Outstanding Pole 2004 Award
Helga Kolek Pole of Year
Retired Americanization
League worker was honored at Polish Festival 2004
Helga Kolek, of Lakeland, a retired staff member of the Onondaga County Americanization League
who helped hundreds of Polish immigrants settle in Central New York, was honored as Outstanding Pole of the Year at the 50th Anniversary Polish Festival.
Kolek is a native of Niewierz, Poland. She spent her early childhood in the slave labor
camps of Germany during World War II, moving to refugee camps
after the war before emigrating to the United States in 1956.
Fluent in Polish, German, Russian and Ukrainian, Kolek mastered her English and became a nationality worker for the Americanization League in 1973, where she helped thousands of immigrants from Europe and around the world become U.S. citizens for 22 years.
Although she helped people from many countries, she has remained close to Polish expatriates in Central New York, especially those who sought political asylum here during the Solidarity uprisings about 20 years ago.
"After Poland was free, these people also brought their families, whoever they could under
the law," she said.
Kolek said she was often upset when immigrants couldn't
bring family members because of immigration regulations.
"It was a very rewarding job," she said, "sometimes very
sad."
In 1985 the Central New York Daughters of the American Revolution named her the Outstanding New Citizen, and Onondaga County Executive Nicholas Pirro proclaimed March 13 Helga
Kolek Day in 1995, when she retired.
Outstanding Pole 2008: Professor Tomasz Skwarnicki
Outstanding Pole 2007: United Polka Leauge
Outstanding Pole 2006: Dr. Mroziewicz-Janik
Outstanding Poles 2005: Walter Boruszewski & Joseph Baraniewicz
Outstanding Pole 2003: Professor Tadeusz Iwaniec
Outstanding Poles 2002: Rev. Madej & Dr. Chmielewski
Outstanding Pole 2001: Charlie Hollis
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