The Foreign Service Institute, which trains US diplomats, has produced a list of the world's languages ranked in order of difficulty for English speakers to learn. Polish, along with the languages of the three Baltic States is among the hardest only being beaten by Arabic, Korean, Japanese and Mandarin Chinese. The use of diacritics means the Polish alphabet has 32 letters which complicates things. Road signs are a constant source of wonder.
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It really isn't easy |
Heading south on the S7 motorway, it will be nice when it's finished, we arrived in the city of Kielce, dropping anchor in a car park next to a former limestone quarry which has been turned into a geological park. A walkway has been constructed and we wandered round with the Spaniels admiring the various textures and colours in the towering rock face. We were also taken by the amphitheatre with its retractable roof, built into the side of a hill and used for numerous artistic performances and festivals.
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A row of busts...... |
The next morning we plotted a course through the park to the old part of the city. On the way we were intrigued by an eclectic collection of bronze busts alongside the path, probably 30 or 40 in all. It seemed to be a celebration of the performing arts with poets, composers, musicians and painters among the busts created by a variety of sculptors. Among notable Polish figures we also spotted Salvador Dali. Marc Chagall, Leonard Bernstein, Marilyn Monroe, John Lennon and Jimi Hendrix.
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....one of which is of a great guitarist |
The high point of the walk was the summer residence of the Bishops of Kraków, which towered over the city, complete with an ornate formal garden in the 17th century Italian style. The building itself is a mixture of Polish and Italian architecture, a marriage that seems to work well. In Kielce, as elsewhere in Poland, it is impossible to escape the brutalities the country has suffered in the past. The city was the centre of Polish resistance to the German occupation and the hills around it were used by partisans to harass the invaders. Consequently many of the city's inhabitants lost their lives. Like other Polish cities the local Jews were herded into ghetto and here were joined by Jews transported from other parts of the country. In 1942 the ghetto was liquidated and the survivors sent off to be gassed in Treblinka.
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Katyn is seared deeply into Polish history |
The country lost a generation of academics and military officers |
With a pretty good road ahead of us we decide to push on to Kraków where we arrived late in the afternoon. As with Warsaw we had managed to find a small car park, complete with 24 hour security, within a short distance of the old town. We took the Spaniels down to the River Vistula, the very same waterway that had provided us with our first dog walk in the Polish capital. On our way back to the van we passed the New Jewish Cemetery, an 11 acre burial ground begun in 1809 and containing some 10,000 tombs. It was desecrated by the Germans during the occupation but has been lovingly restored since the end of the war. Two other Jewish cemeteries, created in the 1920s and 30s were completely destroyed when they were utilised as the site for the notorious Kraków-Plasźow concentration camp.
The New Jewish Cemetery reminded me of Highgate |
The one faint ray of light in the city in this era of darkness was an industrialist named Oscar
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It is difficult to escape Schindler references in Kraków |
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Kraków's Cloth Hall is stunning |
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A civilised way of seeing the city |
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Salt statues are a feature of the mine |
The piece de la resistance was the stunning St Kinga's chapel, hundreds of feet down in the mine and carved out of the salt. Even in mid-October the car park was packed with coaches from Poland and beyond and tour groups busily negotiating the tourist tat stalls and descending the 200 feet into the ground.
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St Kinga's chapel, 100 metres underground, can be hired for weddings |
Images of Kraków
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St Mary's Tower. |
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A short break in the Market Square |
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Many of Kraków's buildings survived the war |
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The Planty is a great dog walk |
The salt Chapel is amazing.
ReplyDeleteCan you be sure he wasn’t asking to buy the spaniels?!
ReplyDeleteIt did cross my mind, but if he was he wanted them shrunk to four inches high!
DeleteI wondered if you could tell by his face if he thought they were expensive or not?
ReplyDeletePoland does sound and look wonderful, I also wonder what it is that encourages so many to leave their country and set up in other parts of Europe?