logo
Below Warsaw's modern surface, a dark past haunts its tourists

Below Warsaw's modern surface, a dark past haunts its tourists

Yahoo28-05-2025

"You can ignore history and just look at Warsaw as a modern city. But if you are curious, then you can find something on every corner." The words are from Witold Wrzosinski, director of the Jewish Cemetery on Okopowa Street in the Polish capital.
The Warsaw native, who oversees the 33-hectare last resting place for the city's Jews, is spot-on when talking about the 1806-founded cemetery, but also about the city as a whole. Anyone who visits the Polish capital who does not come away with learning something of its rich and often tragic history must be walking the streets with blinkers on.
Then, Warsaw looks like a chic and modern metropolis: The architecture is appealing, the underground stations are stylish and sometimes so clean that they almost seem sterile. There are many parks to retreat from the hustle and bustle of city life, including the centrally located Łazienki Park, which is the largest. Along the Vistula River, which divides Warsaw's old town from districts such as Praga - now the centre of the city's artistic scene - people like to walk the promenade on warm evenings.
The history begins at the Palace of Culture, a monumental building that is impossible to overlook and was erected at Soviet dictator Josef Stalin's behest in the 1950s. At almost 240 metres, it is still one of the tallest buildings in Poland. Once seen as a symbol of communist oppression, Warsaw's residents have now made their peace with the "Stalin syringe" - a reference to the edifice's sharp-shaped spire. It is now home to museums and cinemas, among other things. A travel tip: Take the lift up the spire for a panoramic view of the city and Vistula River.
Recalling uprisings
The Centrum Nauki Kopernik, the science centre and museum named after Medieval astronomer Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543), is also located on the banks of the Vistula. Copernicus, who was born in the north-central city of Torun, is considered one of the country's most important scientists. In the neighbourhood, you will discover the former power station Elektrownia Powiśle, a factory building that now houses modern restaurants, cafés and shops.
But there is more to Elektrownia Powiśle than just industrial history. The plant was a focal point of the Warsaw Uprising of the Polish Home Army against the German occupation in the autumn of 1944, where workers tried to supply the city with energy during the fighting.
The Nazis put down the uprising and then answered it with brutality. On the orders of Nazi SS and Gestapo chief Heinrich Himmler, the occupiers bombarded the entire city centre. Photographs of this period can now be seen in the Warsaw Uprising Museum and in Polin, a museum devoted to the more than 1,000-year history of Jewish life in Poland. The museum is also dedicated to remembering the Holocaust.
It was between mid-April and mid-May 1943 that what remained of Warsaw's Jewish population launched an uprising in the Warsaw Ghetto against the Nazis. It was the biggest Jewish act of resistance during the Holocaust, and it also ended in tragedy. Cast-iron plates embedded at 22 points in the street surface mark the external boundaries of the erstwhile ghetto.
The rebuilt historic old city centre
To the west of the Vistula, where the historic centre, royal palace and ghetto were located, not one stone was left standing at the end of the war. However, as early as 1945, the people of Warsaw set up an office for the reconstruction of the capital. They wanted to rebuild everything as faithfully as possible. Warsaw's Old Town, a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1980, is recognised worldwide as the most famous example of a reconstructed city.
The memorial to the heroes of the Warsaw ghetto uprising at the Polin Museum is also of great interest to history-conscious travellers: It was here that on December 7, 1970 then-West German chancellor Willy Brandt knelt down in a historic gesture of Germany's expression of remorse for the wartime crimes committed against Poland.
One of the most important memorials in Warsaw is also the "Umschlagplatz" - transshipment centre - near the Warsaw Ghetto. There, the Nazis rounded up and then deported some 250,000 Jews to the Treblinka extermination camp 100 kilometres to the north-east.
The Jewish cemetery, which was once part of the ghetto border, was spared from the bombs. And so, with its sometimes monumental burial artefacts, to cemetery director Wrzosinski it is a testimony to how generations of Jews lived in Warsaw.
Today, 60 people are working on the huge cemetery grounds, including 30 archaeologists who are unearthing buried jewellery and porcelain, but also rifles and cartridges from the time of the Jewish resistance. "We all know how they died," Wrzosinski said of the country's Jews. "But let us here show how they lived."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Panama's president appeals to a higher power as nearly 2 months of protests roil nation

time4 hours ago

Panama's president appeals to a higher power as nearly 2 months of protests roil nation

