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Unseen Soundwalks
Culture.pl
26 episodes
5 days ago
Unseen is a series of immersive soundwalks brought to you by Culture.pl. Each episode invites you to explore the hidden corners and untold stories of Warsaw, reimagining the city’s most intriguing places through sound and narrative.
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All content for Unseen Soundwalks is the property of Culture.pl and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Unseen is a series of immersive soundwalks brought to you by Culture.pl. Each episode invites you to explore the hidden corners and untold stories of Warsaw, reimagining the city’s most intriguing places through sound and narrative.
Show more...
Places & Travel
Society & Culture
Episodes (20/26)
Unseen Soundwalks
Tłomackie 7

The largest synagogue ever built in Poland.

The Great Synagogue was built between 1876 and 1878 according to a design by Leandro Marconi. Warsaw’s largest Jewish temple housed an impressive 2,200 seats.

The grand opening took place on 26th September 1878 and was attended by many guests, including the city authorities. The sermon, in Polish, was delivered by Isaac Cylkow, rabbi and translator of the Hebrew Bible into Polish.

The Great Synagogue was quickly recognised as one of the landmarks of the capital. It was the only synagogue that was marked on the general plans of Warsaw, alongside palaces, churches and other characteristic points of the city, and was recommended by tourist guides to the capital. 

The synagogue was located on the border of the Jewish quarter. Sermons were preached there in Polish, and attended mainly by wealthy Jews who were assimilated into Polish culture.

However, it was enough to take a few steps away from the temple to find yourself at the heart of the Yiddish-speaking centre of Warsaw.

 

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• Landscape with a Synagogue: The (Un-)Lost Tradition of Polish Synagogue Architecture // on Culture.pl

• Hebrew Works Differently: An Interview with Author & Translator Julia Fiedorczuk // on Culture.pl

• 10 Places You Will Never Visit in Warsaw // on Culture.pl

• Heaven’s Gates: Wooden Synagogues in the Territories of the Former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth // book profile on Culture.pl

• 9 Illustrious Synagogues You Can Visit in Poland // on Culture.pl

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl • The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
4 minutes 13 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Nalewki 2A

An address where the Jewish and Polish worlds met and intermingled. 

Pasaż Simonsa (Simons’ Passage) owes its name to the German industrialist and building’s owner Albert Simons. The building complex consisted of two sections. The first part started being used in 1903, and construction as a whole was completed in 1906.

The first building was in the shape of an arc that ran from Długa 50 to Nalewki 2. It was a grandiose five-storey edifice with a large number of windows, which was very modern for its time. The second one, built deep into Nalewki Street, was given the address Nalewki 2a.

Today, this place is part of Krasiński Garden, which was enlarged after the war. Number 2a was, as the writer Moshe Zonshayn put it, ‘a Jewish kingdom’, as it was here that many Jewish political (but also cultural and sporting) organisations found their headquarters at various times.

From the beginning, the Pasaż building served a variety of functions; it was a shopping mall, an office building and a hotel. There were also numerous shops offering a wide range of goods and services.

The building was located in the heart of Jewish Warsaw, where one of its most important and best known thoroughfares and its symbol, Nalewki Street, began (today a section of the former Nalewki is called Stare Nalewki).

Among the Jewish organisations that operated at this address, it is worth mentioning the sports clubs: the Zionist Makabi and the socialist Morgnsztern. They not only had their offices here, but also gyms for various sporting sections. The Warsaw branches of both clubs had more than a thousand members by the end of the 1930s.

The future hero of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Michał Klepfisz, father of the contemporary American-Jewish poet Irena Klepfisz, was active in Morgnsztern as a student.

The building was destroyed as early as September 1939 and was located outside the ghetto walls. During the Warsaw Uprising, an insurgent redoubt was located in the building at 2a Nalewki Street. On 31st August 1944, the building was bombed and around 300 people died under the rubble. After the war, the ruins were demolished.

 

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

• Be Strong and Brave: Jews, Sport, Warsaw // book profile on Culture.pl

• On Their Own Terms: The Warsaw Ghetto & Its Heroic Uprising // on Culture.pl

• Unseen Soundwalks: Warsaw Rising ‘44 // the previous season of this audiowalk

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
6 minutes 15 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Długa 8A

One of the most important locations in Yiddish theatre.

