See also...
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Vos photos de choc sans discrimination / Tus fotos de choque indiscriminado
Photos avec un message, une alerte , une émotion, un symbole, une réflexion, une drôlerie
Photos avec un message, une alerte , une émotion, un symbole, une réflexion, une drôlerie
Decadenza - Dekadenz - abandoned thinks - decadencia
Decadenza - Dekadenz - abandoned thinks - decadencia
Fenêtres, portes et façades / Windows, doors and façades.
Fenêtres, portes et façades / Windows, doors and façades.
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
Folk architecture, arquitectura popular, Volksarchitektur
"Street Art & Graffiti"-"Straßenkunst & Graffitis"-"Art de la rue et graffitis"-"Arte callejero y graffiti"-""Arte di strada e graffiti"
"Street Art & Graffiti"-"Straßenkunst & Graffitis"-"Art de la rue et graffitis"-"Arte callejero y graffiti"-""Arte di strada e graffiti"
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The Kotwica ("Anchor") was was a World War II emblem of the Polish Underground State and Armia Krajowa (Home Army, or AK). It was created in 1942 by members of the AK Wawer Minor sabotage unit, as an easily usable emblem for the Polish struggle to regain independence. The initial meaning of the initials PW was Pomścimy Wawer ("We shall avenge Wawer"). This was a reference to the Wawer massacre (26–27 December 1939), which was considered to be one of the first large scale massacres of Polish civilians by German troops in occupied Poland.
Over time the letters PW came to symbolize the phrase Polska Walcząca ("Fighting Poland").
Early in 1942, the AK organised a contest to design an emblem to represent the resistance movement, and the winning design by Anna Smoleńska, a member of the Gray Ranks who herself participated in minor sabotage operations, combined the letters P and W into the Kotwica.
Smoleńska was arrested by the Gestapo in November 1942 and died in Auschwitz in March 1943, at the age of twenty-three.
The Kotwica was first painted on walls in Warsaw, as a psychological-warfare tactic against the occupying Germans, by Polish boy scouts on 20 March 1942.
Then it was painted on the walls of Polish cities, stamped on German banknotes and post stamps, printed on the headers of underground newspapers and books, and it also became one of the symbols of the Warsaw Uprising (the letters P and W are also abbreviations of Powstanie Warszawskie ("Warsaw Uprising") and Wojsko Polskie ("Polish Army").
I took this photo half an year ago, at a place that most certainly remembers those cruel years.
This ruined house witnessed the Wola massacre.
From 5 to 12 August 1944, tens of thousands of Polish civilians along with captured Home Army resistance fighters were brutally and systematically murdered by the Germans in organised mass executions throughout Wola. Whole families perished including babies, children and old people. Germans murdered patients in hospitals, killing them in their beds. Doctors and nurses caring for them were also killed. Dead bodies were piled up to be burned. Before burning, dogs were let loose to check if anybody was still alive. If found alive they were killed on the spot. Black fires from the burning of thousands of bodies covered the whole suburb. Hundreds of women were raped and then killed. Parents were made to watch their children being killed and priests trying to protect those who sought refuge in churches were murdered, some at the altar.
So whoever put those emblems there in past years made a statement: "Always remember".
Today we commemorate the 76th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising.
The Uprising began on 1 August 1944. The exact time was 5:00 PM, 1 August 1944.
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Olympus XA + Kentmere Pan 400 + Kodak HC-110 (Dil.B)
Over time the letters PW came to symbolize the phrase Polska Walcząca ("Fighting Poland").
Early in 1942, the AK organised a contest to design an emblem to represent the resistance movement, and the winning design by Anna Smoleńska, a member of the Gray Ranks who herself participated in minor sabotage operations, combined the letters P and W into the Kotwica.
Smoleńska was arrested by the Gestapo in November 1942 and died in Auschwitz in March 1943, at the age of twenty-three.
The Kotwica was first painted on walls in Warsaw, as a psychological-warfare tactic against the occupying Germans, by Polish boy scouts on 20 March 1942.
Then it was painted on the walls of Polish cities, stamped on German banknotes and post stamps, printed on the headers of underground newspapers and books, and it also became one of the symbols of the Warsaw Uprising (the letters P and W are also abbreviations of Powstanie Warszawskie ("Warsaw Uprising") and Wojsko Polskie ("Polish Army").
I took this photo half an year ago, at a place that most certainly remembers those cruel years.
This ruined house witnessed the Wola massacre.
From 5 to 12 August 1944, tens of thousands of Polish civilians along with captured Home Army resistance fighters were brutally and systematically murdered by the Germans in organised mass executions throughout Wola. Whole families perished including babies, children and old people. Germans murdered patients in hospitals, killing them in their beds. Doctors and nurses caring for them were also killed. Dead bodies were piled up to be burned. Before burning, dogs were let loose to check if anybody was still alive. If found alive they were killed on the spot. Black fires from the burning of thousands of bodies covered the whole suburb. Hundreds of women were raped and then killed. Parents were made to watch their children being killed and priests trying to protect those who sought refuge in churches were murdered, some at the altar.
So whoever put those emblems there in past years made a statement: "Always remember".
Today we commemorate the 76th anniversary of the Warsaw Uprising.
The Uprising began on 1 August 1944. The exact time was 5:00 PM, 1 August 1944.
-----
Olympus XA + Kentmere Pan 400 + Kodak HC-110 (Dil.B)
, Edna Edenkoben, Guy Bacca (guybac), Berny and 8 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to Typo93 clubThank you!
Gdzie muchy nie mają przeszkód .....
Là où les mouches n'ont pas de contraintes à y entrer et sortir à leur gré.....
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to Léopold clubAnd, oh, thank you Léopold for so many invitations to different groups.
I accepted those where you are and admin.
I am nor sure about the rest though...
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