By Henry Srebrnik, [Summerside, PEI] Journal Pioneer
Warsaw, Poland's capital city, is truly a phoenix.
It was almost totally destroyed in the Second World War
while under Nazi German occupation, which was followed by
almost five decades of Soviet-imposed dreary Communist rule.
Since the fall of Communism, Warsaw has risen from the ashes
to become a vibrant, modern, efficient, clean, and beautiful
city.
And I must emphasize that point: Warsaw is indeed beautiful.
But no one can, or should, forget the horrors it endured in
the 20th century. For a visitor, these can be experienced at
two "must-see" venues, the Polin Museum of the History of
Polish Jews, and the Warsaw Uprising Museum.
They provide a window into the unimaginable suffering here,
one that included the deaths of hundreds of thousands of
people.
Both venues are fairly recent additions to an already rich
mix of museums, memorials, and other testaments to Warsaw's
complex and often tragic history.
The Polin Museum opened in 2013, the one on the 1944 Warsaw
uprising on the 60th anniversary of that battle against the
Nazi occupiers.
The state-of-the-art Polin Museum chronicles the history and
diversity of Jewish culture during that community's
1,000-year history in Poland, which basically ended in the
Holocaust.
Situated where the Nazi-imposed Jewish ghetto stood during
the Second World War, this excellent museum comprises eight
galleries.
Highlights include a beautiful replica of a wooden synagogue
ceiling, books produced by Jewish printers 400 years ago,
and a replica of Zamenhofa Street in the heart of the Jewish
district of Muranow. This was a typical Jewish street in
Warsaw between the two world wars.
Polin introducers visitors to antique objects, paintings,
imnteractive installations, reconstructions and video
presentations.The museaum also features temporary
exhibitions, concerts, debates, films, lectures, and
workshops.
On the grounds there is a statue of Jan Karski, the Polish
envoy who in 1942 told the world about the ongoing Nazi
effort to kill all of Europe's Jews.
Nearby one finds the monument to the heroes of the Warsaw
Ghetto uprising of 1943, unveiled in 1948.
Of Poland's prewar population of some 3 1/2 million Jews,
only some 300,000 survived the war, most of them by having
fled into the Soviet Union before 1941.
The Museum of the 1944 Warsaw uprising is also quite an
experience. It presents the heroism of the Polish
Underground State and its Home Army (Armia Krajowa,or AK) in
its attempt to liberate Warsaw.
The uprising began on Aug. 1, 1944 and lasted 63 days. It
resulted in the complete destruction of 85 per cent of
Warsaw and the death of at least 170,000 of its people.
The museum is a tribute to those who died for the freedom of
Poland and its capital. Packed with interactive displays, it
chronicles the heroics and tragic ending of one of the war's
most seminal events.
Exhibits include a full-size B-24 Liberator airplane, like
those which were dropping American supplies to the
insurgents, and replicas of the sewers where AK soldiers
evaded Nazi gunfire while moving through the city.
Included is a 3-D film, The City of Ruins, which takes you
on an aerial journey over devastated Warsaw, showing what
the city looked like when finally liberated from the Germans
in 1945. It had been almost obliterated.
The museum also helps visitors understand the complicated
international situation at the time, one which made it
difficult for the western Allies to provide more aid.
It describes in particular the duplicitous behaviour of
Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, whose Red Army stood across the
Vistula River from Warsaw but did not help those trying to
liberate the city from the Nazis.
Anyone interested in what happened in Poland during the war
should, at the least, visit these two museums.
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