Michał Weichert, a lawyer, but also an avant-garde director and theatre theoretician, lived at 8a Długa Street from the mid-1930s. A figure of great merit for the history of Yiddish and Polish theatre, he founded the Young Theatre (Yung-Teater).

Originally hailing from Galicia, the Polish territory partitioned by Austria-Hungary, Weichert settled in Warsaw only in 1918, as a mature man of 28. He came to the capital after a stay in Berlin, where he studied under the supervision of the famous director Max Reinhardt, a theatre reformer.

In Warsaw, he had an intensive career as a publisher and director, as well as a pedagogue. From the early 1920s, Weichert organised experimental acting studios in the capital, the first Jewish acting schools of their kind. Their graduates formed the core of the Yung-Teater in 1932, which Weichert was director of until 1939.

One of the seats of the Yung-Teater was located nearby, at 19 Długa Street, almost opposite 26 Długa Street, another building that is part of this series of Unseen. LINK TO 01-Dluga-26


How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• Jewish Theatre in Poland: Fragments of an Illustrious History // on Culture.pl

• Jung Jidysz // bio on Culture.pl 

• Where is Poland? // a multimedia guide about the era 1795-1918 when the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was partitioned by three neighbouring empires

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
4 minutes 11 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Tłomackie 13

The worldwide embassy for Yiddish literature.

In the Jewish cultural memory, 13 Tłomackie Street is the address of the worldwide embassy for Yiddish literature, a kind of British Council or Goethe Institute, as well as the Ministry of Diasporic Culture and the Cultural Parliament in one.

This ‘global address’, as the journalist Jecheskiel Najman called it, became a symbol of pre-war cultural life, its disputes and debates, as well as its ups and downs. It appears in almost every memoir about pre-war Jewish literary Warsaw.

Among others, the Nobel Prize laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer wrote a series of articles about the place. Of course, they did not mention the address itself, but the institution that operated here: Fareyn fun Yidishe Literatn un Zhurnalistn, or the Union of Jewish Writers and Journalists.

The union was founded in 1916 and initially had no headquarters. In June 1918, it moved to 11 Tłomackie Street, and then a few months later from October 1918 until May 1938, it functioned at the legendary address of 13 Tłomackie Street. 

In 1927, Tłomackie 13 became the headquarters of the Warsaw section of the Jewish PEN-Club, an international organisation of writers, which continues to operate to this day.


How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

 

Further reading:

• Jung Jidysz // bio on Culture.pl 

• Isaac Bashevis Singer // bio on Culture.pl

• Sholem Asch // bio on Culture.pl

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Unlikely Revival & Sudden End of Yiddish Literature in Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl


Show more...
1 year ago
5 minutes 38 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Chłodna 8

The editorial offices of Haynt, the largest Yiddish daily newspaper of the Interwar period.

The first issue of the Zionist Haynt daily was published on 22nd January 1908, while the last issue came out on 22nd September 1939, shortly before the capitulation of Warsaw.

Around 300 issues were published annually from Sunday to Friday, both in Warsaw as well as in other local versions. All of them were edited for 31 years from the same place – the editorial office on Chłodna Street.

The creators of Haynt focused on their mass readership. In order to keep them reading, they not only offered fresh vividly-edited information, but the most famous names of the time. By 1911, the magazine had gained so much popularity that its circulation reached 100,000 copies.

Despite the economic and socio-political difficulties of the 1930s, the editorial office functioned until the capital was occupied by the Nazi Germans. The magazine’s archives were destroyed around that time and the printing equipment was confiscated and taken to Germany.

The building itself survived the war, although it was burnt down. It was demolished in 1947.

 

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• Lost World: Polish Jews – Photographs from 1918-1939 // book profile on Culture.pl

• The Most Unusual Jewish Publication of Interwar Poland // on Culture.pl 

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
5 minutes 4 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Leszno 2

Where the elites of the Interwar Jewish stage spent time together.

