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Life Through Basia's Eyes

Basia Korzeniowska's avatarBasia Korzeniowska

British born of Polish parents; educator, teacher, translator, chair of Polish Citizens’ Committee Housing Association Ltd., fundraiser and organiser.

I was born in Earls Court, centre of Polish émigré life at the time, then lived in South Kensington and went to a tiny boarding school in Ealing. I read Spanish and English at Sheffield University, and as I always knew I wanted to be a teacher I did my PGCE there in 1978. For the next forty years I taught in a wide variety of schools, eventually specialising in Special Education. The cohesive theme of my career was creative education in the widest sense of the word.
My passions are people, education, literature, theatre and inclusivity. I hate sport but enjoy walking and taking photographs and writing.
Now on my gap year I am enjoying volunteering my help with the Polish Cultural Foundation, chairing the committee of Antokol Polish Care Home and I promote knowledge of immediate history to school children about the events of the Second World War which led to my parents being here as refugees.

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Sausage Tree

Yesterday I  was in total crisis.  I am on holiday from school and  although I have a lot to do I thought I could spend a happy hour looking at our photos from our incredible trip to Uganda and Tanzania 3 years ago. (More about that some other time). For the last three years I […]Read Post ›

Mothering Sunday 2016

Mothering Sunday. Ten years ago I still had my mother and my godmother, who was also my aunt. Five years ago I still had my godmother. Now I am mother to three of my own very grown-up children and Mothering Sunday is still an extremely significant day for me. This picture of the queen is […]Read Post ›

Nuns 1 

MM Clare. Very old. Would look after the boarders at night before matron was installed. She would hang all her necessities on a cord round her waist underneath the top layer of her habit. These included nail clippers, scissors, and an exercise book full of sweet jokes that she had written down to entertain us […]Read Post ›

Vienna holiday 

Not a holiday really. Just a record. Vinyl. Very old. We put it on just now and the memories flooded back. Sitting at home in the purple and yellow living room in Egerton Court putting on record after record and dancing and singing  wildly whenever I was on my own. With the limited choice of […]Read Post ›

Stars and Bars

By William Boyd   Not his best book. Very funny in places and especially good when describing the scenery and weather. But the story is too far fetched and the set pieces don’t always quite work. Very unsatisfactory ending. But then I looked at when he wrote it and it was over thirty years ago. So […]Read Post ›

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry

by Rachel Joyce   I read the Love Song of Miss Queenie Hennessy first.  Apparently it is the second in the series, but this is the one I got for Christmas so I read it in a couple of days in the holidays. I couldn’t put it down. It was sad and funny and moving […]Read Post ›

Copenhagen

Copenhagen  The story of Hans Christian Andersen as told by class 4a in Marlborough School, 1964. “Oh wonderful, wonderful Copenhagen,” they sang – we sang – in a very animated approximation of Danny Kaye in the film of the time. Our last year of school – we seemed to be in constant rehearsal, and everyone […]Read Post ›

Skiing

Carlos, Sylvie, Laurita, Luis                         Laurita, Sylvie, Carlos and me For CS SS LI I am not sporty.  Never have been, never will be.  Everyone knows that I move slowly, reluctantly, doing my bit for the planet by conserving energy whenever I can.  Thus I […]Read Post ›

My father in his own words

BRITAIN AT WAR READERS’ MEMORIES 2:14PM BST 21 Oct 2008 Britain at War: Surrendering Germans In July 1944 in a battle near Loretto my battery (25 pounders) was supporting the 7th Hussars in crossing the river Musone.     As an artillery observer in a White Scout car we were moving towards the river under […]Read Post ›

Tatus

My father died on the 23rd November   This is what I said at his funeral. It gives a tiny flavour of what he was like….  96 years old and he was still my Tatus. My first memories of him are when he was in his late thirties and I was about three or four. […]Read Post ›

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