Disappearance of Henry Borynski

Last updated

Henry Borynski
Born(1910-10-08)8 October 1910
Poland
Disappeared13 July 1953 (aged 42)
Bradford, Yorkshire, England
Status Missing for 71 years, 3 months and 15 days
Alma mater University of Kraków
OccupationChaplain

Henry Borynski (born 8 October 1910) [1] was a Polish priest who served as Roman Catholic chaplain to the Polish community in Bradford in Yorkshire. He was last seen on 13 July 1953, and his sudden disappearance remains unsolved.

Contents

Background

Henry Borynski was born in a small village outside Kraków to humble origins. [1] He won a scholarship to the grammar school at Oswiecim. [1] He received a degree in theology from the University of Kraków. [1]

Borynski was ordained as a Catholic priest in 1938. [1] He escaped from German-occupied Poland in 1940. He became chaplain and teacher of religion at the Polish Grammar School in Diddington. [1]

Borynski was appointed chaplain to the Polish community of Bradford in Yorkshire from October 1952. [2] With around 1,500 Polish refugees from Communism in Bradford, it was the largest Polish emigre community in the North of England. [3] Borynski was known for the anti-communist nature of his sermons. [4] By all accounts, Borynski was well-liked and respected by all those he came into contact with. [4]

Borynski replaced Canon Boleslaw Martynellis as priest to the Bradford Polish community. [5] Martynellis claimed to have retired from his post for health reasons. [6] Martynellis had actually been removed from his post following complaints that he kept a mistress that he described as his "niece". [7] Martynellis entered into semi-retirement, but remained in Bradford and continued to perform Mass for the small local Lithuanian community. [3]

Borynski was one of several Yorkshire-based Polish chaplains who led protests in October 1952 against the activities of Soviet agents in the Bradford area. [3] It was rumoured that officials from the Soviet Embassy in London had visited refugees' homes after dark, pressuring them to return to Eastern Europe. Refugees had also received letters pressuring them to return to their own countries. [3]

The night of the disappearance

Borynski received two telephone calls on 13 July 1953. [8] Following the first telephone call, he visited Canon Martynellis. Martynellis later told reporters that Borynski had come to see him because he said he had received a telephone call from someone purporting to be speaking on his behalf. Martynellis had not phoned him, nor had authorised anyone to make the telephone call. [8]

Later in the evening, Borynski received a second telephone call from a man speaking Polish. [8] Borynski was heard by his Polish housekeeper to speak in short, clipped sentences during the call, different from his normal cheerful disposition. Borynski reportedly said "All right, I go". Borynski was not normally secretive, but he was reported to have taken the call in a low voice, with his hand cupped around the mouthpiece. [5] He left his lodgings at Little Horton Lane hurriedly, wearing an overcoat and hat, which he rarely did on a summer's evening. Borynski left his wallet and personal papers at the house, and had 10 shillings on his person. [8]

Borynski was last seen outside the entrance to St Luke's Hospital in Bradford, just a few hundred yards from his home on Little Horton Lane. [6] He told one Karol Wojciechowski, who started to engage him in conversation, that he didn't have much time and that he was going to "play detective".

Investigation

Borynski's disappearance was not reported until two days after he was last seen. [6] Bradford Police received assistance in the investigation from Scotland Yard and MI5. [6]

British police were alerted to look for Borynski, though they deemed it unlikely that he had been kidnapped; he was described as 6 ft (180 cm) tall, and weighed 14 stone (200 lb; 89 kg). [8] Police found no evidence to indicate that Borynski had left Britain. [9] Police confirmed that there was no evidence that Borynski had been a victim of a Russian assassin. [10]

Police ultimately came to the conclusion that Borynski's disappearance was not voluntary, but were unable to determine his whereabouts. [11]

An MI5 report disparaged the lead investigator of the case for Bradford police, Superintendent Thomas Rushworth, who was described as, "physically on the eve of retirement, and mentally somewhat beyond it". [12]

