The Dwarfs of Wroclaw
This is a typical scene in Wroclaw, Poland. Not the attractive Art Deco front, but the little figure to the left of the door, one of the over 800 Dwarfs of Wroclaw.
They are a huge attraction for the kids, who have sticker books and try to collect as many as they can.
So what is with these dwarfs?
In European fairy tales dwarfs come to help people in need (think of Snow White, for instance). In Wroclaw in the 1980s Waldemar Fydrych led the Orange Alternative, a protest against the communist regime, arguing that a protest movement with absurd satirical elements and accessible for everyone would be effective and difficult for the authorities to counter without ridicule. They overpainted communist slogans with pictures of dwarfs and used pictures of dwarfs to indicate the site of a happening, where they would distribute "luxury" items, which were not always easy to obtain, such as toilet paper, cut flowers, sanitary pads and also orange dwarf hats. He argued (correctly) that the police would be too embarassed to arrest dwarfs, and if they did, they would be ridiculed(correct again). He also argued that the West was more likely to pick up and publish an article if he was arrested for distributing sanitary pads than for clever intellectual reasoning or a violent action. It was a success and even spawned, and supported, the Orange Movement in Ukraine. (see en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_Alternative )
The dwarfs are in their honour and many continue the slightly subversive and humorous themes. Others are sponsored by shops, businesses and even official institutions. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wroc%C5%82aw_Dwarfs
A Solidarnosc grafitti dwarf...
Two dwarfs sawing a police baton...
Outside the German Consulate, two dwarfs are downing a beer, having whacked a hole in the Berlin Wall...
But this guy wasn't so lucky...
Finally a dwarf to commemorate the Wroclaw Guitar Festival.
Every 1st May, guitarists gather in the huge market square (one of the largest in Europe) and strum along to, or freak out to, or try to copy Jimi Hendrix's "Hey Joe" and other Hendrix classics. In 2023 they earned yet another place in the Guinness Book of Records with 7,967 guitarists playing Hey Joe. A week ago they broke that record again with 8.122 guitarists!
heyjoe.pl/summary/
www.youtube.com/watch?v=JUffwZJ98aU
And this must be getting close to a record for the longest post. Sorry!