Welcome! Wilkommen!

I would like to welcome you to my European Extravaganza blog. I intend to use this blog to share my advantures abroad as a Fulbright Scholar. This blog will give my family and friends back home a chance to know what I am up to through posts and pictures. I hope you will share in my experiences and have some fun with me. - Emma

Zwinger

Zwinger
Dresden Palace and Museum

Monday, February 28, 2011

Auschwitz

On Wednesday morning, I woke up early, got dressed and ate breakfast, and then walked 15 minutes to the main bus station to catch an 8:25 bus to Oświęcim, the original Polish name of the town before the Germans took over and gave it its German equivalent, Auschwitz. The drive there took us through a beautiful countryside dotted with small villages. One hour and 45 minutes later, we arrived at the concentration camp. After getting some information, I bought a ticket to join an English tour.
At 10:30 the tour began at Auschwitz-I, where the famous “Arbeit Macht Frei” (work sets you free) sign is located.

The tour guide, a native of Poland with fabulous English, told us about the history of the camp and took us through multiple barracks, where once the prisoners lived and now were museums. The museums used pictures, maps and original items owned by the prisoners themselves, to give greater light into the tragedy. Unlike most concentration camps, Auschwitz-I was a Polish military base before the war. Thus, this camp was made up of brick buildings. For me this was a surprise because most depictions of the concentration camps show them as have low-quality wood barns for buildings.

We also visited the single crematorium at Auschwitz-I and got a view of the prison within the camp where local resistance fighters, political prisoners, and troublemakers within the camp were killed without much reason.
 After more than two hours, the group took a bus to the second, and more infamous, camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. When you see Auschwitz, it is this camp that is usually shown.

Walking through the notorious train station and onto the platform where thousands of Jews were separated from their families and where most were immediately sent to their deaths is an experience in itself. It was interesting to see the place and I heard and seen so much about. However, at the same time to walk the path of so many victims was heartbreaking. This camp is humongous. It is 400 acres and takes 15 or more minutes to walk from one side to the other. While there we also visited a reconstruction of the barns. Originally designed to hold 52 horses, here hundreds of people were crammed together to live in the rain and snow.
Finally we walked to the back of the camp to see the remains of two of the more active crematoriums. When the Russians were getting close, the SS soldiers who ran the camp burned most of the documents and demolished the crematoriums as a way to protect themselves.

When the tour was over, I took the bus back to Auschwitz-I and went to the bookstore and had some lunch. At 4 O’clock I caught the bus back to Krakow. When I arrived back in town I picked up some food and headed back to the hotel. It had been a very cold day and I was tired. I ate take-out Chinese food in bed and watched a movie before going to bed.
The next day I slept in. Once I got going, I headed to the Jewish Quarter and visited the two main Jewish cemeteries and the oldest Jewish synagogue in Europe.


I then walked another 10 minutes to reach what was the Jewish Ghetto during German occupation. Only two small segments of the wall remain and there is a memorial at the square where the Jewish community waited to be deported to concentration camps. I also visited a small museum located in a former pharmacy. This pharmacy is important because even when it was within the ghetto, the Catholic pharmacist kept the store open and gave away medication and medical supplies for free. The pharmacy was also a gathering place for Jewish intellectuals during their captivity. Finally, this museum is of note because it plays three original films, one showing the area before the war, one that depicts the forced movement of the Jewish community into the ghetto and the last one showing what the ghetto looked like immediately after the Jews were deported.  
Afterwards I headed back to the center of Krakow for some lunch and a little shopping. For a souvenir, I bought myself a tea set in the traditional Polish pottery. I spent the rest of the afternoon going back to the different places where I wanted more time. When it got dark, I went back to the hotel and picked up my luggage. I would leave that night for Budapest, but had a few hours to kill. I eat some dinner and walked around a large mall connected to the train station. At nine pm I was on the train to Budapest. I lucked out and had a double sleeper by myself. The room was nicer than I expected and the bed, with a feather duvet blanket, was not too bad. I slept as well as could be expected. When I woke up, I was in a new country and had a new town to explore!

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Krakow and Budapest Photos

I have uploaded all of my pictures from my trip. Scroll to the bottom of the page and click on one of the pictures under Emma's Picture Albums. When the screen pops up, click on the My Photos tab up top. This will take you to all of my albums. Then just choose which album you want to look at and click it. Enjoy!

My adventures in the East

Winter vacation, a wonderful initiative of the Germans, is a two week vacation in February. For the average German family, this time is spent skiing in the Alps. However, I used this free time to go to places I have yet to explore – Eastern Europe. I started my vacation on Monday February 14 by riding a train for ten hours from Dresden to Cottbus and after a change of trains on to Krakow. It was a long day, but I had brought things to occupy my time. I was fascinated by the Polish landscape. Beginning at the border, southwestern Poland is very flat and mostly forest. As we traveled east, the land become hillier and was used for agricultural purposes. I arrived well past dark and took a taxi to my hotel. My hotel was very nice and I would stay then again should I ever again reach Krakow. It was located in the main city center only a block from the main square. It was a bit noisy at night, but I was too tired to notice, and had a good breakfast of bread, meat, cheese, jam, juice and more.
My first day in Krakow was spent seeing the sights. It was a cold clear morning. I started by walking through the Planty, a parked planted on the remains of the medieval wall that once surrounded the old town. I entered the town from the north going through the only remaining gate of the wall. The gate opened onto the main north south road. I spent the morning walking along this street looking at the different items for sale and stopping at different points to visit the important sights. These included the cathedral, the old cloth hall and a tower, the only remaining piece of the original town hall, in the main square, St. Francis’ Basilica, where Pope John Paul II was once bishop, and the castle on a large hill at the south end of the town. 
Main square

Within the walls of the Castle
For lunch I ate at a traditional Milk Bar, a cheap self-service restaurant that serves traditional Polish food.  I had two humongous potato pancakes that were topped with a thick stew, ketchup, cream, and cheese. I also tried the local drink called the Kompot. It is a fruit juice.

After lunch I returned to my hotel room and took a nap. I was determined that this trip would be relaxing and stress free. If I wanted to stop for tea, that I would or if I wanted to go back to my room and rest, it was not a big deal. Three days in Krakow was plenty of time and ensured that I could take my time seeing the town. After I woke up from my nap, I headed back out and walked around. For dinner I went to an Italian restaurant suggested by my guidebook and had a delicious pizza. I returned to my room early and went to bed tired and wanted to get a good night’s sleep because the next day I would get up early and go to Auschwitz.