In 1931, his father, a tax inspector, was transferred to Szczuczyn Nowogrodzki, in what is now the Belarus Republic, and the whole family moved there.
On 13 April 1940, Przeniczka and his sisters were also deported to northern Kazachstan, where they were settled on the collective farm at Krywoszczoki.
In August 1941, after the signing of the Sikorski–Mayski agreement, Przeniczka was allowed to leave the collective farm and join the Polish Armed Forces, being organised in the Soviet Union by General Anders.
Housed in a tent, and despite temperatures of minus 40 degrees, Przeniczka began his military training.
In July he left the Soviet Union via the port of Krasnovodsk, arriving in Pahlevi in Iran.
Believing he was working for an Allied victory and an independent post-war Poland, he fought on the rivers Volturno and Rapido.
After the end of the war, Przeniczka's Division remained in Italy, where he continued his secondary education in Alessano, completing the lower level of the Bacalaureat, whilst at the same time, in May and June 1946, attending an M3 Battery artillery course with the 10th Wolyn Fusiliers Battalion.
For over fifty years Przeniczka was a permanent member, and from 1985 to 2015 he served as treasurer and chief accountant.