cracow letters
 
A city's culture--the continuity of people's lives in a specific place

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Cracow... Krakow...Crakow... What's this place called, anyway?



Happy New Year
from
Cracow Letters


 
 
 

Coming Soon:
Why Saint John Cantius Represents Survival for Cracow in the Coming Hard Times
Coming Soon:
Professors Battle It Out In Mayoralty Contest
Both contenders in the recent mayoralty election were academic specialists in the politics they have long opposed: In this corner, a leftist who studied the regime of the prewar "Colonels" regime. And in the other corner: a right-winger who wrote a hair-raising real-life thriller about 1947, the year the communists consolidated power. Cracow Letters blows the dust off old copies of the two professor-politicians' monographs.
Read our reviews of
Ryszard Terlecki's Dictatorship of Treason
Jacek Majchrowski's Strong, United, Prepared.
Coming Soon:
Atrocity on ulica Lobzowska: From a Cracow Cafe to the Auschwitz Death Wall

Tucked away in a low building not far from the Main Square, the Cafe in the Artists' House looks almost the same today as when it opened in 1934. A hotbed of experimental cabaret and opposition politics before the German invasion, it stayed open under occupation restrictions--until the Gestapo came crashing in uninvited.
-An Eyewitness Account of the Gestapo Raid
-Deportations of Poles to Auschwitz from Cracow, April 1942
-Nazi policy towards Poland in the words of the Nazi leaders

-Einsatzgruppen to Chechen Henchmen: Under the Nazi Heel
See also:
-A Young Voice Speaks Straight from the Cracow Ghetto
-Zimmermann's War: From Cracow to Haifa, by Way of Hell
Memoirists Recall The Cracow of their Youth
See also:
-Natan Gross's Elegy for Middle-Class Jewish Cracow
-Roman Polanski's Cracow
Skating Abroad
Under the Old System, a 1970 worst-seller offered an ideologically sanitized look at the two years that Lenin spent here, writing, plotting, walking on the Blonia, bicycling to Lasek Wolski, and skating.
See also:
-The Lenin Museum in the 1980s
Also on the Cracow Letters Bookshelf:
-History of Cracow: Under German Rule, 1939-1945
-History of Cracow: The Long Nineteenth Century, 1794-1918
-Jacek Purchla on the Making of Modern Cracow
-Nostalgia for Galicia and Emperor Francis Joseph
-Moishe and Ksawery: A Polish-Jewish Friendship
-The Jazz Club that Fidel Castro Opened
-Analyzing Tadeusz Kantor's Theater of Death and Memory
-History of Cracow: Between the Wars, 1918-1939
 


 

All material on this site © Cracow Letters 2003-2006




Layers of culture in Cracow: a stodgy rent-townhouse (left) on al. Slowackiego was headquarters of the Kripo (Kriminalpolizei) under the Germans between 1939 and 1945; in the building on the right, a 20th-century architect's own neo-Gothic residential showcase, the young Roman Polanski lost his innocence.


A Taste of the Old System
What was it like going out under "real socialism" before 1989? Two cafes and a restaurant that still smack of the vanished world. 
See also:
-The Cafes of Atlantis, ca. 1987


Shrine to a Vision by a "Sister of the Second Choir"
The mystic of the Divine Mercy, St. Faustina, lived at a convent on the outskirts of Cracow. The new shrine there is emerging as one of the world's leading Roman Catholic pilgrimage destinations.



Small Movie Theaters Cracow still contains a few tiny, old-fashioned urban cinemas. In some cases, they offer a repertoire that differs from the standard global fare. Inside, these cinemas may sometimes be as romantic as a 1947 poem about them by Galczynski.