Well, if I didn’t get enough yesterday, I thought I needed
to go to the Schindler’s Factory Museum.
But first, breakfast time! I went to this place called
Coffee Heaven, which sounds like a wonderful, magical place, but it’s totally
not! I got scolded for trying to take a picture, the staff hardly made eye
contact, and the looked kind of perturbed that I was in there! The coffee was
good and so was the muffin, but I totally should have gotten the Polish
breakfast again. =)
Moving on! Next up, I switched from my hostile hostel to an
actual hotel. They were running a special rate (200 zl/night, which was about
$65), and so I moved my stuff right then and there!
And now it was time to go to the Schindler Factory Museum.
It’s about a 15 minute walk from the Krakow city center, but it took me about
30 thanks to a couple of missed turns. =) That’s life.
When you walk in, you buy your ticket and walk up the
stairs. The first room is all pictures of life before the war. Pictures of
people in their wedding dresses, family pictures, people having fun, etc. There
are sounds of people talking, the radio going, and normal house noises. Some facts
are on the hallway walls: During the inter-war period, ¼ of all Krakowians were
Jewish. Krakow was experiencing a booming economy and growth; it was the
cultural center of Poland. The next room looked like a carnival or a movie
theater. There was a place to watch a film about Schindler’s Factory. It
described the working conditions, which were quite good for the time—they even
got one or two bowls of hearty soup and a couple of servings of bread and
coffee per day. They made metal goods, such as pots and pans that were sold
both in store and on the black market. Schindler was repeatedly arrested by the
Gestapo for smuggling drugs several times, but always got out unscathed. He
made a significant moral transformation, although not a complete 180-degree
turn. But he did save upwards of 1200 Jews, putting his own life in danger. There
was at least one time when he went directly to Plaszow work camp to get some of
his workers out when they were taken away.
On September 1, 1939, the Nazis began bombing Poland,
including Krakow, at 5:00 am. Poles were not allowed to help Jews—this was
outlawed and a Pole could be shot on the spot. The next hallway I entered was
cold. You could hear sounds of people talking, factory work, and bombs. You had
to walk through a maze of Nazi flags. Poles and Jews were all mistreated and
restricted from living in their own city. Polish professors were arrested, and
Hans Frank, the General Governor from the Nazi army himself, who made Krakow
his seat of government, told them they were about to be arrested. Many died in
prison; others were shipped to concentration camps. There was to be no higher
education. People were to be educated enough to know that there was no way to
overpower the Nazis. General Frank moved into Wawel Castle.
Krakow was “Germanized” as quickly as possible. The main
market square was renamed “Adolf Hitler Platz,” which means “Adolf Hitler
Square.” In this exhibit you could hear German marching music and singing.
There were also pictures of the Nazis having a good time and having run of the
city.
Sounds of work came from the next room, and there were
pictures of people being beaten and mistreated and hanged. Jews were taken to
prison, and to give you and idea of their fear, there was an old Polish prison
cell down a set of stairs you could go down to in a corner. It is a tremendous
understatement to say it was creepy and frightening. You couldn’t see anything
in the cell but darkness, and all you could hear were scared whispers.
Then you went to an office, probably like Schindler’s
office. There were hats and coats on a hat rack, books sitting out. (I noticed
a lot of things were sitting out and not behind any glass. This would not
happen in an American museum, unfortunately. That’s a little off topic,
though.) This room was interactive and very informative because it explained a
lot about the factory and Schindler’s role. Not only was the factory for making
pots and pans, but also for munitions. The factory used to be called “Emilia”
Factory, or enamel factory, and belonged to a prosperous Jewish family, but of
course that was done away with. Schindler bought it and started manufacturing
some of the same things. At first he hired mostly Poles, then mostly Jews
because they were cheap labor and didn’t have to be paid.
After this exhibit was a bit of a relief. There was a room
all about the underground theatre. In the ghetto, Jews held performances in
their homes and in the basements of businesses. There had to be some way to
think about something other than how awful it was. I thought this was a good
way to break up the progression.
