Home

Advertisement

Customize
clanok

November 2009

S M T W T F S
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
2930     

Tags

Syndicate

RSS Atom
Powered by LiveJournal.com

May. 20th, 2008

clanok

One of the most reliable Israel’s allies

It is still difficult to understand anti - Israeli and anti - American stance of many European politicians. Comparing the present situation of Israeli Arabs to situation of Jews during Holocaust is the most nonsense thing, which one could imagine. It means that persons who aplly such a comparision do not understand meaning of the term “holocaust” and appear to be ignoramus.

Arab - Israeli conflic is not black and white one, there is not one party which is absolutely good and the second one - absolutely bad, as many European leftists see that, they perceive Israelis as a bad guys and Arabs as an exclusively persecuted victims.

Israelis have a right to possess their own state, and so do Palestinians. But it is absolutely unimaginable to tolerate such a situation when some groups of raidcal Palestinians demand destruction of Israel or in their fight for statehood resort to terrorism and attack innocent civilians.

It enjoys me much that Polish government, especially president Lech Kaczynski so unambiguously supports politics of Israeli government. In an interview which he gaved last Saturday to the one of the mot important Polish dailies (”Rzeczpospolita”) he stated that Poles because of its historic and cultural ties whit Jews are lively interested in good relations between these two nations.

I belong to these people who - maybe naivly and sentimentally - believe in brotherhood between nations. I myself live in a town (Bialystok, north eastern Poland), where still live many nations - Poles, Belarussians, Tatars, Russians, descendants of Germans, where coexist different cultures and religions - Catholics, Orthodox faithful, Muslims, Protestants, and traces of the past are visible - former Jewish synagogues, houses, cemetaries.

When I have more free time I will translate that interview with president Lech Kaczynski, in which he spoke so much about Polish - Jewish common history, common national heros, poets, writers. Jewish presence in Poland counts about 800 years, so it is no wonder that these two nations are so close to each other. There is no other possibility than true, deep and sincere reconciliation of Poles and Jews. And it is a good news that Poland appears to be one of the most reliable Israel’s allies.

Apr. 28th, 2008

clanok

Industrial Bialystok - part 2

Afraid of possible old textile factories’ disappearance from town landscape I resolved to save them in pictures. Below there are presented next photgraphs taken during my today bike trip across the twon.


Former factory near Czestochowska street.










Old factory close to Jurowiecka street.
clanok

Industrial Bialystok

At the first half of the 19th century Bialystok’ economy started growing fast. German and Jewish manufacturers began to come here to set up textile facories, especially after 1831 - the year when customs border between Krolestwo Polskie (The Polish Kingdom) and the enormous part of former Polish and Lithuanian lands was established by tsarist government as a kind of repression for Polish independence uprising in 1830 - 1831 (November Uprising). It was the time of huge influx of German and Jewish textile manufacturers, highly qualified German workers. Bialystok became at that time one of the most important industrial towns in whole Russian Empire, it was even called “Manchester of the north”.

Many of the old textile factories were in so pitiful state that it was not possible to save and renovate them, some of them were just knocked down, onle a few survived and it is difficult to predict how long they will stay. some of them are now converted into the lofts and probably it is the only way to protect those old buildings, though there is a danger that they may lose its original character.

Below we took pictures of two almost untouched yet old plants and one being under way of converting.



Apr. 26th, 2008

clanok

Bike trip to Knyszynska Forest

It seems that real spring has sprung at last. Today we had almost 20 degrees Celsius and a lot of sunshine. We could take off our shirts, sweaters, jackets and wear only t-shirts. After a long break - lasting almost 6 months we were able to take a bike trip to Knyszynska Forest, set off at 2 p. m. across the busy town. To go through the busy, jammed town may be a really traumatic expereince, and in fact it was so today. Fortunately thanks to EU funds municipal authorities build more and more bicycle paths in Bialystok and we used one of them to reach Suprasl - small, picturesque town, about 15 kilometres from Bialystok.


