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All posts for the month July, 2013

Old Town Warsaw, rebuilt after WWII

Old Town Warsaw, rebuilt after WWII

The Polish capital of Warsaw is a truly inspiring place. I’m amazed to find such a vibrant city after what this place has been through.

Lunch in beautiful and inspiring Warsaw

Lunch in beautiful and inspiring Warsaw

Poland was practically ground zero in World War II. The Germans started the war here, built their most horrific concentration camps here, and subjected most of Poland to six brutal years of occupation. Poland lost more of its population (16% to 20% of the national population, depending who you ask) than any other country, including Germany (8 to 10%).

Enjoying the afternoon buzz of Old Town Square

Enjoying the afternoon buzz of Old Town Square

On August  1, 1944, as the German war effort was collapsing and the Soviet Union was moving through Poland toward Warsaw and eventually Berlin, the citizens of Warsaw rose in rebellion against their German occupants. In the first days of this Warsaw Uprising they took command of key parts of central Warsaw amid general euphoria. But over the next six weeks the Germans fought back with vastly superior weapons and resources, forcing a surrender by the brave people of Warsaw on September 23.

Monument to the Warsaw Uprising

Monument to the Warsaw Uprising

In reprisal, Heinrich Himmler ordered the complete destruction of Warsaw and the murder of every single inhabitant. German troops spent October through January systematically destroying every building in Warsaw — homes, churches, offices — with special attention to any archives or monuments of historical importance. A city of 1.3 million inhabitants in 1939 was reduced to barely 1,000 people living among rubble by 1945.

To make matters worse, Soviet troops sat just on the outskirts of Warsaw through all of this destruction, resisting please for help from their Polish “allies” in the city’s darkest hours. Stalin apparently hoped the Germans’ efforts would make the Soviet subjugation of Poland after the war a little easier. And of course, the ultimate destruction of Nazi Germany was of little consolation to the beleaguered Poles, who were then subjected to 45 years of Soviet Communist domination.

The destruction of Warsaw was so devastatingly thorough that Poles had to debate whether to move their capital after the war. But instead they committed to stay and rebuild. In parts of central Warsaw, especially the Old Town, they spend the subsequent decades rebuilding everything precisely as it appeared before the war. They painstakingly re-built blocks and blocks of apartments, shops, churches, and even the Royal Palace from pre-war photographs and historical records.

In 1989, Poland’s decades of struggle against their last oppressor, the Soviet Union, came to an end. They since joined NATO and the European Union and the modern European world. Warsaw is now a thriving capital of 1.7 million people. I wander these streets in amazement of the human spirit.

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From a moving exhibit of rare color photos of central Warsaw after the Nazi attempt to annihilate the city

Old Town Square, where every building was rebuilt exactly as before the city's total destruction

Old Town Square, where every building was rebuilt exactly as before the city’s total destruction

From Gdańsk we caught a bus to Torún, one of Poland’s oldest cities. First, though, we left later than we’d planned because the Solidarity museum had been closed on Monday, and we really wanted to see it before we left. It was totally worth it. What an amazing story of workers fighting back against incredible odds and starting a movement that quite literally changed the course of world history. While Lech Walesa has more recently proven himself to be a distinct homophobe, nothing can diminish the importance of what he – an unemployed electrician – accomplished.

A section of wall from the Lenin Shipyard, right, that started it all, and culminated in the fall of the Berlin Wall, left

A section of wall from the Lenin Shipyard, right, that started it all, and culminated in the fall of the Berlin Wall, left

Back in 1231 Teutonic Knights built a fortress here in Torún, the ruins of which were adjacent to and perhaps even a part of the hotel we stayed in. And in 1473, Nicolaus Copernicus – who developed the model that showed that the sun, not the earth, was the center of the universe – was born here. Notwithstanding the fact that he was wrong (in case you’re wondering, the sun is not the center of the universe) it was still a big deal.

Mark & I sat in a little cafe late in the afternoon, just watching people going by and drinking a glass of wine; I was amazed at our good fortune. We’d spent three days in in Gdańsk where, as Mark noted, World War II started and the Cold War started to end. All I’d known about Gdańsk three months ago was that there were shipyards there, so I would not have expected such a beautiful city. And now here we are for a day in Torún, another beautiful city. A city with so many beautiful churches, the Church of St. James Gordon, shown below, doesn’t even make the guide books, but was incredible.

Meanwhile, to make the Poland experience even better, I’m reading Heart of Europe by Norman Davies, a history of Poland that starts with Solidarity and moves backward. It’s a pretty compelling story and I’m more eager than ever to move on to Warsaw and Krakow.

One more shot of beautiful Gdańsk

One more shot of beautiful Gdansk

Torun is on the Vistula River, which connects Krakow, Warsaw, and Gdańsk, so we'll be seeing more of it

Torun is on the Vistula River, which connects Krakow, Warsaw, and Gdańsk, so we’ll be seeing more of it

Nicolaus Copernicus in the town square

Nicolaus Copernicus in the town square

Church of St. James - big and beautiful, but you have to do better than that, apparently, to make the guide books

Church of St. James – big and beautiful, but you have to do better than that, apparently, to make the guide books

Our hotel, adjacent to part of the 13th century

Our hotel, adjacent to part of the 13th century fortress

Mark was amused by a car advertising Fart Produkt, though of course I don't share that sophomoric humor

Mark was amused by a car advertising Fart Produkt, though of course I don’t share that sophomoric humor

Gdańsk offers everything we could want from an urban travel destination — beautiful scenery, dramatic history, and a short hop to the beach. Below are scenes from the central city, which has been rebuilt in all its former glory from rubble after World War II.

Długi Targ, Long Market


Glorious architectural details abound

The shadow of World War II is everywhere in Poland, but Gdańsk is where it all began. At 4:45 am on September 1, 1939, the German battleship Schleswig-Holstein began shelling the Polish guard post at Westerplatte, the entrance to the Gdańsk harbor, to begin the invasion of Poland.

The Novy Port lighthouse, which returned the first shots against the German invaders

The Novy Port lighthouse, which returned the first shots against the German invaders

Monument

Monument to the defenders of Westerplatte

It was also in Gdańsk where the half century Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe truly began to unravel as shipyard workers rebelled against rising food prices. In 1970, a riot at the Gdańsk shipyard was brutally suppressed. Ten years later, as the Solidarity movement began to take hold, a monument to those workers was built, featuring the moving words of the poet Czesław Miłosz:

You who wronged a simple man
Do not feel safe
A poet remembers
You can kill one, but another is born

Monument to the Fallen Shipyard Workers

Monument to the Fallen Shipyard Workers