Worrall Travel R's

Worrall Travel R's
Roz and Russ

Worrall Travel R's - Kicking the Bucket List

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Day 55 - Auschwitz Evil

Gas chamber
For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE


Auschwitz is not something one really wants to see, but it something one needs to see in order to remind ourselves of how we must work to educate and cultivate the best characteristics of human kind (empathy, understanding, generosity, tolerance, respect, dignity...) and suppress those negative characteritics we possess (fanaticism, violence, hate, greed, prejudice, revenge, deceit...), so that evil of this magnitude can be prevented or deterred from happening again.

Five thousand people a day were being murdered in Auschwitz in the gas chambers and then incinerated. Heinous and sickening.

It is beyond our comprehension how Hitler could infect his sociopathy on a nation and create the evil empire of hate and murder that he did.

Worrall Travel R's are saddened today in Poland

Monday, August 04, 2014

Day 54, August 4, 2014 - Wieliczka Salt Mine


First a correction to Day 52 - Left out and important zero.  There were approximately 300,000-400,000 densly packed Jews in 3.3 square kilometers.  Not 30,000.  250-300,000 were killed.  

For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE

It is late in the afternoon on August 4.  Russ and I are sitting in a little bar/cafe in the old Jewish sector of Krakow.  The afternoon storm is right overhead, so we are taking a time out for some coffee and apple pie with ice cream as we catch up on email, trip planning, and blogging.

We took a tour of the salt mine this morning.  The tour was wonderful and the mine caverns with history, sculptures, cathedral, chapels, lakes, cinema, multi media, and underground markets are amazingly big and beautiful.  No longer an operating mine, the mine still employs three hundred miners to convert sections into tourist attractions.  Sorry, since I can only post one photo when I email in my blogs, I will post some photos of the mine and old town Krakow at a later date.  Check the actual blog for the photos.

Tomorrow is another sober day, as we will be going to Auschwitz, and Katowice, Poland.

All is well with the Worrall Travel R's still waiting for the rain to subside in Krakow

Day 53, Travel to Krakow, August 3, 2014

  

For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE


We awoke on Sunday morning, August 3, to a beautiful day.  After packing, and sharing breakfast with Hanna and Jacek, we bid them a heartfelt farewell and thank you for their hospitality.  We enjoyed our stay with them in the rural suburbs and the rebuilt old town of Warsaw.  In the photo above, all the buildings in the town square have been painstakingly rebuilt after the War to resemble that which one stood.

The ride through the countryside was filled with rolling hills, forests, and harvesting of grasses and grains. By the time we reached Krakow late in the afternoon, the sky darkened with heavy rain clouds.  We stopped at a grocery and made it to our AirBnB before the thunder, lightning, and rain became a torrent.  In a few hours the afternoon storm had passed.  

We went down to the kitchen and fixed ourselves some ham and cheese sandwiches with fresh tomatoes for dinner.  Tomorrow we are off to the World Heritage designated salt mines just out of Krakow in Wiekiczyka.

All is Well with the Worrall Travel R's




Day 52, August 2, 2014 - Jewish Ghettos of Warsaw



It has been a couple of sobering days here in Warsaw.

For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE


In 1943, the Jewish Resistance rose up against the German occupation of Poland. The Germans required the Polish Jews to wall themselves off with a two meter high brick wall In 1940. Jews from other parts were brought into the walled ghetto which served as a concentration camp until the Jews were shipped off to gas chambers, There were approximately 300,000-400,000 densly packed Jews in 3.3 square kilometers.   Food was scarce and the people were hungry and dying from typhoid.

It is my understanding, that the uprising resulted in a self-induced suicide as the resistance had little to fight with but figured they had nothing to lose and they could at least die with dignity (250-300,000) met their deaths, here. Today in Warsaw, there are few remnants and artifacts of the Jewish ghettoes. We could hve wondered through the streets not even knowing that we were once in the walled off sector.

Fortunately, we had made contact with a SERVAS day host, Ewa, retired economist and public servant. She guided us through the ghettos, showing us places where monuments, markers, and new buildings now stood where the ghettos used to exist. Ewa, is not Jewish, but had considerable historical knowledge. She also shared her own family's personal Polish tragedy during the German Nazi regime, where her father was a POW at the end of the war and escaped to ultimately be reunited with his wife, His wife Ewa's mother as a young wife was basically thrown by the Nazis into the streets with a three month old baby when here husband was taken as a POW.

She wandered looking for food and shelter to no avail. The baby, died. Eva's mother relates stories of how the civilian Poles were massacred and buildings set on fire by the Nazis. Women and children jumped from the burning buildings to their deaths. Apartment buildings on contoured hills in the old ghetto area have been built on the ashes 0f the original buildings. It is too poignant reminder of the death and destruction that war brings. All very tragic.

