ACTRESS Rula Lenska has revealed a family connection with the story of a world-famous bear adopted by Polish soldiers who came to Scotland.

The star is to outline her links to Wojtek “the soldier bear” commemorated by a statue in Edinburgh’s Princes Street Gardens today.

Wojtek was an orphan cub when rescued by young Poles in 1943 as they made their way to the Middle East after surviving the hardships of deportation to Siberia.

They hid the Syrian brown bear from their senior officers in the Free Polish Army but, when the secret was revealed, they gained permission to keep him as a mascot.

Read more: Watch - Wojtek 'reunited' with Polish soldier in memorial 

When Polish forces were deployed across Europe during the Second World War, the troops refused to leave him behind.

The Herald: Wojtek with Alan Beattie HerriotWojtek with Alan Beattie Herriot

The only way Wojtek could be transported was under an official passport, so he was duly granted an army serial number and the rank of private.

After the war, the bear lived with Polish troops based in the Scottish Borders. He was later given a home at Edinburgh Zoo.

Lenska, the former East Enders and Minder star who has Polish heritage, is said to have a poignant family connection with Wojtek’s history.

Read more: Watch - Wojtek 'reunited' with Polish soldier in memorial

A publicist for the 68-year-old said: “Although born in Cambridgeshire, her aristocratic family hail from Poland, where they owned a castle and estate in Dzików.

“Her father was a personal secretary to Józef Beck, the Minister for Foreign Affairs in pre-1939 Poland. Later he held important positions in relation to the Polish government and military missions during the Second World War.

"Her mother Countess Elzbieta Tyszkiewicz shares an equally dramatic story, escaping from Nazi-occupied Poland to Italy, then to survive two years in Ravensbrück concentration camp.”

Read more: Watch - Wojtek 'reunited' with Polish soldier in memorial

Lenska is to talk about her family’s connection to the history of Wojtek at an event which also involves Edinburgh-based financier Peter de Vink — a key fundraiser in the campaign to commemorate the bear and the Polish troops who helped Scotland during the war.

Wojtek, who reportedly carried supplies of ammunition with troops at the battle of Monte Cassino in Italy, was moved to Edinburgh Zoo in 1947 and lived there until his death in 1963.

His story has become a symbol of the Scots and Polish communities’ linked history.

Read more: Watch - Wojtek 'reunited' with Polish soldier in memorial

The Wojtek Memorial Trust raised £300,000 for a permanent tribute to the bear, with a statue by Alan Beattie Herriot, above, being unveiled last year.

The memorial, which includes a four-metre relief panel detailing six scenes from Wojtek’s life, draws visitors from all over the world.

Lenska, who appeared on Celebrity Big Brother with former MP George Galloway, is in Edinburgh to perform in Eurobeat at the Pleasance Grand.