106-year-old WW2 veteran reunited with uniform weeks before death
Second World War veteran Lucas Kulczycki getting to try on his uniform one last time.
SuppliedIt was a reunion 70 years in the making for a Second World War veteran and his army uniform.
The brown leather boots and green jacket, with pockets full of photographs and memories, had been given to the Ogniwo Polish Museum Society in Winnipeg earlier in 2018.
The donation led the museum’s archivist Marta Dabros on a quest to track down the man behind the uniform.
“I started looking through the photos that were in the pockets and it showed this really rich life,” Dabros said. “He moved to Boston and Washington and it turns out he was an amazing pediatrician, specializing in cystic fibrosis.”
READ MORE: The journey of a Winnipeg 94-year-old World War II veteran
She was able to identify the veteran, Lucas Kulczycki. He was a medical officer in the Polish army before becoming a doctor and moving to Swan River, Manitoba in the early 1950s. It was there that he left his uniform behind.
The army-issued items were tucked away by Kulczycki’s friend and later discovered by his distant relatives in the northern Manitoba community.
Dabros tracked him all the way to Virgina, in his retirement home.
“Of course the right thing was to send the uniforms back to him after all these years,” Dabros said.
Dabros got in touch with Kulczycki’s daughter, Dorthy Kulczycki Schilder, to return the items to the family.
“Of course I was amazed and surprised. It’s overwhelming that someone would have preserved his uniform for so long,” she said.
Kulczycki Schilder and her husband collected the items and brought them to her father.
“We sat down and told him we had a special surprise for him. We told him it was his uniform from being in the army,” she said. “It was really heartwarming.”
READ MORE: 93-year-old WWII veteran praises No Stone Left Alone efforts: ‘They’re doing a tremendous job’
Her 106-year-old father tried on the uniform one more time.
“We put the jacket and the hat on him and it still kind of fit, it was a little snug fit,” she said. “He smiled and he seemed to have some recognition of some of the items and photos.”
Kulczycki passed away on Thursday, May 3, 2018, just weeks after being reunited with the items.
READ MORE: ‘I’m never sure I belong here’: As their numbers dwindle, older vets honour fallen friends
Kulczycki Schilder and her family decided to donate the items back to the Polish museum in Winnipeg.
“I think it would be much better to be displayed and his history along with it so we can share it with everyone and that’s what my father would like too, to share,” she said.
Kulczycki Schilder said it speaks to her father’s legacy. After moving away from Manitoba, Kulczycki became a world-renowned pediatrician.
“He went on to become one of the world experts at one time on cystic fibrosis, and a pioneer in the area of cystic fibrosis and brought that here to the United States working at the children’s hospital in Washington and then for another couple decades at Georgetown University,” Kulczycki Schilder said.
The Ogniwo Polish Museum Society at 1417 Main Street has Kulczycki’s photographs and uniform on display.
© 2018 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Editor's Picks

'Brazen union-busting': Canadian Lacrosse Association threatens to use replacement players at world championships

World News Day: These are the Canadian journalists who lost their lives while doing their job

Pollution from Canadian refineries an ‘embarrassment’ compared to U.S.

Bill Cosby conviction signals demise of sexual assault stereotypes, rise of #MeToo

Koreas pledge 'era of peace' — a look back at the 65 years it took to get here

Trans Mountain pipeline: Some of the main arguments for and against it

Comments
Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.