"The Earth is Art, The Photographer is only a Witness" - Yann Arthurs-Bertrand



From England to Scotland

Beautiful landscapes

Three Sisters, Australia

Famous peak Three Sisters in the Blue Mountains, New South Wales

Sydney, Australia

Sydney Opera House

Uluru, Australia

The Aboriginal sacred mountain in the Red Centre.

Kuranda, Australia

A beautiful parrot in the Kuranda Birdworld.

Melbourne, Australia

Melbourne skyline in St Kilda.

Krakow, Poland

The Main Market Square in Krakow, Poland.

Wroclaw, Poland

The Main Market Square in Wroclaw, Poland.

The Pieniny Mountains, Poland

The Three Crowns in the Pieniny Mountains, Poland.

Edinburgh, Scotland

Edinburgh Castle and the Ross Fountain.

St Ives, England

Pretty St Ives, Cornwall.

Rome, Italy

Colloseum

Monday, 23 December 2013

Scottish Christmas

Christmas is coming so I decided to write a bit about Scottish Christmas, which probably looks similar to English one. However, Christmas in Scotland was not popular in the past as the Presbyterian Church never put too much emphasis on Christmas. I would not say that Christmas in Scotland has a lot to do with religion as unfortunately it seems to be more a commercial holiday. However, you can still see people going to church on Christmas Eve or Christmas Day.

Christmas decorations start as early as in late October or early November. Shops are packed with Christmas stuff and the Christmas fever infects the majority of the population. Edinburgh is even more busier than during the Festival and it is extremely difficult to move around so be prepared to slow down and walk as fast as the crowd lets you. It really seems like people go crazy and they buy a lot of stuff. Do they really need it? Probably not.

In Edinburgh the Christmas Market is opened every year in November until early days of January. The Christmas Market, located in the East Princes Street Gardens, gives an opportunity to try different food like French crepes with nutella, gingerbread, cheese, sausages or drink mulled wine. You can also buy Christmas decorations or gifts there. What is more, it is a great place to have fun as the Market provides lots of rides and attractions like the ice rink, a star flyer, a big wheel or a carousel. This year apart from the German Christmas Market in the Princes Street Gardens, there is also the Scottish Christmas Market located in St Andrew Square where you can buy traditional Scottish food and drinks. The Edinburgh Christmas Market attracts thousands of tourists and local people and is usually packed with them, especially at the weekends or in the evenings.

Scots decorate their houses with Christmas decorations like a Christmas tree, holly wreaths, mistletoe or Christmas lights.

Christmas Day is a holiday in Scotland and you can enjoy it with your family. If people are religious, they go to church to celebrate the birth of Jesus. If not, they just open presents early in the morning and later have traditional Christmas dinner. It may contain soup and a roast turkey with roast potatoes and vegetables like roast parsnips, carrots or Brussels sprouts. You can also find other kinds of food on the Scottish Christmas table like salmon, cranberry sauce, bread sauce or chipolata sausages.

Two the most popular Christmas desserts include Christmas pudding served with Brandy sauce and mince pies. I tried both as I thought it would be nice to try something from the culture I live in now and both desserts landed in the bin. Honestly, I do not know how they can be tasty as they were disgusting, but if I had to choose which one was eatable I would say mince pies. We have got really fantastic, delicious and mouth-watering cakes in Poland and after experiencing Polish bakery, there is no way I could call Christmas pudding tasty.


Scots buy a lot of sweets which probably land in the Christmas stockings. They also like German gingerbread or Stollen, Italian cakes Panettone, Pandoro and Panforte as well as Florentine biscuits.

Another thing which is popular here is different selection of cheese served together with crackers and good wine. Scots buy a lot of alcohol like wine, champagne, whisky, gin, vodka or Irish cream. It is believed that Polish people drink a lot of alcohol, but I would not say we can afford as much alcohol as Scots can easily do so it is rather a horrible stereotype but as we know it is hard to change them.

As a Christmas snack Scots would choose different kinds of nuts.

During Christmas dinner Scots pull Christmas Crackers inside which they can find a joke, a paper hat or a wee toy. It’s a common picture to see people wearing those silly paper hats while sitting at the Christmas table or during Christmas parties which are popular here.

On Boxing Day sales start here so it is definitely a crazy shopping day when people buy lots of things and you do not feel like it’s Christmas time anymore.

My Polish Christmas
Is it possible to preserve Polish Christmas traditions here in Scotland? Yes, it is as you can make Polish dishes which we eat on Christmas Eve, share a holly wafer, sing carols or go to the Midnight Mass. However, if you cannot go to Poland for Christmas and have to spend it without your family, it is really hard. What is more, there is something magic on Christmas Eve in Poland and you cannot find it here. I simply loved this time in the afternoon when everything slowed down and there was such a magic atmosphere and anticipation of starting the dinner with your family which was always special and moving. I miss Polish Christmas a lot!

