hands. Poland has won the war. Poland is victorious. Tomorrow I can go back to school."
|
Mama patted me on the head. Only a faint smirk danced in the corners of her mouth. "Good, good, my child, now go back and play outside."
|
"But, Mama," I protested, "you do not even seem to be happy. You were so worried about the war, and now that it is over you are not at all excited or pleased. Shlamek will come home now, and Papa can go back to traveling to Katowice. And by the way, where are Gdansk and Gliwice, Mama?" I asked curiously. I did not have time to wait for an answer, aware that Sholek had already vanished. I quickly followed him into the yard.
|
There was a lot of hustle and bustle in the yard. A general meeting of the police force had been called. The staff from the municipal offices on the second floor was there as well. The tall skinny inspector was talking to the crowd that formed a circle around him. This was Friday, September 1, 1939, the day Germany declared war on Poland.
|
"Our country is at war," the inspector general solemnly said. "Our country has been at war before and has been briefly partitioned in the past. But Poland will never surrender to her western enemy. The greedy Germans will not be allowed to stomp their boots on our soil. Not one fistful of land will they conquer, not one centimeter will we surrender. We will defend our country, my comrades, with our bodies and souls. It is our homeland, our fatherland. We will reconquer what they try to steal from us. Our Pomorze is what Hitler wants. No, my dear patriots, we will not give up Pomorze. As a matter of fact, we have Gdansk right now. This is what I am proud to tell you. We have just received the news, the good news, my fellow Poles. Gdansk is in our hands. And so is Gliwice, my dear gentlemen."
|
A loud burst of applause followed, drowning out the rest of his words. All the faces were smiling. The meeting started to break up, yet no one was leaving the yard. People formed small circles, enthusiastically discussing the war. It was obvious that the Germans were losing. It was clear that the Ger-
|
|