It is an Orthodox church in Suprasl. First Orthodox church in Suprasl was built in the end of the 15th century. It was blew up by withdrawing German Nazis in 1944.

In Suprasl bicycle path ends and later on we went the road to Krynki, all the time across beautiful and old Knyszynksa forest. After passing a few kilometres we turn right, asphalt ended and we entered the real kingodm of the primeval forest.

Road to Budzisk Reserve in Knyszynska Forest.


“Entrance” to Budzisk Reserve in Knyszynska Forest.

As far as I am personally concerned, especially bike trips makes me fell free, they provide me with a kind of methaphysical sense of happiness and freedom. Forest itself in turn appears to be a real sanctuary for me, it is a place when I am able to believe in God and get rid of all my fears; a place for a deep contemplation and meditation. Real sanctuary…


In the middle of Budzisk reserve.









On our way home we started joking that this forest reminds us of “Blair Witch Project” and for sure it also has its witch whom one day we will meet ;-) There are many interesting and mysterious forest stories told by forest village inhabitants about ghosts, devils, but about them next time…

Apr. 18th, 2008

clanok

Remnants of Bialystok ghetto - part 2

Together with my friends I resolved to immortalize places, buildings, gardens, streets which were witnesses of the most tragic and cruel events in history of our native town. We are Polish inhabitants of Bialystok - town of many cultures, religions, languages in the north - eastern Poland. This is the place where the East meets the West; towers of Catholic and Orthodox churches soar above the town, Protestant churches, muslim mosque enrich Bialystok’s face.

Poles, Belarussians, Tatars, Russians, descendants of Germans are still hosts of our town, but Jews who before the II World War made up 50% of Bialystok’s population are absent. Majority of Jewish inhabitants was exterminated by German Nazis in 1941 - 1944. Only a few hundreds of Jews were able to save their lives. Presently there are no open and functioning synagogues or houses of prayer, no lively Jewish community in Bialystok.

This post is dedicated to places which during the II World War found itself in the borders of the ghetto area, where German Nazis gathered about 50.000 Jews.

Evening in Czysta street. View from Czysta street, on the left - house in ghetto were Samuel Pisar lived.


 


House in the courtyard in Czysta street no 5.


 

Old buildings in Czestochowska street, near Czysta and Warynskiego street.


 



Warynskiego street, near Cytron Synagogue, in front of - yellow and brown building was a school for Jewish girls before the Second World War.

Apr. 15th, 2008

clanok

Remnants of Bialystok ghetto - part 1

I have always been amazed by the contrasts included in beautiful places. How is it possible that place that witnessed most cruel events in the world history may at the same time include so much beauty? I mean contrast between internal appearance of a place and history it contains.

The most beautiful gardens in my native town are on the areas of the former ghetto. Bialystok’s history has not witnessed more cruel period than time of the II World War, when about 50.000 Jews were gatherd in interior part of the town, where German Nazis organizied ghetto. Those beuatiful gardens, wooden small houses, old bulidings, old trees, lush green of the gardens, many colurs of flowers, picturesque paved streets, red brick factories were witnesses of unimaginable cruelties in human kind’s history - murders of hundreds of innocent children, women, men; later on uprising in Bialystok ghetto and deaths of further hundreds of persons.

Now spring has just come nad those places start again to be the most beautiful places in the town. They are still grey, but in a short time they will explode with lush green and many other bright colurs of the Bialystok gardens.

Is it possible to understand such an indifference of nature to human kind suffering?


On the left - part of the synagogue in Warynskiego street, on the right - old building, both from the begining of the XX century, on the area of former ghetto.



Small wooden house in Czysta 5 street, where Samuel Pisar - surviver of Bialystok ghetto, later on adviser of John Fitzgerald Kennedy - lived in inferno of Bialystok ghetto.



Wooden remnant of the ghetto gate between stones in Czysta street.



View of the Czysta street from the place were ghetto gate stood.



Houses in Czysta street, on the left - Czysta 5 - wooden house where Samuel Pisar lived.

Advertisement

Customize