I spent my childhood in an ugly industrial city. I was brought there when I was barely four months old, and then for many years afterward I was told about the extraordinarily beautiful city, Lwów, that my family had to leave. So it is not surprising that I looked upon real houses and streets with a semicontemptuous air of superiority and that I took from reality only the bare necessities.
Adam Zagajewski: Two cities
It is amazing that while I am straining my memory against the flow of time, I can still feel the innocence of such street names as Janow, Zmesienie, Piaski and Lackiego, which were imbued with such an evil meaning by the years of 1941 and 1942, when the city on a day became empty from Bernstein street to the theater, the Sloneczna and further, and a silent and dead neighborhood remained in its place, with windows wide open and curtains flapping in the wind. There was not a single soul on the yards and balconies. Only a few scattered buildings were left at the outskirts, and then the ruins were overgrown by the grass.
Stanisław Lem: The High Castle
Much has been written about the cafés of Lwów, and such places as the “Café Szkocka”, the “Atlas” or the “George” already have their loyal bards. The story of Lwów’s inns has long matured into a fable, a kind of a “text of Lwów”… The Poles, Ukrainians, Jews, Armenians, Germans all prayed in their own prayer houses, but they spent their time together in the pubs: at least there they tolerated each other.
Bogusław Bakuła: Stage, carnival, revolution
With this map we start the reconstruction of the one-time city: we try to assess through the photos of today’s visitors what remains from the former Lwów. We begin with the historical city center, but we will soon expand it with the maps of the suburbs as well, and the number of the photos will increase continuously. The gray dots indicate that a picture could not be exactly localized, and when a dot turns red, it means that it received its own post. The overview of the modern state will be complemented with further layers of old photos, postcards, drawings and memories. Check back soon.
6 comentarios:
Studiolum, as you are a man of many tongues, I am surprised not to have found in your selection the beauty of this shop bit.ly/o9fbFD http://bit.ly/o6vAuB which I could behold in my visit to the city last year.
Thank you very much for the fascinating photos! The truth is that I do not remember the shop. Where is it exactly? as I’d like to include it in the map.
And thank you for the reference to your wonderful blog. I have just read its exhaustively informative posts on the Ukraine, and will go on with the rest.
So nice, Magritte in L’vov.
(listening to René and Georgette Magritte with their dog after the war, by Paul Simon)
We’re ready for Galicia, now.
Thanks for reading me. Paraphrasing Borges I am not specially proud of the blogs I wrote, but I am really proud of the ones I read and this one has a dear place among them.
The shop is in the corner between курбаса and тиктора, very close to Svobody avenue. You can indeed use my shot. I send you this link to Panoramio, so that you can see a better-quality picture and the exact position of the shop in the map. http://www.panoramio.com/photo/41626403
It's depressing to see the swastika defacing the memorial to the Golden Rose Synagogue. Omer Bartov (Erased, 2007) writes "The site of the temple seems to be a popular nighttime hangout, as indicated by the empty beer bottles and other garbage strewn in the shallow pit next to the only remaining wall". The Wikipedia picture (2008) of the memorial is graffiti-free. Bartov also captures other traces, a doorway with mezuzah markings and the remains of a store sign in Yiddish, Polish and Hebrew. All to finally disappear at the next renovation.
This is a greatest city. Events happened here in the last 100 years cannot happen everywhere else in a million years.
Lwów is the only town in Ukraine that in Italy is called with an Italian name: LEOPOLI.
All good wishes and congratulations indeed!
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