Canon Martynellis

Police described Martynellis as the "main pivot" and the "focus" of their enquiry regarding Borynski's disappearance, and searched his home three times. [13] [14] The MI5 investigation regarded Martynellis as a man with "a dubious reputation", and suggested possible complicity in Borynski's disappearance between Martynellis and Polish intelligence services. [12]

A police report described Martynellis as a "shifty, untrustworthy individual ... who would stop at nothing to gain his own ends". [7] Leaders of the Polish community in Bradford considered Martynellis responsible for the murder of Borynski. [12]

Martynellis was found to have purchased 60 lbs of caustic soda in the fortnight preceding Borynski's disappearance. [12]

A month after Borynski's disappearance Martynellis was found collapsed at his home. [14] Martynellis claimed that he had been visited by two men who ordered him to 'keep quiet priest'. [14] Martynellis had no external injuries, and police declined to confirm that he had been attacked, but confirmed that they were not searching for an assailant. [14] Martynellis later claimed the attack could have been an hallucination, aggravated by the trauma he had suffered in a Russian gulag during the Second World War. [6]

Martynellis died from a heart attack in 1955. [15]

Theories

In 1962 it was reported that assassin Bogdan Staschynski had claimed that he had killed Borynski with a cyanide injection in a case of mistaken identity. [11] It was claimed that he buried the body on Ilkley Moor. [11] West German police, who held Staschynski in custody at the time, dismissed the report as a fabrication. [11]

Bob Taylor, a retired British police detective, claimed on a 2003 edition of the BBC's Inside Out programme that Borynski was murdered by the Polish Secret Police. [16] Taylor claimed that Martynellis was involved with Polish agents in arranging Borynski's abduction, saying that "Martynellis may have been told that this was the way to keep his old job and that he did not realise what he was getting involved in until it was too late". [15] [16] Taylor claimed that Catholic officials "knew more than they disclosed to police in Bradford at the time". [15]

It was also suggested that Borynski was murdered by an overzealous member of Martynellis' congregation, who wished to see the priest reinstated. [5] This was the theory favoured by the Bradford police. [12]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Peter Sutcliffe</span> English serial killer (1946–2020)

Peter William Sutcliffe, also known as Peter Coonan, was an English serial killer who was convicted of murdering thirteen women and attempting to murder seven others between 1975 and 1980. He was dubbed in press reports as the Yorkshire Ripper, an allusion to the Victorian serial killer Jack the Ripper. He was sentenced to twenty concurrent sentences of life imprisonment, which were converted to a whole life order in 2010. Two of Sutcliffe's murders took place in Manchester; all the others were in West Yorkshire. Criminal psychologist David Holmes characterised Sutcliffe as being an "extremely callous, sexually sadistic serial killer."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Disappearance of Suzy Lamplugh</span> 1986 disappearance of woman in London

Susannah Jane Lamplugh was a British estate agent reported missing on 28 July 1986 in Fulham, London, England, United Kingdom. She was officially declared dead, presumed murdered, in 1993. The last clue to Lamplugh's whereabouts was an appointment to show a house in Shorrolds Road to someone she called Mr. Kipper. The case remains unsolved with Lamplugh still missing, and is considered the world's biggest-ever missing person’s inquiry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claudy bombing</span> 1972 IRA attack in Northern Ireland

The Claudy bombing occurred on 31 July 1972, when three car bombs exploded mid-morning, two on Main Street and one on Church Street in Claudy in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. The attack killed nine civilians, injured thirty and became known as "Bloody Monday". Those who planted the bombs had attempted to send a warning before the explosions took place. The warning was delayed, however, because the telephones were out of order due to an earlier bomb attack. The Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) issued an immediate denial of responsibility, and later stated that "an internal court of inquiry" had found that its local unit did not carry out the attack. On the thirtieth anniversary of the bombing, there was a review of the case and in December 2002 it was revealed that the IRA had been responsible for the bomb explosions.

