Zbigniew Wacław Wiśniowski - Zbigniew Wacław Wiśniowski

Romuald E Lipiński - Kirgistan 2

Edward Bator - Joining the Polish Army

Traveling south to join the Polish Army

Danuta Aleksandra (Mączka) Gradosielska - Amnesty part 1

The last families to leave the camp

Danuta Aleksandra (Mączka) Gradosielska - Amnesty part 2

Leaving the camp and heading south

Zbigniew Gondek - From Kazakhstan to the Polish Army

Going from Northern Kazakhstan to the Polish Army in the South.

Władysław Kuźma - Life in the USRR after the amnesty

Barbara (Kowalska) Kowalska - Father’s trauma

Barbara (Lenkowska) Czartoszewska - Problems escaping USSR

Zofia (Mertens) Teliga - Surviving USSR

Zofia (Mertens) Teliga - Life after the amnesty

Jan Michałowicz - Free from gulag

Helena (Lenkiewicz) Szołomicka - Amnesty

Czesław Zychowicz - Evacuation from USSR

Dorota (Klausner) Leviner - The road to Buzuluk

Dorota (Klausner) Leviner - Amnesty and first days of freedom

Janina (Szrodecka) Kwiatkowska - Problems after the amesty

Ryszard Saper - Polish Embassy in Kuybyshev

Aniela (siostra) Nowak - Evacuation

NN. Szkopiak - Evacuation

Stanisław Żurakowski - Evacutation and happiness

Stefan Waydenfeld - Amnesty and release

Anna (Slawetska) Bortnowska - Amnesty

A neighbour from Osmiana who joined the Polish Army and was on leave to look for his family, found them along with 17 people from Osmiana

Anna (Slawetska) Bortnowska - Orlenta

The Polish Army invented a formation called Orlenta in order to allow children who were too young to join Junacy a chance to also be evacuated to Persia.

Janina (Jane) Kulibaba - Polish deportees heading to southern USSR; Polish orphanage in Jangi Jul