Before World War II, the building on Leszno 2 housed the headquarters of the Union of Jewish Stage Artists (Yidisher Artistn Fareyn). It was founded in 1919 to support Jewish directors and actors and to defend their rights.

On the face of the building was a clock created by the watchmaker Epstein. All the residents of the neighbourhood adjusted their timepieces to the clock, which worked perfectly until the bombing of Warsaw in 1939.

The address also housed a number of cinemas as well as the luxurious Bar Central, run by the renowned restaurateur Izaak Gertner.

Gertner’s restaurant was closed down at the beginning of 1940. In its place, a year later, the Sztuka Café was established – the largest and most famous café in the Warsaw Ghetto.

It was a venue available to a small group of wealthy and polonised elites. The cream of Polish-Jewish entertainment performed at the Sztuka, including Andrzej Włast, Władysław Szpilman, Pola Braun, Wiera Gran and Marysia Ajzensztadt, a young artist dubbed the ‘nightingale of the ghetto’.

 

 How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• Artists of the Warsaw Ghetto // on Culture.pl 

• ‘Tango Milonga’: The Remarkable Journey of a Polish Interwar Hit // the story of Andrzej Włast’s most influential song, on Culture.pl

• Władysław Szpilman // bio on Culture.pl 

• Wiera Gran // bio on Culture.pl

• Marysia Ajzensztadt // bio on Culture.pl

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
5 minutes 48 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Ceglana 1

The home of Yitskhok Leybush Peretz, the father of modern Yiddish literature.

The now non-existent Ceglana 1 is an address of almost mythical proportions in the history of Jewish culture thanks to Yitskhok Leybush Peretz, the father of modern Yiddish literature, who lived at this address.

The Peretz House on Ceglana Street became a real cultural institution. Publishers, musicians, artists, theatre types, locals and visitors ‘from all four corners of the world’, as Peretz’s close friend, Gershon Lewin, used to say. He claimed that ‘being in Warsaw and not visiting Peretz was like being in Rome and not seeing the Pope’.

Shabbat gatherings at Peretz’s house in Ceglana Street have gone down in Jewish cultural history as the stuff of legend.

Peretz was born in 1852 in Zamość. He was a lawyer by profession and ran a private practice in his hometown. In 1887, for political reasons, he lost his licence granted by the tsarist authorities for supporting the Polish national cause as well as socialism.

He made his Yiddish debut in 1888 (he had previously published in Hebrew), and this date marks a milestone in the history of Yiddish literature.

 

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• Yitskhok Leybush Peretz // bio on Culture.pl

• Greetings from Zamość: A Literary Guide to the ‘Perfect’ City // on Culture.pl

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
6 minutes 49 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Długa 26

One of the most renowned addresses of pre-war Jewish Warsaw. 

Długa 26 housed the socialist Bund party headquarters from 1936 onwards, as well as the capital’s first school with Yiddish as the language of instruction. Other political organisations based here included the Masada Zionist youth union.

Alter Kacyzne had his professional photography studio in one of the three courtyards the building had before the war. Born in Vilnius, he came to Warsaw in 1910. Kacyzne was a writer, journalist and publisher, as well as co-author of the screenplay for The Dybbuk, perhaps the best-known and most celebrated film in Yiddish produced in Interwar Poland.

However, he was probably best-known for being a much sought-after photographer. Apart from taking snapshots of Warsaw’s bohemian scene, he also documented the everyday life and the poverty of Jewish shtetls in Interwar Poland and beyond, sending his photos to New York to be published in ‘The Forward’, or ‘Forverts’, the long-running Yiddish newspaper.

Israel Joshua Singer, the older brother of writer and Nobel laureate Isaac Bashevis Singer, also worked at Kacyzne’s workshop for while, and they co-founded a literary journal together which was published up until 1939.

 

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.


