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About school

The facility is located in a town of about 700 people. It is attended by students from 11 towns: Rakoszyce, Kulin, Kryniczno, Jugowiec, Wojczyce, Gozdawa, Budziszów, Ramułtowice, Sikorzyce, Świdnica Poland, and the Czech Republic. The school consists of grades 1-8 of primary school, a kindergarten section and a kindergarten point; a total of 267 students. Children learn for the first shift. The teaching staff consists of 24 full-time teachers and 6 part-time teachers.

The school's base consists of 2 buildings, a gymnasium, an asphalt pitch, a pitch with an artificial surface, a playground, and green recreational areas. The school is equipped with a spacious, modern computer lab with Internet access; 14 classrooms, including a language room, 2 rooms for pre-school education; a library, spacious school corridors. The rooms are renovated and well-equipped. The facility has 6 interactive boards, 3 projectors with a screen, there is a computer in almost every classroom.

The school offers physical education classes in the swimming pool, to which children are transported approx. 10 km; care of a pedagogue, psychologist and nurse; care in the day-room from 7.00-15.00; possibility of using a hot meal in the form of soup, consumption of milk, fruit and vegetables. The facility is monitored, the school has a "Safe School" certificate. An electronic journal has been operating in the school since last year. The school offers learning English and German.

From the 2017/2018 school year, the school is called Szkoła Primary im. Sybiraków in Rakoszyce, previously it was the School Complex.

THE PATRON OF THE PRIMARY SCHOOL IN RAKOSZYCE ARE SYBIRATES.

History of Siberians.

After the Soviet aggression against Poland on September 17, 1939, the Soviet invader used ruthless terror against Polish society in order to force submission, prevent attempts at resistance and gain absolute obedience. Among the many repressions committed by the Soviets against Polish citizens, there were also four mass deportations of Polish citizens into the USSR carried out in 1940–1941. The first deportation affected families of military and civilian settlers as well as forest service workers. It took place on the night of February 9-10, 1940. The second deportation took place on April 13, 1940, and as a result mainly the families of people held in prison camps, as well as those imprisoned and arrested. The third round of deportations took place on June 29, 1940 and mainly affected refugees from the German occupation, the so-called "Currents". The fourth deportation took place in May and June 1941. The members of the underground and their relatives, the families of those who were shot, arrested for "counter-revolutionary" activities, or those who were hiding or escaped under German occupation, were mainly deported to the deportation.

Those sentenced to deportation usually had only one hour to take the most necessary things for their journey into the unknown. The ordeal of traveling to Soviet labor camps in terrible conditions awaited them. In the remote regions of the Soviet Union, almost 2 million Polish citizens were seized, almost all their property was stolen. People detached from their roots, who did not understand the hostility that touched them, found it difficult to endure the harsh conditions of their stay in Siberia. Transport in cattle cars, hunger, difficult living conditions, hard backbreaking work, physical and mental repressions decimated those sent to many camps. Every third exile did not return to the country, he gave his life on inhuman soil.

School Anthem - "March of the Siberians"

Words: Marian Jonkajtys

Music: Czesław Majewski

From borderland towns, eastern settlements and villages,

From mansions, white mansions and cottages

We were still going to Independence,

They walked stubbornly for over two hundred years!

The tsarist executioners lengthened their way,

The shortest route led through Siberia

And the Confederates walked in chains

I could mark the Polish route ...

In the Kościuszko Uprising, two uprisings

Schools and barricades of Warsaw and Łódź

Konradowski was floating in spirit

And he led us in the march to Poland.

And we walked and walked - decimated

Through the taiga, steppes - a tangle of roads

And we walked and walked - undefeated

Until "Miracle on the Vistula" was given to us by God!

From borderland towns, eastern settlements and villages,

Schools, offices and townhouses and huts:

We were going to Independence again

Like from the partitions from twenty years ago.

Because from September, from the seventeenth

Each of us again went the longer:

Through the ice from the North Pole

Through Łubianka, through the Katyn Forest!

On the Inhuman Land, the Polish road again,

Designated nameless crosses ...

The red executioner did not stop us,

Because Poland is ahead of us - getting closer!

And we walked and walked - decimated

Although the enemy wanted to divide us by treason ...

And we went through Ludowa - undefeated

God deigned to return to Free Poland !!!

Hymn SybirakówMarian Jonkajtys, Czesław Majewski
00:00 / 03:54
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