The outstanding story of Wojtek the Bear, a Syrian brown bear adopted by soldiers in the Polish army during World War II. The bear, who was initially given the rank of private, eventually rose to the rank of corporal and served mainly as a morale booster for the soldiers. In the spring of 1942, the newly formed Anders’ Army left the Soviet Union for Iran, accompanied by thousands of Polish civilians who had been deported to the Soviet Union following the 1939 Soviet invasion of eastern Poland. On the journey from Pahlevi to Tehran, Iran, on 8 April 1942, Polish soldiers encountered a young Iranian boy who had found a bear cub whose mother had been shot by hunters. the young boy traded the Syrian brown bear cub in a burlap sack to members of the Polish company in exchange for a Swiss Army knife, canned beef, and chocolate. One of the civilian refugees in their midst, eighteen-year-old Irena (Inka) Bokiewicz, the great-niece of General Bolesław Wieniawa-Długoszowski, was very taken with the cub. She prompted Lieutenant Anatol Tarnowiecki to buy the young bear, which spent the next three months in a Polish refugee camp established near Tehran, principally under Irena’s care. In 1942 the 22nd Artillery Supply Company of the II Corps of the Polish army was formed in the Middle East by Polish refugees that had arrived in Iran from the Soviet Union. The In August, the bear was donated to the 2nd Transport Company, which later became the 22nd Artillery Supply Company, and he was named Wojtek by the soldiers. The name Wojtek is the nickname, diminutive form, or hypocorism of “Wojciech” (Happy Warrior), an old Slavic name still common in Poland.. A soldier named Peter Prendys became Wojtek’s caretaker. Prendys taught the bear to salute, wave, and march, and Wojtek appeared to happily perform these duties. When not training, Wojtek amused himself with the soldiers in the camp by engaging in their activities, including wrestling and boxing. In addition to double rations, the soldiers gave the bear treats, cigarettes, and beer. Despite his taste for beer, Wojtek did not seem to become intoxicated. As part of grenade practice, the soldiers lobbed oranges, which Wojtek chased. He also enjoyed riding in trucks, at first in the passenger seat when he was a cub and then in the back seat when he grew larger. One of Wojtek’s favourite activities was taking long cold showers, and he eventually learned to turn on the shower by himself. When shortages resulted from the bear’s profligate use of water, his comrades forbade him to shower alone. Nevertheless, one day Wojtek is said to have found the door to the showers open and wandered inside, where he encountered an Arab who had sneaked into the Polish camp to locate its weapons arsenal so that local dissidents might later raid it. Wojtek terrified the interloper, causing him to surrender to the Poles. As a reward, Wojtek earned himself unlimited shower time and two bottles of beer.
