Thursday, September 13, 2012

The Munich to Moscow Meander - Part I:


WHAT I SAW IN WARSAW



Friday, August 17, 2012:

As soon as I finished teaching for the day I hustled home, changed, and got my stuff together. I walked out the door with my backpack and embarked on one of the longest overland journeys I had ever taken: Munich to Moscow.

Not far from my apartment in Munich is the ZOB (Zentrale Omnibusbahn) where I boarded a coach bus in which I would spend the next 16 hours. I ate my packed dinner as we drove through the evening in the Bavarian countryside. I started my book for the trip: a 900-page Cold War spy thriller.

I got out to brush my teeth when we stopped in Nürnberg at dusk. After that, I fell asleep and when I woke up again we were already well into Poland. After another couple hours of sleep I found myself stepping off the bus in Warsaw.


View Munich to Warsaw in a larger map


  One of my favorite things is to alight from a bus, a train, or an airplane in a new country. Some things are familiar, some things are new. Your job is to decipher and discover, witness and watch as daily life goes on like normal for people you've never met in a place you've never been. Arriving at the bus station in Warsaw was no different. I made my way to my hostel and after checking in, I went off to explore the city.




Warsaw has had a rough history, but you wouldn't necessarily know it by looking around the city today.



While Warsaw hasn't always been the Polish capital, it has been an important city for half a millennium. During that time it has been a center for trade, art, and culture.




Polish cuisine might not be the most sought after or influential but the famous dumpling sure are tasty.



Some of Warsaw's sons and daughters are giants in their respective fields: Marie Curie and Nicholas Copernicus, for example. See the planets in the square orbiting Copernicus's statue?


And of course, Frédéric Chopin, the legendary composer. Though his body is interred in Paris, his heart is kept inside this church in Warsaw across from the Copernicus monument (and the KFC):





Warsaw also had a large and lively Jewish population, which flourished until the 1930's when it was completely wiped out by the Nazis. The 20th Century was not kind to Warsaw.

Memorial building in the former Jewish Ghetto:


Surprisingly, the Jewish Synagogue still remains.



Occupied by the Third Reich, Poland was not only a miserable place for the Jews, but for most Poles as well. In 1944 the Warsovians had had enough and the Warsaw Uprising began. The Russians were already in Poland and the Poles believed that the Red Army would come in and assist them in their struggle against the Germans.

The Russians, however, watched and waited as a vengeful Hitler ordered Warsaw to be razed to the ground. The uprising was defeated with nearly 90% of the city reduced to rubble and over 200,000 civilians killed. Stalin, you see, knew that a rebellious Poland would be difficult to control after "liberation" and so refrained from intervening until the resistance could be extinguished by the Germans.

One of the few prewar buildings that was neither destroyed nor rebuilt:


After the Soviets marched into the city it was easy to install a communist puppet government. It would be over 40 years before the Poles would have real freedom again. But they endured and they rebuilt. In fact, the entire old town was reconstructed based on old photographs, paintings, and surviving architectural plans.



Walking around the Old Town today, you would have no idea of the destruction that took place only a few generations before.



In the 50's Stalin gave a gift to the people of Warsaw in the form of this Socialist-Classical skyscraper (still one of the tallest buildings in the EU):


It is the Palace of Science and Culture and today houses apartments, offices, a movie theater, and event halls.

While the "Palace" has a certain imperial elegance to it, most of the structures built during the socialist era were not so pretty:



But the 90's came and Poland broke free from the disolving USSR and the Warsaw Pact. Since then they have enjoyed rapid growth and development. Modern skyscrapers are now prominent features of the Warsaw skyline.



And shopping malls with all the best stores are not hard to find.



The Old Town thrives like in any other major European city.


There are jazz concerts.



Street performers.



Cool graffiti.


(this was actually outside the Chopin Music Conservatory. It was fun to stand outside the windows and play "Name That Tune" while listening to students practice.)

Churches, bridges, balloons, and stadiums.


Tourists.



Polish patriots are memorialized.


The night is alive with a festive atmosphere.



And where there was once horror and hell there is now peace.


I started this blog post on Sept. 11 and I guess that is somewhat appropriate. It's a day of loss for my country and for my family, but as my visit to Warsaw reminded me, no matter the loss and sorrow of the past there is always the hope of renewal, rebuilding, resurrection, and real peace.



....Oh yeah, and there is sour rye soup with a Polish sausage and a horseradish egg and glass of fruit compote to top off a great day in a great city.



...




1 Deep thoughts:

Tom and Tami September 21, 2012 5:40 AM  

Good to hear of your adventures again. I've missed them.

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