PANAMA CITY -- Panama's José Raúl Mulino appealed to a higher power on Friday, calling in an archbishop and a rabbi to deliver a message to striking banana workers after nearly two months of social protest that have roiled the country. Mulino has said he won't reverse controversial changes to Panama's social security system, courts have deemed the strike illegal and top banana Chiquita Brands fired nearly 5,000 striking workers last month in Panama's western Bocas del Toro province. But nothing has stopped the protests. So at his weekly news briefing Friday, Mulino said he had met with Archbishop José Domingo Ulloa and one of Panama's leading Jewish figures, Rabbi Gustavo Kraselnik, to enlist them as intermediaries. He gave Ulloa a personal letter to bring to Francisco Smith, leader of the striking banana workers' union. In the letter, Mulino said, he committed to send proposed legislation to the Congress that would be favorable for the country's banana sector, above all its workers. But he conditioned the proposal on former workers lifting their protest. There was precedent for the maneuver. In 2022, Ulloa brokered a dialogue that eased protests over the high cost of fuel and food. In 2018, Ulloa mediated a dispute between parts of the government. Smith, secretary general of the Banana Industry Workers Union, had said earlier Friday before Mulino's announcement that he was open to dialogue. Union leaders planned to travel to the capital Monday to meet with the president of the National Assembly and present a list of demands. He insisted, however, that changes be made to the social security reform. Smith, who has led the protest in western Bocas del Toro province, has said the social security reform passed in March threatens the special privileges laid out for banana workers in another law, covering things like subsidies and labor protections. The impact has been acute. Chiquita Brands said last month they had lost at least $75 million before announcing a temporary halt to their operations in Panama. Demonstrations have not been limited to the banana workers, to Bocas del Toro or even to the social security changes. At various times teachers, construction workers and students have protested as well. Authorities have said they'll withhold the pay of 15,000 treachers for their strike. On Thursday, border police clashed with protesters who had blocked a highway in eastern Darien province, leaving injured on both sides. In addition to the social security changes, demonstrators have protested a security agreement giving U.S. troops access to some Panamanian facilities and efforts to reopen a massive copper mine.

Panama's president appeals to a higher power as nearly 2 months of protests roil nation
Panama's president appeals to a higher power as nearly 2 months of protests roil nation

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Panama's president appeals to a higher power as nearly 2 months of protests roil nation

PANAMA CITY (AP) — Panama's José Raúl Mulino appealed to a higher power on Friday, calling in an archbishop and a rabbi to deliver a message to striking banana workers after nearly two months of social protest that have roiled the country. Mulino has said he won't reverse controversial changes to Panama's social security system, courts have deemed the strike illegal and top banana Chiquita Brands fired nearly 5,000 striking workers last month in Panama's western Bocas del Toro province. But nothing has stopped the protests. So at his weekly news briefing Friday, Mulino said he had met with Archbishop José Domingo Ulloa and one of Panama's leading Jewish figures, Rabbi Gustavo Kraselnik, to enlist them as intermediaries. He gave Ulloa a personal letter to bring to Francisco Smith, leader of the striking banana workers' union. In the letter, Mulino said, he committed to send proposed legislation to the Congress that would be favorable for the country's banana sector, above all its workers. But he conditioned the proposal on former workers lifting their protest. There was precedent for the maneuver. In 2022, Ulloa brokered a dialogue that eased protests over the high cost of fuel and food. In 2018, Ulloa mediated a dispute between parts of the government. Smith, secretary general of the Banana Industry Workers Union, had said earlier Friday before Mulino's announcement that he was open to dialogue. Union leaders planned to travel to the capital Monday to meet with the president of the National Assembly and present a list of demands. He insisted, however, that changes be made to the social security reform. Smith, who has led the protest in western Bocas del Toro province, has said the social security reform passed in March threatens the special privileges laid out for banana workers in another law, covering things like subsidies and labor protections. The impact has been acute. Chiquita Brands said last month they had lost at least $75 million before announcing a temporary halt to their operations in Panama. Demonstrations have not been limited to the banana workers, to Bocas del Toro or even to the social security changes. At various times teachers, construction workers and students have protested as well. Authorities have said they'll withhold the pay of 15,000 treachers for their strike. On Thursday, border police clashed with protesters who had blocked a highway in eastern Darien province, leaving injured on both sides. In addition to the social security changes, demonstrators have protested a security agreement giving U.S. troops access to some Panamanian facilities and efforts to reopen a massive copper mine. Alma Solís, The Associated Press

