Poland Remembered II |
Monday Mar 26 2007
By Stu Whitley
Bio
This is the second in a four-part series.
There is no country more tragically concerned with war, oppression and the visitation of death than Poland. This is saying something for a continent riven by ethnic and political conflict for millennia. It is my impression that war—and in particular, the Second World War—casts a long shadow there, for the occupation by the Soviet Union that followed for nearly half a century afterward had its bitter roots in that conflict. The scars are yet there, literally. In the large block in Lublin where my father lived as a boy, a line of machine gun bullets fired 67 years ago is neatly stitched across the stone façade.
My brother and I went to Poland with my father to visit the country he knew as a young man. In 1939, he was an 18-year-old corporal in the 24th Lancers, his father’s regiment. The unit was stationed in Krasnik, a small town just outside Lublin, whose sole purpose at the time was to support the regiment.
These days, all that remains of the Lancers are ancient stables now converted to storage for bricks, and a small museum dedicated to the memory of the 24th. Old photographs and fading documents show resplendent, prideful warriors, including my kin. My grandfather is shown, frozen for all time mid-flight, on a white stallion crossing a stone fence.
One of my father’s clear recollections at the outbreak of war was of my grandfather rummaging about, calling to his step-mother, looking for his dress uniform and accoutrements. These to be ready for the victory march in Berlin, so confident was he that the Nazis would be repulsed. This wasn’t unusual: in his memoirs, Professor Swianiewicz, a survivor of one of the early Soviet concentration camps, wrote that “…the mood of the Poles tended to be optimistic…they never imagined that Germany could win the war.” These were the men who faced the Blitzkrieg with lances and on horseback. That spirit of indomitability and infinite confidence probably best defines Poland, and is perhaps why it has endured as a nation despite the lack of natural borders, sandwiched as it is between larger, sometimes rapacious neighbors. It is perhaps the reason why the dead are owed such deference in a land where suffering and sacrifice maintained the national sense of self through generations of oppression.
A case in point: enraged by the obduracy of the Home Army (Polish underground) during the Battle of Warsaw (August 1 – September 3, 1944), in which my father was engaged, Hitler threw the full weight of his eastern divisions against the city. When it became clear that the destruction of what remained of the resistance was inevitable, the government in exile (in London) ordered surrender after a standoff of two months. Immediately, Hitler demanded the razing of the city. Contemporary photographs show nothing but rubble in every direction. One is reminded of Xerxes flogging the Hellespont for stormy weather: such madness is evident in the city’s complete destruction, including the Royal Castle and the Old Town.
Yet Poles rebuilt the city brick by brick, with paintings, old photographs and blueprints in hand. In some cases, shards of moldings and pieces of stone carvings supplied the models for replicating what was lost, to the point where the post-medieval structures, including the Royal Palace that borders a cobblestone square, restore the Old Town to its former glory. Sitting in a café today, one might assume the patina of centuries finishes these buildings, so true are the restorations. At the beginning of Remembrance of Things Past, Proust wrote that memory is a rope let down from heaven to draw us up from the dark well of ‘not-being’. Memory raised up afresh the glory of Warsaw.
Written by eldering at Learning
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