Beata Obertyńska
Beata Obertyńska, who used the pseudonym Marta Rudzka, was a Polish writer and poet.
Early life and education
Beata Wolska was born 18 July 1898, near Skole, Austrian Galicia, the daughter of Young Poland poet Maryla Wolska and, an engineer and industrialist in the oil business. She was also the granddaughter of painter and sculptor, the one-time fiancee of painter Artur Grottger, who allegedly encouraged Monné to marry Młodnicki as Grottger was dying.Wolska spent her childhood and adolescence with her siblings in the family villa in Lviv, where they were home-tutored. She later passed her high school exams. In her youth she was associated with the Skamander movement.
Obertyńska studied acting at the Państwowy Instytut Sztuki Teatralnej.
Career
In 1924, Obertyńska published her first poems in Słowo Polskie then published her first collection, Pszczoły w Słoneczniku, in 1927. In the 1930s, she acted and wrote plays for local theatres.During the Soviet occupation of Lviv in July 1940, Obertyńska was arrested by the NKVD. She was imprisoned in the infamous Brygidki prison and was later moved to prisons in Kyiv, Odessa, Kharkiv, Starobielsk and finally to the Vorkutlag camp. In 1942, following the Sikorski-Mayski Agreement, she was released and joined Anders' Army, where she served as "a nurse and lieutenant in the Polish II Corps in Rome". She served through all of its campaigns in Iran, Palestine, Egypt and Italy.
In 1942, Obertyńska began writing a memoir about her experiences in the labour camps, which was published as W Domu Niewoli in 1946 under the pseudonym Marta Rudzka. The book is "one of the earliest and most important testimonies of life in Soviet labour camps", alongside the work of Polish artist Józef Czapski and Polish writer Herminia Naglerowa.
Later, she published in Polish-language publications, including Dziennik Polski, Dziennik Żołnierza, Orzeł Biały, Polska Walcząca, Ochotniczka, Wiadomości, Życie, and Przegląd Polski. She was a laureate of several literary awards, among them the award of the London-based Przegląd Powszechny and of the Lanckoroński Foundation, the award of The Polish Ex-Combatants Association, and the Jurzykowski Prize.
Personal life
Obertyńska married Józef Obertyński, a landowner. After Józef's death in 1937, Beata managed the property.After World War II, Obertyńska settled in London. Her younger sister, Aniela, married the diplomat and writer Michał Pawlikowski. They too settled in London after the war. Lela was a sought-after portrait painter and produced a portrait of Diana, Princess of Wales, as a child.
In 1980, Obertyńska collapsed on a bus in Putney High Street in London. She died on 21 May.
Major works
Poems
Pszczoły w słoneczniku Głóg przydrożny,Otawa. Wiersze dawne i nowe,Miód i piołun,Anioł w knajpie,Perły – wiersze,Wiersze wybrane Grudki kadzidła Skrząca libella- ''Liryki najpiękniejsze''
Novels and memories
Gitara i tamci Wspomnienia W domu niewoli- ''Skarb Eulenburga''