TADEUSZ "TEDDY” PIETRZYKOWSKI (1917 – 1991) Born in 1917 in Warsaw, brought up in a traditional Polish family, in which patriotism and Catholic values played a great role, adamant in the realization of his sports dreams and life decisions, Tadeusz Pietrzykowski is a model for generations.
At the age of 11, he joined the scouting movement, which, as he recalled: it was first and foremost my first and most important school of life. (...) I had my first contact with gloves at a gathering. I caught the boxing bug and this skill of boxing, which I encountered in scouting, deepened in the WKS Legia sports club, exerting a decisive influence on my life. Until 1939, representing Legia, fighting under the pseudonym “Teddy”, taken from Teddy Yarosz - his boxing idol, he won the championship of Warsaw several times and the vice-championship of Eastern Poland in the bantamweight.
The outbreak of World War II interrupted a very promising boxing career. Tadeusz Pietrzykowski took part in the defense of Warsaw, then he wanted to fight for a free Poland in Polish military units forming in France. Caught during the illegal crossing of borders, he was deported in the first transport of Polish political prisoners to KL Auschwitz, where on June 14, 1940 he was given the number 77. In March 1941, he was the first boxer to fight a victorious boxing duel with a German kapo. |