Further reading:

• Sto Lat, ‘Dybbuk’! Celebrating & Commemorating the Classic Yiddish Play – Online // on Culture.pl

• Possession: 100 Years of ‘The Dybbuk’ // on Culture.pl

• Alter Kacyzne // bio on Wikipedia.org

• Isaac Bashevis Singer // bio on Culture.pl

• 8 Remarkable Yiddish Books from Poland // on Culture.pl

• From ‘Last Sunday’ to ‘Last Shabbos’: Poland’s Legendary Jewish Tangos// on Culture.pl 

• The Lost World of Yiddish Films in Poland // on Culture.pl

• The Rise & Fall of Polish Song // on Culture.pl

Show more...
1 year ago
6 minutes 49 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Operation Kutschera

It was in this vicinity that one of the most daring operations of the Home Army resistance took place – the assassination of the SS commander and head of police for the Warsaw district, Franz Kutschera.


In the autumn of 1943, SS-Brigadeführer Franz Kutschera was transferred to Warsaw with the aim of pacifying Polish resistance to the Nazi occupation.

As soon as he took up his post, the number of street arrests and public executions grew rapidly, and Kutschera was soon nicknamed the “Butcher of Warsaw”. As a result, he also became a wanted target by the Polish underground, which started to track him with the intention of gunning him down.

After a failed attempt on Kutschera’s life in the final days of January 1944, another attempt was made in the early hours of the 1st of February. This time, the plan worked… Kutschera’s limousine was ambushed and he was shot by a gunshot to the head.

The next day, in retaliation for the killing, the Nazis rounded up and shot 100 Poles near the site, while a further 200 were killed in what was left of the Jewish Ghetto. The people of Warsaw were also told they would have to pay a fine… to the tune of 100 million złoty.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 15 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
The Wola Massacre

The Church of St. Stanisław serves as just one reminder of the brutal massacre of the civilian population of the Wola district, in line with Hitler’s orders to raze Warsaw to the ground and destroy the city completely…


Following the outbreak of the Uprising, Germans stationed in Warsaw started to indiscriminately kill Poles living in the city, both insurgents as well as civilians.

However, it is in the western district of Wola where the most brutal atrocities occurred. In an effort to use terror tactics against the Poles, around 50,000 civilians were killed within a week.

The church was one of the first transit camps. Civilian prisoners were rounded up here as early as the 2nd of August, but it wasn’t until the 5th, after the storming of the Home Army of the Gęsiówka prison, that the local population was rounded up inside the church for initial selection by the Nazis.

Conditions in the church were dire – there was no water or food, and illness spread like wildfire. Around 400 prisoners, including three priests, were shot outside the church and burned.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 25 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Liberation of the Gęsiówka Concentration Camp

Slated to close in the summer of 1944, by mid-July the Germans started to evacuate the camp, although by the time the Uprising started there were still around 400 inmates, mostly non-Polish Jews from across occupied Europe.


Storming the Gęsiówka camp was no easy task. The whole prison was surrounded by guard towers and bunkers, all armed to the hilt. The insurgents used a captured Panther tank – dubbed “Magda” – to initiate the attack by firing at the towers.

This was followed by the assault. After the tank had forced through the barricade and broken through the entry gates, insurgents then used the cover of heavy fire to storm the camp.

Some 348 prisoners were freed, including 24 women. 89 prisoners had Polish citizenship, the rest were Jews from Hungary, Greece, Holland, Belgium, France and Czechoslovakia. A vast number of the freed prisoners joined the continuing fight against the Nazi occupiers during the Uprising, assisting the Home Army insurgents in the Old Town.


How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 2 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Tank Trap on Kilińskiego Street

In mid-August 1944, over 300 people died in one of the most tragic episodes of the Uprising when a radio-controlled vehicle carrying half a tonne of explosives blew up after Poles thought they had seized it.


On the morning of the 13th of August 1944, the Germans launched an assault on the Old Town from their positions at the nearby Castle Square.

At 0900 hours, a tracked vehicle, what seemed to be a tank, started crawling up Podwale Street towards the maze of streets which make up Warsaw’s oldest district, an insurgent stronghold at the time. Combatants threw molotov cocktails at the tank, forcing its driver to escape from the resulting fire.

Insurgents found no weapons in the vehicle but they did notice a radio device of sorts. Nobody was allowed near the tank until a sapper had checked it out, although before a technician managed to inspect the vehicle, at around 1600 hours two soldiers claiming to be under direct orders from the Polish command climbed into the tank and started to drive it into the insurgents’ territory, towards the Old Town.

