When I found out I was going to Europe this summer, I
decided I had to at least see Poland.
I’ve always sort of romanced my vague Polish Jew ancestry (mom’s dad’s mom’s
family lived there until the war when they moved to England) and I especially
liked the idea of visiting the country with my mom.
We took the night train over from Prague (Aside: don’t take
a night train anywhere if you actually want to sleep. I don’t care how cute
your little compartment room is, or how many complimentary foil-topped water
cups they give you—you will spend the entire night wondering what kind of
livestock animal you just hit, what piece of the train was just ripped off by
an alien onslaught, or how many seconds you have left to live before the murderous
German men outside find you.)
We arrived early in the morning, and after working out a
snafu with our AMAZING hotel (Hotel Stary in Krakow, check it out; it has a
DUNGEON POOL), I used a prehistoric navigation mechanism to lead us in a
roundabout route to the bus station. (I think the English translation for it is
“map.”)
We spent the rest of the day walking around Auschwitz. I’m
glad we did it, but the experience was heavy and numbing and strange. I don’t
know if anyone can come close to grappling with the atrocities that occurred
there, especially in one afternoon. Walking through the barracks, the
starvation cubicles, a gas chamber, and past the shooting wall felt a little
like touring the set of a horror movie. Most disturbing to me was the room full
of human hair the Nazis had sheered from the head’s of Jewish women to make
carpets. Two tons of hair, a sea of it, on the other side of a pane of glass.
Clearly the first half of our Krakow trip was a sobering
experience. But from there we decided to embrace the more positive aspects of
the cities history and culture. We found ourselves drawn to the overall vibe of
Krakow, but it was hard to put our finger on exactly what it was. It felt
smaller than Prague, maybe more village like. Warmer even.
| We crashed a Polish wedding. That also added to our love of the city. |
A mischievous walking tour guide said something that struck
me: “In Krakow, we are not soldiers, we are artists.” Perhaps this is the vibe
I was drawn to. Historically, the people of this place gravitated more heavily
to the arts than to war. Sculptures poke fun at bloodlust, and poets are buried
next to kings in the cathedral catacombs.
| My goat friend in the Market Square. (I make them wherever I go, clearly) |
A Jewish heritage festival happened to be going on while we
were there, so the Jewish Quarter was alive with people and sephardic rock.
(It’s OK if you don’t know what that is; I didn’t either).
The buildings and markets in Old Town were beautiful and
bustling, but the Jewish Quarter ended up being my favorite section of Krakow.
I enjoyed browsing the tiny bookstores and jewelry shoppes with tired facades.
We sat at an outdoor café and ate delicious fish soup while bearded men passed
by in throngs. (If you read that as "thongs," good for you).
The second night, we came back to the Quarter for the big
concert. There, we picked up on some interesting culture differences. When you
think of an outdoor concert in America, what comes to mind? Beer. Dancing.
Jumping. The guy smoking a rainbow bong to your left.
| Mysteriously well-behaved crowd. |
Not in the Krakow Jewish Quarter. Liesa and I found
ourselves hoisting our vodka sodas and spinning around in a massive crowd of
stationary, empty-handed Jewish music “fans.” Should this have felt awkward? Of
course. Did we embrace it and dance all the more enthusiastically? Did Liesa,
when a lead singer asked if anyone was from Brooklyn, pump her fist in the air
and yell “U-S-A!!!” from the middle of a silent crowd? Naturally.
We only had two days in Krakow, but we left with a special
appreciation for the place (and it’s soup; seriously, we ate such good soup
there). I would definitely go back, just maybe not on a night train.













