Celebrating Chopin in Warsaw

In this video clip, I blindsided my wonderful Warsaw guide, Monika, when I asked her to show off Warsaw’s love of Chopin. Imagine having your own charming local guide like this one to show you how the benches play Chopin in the parks.

Every year I have a tradition of signing up for a Rick Steves tour in Europe. We have 35 or so itineraries, and the choice can be tough. I’ll tell you, right now, after lots of time in Eastern Europe this summer, I am tempted to take our Best of Eastern Europe tour in 2015.

Today’s Warsaw

Warsaw is Poland’s capital and biggest city. It’s huge, famous, and important…but not particularly romantic. (If you’re looking for Old World quaintness, head for Kraków.) But Warsaw is an inspiration to visit. To think it was literally bombed flat and rebuilt since 1945 is amazing.

People-in-Warsaw-Park-PolandWalking through Warsaw’s parks, enjoying a little Chopin in the composer’s hometown, marveling at its fast-growing skyline, and just connecting with big-city people who are as warm and charming as small-town folk — that’s the fun of Warsaw.

 

Gary-Cooper-in-Solidarity-get-out-vote-posterPoles love America — they think of us as their big brother from across the Atlantic. And when the communist government gave the people a small opening for representative government in 1989, the “get out the vote” poster was Gary Cooper holding not a gun, but a voting card. The result of that election: Anticommunist parties won every single seat the communist party offered up for a vote.

 

chopin-salon-warsawI spent my first evening in Warsaw at the Chopin Salon, an intimate evening of beautiful music, wine, and cheese hosted by Jarek Cholodecki, who runs the recommended Boutique B&B. Each evening, a small group of locals and travelers gather around Jarek’s big, shiny Steinway grand to hear great music performed by talented young artists in a great city. It felt “very Warsaw.”

 

skyline-with-Stalin-tower-WarsawWarsaw’s massive Palace of Culture and Science skyscraper, dating from the early 1950s, is the tallest building between Frankfurt and Moscow (760 feet with the spire). It was a “gift” from Stalin that the people of Warsaw couldn’t refuse. Varsovians call it “Stalin’s Penis.” (There are seven such “Stalin Gothic” erections in Moscow.) If it feels like an Art Deco Chicago skyscraper, that’s because the architect was inspired by his years he spent studying and working in Chicago in the 1930s. Because it was to be “Soviet in substance, Polish in style,” Soviet architects toured Poland to absorb local culture before starting the project. Since the end of communism, the younger generation doesn’t mind the structure so much — and some even admit to liking it for the way it enlivens the new, predictable, glass-and-steel skyline springing up around it.

Polish Booby Prize

This is the final of four reports that my Eastern Europe guidebook co-author Cameron Hewitt sent me from his travels:

In Poland, the big news is that several Polish cities are hosting matches for the 2012 Euro Cup soccer championships — which in Europe is only a small step down from hosting the Olympics. Everything’s under construction. They’re building new high-speed rail lines like crazy, which will be good news in a few years, but is bad news now since most journeys are substantially delayed. The Gdansk-Warsaw trip, usually about four hours, took closer to six.

Warsaw’s Central Station — my vote for most depressing and confusing rail station in Europe — is slated for a desperately needed overhaul soon. It can’t happen fast enough. In the five-minute walk from the ticket office to my platform, I ran into three different American couples who were toting my guidebook and hopelessly baffled about what to do next. Pointing them in the right direction, I felt pretty good-Samaritan about myself…until I realized that they were just the tip of the confused-tourist iceberg. Normally I’d take their confusion as a sign that the book needs improvement; in this case, I think it’s the station that needs improvement. (But I’m revamping the “Arrival” section anyway, just in case.)

There’s always something new in fast-developing Poland. Every time I go back to certain towns (like Gdansk), I discover that several good hotels and restaurants have opened. Occasionally I’ve had to list a hotel (with ample “last resort”-type caveats) that I know isn’t that great, just because there are no acceptable alternatives. It’s so satisfying to visit a few new hotels or restaurants, discover that they’re better than the old standbys, and delete the duds from my book. (There’s even a good sushi restaurant now in Gdansk — so long, “Pierogi Restaurant Under the Boar.”) In a few cases, if you compare my hotel or restaurant listings from five years ago to today’s, you’ll find only a couple of overlaps. That’s not the case in most books, but in Poland it just shows how things are steadily improving.

A couple of Poles bragged to me that Poland is one of the only countries in Europe that’s not suffering so badly from the financial crisis. It’s actually had positive economic growth last year. But it’s sort of a booby prize. When pressed for reasons, they acknowledged that it’s probably because the Polish economy is a bit backwards and not as well-integrated into the global scene, making it less prone to worldwide fluctuations.

I usually have total tunnel vision about my work, but this trip I’ve been trying to chat more with people I meet. This has reminded me how rewarding it can be to strike up a conversation — whether with a couple from Sherwood Forest in Nottinghamshire, or a woman from Friday Harbor who’s about to embark on an epic journey that will take her to the Baltics, the “-Stans” of central Asia, and the prettiest stretch of the Camino de Santiago. Most fascinating was the pair of young Scottish women who quit their jobs and were traveling all around Europe for four months — sleeping in their car, cooking on a camp stove, showering once a week (“10 days was the longest”), and making a go of it on a budget of €50 a day, most of which went toward gas and experiences.

But, as always, my favorites have been interactions with Polish people. It’s amazing the connections you discover with people you’d think you have nothing in common with. On the long train ride from Gdansk to Warsaw, I shared a compartment with a woman whose husband is a cognitive psychologist/memory researcher. It turns out he’s familiar with the work of the professor I was a research assistant for in college.

And just now, as I write this on the train from Warsaw to Krakow, I’ve been chatting with Monika. She told me she was going to a very remote little village northeast of Krakow to visit her father. I prodded her for more details, and it turns out she grew up in a small town (Szczurowa) that’s just a 20-minute drive from the villages where my great-grandparents were born. I’ve been in her middle-of-nowhere town twice in the last few years. She knows several people with the same surname as my ancestors. And I have to assume that she’s probably a distant cousin of some sort.

A few minutes later, “Cousin Monika” became my guardian angel when my computer crashed after I spritzed a little water on the keyboard. She called her brother-in-law, who’s a tech support guy, and got some tips. Now my computer is humming away on my lap again.

When traveling, we focus so much on the museums, the cuisine, and the scenery. But it’s often these strange, funny, serendipitous little interactions that we remember the most fondly.