Anna Borkowska (actress)

Anna Borkowska (died 2008, Tehran) was a Polish war refugee who settled in Iran. She was an actress and vocal teacher.[1][2] As a child, after the Soviet invasion of Poland she was forced to leave home with some of her family members and transported to a forced labor camp in Siberia in the Soviet Union. She was one of the 120,000 Polish refugees who fled the Soviet Union with the Anders' Army after the Axis invasion in 1941. She settled in Tehran.

She is best known to international audiences for her role as the kindly elderly woman who aids a determined little girl in the quest for the perfect goldfish in Jafar Panahi's 1995 film The White Balloon.[3]

She is also the main character of Khosrow Sinai's The Lost Requiem (original title: Marsiye-ye gomshode, مرثیه گمشده, released in 1983), which is a documentary about the Poles who found refuge in Iran during World War II, after being forcibly taken to Soviet labor camps in Siberia.

She is buried in the Polish cemetery at Doulab in Tehran.

Legacy

A lecture on Borkowska, on her youth in Poland, the hardships in Soviet slavery and her life and film career in Iran was delivered by Polish specialist in Iranian studies Ivonna Nowicka in June 2019 in Warsaw. Written and photographic and unique film material from the archives of Nowicka and of researcher Alireza Doulatshahi was used.[4][5]

gollark: The closest thing would be "dado".
gollark: Routing failure of some kind, which they can't fix remotely because they cannot communicate with the routers, and which also stopped them getting into the buildings.
gollark: Angle-grind the end off or something.
gollark: Yes it does, just stick a 2TB M.2 disk into a USB enclosure.
gollark: (for earth gravity)

References

  1. "Forgotten Chapter of WWII Lies Buried in Iranian Graveyard". LA Times. November 5, 2000.
  2. Faruqi, Anwar (October 8, 2000). "History buried in Polish graves". Spartanburg Herald Journal. Spartanburg, S.C. Associated Press. p. A20. Retrieved October 14, 2019.
  3. The White Balloon review, 1-World Festival of Foreign Films Archived December 22, 2010, at WebCite
  4. "A Lecture by Ivonna Nowicka". Retrieved June 29, 2019. (pol.)
  5. "From Soviet Forced Labor Camps to Iranian Cinema. A Lecture on Anna Borkowska by Ivonna Nowicka". Retrieved June 29, 2019. (pol.)


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