The sign says (from Google Translate) "The tenement house on Wahce Street 14 was built in the 19th century. During the German occupation, it was part of the Jewish ghetto. There are three buildings on the street side of the street. There was a Jewish poet writing in Polish, Wadyslaw Szengel, the chronicler of Tonania, who described the life in the Jewish ghetto and the well-known photographer journalist opera singer Menachem Kipris, who also collects and documentes traditional Jewish music. After the liquidation of a small ghetto in 1943, In the front of the building there is a wall which in the years 1940-1942 was the border of the...
Read moreKAMIENICO is the biggest wall street art in Warsaw (1400 sq.m.) placed on the northern wall of Waliców 14 building. The building is standing on the border of World War II ghetto and is one of the most ruined of these which survived the war. During the wall art presentation, the artist sent 33 balloons in the air. The ballonns were bought with money he got from the sale of a ring for his...
Read moreOne of the very last houses in Warszawa that show the circumstances of the life in the former Ghetto. I think that this place is definitely worth a visit. It’s not like it’s perfect for pictures and it would be inhuman to make a selfie in front of it because I ask myself: what would these walls say if...
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