AM KATAT BASH - A Kiwi on the move
Wednesday, September 17, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
Even though it was summer it was windy and cold at the top.
According to folklore, witches met on the summit on the Sabbath - presumably Polish and Slovakian witches.
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Saturday, September 13, 2014
The revolving coffins of Krakow
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I like the silver one myself.
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Friday, September 12, 2014
Tuesday, September 9, 2014
"Concrete and democracy belong together'
In 1911, the Wroclaw city council commissioned architect Max Berg to design an Exhibition
Grounds and Hall so that the city would compete with trade fairs such as those held in Leipzig and Frankfurt. Controversial at the time, the Centennial Hall was both an architectural and engineering master piece and is now listed as a UNESCO heritage building.
It was the largest dome built of reinforced concrete and the wide concrete arches were breakthrough in structural engineering.
Several Nazi rallies were held there in the thirties but Hitler hated the building as being too stark and plain. To celebrate the triumph of socialism over fascism, in 1948 a tall slender spire was placed at the main entrance to the hall. Still used extensively today, the building has been lovingly restored.
Monday, September 8, 2014
"No Freedom Without Dwarves"
The Solidarity Movement of the 1980s was part of a wider unrest sweeping Poland over the Soviet occupation and in Wroclaw it took a very unusual and innovation turn. In 1981 whenever authorities painted over anti government slogans, Waldemar Frydych would stencil a dwarf on the fresh paint to illustrate that it would take more than paint to stop the protest. Quickly the dwarf with its distinctive orange cap (apparently Polish dwarfs wear orange caps) started appearing everywhere under the slogan "No freedom without dwarfs". The dwarf figures mocked and poked fun at the authorities who were powerless to move against what was on the surface just some silliness. But the message was clear and as the eighties progressed the dwarf movement became much bolder, but never lost its sense of fun.
Groups of mainly young people paraded through the streets dressed as dwarfs with slogans such as 'Help the militia, beat up yourself'. The authorities had to act but were left arrested people and charging them for wearing an orange hat or trousers.
The peak of the movement came in 1988 when over 10,000 people packed the central city all dressed as dwarfs.
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