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Friday, 6 December 2013

Auschwitz-Birkenau - former German Nazi concentration camp

Who doesn't know Auschwitz? At least in Poland everybody knows the place as well as the unimaginably horrible things which happened there. 

Personally I believe that everyone, no matter what they nationality or religion is, should visit the concentration camp to learn the history of the place and of the victims. It is the best lesson we can get to make sure that something like this will never happen again. It should not have happened, but it did - "People did this to people!"



Auschwitz-Birkenau is a former German Nazi concentration camp located in Oswiecim, Poland. This is the place where German Nazis created a real hell on earth during the second World War when they deprived over 1 million of innocent people of their humanity and their lives. It is estimated that 90% of people who were killed there were Jews from different countries. 

There are so many books to read (especially in Polish literature), films to watch, but they cannot tell the story of every individual who was killed there and cannot describe what really happened there.













One of the short stories by Zofia Nałkowska


Zofia Nałkowska Medallions (1946)

By the Railway Track

Yet another person now belongs to the dead: the young woman by the railway track whose escape attempt failed.
One can make her acquaintance only through the tale of a man who had witnessed the incident but is unable to understand it. She lives on only in his memory.
Those who were being transported to extermination camps in the lead-sealed boxcars of the long trains would sometimes escape en route. Not many dared such a feat. The courage required was even greater than to go hopelessly, unresisting and meek, to a certain death.
Sometimes escape would succeed. The deafening clatter of the rushing boxcars prevented those on the outside from hearing what went on inside.
The only means of escape was by ripping up the floorboards. In the cramp of jammed-in, starved, foul- smelling, filthy people, it seemed an improbable gambit. Even to move was impossible. The beaten human mass, wriggling with the rushing rhythm of the train, reeled and rocked in the suffocating stench and gloom. Nevertheless, even those who, weak and fearful, would never dream of escaping, themselves understood their obligation to help others. They’d lean bac, pressing against one another, and liftr their shit-covered legs in order to open a way for freedom for others.
Succesfully prying open one end of the floorboard raised a glimmer of hope. A collective effort was required to tear it up. It took hours. Then there remained still the second and the third boards.
Those closest would lean over the narrow aperture, then back away fearfully. Courage was called to crawl hand and foot through the chink into the din and crash of iron, into the gale of the smoking wind below, above the gliding bases, to reach the axle and, in this catch-hold, to crawl the spot from which jumping would guarantee the best chance at salvation. To drop somehow, some way, in between the rails or through the wheels. Then, to recover one’s senses, roll down unseen from the mound, and escape into the strange, temptatingly dark forest.
People would often fall under the wheels and be killed on the spot, struck by a protruding beam, the edge of a bar, thrown forcefully against a signal pole or roadside rock. Or they’d break their arms and legs, and be delivered thus unto the greater cruelty of the enemy.
Those who dared to step into the roaring, crashing, yawning mouth were aware of what they risked. Just as those who remained behind were, even though there was no possibility of looking out through the sealed doors or high-set windows.
The woman lying by the track belonged to those who dared. She was the third to step through the opening of the floor. A few others rolled down after her. At that moment a volley of shots rang out over the travellers’ heads – an explosion on the roof of the boxcar. Suddenly the shots fell silent. The travellers could now regard the dark place left by the ripped-up boards as though it were the opening to a grave. And they could ride on calmly, ever closer to their own death, which awaited them at the crossroads.
The smoke and rattle of the train had long since disappeared into the darkness.
All that remained was the world.
The man, who can neither understand nor forget, relates his story once again.
When the new day broke, the woman was sitting on the dew-soaked grass by the side of the track. She was wounded in the knee. Some had succeeded in escaping. Further from the track, another lay motionless in the forest. A few had escaped. Two had died. She was the only one left like this, neither alive nor dead.
She was alone when he found her. But slowly people started to appear in that empty space, emerging from the brick kiln and village. Workers, women, and a boy stood fearful, watching her from a distance.
Every once in a while, a small chain of people would form. They’d cast their eyes about nervously and quickly depart. Others would approach, but wouldn’t linger for long. They would whisper among themselves, sigh, and walk away.
The situation was clear. Her curly, raven hair was obviously disheveled, her too-dark eyes overflowed the lowered lids. No one uttered a word to her. It was she who asked if the ones in the forest were alive. She learned they weren’t.
The day was white. The space open onto everything as far as the eye could see. People had already learned of the incident. It was a time of terror. Those who offered assistance or shelter were marked for death.
