peasant named Ryba asked Bradło for shelter for themselves and their families.
[citation needed] With the aid of the Bradłos, the families created a dugout in which they spent over two years, until the end of the war.
According to the testimony of one of the survivors who, in the words of Gustavo Jalife, performed the "patient and agonizing count",[1] this amounted to 26 months, 10 days and eight hours.
All thirteen refugees survived the war, five of whom signed the deposition through which the Righteous Among the Nations title was bestowed on the Bradło family including Szczepan, Klara, their three sons and daughter Franciszka Bradło-Kozioł.