In the United States on May 11, 2006, retired Roman Catholic priest Gerald Robinson was convicted of the murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl (1908–1980), a Sister of Mercy, a Catholic religious order of women on Holy Saturday, April 5, 1980. Robinson repeatedly appealed, but without success. On July 4, 2014, Robinson died in prison.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Hannah Williams</span> Schoolgirl murdered in London, England

On 21 April 2001, Hannah Williams, a 14-year-old English schoolgirl was murdered after going missing during a shopping trip in Dartford, Kent. Williams's body was discovered on 15 March 2002 at a cement works in an industrial area of Northfleet.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kyllikki Saari</span> Finnish murder victim

Auli Kyllikki Saari was a 17-year-old Finnish girl whose murder in 1953 became one of the most infamous cases of homicide in Finland's history. Her murder in Isojoki remains unsolved.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lionel Crabb</span> Royal Navy frogman and MI6 diver

Lieutenant-Commander Lionel Kenneth Phillip Crabb,, known as Buster Crabb, was a Royal Navy frogman and diver who vanished during a reconnaissance mission for MI6 around a Soviet Union cruiser berthed at Portsmouth Dockyard in 1956.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski</span> Polish Armenian Catholic priest and author (1956–2024)

Tadeusz Bohdan Isakowicz-Zaleski was a Polish Roman Catholic and Armenian Catholic priest, author and activist. He was a leader of the anticommunist student opposition in Kraków in the late 1970s, became a Solidarity chaplain in Kraków's Nowa Huta district in the 1980s, and later an avid supporter of the lustration of the Polish Church. On 3 May 2006, he was awarded the Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, one of Poland's highest orders. Subsequently, in 2007, he was awarded the Order of the Smile and the Polish Ombudsman's Order of Paweł Włodkowic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Disappearance of Claudia Lawrence</span> Unsolved 2009 disappearance of 35-year-old woman from York, England

Claudia Elizabeth Lawrence is an English woman who was last seen and heard from on 18 March 2009. She was employed as a chef at the University of York's Goodricke College at the time of her disappearance. Although the police have treated Lawrence's case as that of murder, with various people arrested but later released, her fate is unclear.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Lindsay Rimer</span> 1994 British unsolved murder

Lindsay Jo Rimer was a 13-year-old British girl from Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire who disappeared on the evening of 7 November 1994. The following year, her body was found in the Rochdale Canal outside the town; she had been strangled.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Sian O'Callaghan</span> 2011 murder in the United Kingdom

Sian Emma O'Callaghan was a 22-year-old British woman who disappeared from Swindon, Wiltshire, England, having last been seen at a nightclub in the town in the early hours of 19 March 2011. Her body was found on 24 March near Uffington in Oxfordshire. On 19 October 2012, at Bristol Crown Court, 48-year-old Christopher Halliwell pleaded guilty to O'Callaghan's murder.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Disappearance of Charlene Downes</span> 2003 disappearance in England

Charlene Elizabeth Caroline Downes disappeared on 1 November 2003, when she was 14, from her home town of Blackpool, a seaside town in north-west England. Downes was last seen in an area of the town centre that contained several takeaway and fast-food units. Lancashire Constabulary, the police force investigating her disappearance, believe that she was murdered within hours of the last sighting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Murder of Zebb Quinn</span> Disappearance and murder of an American in 2000

Zebb Wayne Quinn was an American teenager who went missing in Asheville, North Carolina. Quinn was 18 years old and working at a local Walmart when he disappeared after finishing his shift. His car was discovered several days later in a restaurant parking lot under unusual circumstances: its headlights had been left on, a live puppy had been left inside, and a drawing of a pair of lips and an exclamation point had been scrawled in pink lipstick on the back window.

Margaret Perry was a 26-year-old woman from Portadown, County Armagh, Northern Ireland who was abducted on 21 June 1991. After a tip from the IRA, her body was found buried across the border in a field in Mullaghmore, County Sligo, Ireland, on 30 June 1992. She had been beaten to death. Her murder has never been solved.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Disappearance of Evelyn Hartley</span> Unsolved 1953 missing-person case

Evelyn Grace Hartley was an American teenager who mysteriously disappeared on October 24, 1953, from La Crosse County, Wisconsin. Her disappearance sparked a search involving 2,000 people. In the first year following her disappearance, investigators questioned more than 3,500 people.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Death of Samia Shahid</span> Suspected honour killing in Punjab, Pakistan

On 20 July 2016, Samia Shahid, a 28-year-old British Pakistani woman, was found dead in Punjab, Pakistan. Although involved in a dispute with her family, she had travelled to Pakistan alone as she had been told that her father was critically ill. Relatives claimed that she had died of natural causes, whereas her husband, Syed Mukhtar Kazim, believed that she had been murdered in a so-called "honour killing"; an autopsy and forensic examination concluded that she had been raped and strangled.

