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Warszawa


Tourist attractions:
The Old Town, completely destroyed by the Germans in 1944, was rebuilt after the war and entered on UNESCO’s World Heritage List. Royal Castle and Zygmunt’s Column (1644). The royal park and garden complex, Łazienki, which dates back to the eighteenth century. Wilanów Palace, main thoroughfares with historic seventeenth- nineteenth century architecture (Krakowskie Przedmieście, Nowy Świat. There are also a number of historic churches, including the Gothic cathedral of St. John (16th c.), Holy Cross, St. Anne’s, the Franciscan church, St. Martin’s on ul. Piwna and many others. Also worth seeing are various palaces, election field of the Polish kings, historic cemeteries (Powązki, Jewish cemetery at ul. Okopowa, Orthodox cemetery in the Wola district), monuments (Warsaw Uprising, Ghetto Uprising), museums (National Museum, Zachęta, Museum of the Warsaw Uprising, Museum of Contemporary Art at Ujazdowski Castle), the nineteenth century Citadel, National Library, Warsaw University and Warsaw Polytechnic. The oldest functioning complex of water filters, botanical garden, parks and squares.


Warsaw in 1944

Ghetto after the Uprising

The Old Town

There are also historic sanatoria (spas), suburban areas and holiday retreats (Falenica, Otwock, Konstancin, Podkowa Leśna). Nearby are Kampinoski Park Narodowy, Fryderyk Chopin’s birthplace at Żelazowa Wola, Lake Zegrzyń, numerous forests and large parks.

Before the war, one in three of Warsaw’s residents was Jewish. Very little of prewar Jewish Warsaw has survived, as is the case with the city as a whole – approximately 25%. Most of the Jews were sent to the east, from Umschlagplatz to Treblinka. The ghetto was completely destroyed during the crushing of the heroic Ghetto Uprising in 1943. The rest of Warsaw burned or was destroyed in the Warsaw Uprising in 1944.

Photos courtesy of the City Hall www.um.warszawa.pl
Until the sixteenth century, Warsaw was the seat of the dukes of Mazovia. Beginning in 1569, it became the site of sessions of the parliament (sejm walny) of the Crown and Grand Duchy of Lithuania, and beginning in 1573, also where the Polish kings were elected. In 1596, Warsaw became the capital of Poland.


The Old Town and the Royal Castle. Photo: Anna Jasińska

The royal park, Łazienki. Photo: Anna Jasińska

Until this time, Warsaw’s history reflected the history of Poland as a whole, with both its high and low points. The most difficult period was the Second World War. Today, Warsaw is a typical reconstructed postwar city, with several main axes and “central spaces”. The city is socially very varied. It is a green city, with a population of 1.7 million. As a centrally located capital city, it has experienced rapid development and has become Poland’s main economic and financial center. Despite the enormous scale of destruction during the twentieth century, Warsaw still has a leading role in the fields of culture, education and science.


The catherdral of St.John and the Old Town

In “Diapositive”, we have presented above all what remains of Jewish Warsaw, the monuments to life as it used to be in that city, and memorials to the victims of the heinous Nazi-era crimes.

The recently expanded Chopin International Airport (Okęcie) is Warsaw’s main airport. From there, it takes about 15-30 minutes for taxis and buses to reach downtown. International trains stop right downtown (at the underground main train station, “Warszawa Centralna”). A variety of hotels are available in all price ranges. Air, train and bus connections link the capital with towns throughout Poland.
Services are held at the Orthodox Nożyk synagogue at ul. Twarda 6. Kosher meals are available nearby.

You are welcome to discuss about "Warszawa"

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Adam Mickiewicz Institute, Mokotowska 25, 00-560 Warsaw tel. (48-22) 44 76 100, fax. (48-22) 44 76 152; www.iam.pl