Poland: Warsaw and Why It Matters

Poland: Warsaw and Why It Matters

Join Rick Steves as he explores two of Poland's leading cities: the bustling capital Warsaw and the historic port city of Gdańsk. Discover Warsaw's blend of grand palaces, modern urbanity, and poignant WWII memorials, then venture to Toruń for gingerbread and Copernicus. Visit the formidable Malbork Castle, a medieval fortress, and learn about Gdańsk's role in the Solidarity movement that helped bring down communism. This journey highlights Poland's resilience, rich history, and vibrant future.

Poland’s Warsaw and Gdańsk. | Transcript:

Hey, I'm Rick Steves back with more of the best of Europe. This time we're visiting two of Poland's leading cities. The bustling capital Warsaw that way, the gorgeous maritime port Gdans that way, and the most formidable pile of medieval bricks I've ever seen. Thanks for joining us. Most tourists visiting Poland go only to Krakow. But there's so much more to see. The capital Warsaw is the heartbeat of contemporary Poland. And Gdansk up here in the Baltic coast is a colorful historic port city with a dramatic 20th

century story. We begin in Warsaw, the cosmopolitan capital gilded with a grand palace and a trendy urbanity. We'll learn about its turbulent 20th century and enjoy some Shopan in the park. Then we visit a sweet medieval town, taste its claim to fame, and storm a massive Tutonic fortress. Finally, we discover the port of Gdansk and how it helped bring communism down in Europe. Poland, about the size of Arizona, sits in the north of Central Europe. We'll follow its main river, the Vistula, from the capital, Warsaw, north past Tun and Malborg Castle to Gdansk on the Baltic Sea.

Warsaw is an energetic metropolis offering a fascinating foray into urban Poland. It comes with both a hard-fought history and a modern vibrancy. Today, Warsaw, pronounced Barava here, is Poland's biggest city with close to 2 million people. It's muscular and sprawling, broad boulevards, imposing buildings, and glittering glass office towers. Today's Warsaw is a thriving European center of business, banking, and politics with a cosmopolitan energy. Warsaw's glory days peaked between the World Wars when it was one of Europe's most gental capitals. That spirit survives along its rebuilt main drag, the sweeping Royal Way. With

its elegant facades and its popularity with local strollers, just being out and about, you feel the youthful confidence of this society. Stately hotels and government buildings, this is the president's residence, add to the royal ways grandeur. The Blecla Bakery is every pole's favorite for Ponchki jelly donuts. When locals here go out for donuts, they go out for punchki. My favorite's the classic. It's filled with wild rose jam. But it's not all jelly donuts. Vast squares with memorials remind all of Poland's hard-fought history. Here, the eternal flame honors war dead with numbers almost incomprehensible. As the city was totally destroyed by

Nazis in World War II, nearly everything you'll see, palaces, churches, and fountains, was painstakingly rebuilt from the rubble of 1945. I keep having to remind myself that in this city, hardly a building standing is over 80 years old. Consequently, Warsaw is an architectural jumble, rebuilt both old and new. Warsaw's meticulously rebuilt old town is dominated by its meticulously rebuilt royal castle. The castle, a symbol of Polish sovereignty now for over 400 years, boasts some of this country's most lavish halls, gilded and glittering with chandeliers.

The palace reflects how Poland was independent and strong for centuries, starting in the Middle Ages. When the homegrown dynasty died out, Poland's nobility elected foreign kings at gatherings like this. Many of those imported rulers squandered Poland's resources on their own selfish agendas. They weakened the country until it actually ceased to exist in 1795. For over a hundred years, Poland disappeared from the map, partitioned by three empires, Prussia, Austria, and Russia. But the Poles succeeded in preserving their culture until their country was reborn in 1918 after World War I.

Today, back out on the streets, the atmospheric Old Town entertains the tourists. Here, the 21st century seems to rule these cobbled lanes. In the center of the beautifully constructed market square is a popular sculpture. The mermaid, a symbol of Warsaw, serenades the town's people, still welcoming friends while keeping out foes. To me, this fountain, always energetic with kids playing, feels like a celebration of life, Polish life. And Polish life comes with music, especially the genius of favorite son Frederick Shopan. On summer Sundays, Shopan concerts pack the park. It's an expression of this city's pride in its culture and its enduring appetite for community.

