, exhumed in 1945 on the wall of monastery In the morning of 2 August the monastery came under fire of German light
anti-aircraft guns from nearby
Mokotów Field. SS soldiers conducted a quick search but were unable to find anything confirming the allegations. Shortly afterwards, some of them left the monastery, taking with them Father Superior, Fr
Edward Kosibowicz. They claimed that father superior need to make additional explanations to their commander. In fact, Fr Kosibowicz was taken to the nearby Mokotów Field and there he was shot in the back of the head. After a while, SS men gathered all Poles in the monastery's boiler room. Next, they were called one by one by the soldiers, robbed of all precious belongings (
jewellery,
watches etc.) and finally led to the small room in the basement, which was previously occupied by a coachman employed in the monastery. When all Poles were gathered in the coachman's room, SS soldiers hurled
grenades into the crowd and opened fire with
machine pistols. In next few hours, soldiers repeatedly came back to the place of massacre and systematically executed those Poles who still gave some signs of life. According to the survivors, SS men were accompanied with a 10-year-old German boy who help them to find wounded victims. When soldiers temporarily left the basement, 14 survivors, mostly wounded and pretending to be dead among a pile of bodies, left the room. Four Jesuits and one unidentified woman hid in the monastery's kitchen (behind the stack of
firewood), while the others found shelter in the monastery's boiler room when they also met a man who had hid there prior to the massacre. Shortly afterwards SS soldiers returned to the place of massacre, doused the bodies with gasoline and set them on fire. Probably a few severely wounded victims were burnt alive. Around 40 Poles were murdered in the Jesuit monastery on Rakowiecka Street on 2 August 1944. Among them were eight priests and eight religious brothers of the Society of Jesus, at least eight women and a 10-year-old altar boy. Polish historians were able to identify 32 victims of the massacre. == Fate of survivors ==