Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Witold Szabłowski

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Witold Szabłowski Witold Szabowski Inny Punkt Widzenia

Books
  
The Assassin from Apricot City

People also search for
  
Izabela Meyza, Selmin Çalışkan, Eva Quistorp

Ian buruma introduces witold szab owski in writers unlimited winternachten festival 17 01 2015


Witold Szabłowski ( 'vitɔld ʂab'wɔfskʲi ) (born 1980, in Ostrów Mazowiecka) is a Polish journalist and author.

Contents

Witold szab owski tematy za mn a


Biography

Witold Szabłowski Kulturysta Witold Szabowski Kulturysta polskieradiopl

Szabłowski lived and studied for a year in Turkey, and much of his journalism has engaged with Turkish issues. He is a graduate of the Department of Journalism and Political Science at Warsaw University.

Witold Szabłowski httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

He won the 2007 Melchior Wańkowicz Award in the category of Inspiration of the Year for his honest documentation of aspects of Turkish society not widely known outside of the country. He is known for his concise but vivid use of language. In 2008 he received an honourable mention from Amnesty International for his report on Turkish honour killings, To z miłości, siostro ("It's Out of Love, Sister"), which appeared in Duży Format. He wrote about the situation of women in Turkey who were subjected to rape and honour killing for the "sin" of wanting to decide their own fates.

Witold Szabłowski Witold Szablowski Artist citybooks

Zabójca z miasta moreli ("The Assassin from Apricot City"), a collection of his long-form journalism, was published in Poland in 2010. It won the Beata Pawlak Award and was nominated for the Poland's NIKE book award.

Witold Szabłowski Press release Witold Szabowskis The Assassin from Apricot City

After a journey to Cuba, he wondered if something important had been lost in the change from communism to capitalism. He and his wife, Izabela Meyza, decided to live for the year of 2012 as if they were in Communist times. They wore clothes from Communist times, refrained from buying things not available in the Polish People's Republic, and sought out games and objects from the Communist era. Together they wrote a book about their experiences, Nasz mały PRL. Pół roku w M-3, z trwałą, wąsami i maluchem ("Our Little Polish People's Republic: Six Months in a Three-room Apartment with a Perm, a Moustache, and a Fiat 126p”)

Witold Szabłowski Meeting with Witold Szabowski Citybooks

In 2014 he published Tańczące niedźwiedzie ("Dancing Bears") in which he writes about the creation of reserves for bears previously used as dancing bears to entertain people. He uses the experiences of the former dancing bears to explore differences between communist and capitalist systems.

Witold Szabłowski Witold Szabowski European Culture Congress

In 2016 Szablowski’s book Sprawiedliwi zdrajcy. Sąsiedzi z Wołynia (“Righteous Traitors. Neighbours from Volhynia”) was published. It depicts the fate of the victims and witnesses of the 1943-1944 massacres of Poles in Volhynia. Szabłowski’s main focus is on people who at great personal risk provided help to their neighbours, Polish or Jewish. It is considered some of the best reporting of the massacres of Poles in Volhynia.

Awards

  • European Parliament Journalism Prize
  • Anna Lindh Mediterranean Journalist Award – Special Mention
  • Ryszard Kapuściński Award for literary reportage
  • Translations

    Zabójca z miasta moreli

  • English:
  • The Assassin From Apricot City, transl. Antonia Lloyd-Jones, London, Stork Press, 2013.
  • German
  • Weil ich dich liebe, Schwester. Reportagen aus der Türkei, transl. Joanna Manc, Vliegen Verlag, 2015.
  • Russian
  • Убийца из города абрикосов, transl. Madina Alekseeva, Corpus, 2015.
  • Ukrainian
  • Убивця з міста абрикосів, transl. Dzvinka Matiyash, Tempora, 2012.
  • References

    Witold Szabłowski Wikipedia