segunda-feira, 23 de abril de 2012

churches of Lodz, pt.1

the Trinity Lutheran Church in Lodz is one of the oldest churches in town





St. Olga Orthodox Church

St. Alexander Nevski ortodox church

Church of Holy Name of Jesus, former Protestant Lutheran church of John Evangelist, built in 1880.

Kosciol Podwyzszenia Sw Krzyza, or Church of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross

domingo, 22 de abril de 2012

krasnale at wolczanska street



this was the first krasnale i've found in Lodz. this one stands in a gate at Wolczanska street. those are not specially well mantained.
it was the first time i've seen one of those, so i was happy. i was lucky enough to remember to take a photo.
Although all or most of the dwarves carries a shield with the word"ROK"(year) inscribed, only a few actually have the year written there.

sábado, 21 de abril de 2012

kasia nosowska sings osiecka


this is Kasia Nosowska from band HEY! singing the Osiecka's song "Kokaina".
Kasia is a famous singer and her N/O is a fantastic record dedicated to Osiecka.
the video shows the making of the record.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OtnDGAs-m3c

terça-feira, 10 de abril de 2012

Lodz, jewish cemetery

the jewish presence in Lodz is notable. Poland was tolerant to the jewish presence during the whole XIX century. they have been there since the XV century, but more than once have been expelled, massacred and deprived from their business and goods. so it was only on the XIX century that the jewish communities could really flourish in Poland, specially in Warsaw and industrial cities like Lodz. in late XIX's there were a wave of jews fleeing from the russian Pogrom moving to Poland. They were absorbed by the jewish communities of the cities. at the time of the war,35% of the Lodz population was jewish.


http://shapingtime.webs.com/apps/photos/photo?photoid=105059945


in Lodz the textile factories were the fuel for the city's vibrant development and many of the most important of the factories were owned by jewish families as well their workers.

their presence left many traces in Lodz and the jewish cemetery is a special one.
it is located at Bracka street on the outskirts of the town, in one of the limits of the Guetto during the war.




the Bracka street cemetery is the new cemetery as there were and older one, whose land was sold years later for new buildings.
the size of the cemetery is enormous, with almost 40 hectare and have 160.000 people buried. it is considered the largest jewish cemetery in Europe.
better information can be obtained at the official page:


http://www.jewishlodzcemetery.org/EN/Home/Default.aspx


and

http://www.lodzjews.org/root/form/en/dzieje-zydow/index.asp


it was a sunny morning of a week day, when i took the tram to the final stop. there in the end of town, with a freeway on my side, i took the right path to Bracka street.

the cemetery aparently was empty, and inside the reception a woman not much interested in charge me for going in there (6 sloty).





the place is taken by the vegetation and trees share place with the graves. it is a very strong sight.
the cemetery is divided in sections like almost cemetery, and the graves face the same side - Jerusalem?, and with very few exceptions not sumptous.
I was told about some special tombstones that i could not find.








there is a work to recover the names and history of people buried in the cemetery.
during the war time 43.000 people were buried there over the 5 year duration of the guetto, which is the average number of 23,5 bodies buried there each day, almost one per hour.
and if as a whole around 200.000 person died at the Lodz guetto, the average of 109 persons dead everyday during 5 years of starvation, deseases and killed.
(citation needed mode off)





when it started to rain i was in the wild. in minutes i had my camera wet and my foot into the mud. i took the ground of that place with me for some days.




the poznanski mausoleum

the mausoleum of Izrael Poznanski and Eleonora Hertz is the largest jewish tombstone in the world. the textile industrial Izrael Poznanski died in 1900. his fortune was so big as he must have been important, because 112 years after his death some of the main sites of the city are still linked to him: his palace became a museum, his factory became the biggest complex of culture and shopping of the city, and his mausoleum is the biggest jewish tombstone ever.

Izrael Kalmanowicz Poznanski







there were still some information about the guetto, but after that walk i was ready to go back. all the way back was inside or around the former guetto, and i had a strange feeling to be there.

here is a link to a list of persons buried there during the time of the war, and some beautiful old photos from the cemetery, before it was taken by the vegetation.

sábado, 7 de abril de 2012

lodz, 2010 , 2





Piotrkowska Street


Piotrkowska at night


the Piotrkowska Street is the main street of Lodz and the symbol of an era of prosperity. The street was built as the axis of the city. it is said to be the longest commerce street in the whole Europe.



during the german occupation at WWII it had its name changed to Adolf Hitler Straße, got into decadence after the war until the 90's when it's been renovated. they are still renovating it.



yet today, though other interesting places, Piotrkowska Street is still the more frequent.
on Piotrkowska Street you have the old and the new city, the decadence and the richness, the cheap business and sophisticate restaurants. the street gets wealthier as it goes on the Freedom Square direction.
Piotrkowska gives Lodz a modern feature, being itself the city center.


sábado, 31 de março de 2012

osiecka sings kokaina

Agnieszka Osiecka (1936/1997) is a myth in Poland: singer, author of theater and television, poet, journalist and writer, have her music still recorded by the old and new generations.


agnieszka osiecka

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GskB1_9hgFc&feature=related

lodz, 2010

algumas fotos de Lodz em setembro de 2010.





quarta-feira, 11 de janeiro de 2012

os anões de Łódź

Łódź is a city in central Poland. It is the third city in Poland, but I do not think that its the third  destination in the country. Łódź was a chief industrial city that knew his days at the turn of the nineteenth to twentieth century, stimulated by the textile industry. After the war he lived in an era of stagnation but of modest growth.

the railway station, currently (2012) in the reforms.

some of the many factories have been restored and turned into lofts. but who wants to live in a factory?

the charming trams in Lodz
Despite having suffered less from the ravages of war than Warsaw or Kraków, Łódź lost a significant part of its population - that comprised high percentage of Jews, most of them workers of the textile industry.

But that is for another post.


Łódź is also the land of garage dwarfs .

During the nineteenth century until about 1916, there was activity in a foundry that produced these
garage dwarves. Its founder was Otto Goldammer, German living in the city.

The basic function of the dwarves was to limit the driveway, thus preventing carriages or cars too wide to enter.

There are several models of these protectors garage apart from the dwarfs. In fact, while the dwarfs are something relatively rare within the landscape of the city (there are about twenty of them in the streets of Łódź), other models abound in the city.




there is one blog that organized locations and photos from the dwarfs similar to I have done here
http://krasnolodzki.blogspot.com/
quite often I would gather information there.
Also I must thank to Mrs Agata Mendrychowska that have joined me in many occasions after the dwarfs.




quarta-feira, 4 de janeiro de 2012

new chapter of this blog



This is a new chapter of this blog, dedicated to the iron forged dwarves from the city of Lodz, Poland.