Anthony Joseph Maskell was an American Catholic priest who was removed from the ministry in 1994 because of sexual abuse toward students in many schools within the Baltimore Archdiocese including Archbishop Keough High School between 1969 and 1975. He served the Archdiocese of Baltimore as a counselor from 1965 to 1994. The Netflix documentary series The Keepers alleges Maskell's involvement in the murder of Catherine Cesnik in 1969, after a former Keough student and abuse victim, Jean Hargadon Wehner, claimed he showed her Cesnik's body to threaten Wehner into silence. Maskell denied all accusations until his death in 2001.

Ruth Wilson is a British missing person. She is from Betchworth, near Dorking in Surrey, England and disappeared in Box Hill on 27 November 1995. Her whereabouts are unknown.

The 1980s Franciscan priest murders refers to the mysterious disappearances and murders of two Catholic priests, one of whom was a Franciscan, in the western United States between 1982 and 1984. On August 5, 1982, Father Reynaldo Rivera, a priest at the Cathedral Basilica of St. Francis in Santa Fe, New Mexico, was murdered in an unknown location and his body found three days later. A year and a half later, on July 20, 1984, Father John Kerrigan, a diocesan priest in the Diocese of Helena and assigned to the Sacred Heart Catholic Church in Ronan, Montana, disappeared after leaving a bakery.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Disappearance of Don Banfield</span> 2001 British disappearance case

Donald Banfield was a British man who disappeared from his home in Harrow, London in suspicious circumstances on 11 May 2001. His case is notable for being a rare case in which a murder conviction was secured without a body, and for this conviction being subsequently quashed on the grounds that a joint enterprise conviction in such a case where no body was found was not viable, though the defence themselves remarked that the "likelihood" was that "one or other" of the two suspects in the case had murdered him.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Aldred, Donald (21 August 1953). "The vanished priest". Yorkshire Observer.
  2. "Matchsticks Spell Warning to Priest". The Daily Telegraph. London. 10 August 1953.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Missing Priest's Friend Dies". The Catholic Herald. 7 October 1955. Archived from the original on 20 June 2013. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  4. 1 2 Aldred, Donald (26 August 1953). "The vanished priest". Yorkshire Observer.
  5. 1 2 3 Baker, Peter (28 August 1953). "Where is this priest?". Daily Mirror.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Aldred, Donald (19 August 1953). "The vanished priest". Yorkshire Observer.
  7. 1 2 Norton, Thomas (27 October 2012). "Strange case of the vanishing priest". The Tablet. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 "Kidnapping of Priest Feared". The Sunday Herald. 19 July 1953. Retrieved 3 June 2013.
  9. "Fr. Borynski: No news". Catholic Herald. 31 July 1953. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  10. "Alleged executioners in Soviet spy rings". The Yorkshire Post. No. 33, 458. 21 March 1955.
  11. 1 2 3 4 "'I MURDERED PRIEST' STORY IS DENIED". Catholic Herald. 2 November 1962. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 "Records of the Security Service". National Archives. Retrieved 7 September 2020.
  13. "50 Police Heads Confer over Priest". The Daily Telegraph. London. 12 August 1953.
  14. 1 2 3 4 "Polish Canon tells of attack by two men". Yorkshire Observer. No. 27, 942. 10 August 1953.
  15. 1 2 3 "Fresh claims in unsolved Bradford murder". BBC News. 27 January 2003. Retrieved 6 June 2013.
  16. 1 2 "Riddle of Polish priest's disappearance". BBC News. 27 January 2003. Retrieved 2 June 2013.