Mayor Karen Bass Addresses L.A. Security Concerns After Spate of Antisemitic Attacks
Mayor Karen Bass Addresses L.A. Security Concerns After Spate of Antisemitic Attacks

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Mayor Karen Bass Addresses L.A. Security Concerns After Spate of Antisemitic Attacks

Mayor Karen Bass Addresses L.A. Security Concerns After Spate of Antisemitic Attacks originally appeared on L.A. Mag. The LAPD has increased its presence near Jewish synagogues, schools, organizations, and neighborhoods and near community gathering spots, among them the Israeli Consulate, the Holocaust Museum, and the Museum of Tolerance, city officials said. The uptick was sparked by what Mayor Karen Bass said was the "horrific antisemitic attacks that happened in Washington, D.C. and Boulder, Colorado over the last two weeks have sent shockwaves across the country." Bass was referencing two anti-Semitic incidents in two weeks. In one, a young Jewish couple were gunned down outside the Lillian & Albert Small Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. by a shooter who screeched: "Free Palestine" and "I did it for Gaza," as he was taken into custody. On Sunday, another man - who was in the country illegally - hurled Molotov cocktails at a peaceful gathering in Boulder, Colorado, to recognize Israeli hostages in Gaza while yelling: "Free Palestine." He set fire to several people during the attack, including an 88-year-old Holocaust survivor. But there have been other acts of violence that have raised alarms, including the firebombing of Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's home in April, hours after the governor and his family hosted more than two dozen people to celebrate the first night of Passover. The suspected arsonist picked Shapiro because of "what he wants to do to the Palestinian people," according to police records. A report released by the Anti-Defamation League last month notes a startling uptick in violence against Jews since Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023. The 12-month total tally for 2024 averaged more than 25 incidents a day across the nation. Israel's response to the Oct. 7 attacks has also raised international alarms as the world watches the suffering that has come in the form of collateral damage that has been inflicted on the Palestinian people. That topic was being discussed last October when the former Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Brian Williams, who was appointed by Bass, called a bomb threat into City Hall, according to federal proseuctors. At the time of the hoax call on Oct. 3, 2024, Williams told Mayor Karen Bass the bogus bomber was "tired of the city support for Israel," and was going to blow up "maybe the rotunda," according to federal prosecutors. Prosecutors say that Williams told LAPD officials and Bass that the fake caller was 'tired of the city support of Israel, and has decided to place a bomb in City Hall.' Williams, who quietly retired in April after collecting a paycheck from the time the FBI raided his Pasadena home last winter, is eligible for a city pension despite pleading guilty last month to federal charges related to the threat. As the rhetoric from both sides continues to escalate, Bass met with Jewish leaders alongside LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell on Wednesday to reassure them that the city is taking security seriously. "These heinous acts of violence are reprehensible, and any and all forms of antisemitism will not be tolerated in the City of Los Angeles," her office said in the statement. McDonnell told the Jewish community leaders that the LAPD's Social Media Unit "is actively monitoring digital platforms for any threats," and increasing patrols out of an abundance of caution. "This was not only an act of violence – it was an act of hate – and it has rightly left many in our community shaken and searching for reassurance,' McDonnell said of the Boulder attack. "Our Major Crimes Division continues its work in partnership with the FBI as part of the Joint Terrorism Task Force, ensuring that all credible threats are swiftly addressed." This story was originally reported by L.A. Mag on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store