Poland's great romantic composer sits under a willow tree. Though he lived and worked mostly in Paris, locals cherish the thought that Shopan's inspiration came from memories of the breeze blowing through the willow trees of his native land, Poland. Warsaw museums work hard to explain its complicated history and much of Poland's story is a Jewish story. The Museum of the History of Polish Jews celebrates a thousand years of Jews living in Poland. A winding route traces their experience. With the relative tolerance of medieval kings, Jews became established in Polish society. But because they still suffered through pilgrims and other persecution, few actual artifacts survive.

Many Jews lived in market towns called with richly decorated wooden synagogues. Above the traditional elevated prayer platform is a colorful ceiling, a humble canopy rich with symbolism. When Poland regained its independence after World War I, Jewish culture blossomed, especially in the 1920s when for the first time, Jews had full citizenship and voting rights. And Warsaw was the biggest Jewish city in Europe. Tragically, this flourishing of Jewish culture was crushed when fascist Germany invaded in 1939. Jews were then coralled into a miserable ghetto, subjected to unlivable conditions before being shipped off to Nazi death camps and killed.

A monument captures the desperation of the ghetto's last days. Realizing they were all doomed anyway, the Haggar and Hungary who remained staged a desperate uprising. Nearly all were killed. This was just one city's experience in a Europewide Holocaust. In this attempted genocide, Hitler tried to rid the world of Jewish people. Of the 6 million he killed, half died here in Poland. With its Jewish population decimated, Warsaw's next chapter was a second valiant but doomed uprising. This time by the non-Jewish Poles who remained under Nazi occupation. Poles had formed the biggest underground resistance army in history.

Late in the war, as the Nazis began to falter and the Soviets advanced, Poland's home army mobilized to liberate the country. But the Nazis regrouped and brutally put down the Warsaw uprising. Hitler then ordered that Warsaw be destroyed to its foundations. The Soviet army sat here across the river and watched and waited. Finally, when the Germans were gone, the Russians marched in to claim the wasteland that was once Warsaw, kicking off over four decades of communist rule. Like a phoenix, the city has risen from the ashes. And today, Warsaw is filled with a happy and youthful populace that has no living memory of those hard times.

Today's Warsaw is hip and trendy. Hulking old buildings, no longer fascist or communist, are filled with a rainbow of global food choices. Postindustrial architecture is all the rage. Old red brick factories and power plants have been transformed into convivial hubs for dining, drinking, and shopping. I'm joined by my friend and fellow guidebook author Cameron Huitt and the show's producer Simon Griffith at Debenda for a taste of Warsaw Zerbane foodie scene. This trendy restaurant specializes in craft cocktails and Polish fusion cuisine.

The menu takes fresh local ingredients like heirloom tomatoes and beets and gives them an international spin. Padrron peppers, falafel, pumpkin dumplings, all washed down with a good Spanish wine. Whether Polish or international, you can see that we thought everything was delicious. It's a reminder of how cosmopolitan Warsaw respects Polish tradition while also embracing a global future. I can't think of a better way to enjoy our last night in Warsaw. Heading north from Warsaw through the rolling farmland of the Polish countryside, we reach a small town break from our big city itinerary, Touun.

Torun feels affluent. In the Middle Ages, it was part of the Hansiatic League, a trade union of northern European merchant cities. Like much of northern Poland, many of its buildings are finely crafted of red brick. The city has an easygoing ambiance that comes with the heavenly scent of gingerbread. Every pole knows Tun for two reasons, Capernicus and gingerbread. This was the birthplace of the astronomer Capernicus who 500 years ago established that the earth revolves around the sun. But today here in Torun anyway a lot revolves around this gingerbread.