She begged one young man, who was standing for a while longer, then started to walk away, only to turn back, to bring her some Veronal from the pharmacy. She offered him money. He refused.
She lay back for a while, her eyes shut. Then she sat up again, shifted her leg, clasped it with both hands, and brushed her skirt from her knee. Her hands were bloodied. Her shattered knee a death sentence. She lay quietly for a long time, shutting her too-black eyes against the world.
When she finally opened them again, she noticed new faces hovering around her. The young man still lingered. So she asked him to buy her some vodka and cigarettes. He rendered her this service.
The gathering beside the mound attracted attention. Someone new would latch on. She lay among people but didn’t count on anyone for help. She lay like an animal that had been wounded during a hunt but which the hunters had forgotten to kill off. She proceeded to getr drunk. She dozed. The power that cut her off from all the others by forming a ring of fear was unbeatable.
Time passed. And old village woman, gasping for breath, returned and, drawing near, stole a tin cup of milk and some bread from beneath her kerchief. She bent over, furtively placed them in the wounded woman’s hand, and left immediately, only to look on from a distance to check whether she would drink the milk. It was only when she noticed two policemen approaching from the village that she disappeared, drawing her scarf across her face.
The others dispersed, too. Only the slick, small-town guy who had bought her the vodka and cigarettes continued to keep her company. But she no longer wanted anything from him.
The police came to see what was going on. They quickly sized up the situation and deliberated how to handle it. She begged them to shoot her. In a low voice, she tried to negotiate with them, provided they keep the whole thing quiet. They were undecided.
They, too, left, conferred, stopped, and walked on further. What they would finally decide was not certain. In the end, however, they did not care to carry out her request. She noticed that the kind young man, who had lit her cigarettes with a lighter that didn’t want’t to light, followed after. She had told him that one of the two dead in the forest was her husband. That piece of news seemed to have caused him some unpleasantness.
She tried to swallow the milk but, preoccupied, set the cup down on the grass. A heavy, windy, spring day rolled over. It was cool. Beyond the empty field stood a couple of huts; at the other end, a few short, scrawny pines swept the sky with their branches. The forest, their destination, sprang up further from the railway. This emptiness was the whole of the world she saw.
The young man returned. She swallowed some more vodka and he lit her cigarette. A light dusk brushed across the sky from the east. To the west, skeins and smudges of clouds branched up sharply.
More people, on their way home from work, turned up and were told what happened. They spoke as though she couldn’t hear them, as though she was no longer there.
“The dead one there’s her husband,” a woman’s voice spoke up.
“They tried to escape from the train into the forest. But they shot at them with a rifle. They killed her husband, and she was left alone. Shot in the knee. She couldn’t get any further…”
“From the forest she could easily have been taken somewhere. But here, with everyone watching, there’s no way.”
The old lady who returned for her tin cup said those words. Silently she watched as the milk soaked into the grass.
So no one would intercede by removing her before nightfall, or by calling a doctor, or by taking her to the station so she could get to a hospital. Nothing of the kind would happen. She could only die, one way or another.
When she opened her eyes at dusk, there was no one around except for the two policemen who had come back and the one who would no longer go away. Again she pleaded with them to kill her, but without any expectation that they would do so. She covered her eyes with her hands so as not to see anymore.
The policemen still hesitated about what to do. One tried to talk the other into doing it. The latter retorted, “You do it yourself.”
Then she heard the young man’s voice saying. “Well then give it to me.”
Again they debated, quarreled. From beneath her lowered eyelids she watched the policeman take out his revolver and hand it to the stranger.
A small group of people standing further back watched as he bent over her. They heard the shot and turned away in disgust.
“They could at least have called in someone. Not do it like that. Like she was a dog.”
When it grew dark, two people emerged from the forest to get her. They located the spot with a bit of difficulty. They assumed she was sleeping. But when one of them took her by the shoulder, he understood at once that he was dealing with a corpse.
She lay there all night and into the morning, until just before noon, when a bailiff arrived and ordered her buried together with the other two who had died by the railway tracks.

“Why he shot her isn’t clear,” the narrator said. “I couldn’t understand it. Maybe he felt sorry for her…” 


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The Pieniny Mountains, Poland

The Pieniny Mountains are located in the south of Poland and north of Slovakia. They may not be as popular as the Tatra Mountains, but they are really stunning and worth visiting. 

I recommend the Dunajec River Rafting which you can start in a small village Sromowce Wyżne. It is a great attraction and I personally love it. You can admire one of the peaks the Three Crowns while being on the raft, which you can later climb as the trail is not difficult. 

Below you can see some of the photos from the rafting.




The Three Crowns



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