Now we made our way to the Jewish Ghetto, just half a km
from the factory. It was then that I noticed the floors were always changing
with the exhibits. It’s a small thing that made a difference in setting the
mood. Some floors were wood, some cobblestones, bricks, etc. In this part of
the museum, you walked through a path with the ghetto wall on one side and a
black wall on the other. On either side of the path were bits of written
accounts from people’s diaries about life in the ghetto. The ghetto was like a
labor camp, and if you didn’t have the right paper work when they checked, you
were shipped off to another camp. The area where the ghetto was located was
built for the 3000 people who already lived there. But when the Jews were all
relocated there, 17,000 people lived in that place. It was crowded, the sewage
system couldn’t handle that many people, and many apartments housed five or six
families at once. Jews were not allowed to leave, but there’s a pharmacy there
in the ghetto called Eagle Pharmacy. It was used to smuggle messages during the
War, and it’s now remembered for that.
Then we came back to Schindler. This exhibit was again like
an office, but bigger. There were books on the walls and office machines like
typewriters and old phones in there, too. The exhibit gave a lot of information
about the inner workings of the operation. Schindler was not known as a nice
person, as I’ve already said. With two mistresses, a history of Gestapo
arrests, unfair trading and gambling on his track record, along with various
other things, people simply did not trust him. He even used the factory to
cover up spying against Poland. But the fact remains that he did save people’s
lives when that very well could have gotten him killed.
Next up was a labor camp room. The floor was gravel, there
was machinery there for manual labor, and there was a barbed-wire fence in the
back. Things were very quiet in there.
Then you walk downstairs and the last thing you see is the
“Room of Choices.” We all have the opportunity to choose what we do—for others,
for ourselves, and for humanity. Pretty humbling, depending on what kind of
choices you tend to make.
So now that we’re all somber, let’s get some lunch! I wanted
to find this place our tour guide had told us about called The Olive Tree. It’s
supposed to be completely kosher, abiding by every Jewish law in the Old
Testament. I know I’d just seen it the day before, but I had no idea where it
was! I ended up going to a place called “Kuchina Domava.” The sign said Polish
Traditional Home Cooking, and that sounded about right for me! =) I walked in
and the little man working didn’t know a lot of English, but he gave me an
English menu and we got started. I decided on this thing that someone had told
me I needed to try. I don’t remember what it’s called, but it’s a potato
pancake with goulash on top. And it was SO good! And very heavy. I was so
hungry that I ate it too fast and had a bit of a stomach ache afterward, but it
was totally worth it. =)
I walked back over to the Old Town (it quickly became my
favorite place!) and browsed the Cloth Hall shopping place. I went to the
underground museum of the old church and the original Main Market Square, too.
It’s a small museum, but they had a lot of very impressive artifacts, such as
graves with bones still in them, original wood, pottery and tools found on the
site, and the like. There were also models of what the church looked like when
it was first built in the 900s, then when it was reconstructed and added onto
in the 1600s (if I remember the dates correctly).
And next up, I thought it’d be fun to walk the Plant Garden
path around the city! I needed to work up an appetite so I’d have room for
supper, so walking 4km sounded like a good idea. =) The Krakowians have done a
wonderful job of landscaping. It’s right along the river for part of the way,
which is my favorite thing—sitting or walking by the water! Also, so
fire-breathing dragon happens to be on the path, so I got to stop over and get
a picture with him as well. =)
Making my way around, I decided I was not going to be hungry
enough for a full meal, but I needed to eat something to get me through till
breakfast, so I got a traditional Polish soup, which was about the right
amount. =) It's called Zurek Staropolski, and it's a rye flour soup with boiled egg and sausage in it. Probably wouldn't get it every day, but I was glad I tried it!
And the final stop of the day: Bed time! This time, I went "home" to a nice hotel with nice people who possess excellent customer service skills. Done. =) It was the first good night's sleep I've gotten on this trip, and it's a good thing: I had a night train ride ahead of me the next day!
And now for your viewing pleasure: PICTURES!
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