By Henry Srebrnik, [Charlottetown, PEI] Guardian
Some Varsovians call it, caustically, “Stalin’s wedding cake.” Others have wanted it razed to the ground.
It sits plopped in the middle of the city, looking like a 1930s-era building, and is now surrounded by modern office towers.
It was Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin’s “gift to the Polish people” when the country was under the heel of Soviet oppression.
It’s
full name was “the Palace of Culture and Science in the name of Joseph
Stalin.” But Stalin’s name was dropped after de-Stalinization in the
Soviet bloc in 1956.
Started in 1952 and
completed in 1955, the Palac Kultury i Nauki, or PKiN, was
constructed by 3,500 Soviet workmen, who were housed in a
special estate in Jelonki during their time here. Another 4,000 Poles
helped in building it.
Working at breakneck speed -- with 16 workers losing their lives -- It took jurt three years to complete the building.
Much
of Warsaw at the time still lay in ruins from having been virtually
destroyed by the Nazis during the Warsaw uprising of 1944.
The
Palace, located at Plac. Defilad, is a 42-story skyscraper which, at
231 metres tall, including its spire, is still the highest building in
Poland.
However, work has now started on the
53-story 310 metre Varso Tower, on a site next to the Warszawa Centralna
railway station, with completion slated for 2020, and it will surpass
the Palace in height.
The PKiN was built in a
mixture of the then-compulsory socialist realism style with elements of
American art deco and historic Polish cultural flourishes.
Stalin
had reportedly secretly sent architects and planners to New York to
study the Empire State Building as a model for his skyscraper.
The
final design was by the Soviet architect Lev Rudnev, a leading
practitioner of Stalinist architecture in the Soviet Union, responsible
for many Moscow buildings.
The Palace was meant to be a cornerstone of the Warsaw to come, planned together with a majestic Parade Square.
Built
using an estimated 40 million bricks and housing 3,288 rooms, its
purpose was to serve as not just Communist Party headquarters but also
as a place for the masses, with invitations to the annual New Year’s Eve
Ball issued to the best workers in socialist Poland.
It
is surrounded by dozens of sculptures of famous Polish figures,
including astronomer and mathematician Copernicus, poet Adam Mickiewicz,
and physicist Marie Sklodowska Curie, as well as model workers holding
works of Marxist writers.
With its marble floors
and endless staircases and corridors with their weighty glass
chandeliers and gilded finishings, the PKiN was meant to dazzle the
masses and provide a foretaste of a future socialist paradise.
One gigantic room, the Congress Hall, with seating for 3,000 people, for years held the Communist Party’s annual meetings.
All that is in the past. That same room more recently hosted concerts by, among others, the Rolling Stones and Leonard Cohen.
The
Palace is today home to the Museum of Evolution, the Museum of
Technology, four theatres, a multiplex cinema, and bars. Most of the
building now houses offices and commercial spaces.
The terrace on the 30th floor is a well-known tourist attraction with a panoramic view of the city. I was there on a very hot day, so it was quite refreshing.
Given the system of government it was meant to symbolize, no building in Poland has proved more divisive and controversial.
For
many years, whenever the people of Warsaw stared up at the giant
monolith, they were reminded of their all-powerful neighbour to the
east. It became an object of hatred and a symbol of Russian hegemony.
Indeed,
on Aug. 1, the day I visited the Palace, there were commemorations all
over Warsaw, complete with a ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
in Saxon Garden, to mark the 73rd anniversary of the Warsaw uprising.
As all Poles know, Stalin’s failure to intervene doomed the Home Army’s battle against the Nazis.
Yet,
despite all that, the Palace has become an international symbol of
Warsaw, and even, with Communism becoming a distant memory, an icon.
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