Angloville Krakow
Krakow is busy with young adults enjoying the improved economy. The Poles are busy, enthusiastic and positive about the future. There is no national apathy as noted the previous 4 weeks. The traffic in the central core, near Old Town, is courteous and I seldom hear a horn. Everyone eats pastries or kebab on the street as they are on the move. Again excellent posture, good makeup talents and stylish outfits in spite of the slush and slippery footing. It is interesting being in a city where I have no communication ability and must rely on the goodwill of others. Never considered how isolated one can be for this reason alone.
Christmas is a big event in this town and the Central Square is filling with artisan booths for the Christmas Fair. They also have a Black Friday event the end of December.
The Salt Mine tour and the Auschwitz-Birkenau tour are a must. Puts thing in perspective.
The Saturday tour was by local resident who was an historian and we walked through the Xmas crowds and kept losing her as she is very short. She is only allowed to lose 6 tourists a year in the crowds and retain her license and she almost hit a 2 year high by losing all 13 of us - twice. The coordinators, Ryan from Australia and Ewa from Poland accompanied us. After the tour, Steve from the Romanian venue and I went to the Central Square to drink beer for the afternoon and the younger kids went back to their hostels or wandered around. Some of the younger ones had just finished university or were finishing up university courses online with essays and such, others were in a ‘gap’ year before starting work as a lawyers, 2 were chefs in England using up vacation time and the rest were in various stages of moving around the world. etc.
Sunday on the bus and we added 6 more NES and several Polish. The Polish were a mixed batch: mainly middle management looking to advance up the ladder, several taking the course on their own dime for interest and a retired Polish colonel who is paying for the course so he will be able to speak to his grandson in Arkansas. Arrived at the venue, had lunch and the sessions began. It is the same schedule as Romania. Suggested topics for one-on-one discussion then change partners in 1 hour. The Poles were cautious and reluctant to use their English at first. Had an old fashioned Polish vodka session Tuesday nite and this loosened up everyone. Even the women were doing shots, so when you are told not to get into a vodka lubricated social event with Poles, include the women. Next day was rather subdued. The main event was the presentations on Thursday. These are 5 minute talks in English by every Pole. Each one is assigned a mentor to help them with their English but they are otherwise on their own. The talks were very creative and spontaneous with good stage presence. That nite was a major unwinding and the hotel staff requested that they would like to close the Club at 5 AM. There were several NES the next morning who thought suicide was a good option. Very quiet bus ride back to Krakow that afternoon.
The bus delivered us to Krakow and the groups scattered to buses or trains for their next venue in Poland or to hostels for ongoing flights the next day. One went onto Paris where she was going to do some volunteer repair work on a castle. I hung around Krakow Old Town and the Christmas Fair and then returned to Seattle through a weather event through Northern Europe that fouled up flights all the way down to the Mediterranean.
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