Polish Arts Club of Trenton, New Jersey

Music, Art, Books & More
Includes many books, reviews, articles and awards by our members!






Surviving Genocide
by Donna Chmara

The author describes the loss of her home in Eastern Europe during World War II, her family's deportation to a Nazi labor camp, and their eventual arrival in the United States. Relying on historic sources, interviews with twenty survivors and personal experience, the author focuses on the danger of identifying solely with a group or ideology rather than with the fact of our shared humanity.
Exiled from her home in Eastern Poland as a baby, the author chronicles the aggression against Polish citizens, Jewish and Christian, by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union during World War II. For many it will be the first time hearing about the deportation of thousands to the Soviet Union for forced labor, a topic they have not met in school or in the media. Nor do they know about plans to replace Christianity and all religion with deification of Hitler and the Nazi party. The author weaves this type of information into true accounts of survival from 20 eyewitnesses whom she interviewed over the course of 10 years.




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About the Author


Donna Chmara is currently the President of the Polish Arts Club of Trenton.  As an educator and author, Donna Chmara has turned her childhood experience of war into a lifetime quest for peace and respect for all human beings. As a refugee, she found the public education system to be pivotal in helping her make the transition from war-torn Europe to her new country of America. While attending the College of New Jersey, she was a one-year exchange student at the University of Saskatchewan in Canada. After college, she taught English for two years as a Peace Corps volunteer in Turkey where she maintains many dear friendships. In the United States, she has taught English and composition at the high school and college levels. She has also taught English for shorter periods in places as varied as Poland and the country of Myanmar (Burma.)

In addition to teaching, she has worked as a public school administrator, director of communications for a professional association of school administrators, and director of the State Board of Education Office. She holds a Master of Arts degree in English with a major in medieval literature from Temple University in Philadelphia. On a personal note, she participates in inter-religious and multi-cultural projects and loves to garden, dance, swim, and learn from other peoples' wisdom. Read More about the Donna and her fantastic book!


2021 Competition on the History of Poland
The Polonia Institute Grand Prize Winner!
A Brush with History
by Peter J. Obst

The Essay
by Peter Obst

        In 1981 my sister, Ursula Obst, was a reporter at the Philadelphia Daily News.  When Martial Law was declared in Poand on Dec. 13 her editor decided that she would go to Poland and ifnd out what was going on ther, as no news was getting out. During her stay there she heard about the miners a the Wujek Mine in Sllesia who were shot when they staged a strike at the mine.  This was the story, and photographs, she brought back and was the first reporter outside of Poland to write about it.  The story of the tragedy at the Wujek Mine was made into two films.  The BBC aired Two Weeks in Winter a year after the event.  In 1994 the Poles made thier own version of this story entitled Śmierć jak kromka chleba.
        Last year the Polonia Institute of Torrence, California announced an essay contest.  The theme was to write the untold stories of events that happened during Martial Law in Poland.  It was now forty years after the fact.  After digging up old memories and consulting documents, including my sister's articles that appeared in the Philadelphia Daily News from February 8 through 10, 1982, I produced an essay entitled A Brush with History.  Read the award winning essay here.



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Seven Paintings on Polish History

The seven paintings on Polish history by The Brotherhood of St. Luke were commissioned for the Polish Pavilion of the New York World's Fair in Flushing Meadow Queens, 1939-40. Their display together with the Szymanski tapestries and other prized cultural and historical items constituted the Polish Pavilion's Hall of Honor, the centerpiece of Poland's iconic towered pavilion designed by Jan Cybulski and Jan Galinowski.

Written by Peter J. Obst.
Read More & See the Paintings





Kinga Augustyn is a Polish-born and New York City based versatile classical concert violinist and recording artist gaining worldwide recognition through her performances as a concerto soloist, recitalist and chamber musician. Pictured above is her upcoming release on Centaur Records in 2017. Listen to the 2 short sound clips below.

Read More About Ms. Augustyn
Kinga Agustyn Discography
M. Bruch: Violin Concerto No. 1
F. Mendelssohn-Bartholdy: Violin Concerto

Henryk Sienkiewicz: Three Stories

Translator/writer Peter Obst has breathed new life into these lively tales rendering them into a form accessible and understandable to english Speaking readers. Those who care to sample the wit and humor of Poland's most famous writer will be delighted by these stories. Available from Amazon.Com.

Read about Mr. Obst and the book


"Slaying The Soviet Beast"



Author Zbigniew Wojcik conveys the incredible true story of how he discovered and delivered information that overcame the Soviet Bloc. He warns about the rising threat of socialism in the US today.



Jan Lisiecki’s interpretations and technique speak to a maturity beyond his age. At 27, the Canadian performs over a hundred yearly concerts worldwide, and has worked closely with conductors such as Antonio Pappano, Yannick Nézet-Séguin, Daniel Harding, Manfred Honeck, and Claudio Abbado.

In 2021/2022, Lisiecki presents a new recital programme featuring Chopins Nocturnes and Études in more than 30 cities all around the globe.

READ MORE

Front pages of 'The Wedding' by Stanislaw Wyspianski, 1901

Discover 8 Classics from Poland's Required Reading Curriculum


Reading literature is an important part of education, providing a gateway to language, culture and history. In Poland, there’s an official list of works recommended for high-school students, which includes about 150 varied titles. Culture.pl has hand-picked eight classic Polish texts from this list in order to see what they’re about – and what they say about Poland.


Pope John Paul II

Great Men and Women
of Polish Heritage


Read about more great men
and women of Polish heritage






In June 1952, a woman was murdered by an obsessed colleague in a hotel in the South Kensington district of London. Her name was Christine Granville. That she died young was perhaps unsurprising; that she had survived the Second World War was remarkable.

Read More About The Book


Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin is a book written by Timothy D. Snyder, first published by Basic Books on October 28, 2010. The book is about the mass killing of an estimated 14 million non-combatants by the regimes of Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union and Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany between the years 1933 and 1945.   Read More About The Book



What really happened in
the 1946 Kielce pogrom

A well written editorial submitted by our late member Marilyn Fontes Jose.  The Kielce pogrom was an outbreak of violence toward the Jewish community centre's gathering of refugees in the city of Kielce, Poland on 4 July 1946 by Polish soldiers, police officers, and civilians during which 42 Jews were killed and more than 40 were wounded. Polish courts later sentenced nine of the attackers to death in connection with the crimes. Also see:
The Museum of Family History     Wikipedia



Behind Closed Doors

World War II Behind Closed Doors
Stalin, the Nazis and the West


A fact sheet written by Polish Arts Club member William Muszynski



World War II Invaders
Turned Poland Into Hell

Editorial submitted by Donna Chmara pointing out some vital information that was missing from Sharon Schlegel's column. READ this well written letter by Donna.

The Peasant Prince, A Two-Country Freedom Fighter Book Review

A Two-Country Freedom Fighter Book Review

"The Peasant Prince," by Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Alex Storozynski. A NY Times book review submitted by Donna Chmara.



Behind Closed Doors

Buy the book on Amazon

Buy the video from BBC

Watch episodes on BBC Video

These free episodes are available to watch at this writing. Link was active in June 2022, but no guarantee how long they will be available.