Sunday, March 8, 2026

Warsaw Boy by Andrew Borowiec

A Memoir of a Wartime Childhood. First published 2014.
Dedication: For all the Warsaw boys - especially the ones who never grew up.

Note: I wrote this review in 2017, but somehow it got stuck in Drafts, maybe because it looks unfinished...




This book is a mixture of personal stories and a commentary written with the current knowledge of world history. The personal touch is very valuable. It shows the events, how they looked like on the ground.

The story starts before the war when Andrew was a young boy living with his father, a Polish army officer, and a governess in Kielce. We follow him to Cracow (Kraków) and then, through the September 1939 campaign in Lviv (Lwów), when the city defended itself from a German onslaught only to surrender to the Soviet army.
"On 18 September, the day after the Soviet intervention, the Luftwaffe littered the city with thousands of leaflets urging our garrison to surrender. Simultaneously, the commander of a Russian armoured brigade was busy telling a Polish envoy that the Red Army were there to fight the Germans and, in order to do so, required unhindered passage into Lwów. This, of course, was an enormous lie."
Later, he escapes from the Soviet annexed Lviv to General Government, a German administered area for Poles. The Soviets and Nazis were allowing limited population exchange, but his governess had to lie about his identity to be let go - she said he was a child of Volksdeutsche parents, who sent him with her to Lviv for safety.

He is an eye-witness to the deportation of Polish Jews from Maków on 23 August 1942:
"[...] overnight Maków had been disfigured by a rash of printed wall posters. In German and Polish they ordered the entire Jewish population to assemble in the grounds of a sawmill near the railway station. Failure to report for Umsiedlung (resettlement) was punishable by death."

"[...] these men, women and children living alongside us had, with sullen acquiescence, assembled to start a foul journey towards an uncertain fate without a word of protest from themselves or anybody else. It was as if we all somehow accepted that the Germans had some unchallangeable right to do this. [...] I felt ashamed."
And speaking with his father afterwards:
"'We could have worked together -' I began.
'Don't you think there were efforts to organize joint resistance? Do you think you're the only one who ever had the idea? All kinds of approaches were tried. But the elders of their community, those in the long black coats and with the pejsy, were against it. 'Let us be patient and God will reward us,' they were saying. Their people should tear them apart.'"
Andrew took part in the Warsaw Uprising in August 1944. In the days before the uprising:
"[...] for several days now we had also been hearing comforting rumble of distant artillery as the Red Army and Wehrmacht exchanged fire outside Praga". 
Praga is the collective name of Warsaw districts on the right side of the Vistula river.
"'No doubt Warsaw already hears the sounds of the battle which is soon to bring her liberation,' cooed the broadcaster from the Union of Polish Patriots, the Communist front organisation that had set up shop in Lublin. 'Let those who have never bowed their heads to Hitlerite power join us for the decisive action.'"

"But the Germans were also reminding the Poles of old battles and pleading a common cause. Warsaw Governor Ludwig Fischer, who earlier in the year had narrowly escaped an attempted assassination for the many executions he had ordered, had announced the call-up of all males [...] to help dig a deep anti-tank ditch build other fortifications [...]. 'Just as it did in 1920, Warsaw will defend itself and defeat the Bolshevik enemy,'"
He describes the ill-executed start of the uprising, which took away the advantage of a surprise.

Where he was not a witness himself, Andrew includes eye-witness accounts of other people, like Wanda Lurie, who survived Wola massacre - the killing of 40-50 thousand civilians in just 7 days of August 1944:
"I came last and kept in the background, continuing to let the others pass, in the hope that they would not kill a pregnant woman, but I was driven in with the last lot. In the yard I saw heaps of corpses three feet high, in several places. [...] There were about twenty people in our group, mostly children of ten to twelve. [...] They were all killed. [...]"
The order to kill all was executed mainly by two groups of low-life scum, counting together about 2500 men: Oskar Dirlewanger's German and Volksdeutsche criminals, and Bronislaw Kaminski's RONA - Russian National Liberation Army - Russians, Ukrainians, Cossacks and Turkic-speaking Soviet soldiers recruited from German prisoner of war camps.

The Germans also used Polish women and children as human shields on tanks and barricades:
"With our backs turned to the insurgents we knelt or crouched and the Germans placed themselves on the ground behind us, or knelt on one knee, firing over our heads. [...]".

