For many years I did not think about Poland, for some years I even did not like the country. I felt an Australian even if I still have this funny, some call it charming, Polish accent . I personally do not see much “charming” about my accent but Poland is becoming this way to me. Charming. Also beautiful, sophisticated and sentimental as its people.
Recently I made the second time in my life the choice to live in Australia. I considered that Poland was not my country any more, just the country I was born in. Now I am starting to have doubts, not about living here. Australia is definitely my home. But big part of the space in my heart belongs to Poland and this I am realising with each day I spent here.
Today, accidentally I changed the radio station and at midday I heard the time signal and Krakow bugle call. This is what I heard as a child and later on, the same sounds the same format. Something moved in me hearing the sounds I have almost forgotten with time passing.
Krakow is in my mind the #1 town in Poland. Its XIV century Jagiellonian University, the market Square with its Cloth Hall, monuments, St Mary’s Basilica, doves, horse carriages and many coffee places around the square, the gothic Wawel Castle.... It all makes the town absolutely unique. The sites can be appreciated by Poles and by many visitors from other countries. It is more difficult to appreciate the cultural life of Krakow being a foreigner. In many local cellars there are literary cabarets, jazz concerts, poetry nights. Wonderful, rich, crazy, funny, sad, romantic, sentimental places and people. Krakow is a hermetic place, outsiders are welcome as tourists but not so much welcome into the most important part of the Krakovian life. Any Polish person coming from a place other than Krakow is considered to be an outsider, especially those coming from Warsaw. Those are looked down at, not cultured enough, I suppose.
The Marker Square of Krakow |
Krakow is in my mind the #1 town in Poland. Its XIV century Jagiellonian University, the market Square with its Cloth Hall, monuments, St Mary’s Basilica, doves, horse carriages and many coffee places around the square, the gothic Wawel Castle.... It all makes the town absolutely unique. The sites can be appreciated by Poles and by many visitors from other countries. It is more difficult to appreciate the cultural life of Krakow being a foreigner. In many local cellars there are literary cabarets, jazz concerts, poetry nights. Wonderful, rich, crazy, funny, sad, romantic, sentimental places and people. Krakow is a hermetic place, outsiders are welcome as tourists but not so much welcome into the most important part of the Krakovian life. Any Polish person coming from a place other than Krakow is considered to be an outsider, especially those coming from Warsaw. Those are looked down at, not cultured enough, I suppose.
St Mary's Basilica |
Bugler of current days |
Bugler of current days |
This is how it sounds
This is a PS written more than one year after the original post but I found out something new about the bugle. Actually not so much about the bugle itself but about Jack Nicholson. He knows the bugle and he can sing it up to its sudden end! Ha! This is surprising. The reason is that he has been for many years a friend of the Polish film director Jerzy Skolimowski. They met in the 60ties when none of them was famous or rich. It was in Cannes and after smoking a few joints on the beach together they became fast friends. I shudder to think what kind of education Jack Nicholson may have received from the Polish larrikin, talented but crazy and very creative man. And what did they do in Krakow for Jack Nicholson to learn the bugle? I am sure Nicholson knows a few positives about Polish girls.
Loved this post, AC.
ReplyDeleteNice to get your feedback, thank you.
DeleteAnna
I've found something interesting to illustrate your post:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i6R_v0ZCg4M
The great story of Krakow is difficult to describe in a little post like your one. It's interesting to note that Krakow was the legal capital of Poland up to 1975 and up to 1611 polish kings stayed there. When the state of Poland disapeared in XVIII, Krakow and its region was the only place where the polish culture and tradition were respected. So today the people of the region believe to be the guardians of "polishhood" and I'm agree with them being myself born in Warsaw.
Thank you, Anna, to remeber me the bugle call of my childhood...
Elzbieta
Thank you, Ela, for addition of important historic facts regarding Krakow. Well, I will not argue for higher importance of Warsaw or even Gdansk over Krakow. I appreciate the intelectual power of Krakowians. You know my views on partiotism so I keep silent on the issue of being more or less deserving of guardianship of Polishness.
DeleteAnna
I respect and apreciate your reserve in this point. Thank you, Anna. And thank you for "Polishness" in place of "polishhod" which is rather awful...A little lesson of English.
DeleteKrakow and Poland, God willing, here I come. I have not been to any ex communist countries but have always wanted top visit Poland having read a great deal about the WWII resistance movement there and the subsequent heroics of Lech Walesa. I believe that it is now a very different country and that it is a show piece of post communism reforms.
ReplyDeleteI am delighted to see that you have reactivated the comment system.
I too suffer from dual loyalties. I am a Tamil originally from Tamil Nadu in the South of India, but have lived most of my adult life in the Western state of Maharashtra. I am comfortable in both places but every now and then the call of the roots is irresistible.
We do not have anything like the bugle here, but you can hear the Azaan five times a day in every town and city of the country! Our Muslim brethren insist on sharing their piety through very loud loud speakers. The joke is that most of them are hearing impaired and need such loud reminders.