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Echoes Of Polish Isfahan

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  • Echoes Of Polish Isfahan

    ECHOES OF POLISH ISFAHAN
    by Ryszard Antolak

    Iranian.com
    April 16 2012

    Traces of the Polish wartime exodus to Iran

    There was once a time when the streets of Isfahan echoed to the
    sounds of Polish songs, when thousands of little Polish girls made
    their way to school (or work) along the Chahar Bagh in their smart
    maroon jerseys and grey pleated skirts.

    It is hard to believe today: but from 1942 to 1945 Isfahan was home
    to an army of young Polish orphans (mostly girls) who found safety
    and freedom in Iran after years of forced detention in Siberian labour
    camps. Many had arrived in the country suffering from typhus, cholera
    and dysentery. All were traumatized and emaciated by malnutrition.

    Isfahan welcomed these orphans and found room for them in over twenty
    separate areas of the city. The climate of the city and the beautiful
    surroundings did much to return the children to physical and mental
    health. A large number of these visitors remained in Isfahan for up
    to three years, earning it the name, "City of Polish Children".

    Traces of their presence can still be found in Isfahan, if you are
    prepared to look for them.

    In an Armenian church in the Jolfa area, I discover a Polish relic: a
    highly ornate icon of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa. It is propped
    up on the altar below a rather garish neon cross. As a mass is in
    process, I wait in the aisle before approaching the celebrant (and his
    elderly assistant) for information about the icon. Do they know how
    the church acquired the icon? Could the Polish exiles have donated it?

    After all, the children attended the church regularly on Sundays. Some
    may even have received their first Holy Communions here. The two
    Armenians smile apologetically and shake their heads. They are sorry,
    but they know nothing of the icon's history. But of course (they
    continue) what I suggest is very possible. But they cannot say for
    certain. It is all, in the end, rather disappointing.

    Later, as I wander through the bazaar next to the Jame Mosque, I
    stop to admire some tablecloths on display. The stallholder is very
    friendly, and after sharing a few words I am invited around the back
    to meet his grandfather, the patriarch of the family. He is sitting on
    a tiny stool almost level with the floor, a slim, kindly old man with
    a generous smile and several missing teeth. He is printing patterns
    onto the cloth using nothing more than a simple wooden block. As he
    talks, he smears the block with an inky sponge and presses it firmly
    to the cotton material over and over again. It is intricate work,
    but he makes no mistakes. The dyes are all his own, he tells me. He
    makes them out of such things as alum and pomegranate skins.

    The old man begins to talk about his childhood. He used to play with
    the Polish children during the war years. He could remember many of
    them. In addition, his teacher used to instruct the Polish children
    in woodcarving, the making of wooden figures and ornaments. They were
    good students, he said, eager to learn. One day the teacher asked him
    if he would like to learn Polish (because he could arrange it). But
    he declined. He much preferred to play football on the streets with
    his school friends.

    Suddenly, the old man remembers one of the places in Isfahan where
    the exiles used to live. It is a factory now. He writes down the
    address on a piece of paper for me.

    As I am leaving, the grandson of the old man leans forward and informs
    me of several Poles who have recently arrived in Isfahan to work.

    Sensing my scepticism, he begins to tell me their names and
    then proudly recites two or three phrases in Polish. His Polish
    pronunciation is passable. These newly-arrived Poles like to sing
    and to laugh, he says. And also to drink, he adds finally.

    The very next morning, I go to the address the old man had given me
    in Charbagh Street. The place is now a store called "Polar", and deals
    in refrigeration devices. I talk to the owner, who is more than happy
    to let me to look around. I do, but there is very little to see. The
    rooms upstairs are completely gutted and the ground floors containing
    the shops extensively renovated. The only remaining feature of the
    original building is the exterior facade of the upstairs storey. I go
    out into the busy street and look up. Two ornate stone balconies can be
    seen and also a pair of bay windows containing the faintest suggestion
    of stained glass. What had once been an elegant, sought-after residence
    was now earmarked for demolition. It was propped up on all sides with
    temporary scaffolding and a metal curtain had been set up to protect
    pedestrians from falling masonry.

    Traces of the Polish wartime exodus to Iran were fast disappearing
    from Isfahan. Would anything remain, I began to ask myself, in twenty,
    fifty, a hundred years? Perhaps only graves will remain. Only the
    graves.

    Of all the Polish wartime cemeteries in Iran, Isfahan is one of the
    smallest, but also one of the most beautiful. It can be found on
    the south side of the river on a sloping hill between Mount Sofe and
    Jolfa. Shielded from the main road by a blue wrought-iron fence, it
    is surrounded by lofty pine trees, cool breezes and constant birdsong.

    Peace and serenity permeate everything here. As with most of the
    Polish cemeteries in Iran, it is cared for by the Armenian community.

    The Polish section is marked by two large crucifixes cemented into
    square pedestals with a metal chain hanging between them. Beyond them,
    straight ahead, is an upright commemorative monument of white concrete
    topped by a little crucifix. A Polish White Eagle is emblazoned across
    its surface. It holds an image of the Black Madonna of Czestochowa
    to its breast and the inscription below (in large black Polish
    letters) reads, "To the memory of the Polish exiles, from their
    fellow countrymen".

    Immediately in front of this monument is the oldest Polish grave in
    Isfahan, perhaps even in all of Iran. It is dated 1686, and marks the
    resting place of Theodore Miranowicz, an ambassador from the Polish
    King who died on a mission to the Iranian court. All about him, in
    three neat rows, are the 20 gravestones dating from the time of the
    Polish children. The majority are graves belonging to adults who cared
    for the orphans in Isfahan. Only seven actually belong to children.

    One merely reads, "She never saw the light of day".

    I sit down on a bench to consider all I have seen. In my hand I hold
    a copy of an old Polish newspaper printed in Tehran in 1943. One of
    the articles by a Polish visitor to Isfahan reads:

    A new "Young Poland" is being reborn here in Isfahan. These thousands
    of young people will return to their own country soon with the
    atmosphere of Isfahan deeply imprinted on their hearts. They will
    return home imbued with ideas of Art uncontaminated by fashion,
    advertisement or self-interest. Anyone who experiences "Polish Isfahan"
    for even a single day must bow his head before this miracle and say
    (without exaggeration), "Isfahan will enter the History of Poland."

    (1)

    Unfortunately, the writer was wrong on both counts. There was to be
    no rebirth of the Polish nation. And after the war, virtually none
    of the children returned to Poland. Instead, they became casualties
    of British and US policy towards Poland post 1945. They were passed
    from one shabby resettlement camp to another, whether in India or
    East Africa. A large group of them settled in New Zealand, in a place
    called Pahiatua. Another group (the majority) ended up in Santa Rosa,
    Mexico. The USA refused to take any of them. Indeed, when their ship
    docked in Los Angeles en route to Mexico, the US authorities arrested
    the children and placed them behind barbed wire in an internment camp
    for Japanese citizens. When they were finally permitted to leave,
    it was only by sealed train and under heavy US military guard until
    they reached the border with Mexico.

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