This recreated old bakery is a favorite for field trips. Costumed guides teach young students how in the Middle Ages, Torun's trading connections gave local bakers access to exotic spices. Spices like ginger, cinnamon, and clove. And how the honey in the dough was a natural preservative, allowing it to be traded far and wide. Then the children get to actually roll the dough, press it into traditional molds, and pop their little creations into the oven. Local gingerbread shops let you mix and match a variety of tasty treats with any combination of jams, glazes, and chocolate. For locals, the word is actually a verb. If you've eaten too

much, you have gingerbreaded. I think this will get me to our next stop. Further north is the Malborg Castle. Another red brick masterpiece called the biggest brick castle in the world. This was the 14th century headquarters of the Tutonic Knights. These Germanic crusaders turned mercenaries were hired here by a Christian duke to convert the local pagans. Job done. The Tutonic Knights decided they liked it here, so they stuck around, built this castle, and dominated northern Poland for over a century.

Malbour Castle was essentially a fortified monastery home to monks, knights, and their leader, the Grandmaster. Malbour's fortifications are formidable indeed. The complex was surrounded by an imposing moat and a mighty brick wall. The heavy portal stopped anyone who breached the moat. Then from slits up above, archers could rain down arrows. And the inner drawbridge made the core of the castle an impenetrable last refuge. While knights lived in the outer castle, monks lived in the inner castle. The Grandmaster's lavish and wellfortified quarters with their fanvated assembly rooms and expansive dining halls were the capital of those Tutonic Knights from where they

administered their domain. Most of the main sites of Poland are connected by the Vista River. An hour's drive takes us to its and our final stop, Gdansk. Historically Poland's leading port sits near where the fistla meets the Baltic Sea. For a thousand years, a cultural crossroads with a rich maritime history. Architecturally, it feels more Scandinavian or Dutch than Polish. During its medieval golden age, Gdansk prospered as a key member of the Hansiotic League. The Hansiotic League was an association of over a 100 cities and ports across Northern Europe. Its mission to protect and promote trade. Busy hunting down

pirates, building lighouses, and boycotting ports that didn't join the club. It dominated the economy and politics in the region through the late Middle Ages. In a way, the Hansiotic League was a precursor to the European Union. Its motto, all power to the merchants. Along the embankment is a structure those merchants put to good use. a hulking 15th century crane. Back then, this entire river could be filled banktobank with trading vessels. Maritime trade from distant lands made Gdansk both prosperous and tolerant. It attracted merchants from all over Europe who brought with them elements of their home cultures. These were then woven into the tapestry of the city, reflected

in its eclectic architecture. Overhead, the town hall tower holds a carolon that marks each hour with a cheerful tune. To better understand Gdansk, we're joined by my friend and fellow tour guide, Agnesca Sroa. Our first stop is the town hall. So the city was governed from this exact room here. And the art is there's a lot of art here. Yeah, that's amazing, isn't it? In the middle of the vaulting, have a look at this magnificent painting from6008. Visa river starts over there in the mountains. Look at these barges filled with the grain from all over the kingdom

of Poland. So all the goods were shipped from the Dinsk down the Vista River to the Baltic Sea. They are taking that grain and that grain goes all over Western Europe. And look, deals, businesses made here in front of the Arthus court. These would be traders from all over Northern Europe. Part of the Hansiatic League here making a deal, shaking hands. Indeed, like 1600 stock market and God's hand. So he's holding not the church but the town hall. Exactly. Because Gdansk was so multicultural and multi-religious throughout centuries. It really never mattered what religion you are but how much money you can bring to the city doing your business.

The guild hall is next door. This is a magnificent roof. It's a beautiful guild house. A great example of a great social space where guilds, medieval merchant groups met. Okay. So this was like um networking. Exactly. Merchants from all over Europe were coming here to do their business. Each arch uh belonged to one guild. Imagine in front of each arch there was goldmith guild uh beer guild, amber guild. They were very competitive. So that the traders from Lubebec would meet the traders from Amsterdam and from Ria coming together and then buying grain, timber, coal and exporting that all over Europe.

