More in ‘Krakow Jewish Music Festival’

Sundown: Elf Defense

An ironic sculpture, a tired jokester, and a cross-genre cover
By Hadara Graubart | 5:15 PM Jul 16, 2009

• “Portraying the German ‘master race’ as garden gnomes was an ironic gesture,” says the artist responsible for a sculpture of a golden gnome giving a “Heil Hitler.” The piece is now on display in a Nuremberg gallery, and it’s being investigated as potentially unlawful. [London Times]
• Years after wearing out his welcome with some ...

Music

The Mute Stones

Once bustling, and long silent, Krakow’s streets sing anew
By Josh Kun | 7:00 AM Jul 16, 2009

In the early 1920s, Polish photographer Witold Chrominski took a panoramic shot of Szeroka Street, the central artery that leads into the main square of Krakow’s Jewish quarter, the Kazimierz. In the photo, the square is packed shoulder to shoulder with Jews, men in hats and long wool coats, women wrapped in shawls lugging stuffed shopping bags. It is a scene that bursts with life: you can hear the hum of conversations, the shuffling of weary feet, the shouts of vendors. Today, that same square bursts with a different kind of life and is mostly visited by tourists who’ve come to see the place that was once full of all of those Jews. It is a vibrant place these days, to be sure, but when you stand in the middle of it and think of that photograph, the square’s enduring emptiness is stunning.

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Music

Letter From Krakow

At annual culture festival, Jewishness is abundant; Jews, scarce
By Roger Bennett | 7:00 AM Jul 10, 2009

It is late night in Kazimierz, the Jewish Quarter, and we have just lined up outside of a club for an hour and a half to gain access to a smoke-filled basement for the midnight show. The crowd is boisterous and heaving, surging forward to get closer to front. Behavior typical if a pop ...