Sunday, July 19, 2015
It worked! It is
still dim in our room at 7:15 am! Of
course, the rain that is beginning to fall may be a contributing factor. We take our time getting ready this morning,
as we are still feeling the effects of yesterday.
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Our "breakfast station" |
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Right across the street from home |
We set off around eleven and take a circular route, planning
to see as many of the monuments to the Poles and Polish Jews who suffered
here. We’ve got our maps and Ricky Ticky
and water. What can go wrong? Absolutely nothing!
We head off to our first stop, which is a remnant of the old
Ghetto wall, marked also by bricks in the sidewalk.
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The ghetto was divided into a larger and smaller section. Together they covered 759 acres. At one point, thirty percent of the population of Warsaw was Jewish. Today we didn't even see a single Jewish shop. |
On our way to the Warsaw Uprising Monument we see a group of
protestors outside the Chinese Ambassador’s resident/Chinese Embassy. They are from Falun Gong. We’ve seen them before in Sweden, where they were also protesting their persecution in China. The government has labeled them a sect and outlawed their existence. The embassy grounds are extensive and we
later see their “backyard” with a couple of pagodas.
The Uprising Monument is located in a plaza adjacent to the
Supreme Court building, which is heavily guarded. We’ve noticed that lots of places have guards
and we think some of them are privately hired.
Across the street is the Krasinski Palace, which was burnt down during the uprising and rebuilt after the war.
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These directional signs are quite helpful! |
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They're all cell dishes! |
After that we see the Monument to Ghetto Heroes, which is
adjacent to the new Museum of Jewish History.
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The Museum of Jewish History |
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Jan Karski, professor at Georgetown and author of The Secret State |
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Someone brought him fresh flowers! |
On, now, to the Jewish Cemetery on Okopowa. This old cemetery was damaged during the war,
with German tanks running over many of the graves. While parts of it are new, the most
interesting, and heartbreaking, are from the war years and before. There are numerous monuments which have been
erected by family members in remembrance of those who died in the Holocaust or
were forced to live in exile.
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You can see the reflection of a man tending a grave. |
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Interesting bug |
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New graves |
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Holocaust survivor |
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More memorial plaques |
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Memorial to many different families and to fighters during the dreadful war years. |
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Add caption |
When we leave it is nearly three o’clock and the hunger
pangs are more than a little noticeable.
We happen upon a mall (shudder) but there must be someplace to eat
inside. Marilyn is willing to settle for
a coffee shop with ready-made sandwiches but I convince her to ask the Info
lady about a real restaurant. She and
the gentleman with her agree that the restaurant upstairs has great food, so we
pass the pianist who is very talented and take the flat escalator (no steps!)
up to the - are you ready? – the Viking
(Wiking) restaurant, which is a buffet.
We both select the mixed, sauted vegetables and the spinach “cake” but I
have to have a salad, too, and another bottle of water.
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Such unusual ceiling decor! |
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Miixed vegetables - mushrooms, onions, red peppers, carrots, yellow peppers and zucchini Spinach "cake" with layers of spinach, cheese, carrots (?), mushrooms and a light dough Salad - peas, cucumbers, lettuce, HBE in a light cream sauce. |
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He played a mix of classical and popular music. |
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What a clever use of wasted space for advertising! |
What a good choice we made!
Talk about yummy!
Thus fortified we are ready for our last couple of
stops. First is the place where the Jews
were forced onto the railroad cars, the Umschlagplatz Memorial.
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There are memorials everywhere in the ghetto. |
From there we find the memorial to those who were killed in
one of the hundreds of bunkers all over the ghetto. They were surrounded by the
Germans and none escaped.
Our last stop will be the Memorial to the Fallen and Murdered
in the East.
On our way home we pass a long wall covered with murals
reminiscent of those in Belfast and Gdansk!
Up those 73 steps once again and Marilyn uses Google maps to
determine that we have walked about SEVEN miles today! I think we did more yesterday! We’re either
going to be in marvelous shape or dead by the end of this trip!
We are so beat and full, and it is supposed to rain this
evening, that we decide not to try to go out for dinner; but, instead, to finish up everything, pack,
and go to bed early. We’ve put some
extra change in the parking meter and have until nine o’clock in the morning to
move the car. We’re thinking of putting
everything in the car, adding some more money, and treating ourselves to
breakfast at a nearby restaurant, probably Freta 33, which was recommended on
Trip Advisor. We deserve that!!
Love keeping up with you!
ReplyDeleteSomber reminders. Seems like one of those things that is hard to visit but important to visit.
ReplyDeleteIt's hard to absorb it all. And hard to leave.
DeleteIt truly was an amazing experience. Glad to have seen it all; don't ever need to see it again - anywhere in the world!
ReplyDeleteThanks!