The city is ornamented with fine red brick buildings. That's because here in the marshy north of Poland, stone is scarce. Grand buildings like this old mill elevate brick laying to an art form. The old market hall has long provided an impressive place for farmers to sell their produce. The train station gives visitors a red brick welcome. And even the modern shopping malls carry on this love of brick. And rising high above everything is St.

Mary's Church, one of the biggest brick churches anywhere. To be both tall and stable without the strength of stone, it was fortified with beefy brick buttresses. Stepping inside, you're struck by the stark, austere and very white interior. This is a remarkable church. Mary's church was built before reformation. Look at the beautiful tptic altar coronation of St. Virgin Mary. So the altarpiece is from before the reformation. Exactly. And then the city converted to Protestant. And what was really important was the pulpit because of the word of God and music coming from magnificent organ.

Look at that pipe organ. This is like a pavement of tombstones. Exactly. 500 gravestones of the wealthiest merchants of Gdines who wanted to be buried here in their parish church. And if not buried in the tomb, you could commemorate your family on the wall with an epito in the shadow of the church. Atmospheric Marriottska Street is lined with traditional porches, clever gargoyles, and vendors selling the prized amber that the Baltic coast is so famous for. For amber as high art, the striking amber museum fills an old mill with precious deposits of this fossilized tree sap. Much of the world's amber comes from Poland. Amber, which can be tens of millions of years old, comes in shades of white, yellow, and brown.

It's a favorite medium of local artisans who create exquisite items from an organically sculptured candalabra to a chessboard that would mesmerize a grandmaster. There's an exquisite miniature storage chest and even furniture such as this gorgeous writing desk. Gdans lived its most dramatic moments in the 20th century. World War II began right here in 1939 when Hitler invaded. And those cranes marked the shipyard where 40 years later in 1980, the Soviet block finally began to crack. During communist times, Gdansk was home to the massive Lenin shipyard. In 1980, after decades of frustrations and struggles, shipyard workers went on strike.

They created a trade union called Solidarity. Locking themselves inside the shipyard, they refused to work and scrolled their list of 21 demands on plywood. A fired shipyard electrician, Le Fuenza, heard news of the strike. He came here and literally climbed over the wall to get inside and join his comrades. The strike had its leader. The European Solidarity Center with its industrial strength architecture and inspiring exhibits tells the story both vividly and proudly. For 18 days, 17,000 workers, welders, machinists, and steel workers stood strong.

Their only connection to the outside world was to come to the gate. There they'd pass messages to family members and receive food, supplies, and encouragement. The strikers were hungry, tired, and scared. But they were both inspired and emboldened by the new Polish Pope, John Paul II. Finally, the communist authorities gave in and legalized the union. Half of the nation's workforce joined solidarity, and change was in the air. But then after 16 hopeful months, Polish authorities, fearful of Soviet intervention, declared martial law.

Tanks rumbled through the snowy streets of Poland, and the riot police cracked down on dissident. Solidarity went underground. Yet, it gained momentum. In 1989, the roundt talks brought about elections. The result, solidarity, now a political party, won every available seat. These first cracks in the Eastern block spread quickly. Within a few months, the Berlin Wall fell, borders opened up, communist regimes voted themselves out of existence, and Leoenza was elected the first postcommunist president of Poland. Today, Gdansk, mindful of its history, is a forward-looking community. Facing the skyline of old Gdansk across the river, is a modern development.

Only recently rebuilt from World War II bombings, it echoes the historic roof lines. With its 21st century affluence, Gdansk provides its people a stylish boardwalk for good living. Strolling here, you feel the promise of a bright Polish future. The resilience of Poland's culture and the warmth of its people inspire me. And learning from this country's hard history, I'm reminded that freedom, peace, and prosperity are hard-earned and that we have lots to be thankful for. I hope you've enjoyed our look at perhaps Europe's most underrated and surprising country. I'm Rick Steves.

Until next time, keep on traveling. It's filled with wild rose jam. Whoa. It's a colorful historic port city with a dramatic 20th century story. This is it. This Oh, come to Gdubsk. Yes. To do their business, networking, commerce, money.

More Entertainment Transcript