Capturing Warsaw at the Dawn of World War II
As German bombs began falling on Poland in 1939, an American photographer made a fateful decision
- By Mike Edwards
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Twenty years later, after Bryan republished his photographs in a local newspaper, Zygmunt Aksienow identified himself as the boy in the photograph. Now 80, Aksienow recalls that two large bombs had fallen near his family’s apartment building and “the street was full of broken glass, furniture and parts of human bodies.” A bird cage “blew out of a house, along with a window” and landed in the rubble. Aksienow picked it up, thinking that the canary it held—very much alive—might belong to his cousin Zofia, a neighbor. “I was a scared 9-year-old, out looking for some sign of the normal life I was used to,” he says today.
Aksienow, who would grow up to be a coal miner, no longer recalls what happened to the canary, but he remembers clearly the cruel winter that followed the invasion. His family’s apartment had been heavily damaged and food was scarce, but just before the traditional Christmas Eve feast, young Zygmunt walked in with two buckets of fish, which he and a pal had stunned by tossing a hand grenade they’d found into the Vistula.
Bryan had no idea how he might get out of Warsaw. But on his 14th day there, the Germans declared a cease-fire to allow foreigners to depart by train through East Prussia. Certain that the Germans would confiscate any photographs of the destruction they had wrought, Bryan resolved to smuggle his film out. He gave some to departing companions to hide in their gear, and by one account wound yards of movie film he had the foresight to have processed in Warsaw around his torso. After reaching New York City, he reassembled an awesome trove: hundreds of still negatives and more than 5,000 feet of motion picture film.
That autumn, U.S. newspapers and magazines splashed Bryan’s photos across their pages. Life magazine printed 15 of his images, its weekly rival, Look, another 26—including the one of Aksienow with the caged canary. In 1940, Bryan put together a book about his experience, titled Siege; his documentary of the same name was nominated for an Academy Award.
Bryan died in 1974, just two months after receiving a medal from the Polish government for his still photography, which is preserved at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. His Warsaw film is listed on the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry as a “unique, horrifying record of the dreadful brutality of war.”
Mike Edwards was a writer and editor for National Geographic for 34 years.
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Comments (3)
The people of Warsaw made it a priority after the war to rebuild the Old Town section, which like the rest of the city, had been totally destroyed.
My understanding is that the techniques that were used by the craftsmen who rebuilt these historic buildings, became the standard by which many future restorations of similar buildings were based.
Perhaps a future follow-up article for this magazine might be how this herculean task was envisioned and completed.
Posted by B. Kosmider on December 12,2010 | 09:36 AM
I really enjoyed Mike Edwards' story "On to Warsaw" about Julien Bryan. In 1963, when I was 7 years old, I met Julien Bryan and his wife that summer when they were guests of our neighbor. He fascinated me with his stories of places far beyond my world located in the Berkshires of western Massachusetts. He gave me a trinket from Egypt and the Russian alphabet. Also, he left a signed copy of his book, "Warsaw", a combination of "1939 siege" and "1959 Warsaw revisited". I still have his book and when each of my three children studied this period of history in school, I shared his book with them. I am grateful that I had an opportunity to have met this great man and I am glad that Mike Edwards shared his story with your readers.
Posted by Corinne Lumnah on November 19,2010 | 11:28 PM
ALL of my grandfather's entire family lived in Poland. They were Roman Catholics and everyone of them ended up in Auschwitz. They were all killed except for my great-uncle who had the horrid distinction of having survived Dr.Mengele's (The Angel of Death, I believe he was called) gruesome experiments. The doctor performed vivi-section on my great uncle's arms without anesthesia. His arms shook and trembled until the day he died. The rest of our family became ash...
Posted by sandyra on November 7,2010 | 10:26 AM