Europe Trip 2025 - Oświęcim

Oświęcim (pop. 34k) is a town with documented 800 years of history. It is one of the oldest Piast dynasty towns. It is actually a place where Piasts ruled until 1513, long after they stopped being kings of Poland (1370). Oświęcim was not part of Poland for 146 years. In 1916, the German and Austro-Hungarian emperors promised the creation of the Kingdom of Poland, which would include Oświęcim.

In 1939, when Germans annexed it, 60% of residents were Jewish. In 1940 Germans used the existing army barracks and the temporary migrant infrastructure, built during the last years of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, to create a concentration camp, despoiling Oświęcim forever. On this trip I went to see Oświęcim the town, not the KL Auschwitz, but it's impossible to fully separate the two.


Castle

Most of the photos come from the Castle Museum - opened in 2010. Apart from the exhibits, you can go up to the tower with good views of the area, and to the WW1 and WW2 tunnels under the castle, to take part in a guided quest - not all stations work there, but still it's fun.


The most visible side of the castle.

Entrance and the tower.

The view east - towards the town square and a 14th century church.

The view south. The roof of the castle, Hampton by Hilton hotel, and another 14th century church in the background with a 1975-1984 addition with a copper roof.

Looking west - active travel bridge on the right.

Looking north - path along the river Soła.

Tunnels

One of the game/quest stations.


Leaving the tunnels I saw this mural:
"Be the change you want to see in the world." Life festival was organised every year from 2010 to 2018.


Emigration

In the 19th century there was a lot of seasonal work migration and permanent emigration from Galicia. Oświęcim, being a railway hub on the border of Galicia and the German Empire, was an important stop on these journeys. I learned a bit about how poor Galicia was when I visited the Emigration Museum in Gdynia. The visit to Oświęcim added detail to that story.

Location of Galicia (Galicja) as the province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

A postcard with Zofja Biesiadecka travel agency ad.



Oświęcim was a junction of 3 rail lines: Kraków to Vienna opened in 1856, Wrocław to Mysłowice -  1864, Oświęcim to Kraków Podgórze - 1884.


Emigration continued to be supported by the independent Poland. These booklets with tips and Spanish language lessons for emigrants to Argentina and Uruguay were published by the Emigration Office in Warsaw in 1930.

The "hut" settlement (Polish "barak" looks and sounds like English "barrack", but means a simple, temporary building) was a 1916 Austrian government initiative for a temporary housing of migrants. By the end of 1917 there were 22 brick buildings and 90 timber huts that could house 12 thousand people. The settlement also known as "new town" and "Oświęcim III" had a railway siding, streets, footpaths, water and sewer systems, baths, hospital, post office, civil and military police stations, theatre, and admin offices including an employment agency. In the interwar period, the settlement was housing Polish refugees from Cieszyn Silesia and from Silesian uprisings, and also a battalion of the Polish Army. In 1940 German occupiers converted it to a concentration camp.



Independence

Józef Piłsudski visited Oświęcim in 1915.

1916 celebration of the proclamation of Kingdom of Poland.





Polish-Czech company Oświęcim-Praga assembled cars in Oświęcim from 1929. Here, the model 'Baby'.

This op-ed written in 1930 is a scathing critique of political partisanship, still relevant today.

Jews in Oświęcim


Jakub Haberfeld (original spelling: Jakób Haberfeld or Jakob Haberfeld) – one of the oldest Polish alcohol factories, founded in 1804. The company was reactivated in June 2019.



WW2

Germans in Oświęcim.



Something I didn't realise: the name of the town was also 'Oświęcim', not 'Auschwitz', in the German speaking Austro-Hungarian Empire:






I think the top photo shows the deportation of Jews.




Architecture

Oświęcim had a 1960s communist-era blemish in its historic market square: a modernist shop, built on foundations of a German WW2 bunker, similar to what Poznań got in its old town square in 1962. While Poznań kept theirs and renovated them in 2024, Oświęcim did not - demolished in 2009.

Early 1900s?

1940s

1960s - no cars, someone on a bike.


1970s - communist-era car galore: 4x Syrena, 2x big Fiat, 2x small Fiat, Zastava, old Warszawa.


Same place in 2025.










Bikes

I learned something about bikes too. Notice anything different in the red one here?


Durkopp made chainless bikes.