After our walking tour of Warsaw, we took the metro back to our home stay SERVAS hostsHanna and Jacek. We stopped at a nearby store and picked up enough ice cream to share with them and their extended family. We sat in the backyard on a warm summer evening enjoying our last evening together. Tomorrow we leave for Krakow.

All is well with the Worrall Travel R's

Day 51 -August 1, 2014, Remembrance Day 1944, Warsaw


For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE


Today is the 70th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising in 1944 when the Polish Resistance Home Army of Warsaw tried to rise up against the German occupation and were brutally cut down. Timed to coincide with and urged on by the advancing Russians on the opposite side of the river, the Poles were led to believe that the Russians would assist them with the battle. Stalin however decided to hold off and let the Germans do the dirty work by not giving any assistance. The battle raged for 61 days and 150-200,000 Poles, mostly unarmed citizens were torn from their homes, executed in mass, and buildings burned. By January 1945, 85% of the city had been destroyed. '

This 1944 uprising came a year after the Jewish resistance of 1943 against the Germans. Since 1940, the Jewish Sector of the city known as the Ghetto had been walled off to contain and control the Jews. Eventually over 30,000 Warsaw Jews were loaded into cattle cars to die in extermination camps.

Early in the day we visited the Chopin Museum, then later strolled through the old city of
Warsaw. Girl and Boy Scouts were uniformed from all over Poland handing out information about the 5:00 pm commemoration. We made our way to the central square. Church bells began to chime along with loud sirens. Flares were burned and smoke hovered over the silent citizens who had come to remember this horrible day and for the people who had lost their lives.
It was quite moving and absolutely unfathomable how we as humans treat one another. Unfortunately, we seemed destined to keep hating and destroying those who are different from the "in" group.

All is well with the Worrall Travel R's, happy to be here today and empathizing with Poles for their tragic losses

Sunday, August 03, 2014

Days 50, Warsaw, Poland


Day 50, July 31, 2014

For photo album of 2014 Poland, Click HERE

It was poring rain as we left Riga, Latvia.  As we climbed into the sky, lightening flashed around us and the ride was bumpy, but fairly short, only a couple of hours.  We arrived in Warsaw around 3:00.  By the time we picked up our rental car, bought a few groceries (wine, cheese,and grapes to share with our hosts) and drove out of the city towards our SERVAS host destination about 26 kilometers southeast of the airport, it was just after five.  When we arrived at our address, there was a green iron gate closing the driveway separating the street from a long wooded driveway, with no house in sight.

There were some Polish words on the gate which we did not understand and could not translate without a WiFi connection, nor could we call as we did not have a phone.  I thought the words could have been a beware of dog sign.  As we knew our hosts were expecting us about this time, Russ honked the car horn a couple of times,  Two large dogs rounded the corner from the end of the driveway and bounded toward the gate barking.  Well we got the dogs' attention.  We waited for awhile hoping the barking dogs would bring forth some people, but it didn't.

Even though the dogs were barking, they weren't snarling and even though they were big, one a golden lab and the other a strawberry blond shaggy sheep dog that resembled a Starwars Wookie, they looked benign.  Russ examined the gate and discovered it was not electric and with a little effort it could be slid open.  Despite my vocal reluctance to move inside the gate, Russ slid it open far enough to insert himself, and I stayed in the car outside the gate in case the dogs decided to eat him.  The dogs continued to bark, but followed after him as he turned right onto a pathway and disappeared a short distance from the gate.

Soon from the far end of the drive a man and woman started to walk towards the gate and car.  Russ intersected them at the path, and I could see that introductions were being made.
Later I found out there was a small cottage on the pathway from which Jaycek's contracting business operates.  The staff contacted the house.  The other thing I found out was the sign on the gate did not say Beware of Dogs, it said Open the sliding gate....hahaha!

Anyway, we made it inside the compound and met our lovely hosts, Jacek, engineer/contactor and Hanna, retired psychologist, also post war baby boomers who grew up in the flattened war-torn Warsaw during the Soviet times.  They had much to share with us and we were eager to learn about their lives.  Today they live in a rural area with property that is large enough for three homes including one in which their daughter, husband, and three grandchildren live.

 Hanna immediately made sure we had something to eat.  We arrived between their dinner (around) three and their (supper) between 7:00 and 8:00.  She had prepared some wonderful cold salmon with dill and eggplant, tomato salad and hot cauliflower with creamy herb sauce.  It was delicious and much appreciated.  After dinner, we continued our  conversations seeing some of the local sites (rivers, parks, saltaire park where people enjoy the humid salt mist sprayed on pine boughs).

Our bedroom turned out to be a spacious attic apartment above the cottage that Russ first found when we arrived.  We had everything we needed and it was a very pleasant retreat.

All is well with the Worrall Travel R's in Warsaw, Poland