A huge crowd gathered to celebrate the capturing of the German tank, and a makeshift victory parade assembled along the street. The resulting blast ripped into nearby buildings and tore its way through the jubilant spectators…


How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
4 minutes 15 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Breakout at the Arsenal

It’s 1730 hours on the 26th of March 1943. Operation “Meksyk II”, commonly known as Operation Arsenal, has just got under way…


Commander Stanisław Broniewski, codename “Orsza”, has given the order to attack a Nazi prisoner transport vehicle. It’s carrying Jan Bytnar, codename “Rudy,” from Gestapo heaquarters to nearby Pawiak prison.

However, with the original plan going up in smoke, the Polish contingent has to think fast. They end up storming the van, led by “Rudy”’s comrade in arms, Tadeusz Zawadzki, codename “Zośka”, managing to release around 20 prisoners, including “Rudy”.

While the event did not happen during the Warsaw Uprising itself, Operation Arsenal remains one of the most well-known events undertaken by the Polish underground during World War II and is a testament to the Polish determination to set themselves free from Nazi German domination.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 27 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Redoubt at the Bank of Poland

The Bank of Poland building was a temporary fortification for the insurgents during the first month of the Uprising, but the Polish underground had already been at work here long before… 


During the Nazi occupation, the building’s function didn’t change, and became a Bank of Issue for the Nazi Germans’ General Government. A number of the bank’s Polish employees also worked with the underground, secretly passing on information about transports of money, leading to one of World War II’s largest heists against the occupiers.

During the Uprising, insurgents managed to storm the bank on the 3rd of August. However, due to its tactical position in between the Old Town and Warsaw’s centre, the Germans fought intensely to try and regain the building.

Bloody fighting went on for four weeks straight, with the occupiers even managing to get inside the building a number of times before being fought off again by the Polish Home Army.

It wasn’t until the 1st of September that the last remaining insurgents evacuated the building and escaped to Warsaw’s downtown through the city’s sewer system.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 7 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
PKO

This monolithic building, which used to stretch all the way to Marszałkowska Street, housed a number of important organisations before being destroyed by German bombing in early September 1944.


Apart from housing the Polish Home Army headquarters, the PKO building also had a sanitary point which was later converted into a field hospital, providing beds and sanitation for up to 400 wounded combatants at a time.

The building was so large it also accommodated a POW holding centre for Germans taken captive following the storming of the PAST building on Zielna Street. Meanwhile, the building’s third floor played host to the “Błyskawica” – or “Lightning” – insurgent radio station.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
2 minutes 50 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Napoleon Square

Napoleon Square, now called Warsaw Uprising Square, was one of the most central points downtown during the 63 days of fighting.


In the first few hours of the struggle against the Nazi occupiers, insurgents stormed the Prudential building and hung the Polish white-and-red flag from its roof, making it visible from all parts of the city.

The main post office, which stood where the National Bank of Poland is now, was also a key target for the combatants.

In the last days of August and into September, the Germans started to intensify their air raids and artillery fire throughout the city. The Prudential building was an easy target, and on the 28th of August it was hit by a 600 mm heavy calibre 2-tonne shell fired from a Karl-Gerät mortar. Despite the immense damage, the building did not collapse, and still stands to this day.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 51 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Storming the PAST Building

The PAST building was one of the most important buildings in Warsaw for the German Nazi occupiers. 


The telephone exchange housed inside the building was a communications nerve centre for the Nazi war effort on the Eastern Front, which by late 1944 was moving ever closer to Poland’s capital.

The storming of the PAST was one of the most spectacular events during the 63 days of the Warsaw Uprising: almost 40 Germans were killed, while 120 were taken prisoner. On the Polish side, only around a dozen or so combatants died.

Among the seized loot was a large ammunitions stash, which provided a strong morale booster following the successful siege. The strategic building and its surroundings remained in Polish hands until the end of the Uprising.


