hidden europe 42

By the razor’s edge: western Poland

by Nicky Gardner

Summary

The Polish village of Siekierki on the east bank of the River Odra is a good spot to reflect on European borders. We visit the Western Territories, the area ceded by Germany to Poland at the end of the Second World War.

We drive through the empty forests and meadows on the east bank of the River Odra in Poland. The storks have not yet arrived, and — as always at this time of the year — the river is high. Melting snow on the mountains of south-west Poland drains down through the Odra watershed to reach the Baltic. Along the way the river flows through the Polish city of Wrocław and, further downstream, marks the border between Germany and Poland. The locals in riverside villages along this stretch — places like Piasek and Czelin — talk of beavers, elk and lynx living in this remote area, but sightings of these mammals are rare. The animals keep to themselves, as do the humans in this region of western Poland.

The farmsteads are irretrievably run down and the railway station at Siekierki has not seen a train in years. “Welcome to Ziemie Zachodnie — the Western Territories,” says an elderly man who sits on the railway line. He is carving a piece of green willow. He does not look up, but focuses intensely on the fragment of wood in his hand.

To Poles who lived in eastern Galicia in the months after the end of the Second World War, the lands on the eastern side of the Odra River (and the wider territory of Silesia away to the south-east) were portrayed as a kind of Promised Land. The word Eldorado was used in advertisements posted at railway stations across Poland encouraging migrants to move west to settle in what were euphemistically referred to as ‘the recovered lands’ — the area east of the Oder- Neisse line. Until 1945, most of the land in the area was owned by Germans, who alluded to the region as Neumark or Ostbrandenburg. In 1945, the Potsdam Peace Treaty required these German settlers to move to new homes further west. Some three million ethnic Germans moved and one-time German villages morphed into Polish ones.

Related article

Marking Time: New Train Services for 2020

The hidden europe award for ingenuity in creating new European rail travel opportunities is awarded to Austria's state rail operator, Österreichische Bundesbahnen (ÖBB). We look at what ÖBB will offer anew for 2020, and examine too what's new on the rails in Russia, Germany and elsewhere across Europe.

Related article

Making Tracks for Sweden

As winter slipped slowly into spring in 1917, Lenin passed through Berlin on his journey back to Russia from Switzerland. His onward route from Berlin took him by train to Sassnitz, then on by ferry to Trelleborg in Sweden. These days it's still possible to follow the route taken by Lenin, using the occasional direct trains from Berlin to Sweden.

Related article

At the water's edge: Germany's Wadden Sea

Within just a few centuries, the geography of the Frisian region has been reshaped by storms and tides. Paul Scraton is a regular writer for hidden europe; here he explores Germany’s Wadden Sea coastline. It’s a tale that shows the power of the sea.