While my fellow travelers either went home or on to Berlin, my plans were to stay one more day in Warsaw before going on to London.
My mission was to find the Fryderyk Chopin trail: there are even apps available to enhance the experience. One was called Chopin in Warsaw and the other was Selfie with Chopin. There are benches along the way which show a map of where you are on the trail. You can hear Chopin’s music by pressing a button on the bench.
Even though the entire service was in Polish, it was easy enough to follow along. I recognized the Creed, the Prayers, the Sursum Corda, the Sanctus, Lord’s Prayer and Lamb of God, even though I don’t know a single word of Polish! At the Peace, people just turned and nodded to one another without saying anything.
One thing that was a little unusual was the distribution of communion. People on the inside aisle simply turned inward while the priest walked up and down the center aisle; the people did not have to move except turning inward. That means, though, that no one else got the sacrament except those on the inside aisle.
As the app promised, Chopin’s heart is buried inside the left pillar. Even though he left Poland to work in Paris, he wanted to be buried in Poland; however it is only his heart here—the rest of his body is buried in the Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris.
I was really fascinated by the images of Chopin’s death bed scene. Notice a piano was brought in to play music for him. Also the pressed flowers in the frame were the actual flowers that were at Chopin’s death bed.
I made it back to St. Anne’s Church in the Old Town and a mass was still in progress. I must say that church attendance here in Poland is phenomenal — all the churches are jammed full and are standing room only!
After several more calls to the GoAhead office in Boston, retrieving my luggage from room 2101, and waiting in the lobby awhile, it was finally straightened out and I was assigned to room 2205.
What a relief that I won’t have to sleep on the street tonight!
[…] previous post, In search of Fryderyk Chopin, about my 18,000 step walk yesterday neglected to mention other stops I made along the Chopin […]
I saw in your list of travels you compiled for your Visa that you went to Poland- so I immediately searched your blogs to see if you did a Chopin tour. I am insanely jealous! I have a print of his Polonaise in A flat major framed over my piano and a got a plaster cast of his hands for Christmas- I have always been crazy about him. I hope to do the Poland trip someday and also visit Valdemossa on the island in Spain where he wrote his Preludes.