How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 15 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Barricade

When the Warsaw Uprising broke out in August 1944, Aleje Jerozolimskie was under constant German fire, and crossing the street was a deadly undertaking…


It was here that a barricade was built in the first days of the Uprising to provide an essential communications corridor between the north and south parts of the city centre held by the Home Army.

In the opening days of the Uprising, insurgents got to work, digging out a trench between number 22 on the north side to number 17 on the south side.

Once completed, the barricade was used by messengers and runners, as well as the civilian population. From a logistical standpoint, the barricade on Jerusalem Avenue was used as a corridor to transport weapons, ammunition, food supplies, as well as for transporting the wounded and providing a safe passage for field post.

How to listen:

Unseen is available as a downloadable podcast, although it is best experienced through the Echoes geolocative storytelling app available for iOS and Android. After loading the app, search for soundwalks in Warsaw and you’ll find Unseen.

Show more...
1 year ago
3 minutes 15 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Tribune of Honour

On 24 October 1956, Władysław Gomułka, the new leader of the Polish communist party, took to the Tribune of Honour to address the Polish nation.

The newly built Parade Square with the domineering Palace of Culture was the perfect backdrop for his speech which marked the beginning of a new era of Polish socialism following the cold years of Stalinism.

The Tribune of Honour is the only piece of architecture in this series of Unseen which is still remains, although the system under which it was created no longer exists in Poland.

Further listening about the Palace of Culture:

Stories From The Eastern West: PALACE
https://culture.pl/en/podcast/SFTEW-08-PALACE

Stories From The Eastern West: PALACE II
https://culture.pl/en/podcast/SFTEW-09-PALACE-II

With thanks to:

Czesław Bielecki, an architect, opposition activist in the 1980s, and self-styled ‘political animal’, for telling us about his family history and giving his opinion on the urban layout of Parade Square.

The Polish National Digital Archive, for providing the original recording of Władysław Gomułka’s speech on Parade Square on 24 October 1956 (Ref: 33-T-252)

Piotr Hummel, a historian and local guide, co-founder of WAWstep city guides. [http://wawstep.pl/]

Alicja Baczyńska, your audio guide, for help with acoustic mapping throughout the Unseen project.

Show more...
1 year ago
6 minutes 44 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Sienna 16

Sienna 16 / Śliska 9

At the beginning of August 1942, an elderly well-dressed gentleman left home with around 200 orphans in tow. It was to be their last outing.

Sienna 16 was the last address of Janusz Korczak’s Dom Sierota orphans’ home before he and his children were killed at the Nazi German death camp of Treblinka in the first week of August 1942.

Janusz Korczak was a pediatrician, renowned author, pedagogue, social activist, and defender of children’s rights. In fact, it is his work with children and his role as the director of the Dom Sierot, the Orphans’ Home, for which he is best known.

Apart from introducing new educational methods at the orphange, he also nurtured creativity among the children – one such endeavour was a newspaper: The Little Review.


Further reading:

Biography of Janusz Korczak on Culture.pl
https://culture.pl/en/artist/janusz-korczak

12 Things Worth Knowing About Janusz Korczak https://culture.pl/en/article/12-things-worth-knowing-about-janusz-korczak

Mały Przegląd: A Little Review with a Big Impact
https://culture.pl/en/article/maly-przeglad-a-little-review-with-a-big-impact

There Are No Children, There Are People: Janusz Korczak the Educator
https://culture.pl/en/article/there-are-no-children-there-are-people-janusz-korczak-the-educator

Janusz Korczak: Legacy of a Writer & Teacher
https://culture.pl/en/article/janusz-korczak-legacy-of-a-writer-teacher


With thanks to:

Agnieszka Witkowska-Krych from the Korczakianum Research Institute at the Museum of Warsaw, for providing an insight into Janusz Korczak’s life and work.

Alicja Baczyńska, your audio guide, for help with acoustic mapping throughout the Unseen project.

Show more...
1 year ago
7 minutes 48 seconds

Unseen Soundwalks
Unseen is a series of immersive soundwalks brought to you by Culture.pl. Each episode invites you to explore the hidden corners and untold stories of Warsaw, reimagining the city’s most intriguing places through sound and narrative.