Spies in My Blood with Alex Storozynski – Two Meetings in Washington DC

First meeting:
TUESDAY, September 16 | 6:30 PM
The International Spy Museum
700 L'Enfant Plaza SW
Washington, DC 20024


Second meeting:
WEDNESDAY, September 17 @ 6:00 PM
The Kosciuszko Foundation DC
2025 O Street NW
Washington DC, 20036

The Kosciuszko Foundation Washington DC invites you to two meetings with Alex Storozynski, an author of

Spies In My Blood: Secrets of a Polish Family’s Fight Against Nazis and Communists”

First Meeting:

WHEN: TUESDAY, September 16, 2025 at 6:30 PM

WHERE: Spy Museum in Washington, DC.

700 L’Enfant Plaza SW, Washington, DC 20024

 

Info and registration: HERE

This is a FREE hybrid event (in-person and virtual)

The event at the Spy Museum is organized by the International Spy Museum in collaboration with the Embassy of the Republic of Poland and The Kosciuszko Foundation Washington DC.

 

Second Meeting:

WHEN: WEDNESDAY, September 17 at 6:00 PM 

WHERE: 2025 O Street NW. Washington DC, 20036

This is a FREE event. Refreshments will be served.

RSVP to KFDC@thekf.org

 

Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alex Storozynski was raised by soldiers, spies, and assassins. Despite his mother’s pleas to keep their secrets, he uncovered the truth when he ventured behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War.

Growing up in a family of World War II exiles in New York City, Alex and his older brother George knew that their father fought in the Allied invasion of Normandy, and that their mother was forced by the Germans to work in a Nazi slave labor camp. In 1985, after graduating from Columbia University’s Journalism School, Alex traveled to Warsaw, Poland. There, he interviewed the Communist government’s propaganda minister, Solidarity leader Lech Walesa, as well as rock stars, filmmakers, and artists. His presence drew suspicion—he was surveilled and questioned by the secret police, who labeled him an “enemy of the state.”

Back in New York, with a successful journalism career underway, Alex delved into military archives, family correspondence, and artifacts. He uncovered that in the 1930s, his paternal grandfather ran a spy ring that used chimney sweeps to gather intelligence on Russian agents involved in mass murders against Poles and Ukrainians. His father was also a spy during WWII. Additionally, Alex discovered that his maternal grandfather was a tank commander who assassinated German officers in brothels the night before battles during the Allied invasion of Italy.

When the Berlin Wall fell, easing the Soviet grip on Eastern Europe, Alex obtained secret dossiers revealing that the Communist secret police assigned him and his brother the codenames “Rocky and Nemo.” On his deathbed, George confessed that he had also been part of the family intelligence network and worked for the CIA, undertaking one of the Cold War’s most perilous missions.

This extraordinary story is detailed in the memoir, “Spies In My Blood: Secrets of a Polish Family’s Fight Against Nazis and Communists,” available on Amazon.com.

 

Please watch a trailer of the book below:

 

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