New Eastern Europe - November-December 2017

(Ben Green) #1
161

racks (where every road leading out of
town led to). There was a Soviet part of
the railway station and special stores for
Soviet soldiers. They also had their own
hospitals, preschools, schools, sport fa-
cilities, cinemas and community centres.
There was a Soviet military prosecutor,
a court and even a prison.
The gigantic building which was the
seat of the Red Army in Poland was lo-
cated in a former German residential
neighbourhood. It was well-protected
and fenced with a wall whose remains
can be found today. One could often
hear Russian on the streets and the sight
of Russian soldiers and vehicles marked
with red stars was commonplace. The
railway schedule included regular de-
partures for trains heading to Moscow.
And the residents of Legnica became
used to Russian planes and helicopters
flying overhead. The local bazaar, locat-
ed near the old Polish castle of the Piast
dynasty which saw the times of Hen-
ry II the Pious and the 1241 battle with
the Mongols, was a place where black


market transactions were taking place
and gold was sold at the cheapest pric-
es in Poland.
Legnica also filled a few pages in the
history of the Cold War. It was here, in

1968, where the Soviet generals, togeth-
er with their Polish allies, prepared and
later led the invasion of the Warsaw Pact
into Czechoslovakia, while the local air-
port was the first place where the leaders
of the Prague Spring were imprisoned.

Demons

In 1994 when Jacek Głomb became
the director of the theatre in Legnica,
the Soviet soldiers had just left the city.
Their traces remained, however, in both
physical objects and the locals’ memory
of the Soviet presence. This included
symbolic and controversial ones such as
the Monument of Gratitude to the Sol-
diers of the Red Army, which – at one


point – was renamed as the Monument
to the Brotherhood in Arms. It can still
be seen on Legnica’s main square (even
though its fate seems to have already
been decided on) where it is located
next to the city hall.
Coming from Tarnów, which is a small
town in the Małopolska region, Głomb
arrived to Legnica where everything

It was from Legnica where the
Soviet generals, together with
their Polish allies, prepared
and later led the invasion
of the Warsaw Pact into
Czechoslovakia in 1968.

Legnica with a view to Russia, Grzegorz Żurawiński Eastern Café

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