Swift to Fans: Don't Panic When You Hear Sirens on Thursday

Her Warsaw concert coincides with commemorations of 1944 uprising
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Aug 1, 2024 5:50 AM CDT
Swift to Fans: Don't Panic When You Hear Sirens on Thursday
Taylor Swift performs as part of the "Eras Tour" at the Tokyo Dome, on Feb. 7, 2024, in Tokyo.   (AP Photo/Toru Hanai, File)

Taylor Swift is telling fans traveling to her concert in Warsaw on Thursday to not panic, and to expect to hear loud sirens in the afternoon honoring a key World War II anniversary. The Polish capital is holding observances to mark the 80th anniversary of the start of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising, a 63-day revolt by Polish insurgents after five years of brutal Nazi occupation, the AP reports. The entire city stops and alarm sirens sound every year on Aug. 1 at the exact time in the afternoon when the revolt was launched. Swift is performing for three consecutive nights in Warsaw starting Thursday.

"To the people who are coming to the concert on August 1st don't panic if you heard sirens alarm about 5p.m. It will be 80th anniversary & planes!" Swift's "The Eras Tour" posted on social media. Thousands of ticket-holders, many who are traveling to Warsaw from afar, will be in or near the stadium at that time already for the evening performance. A Polish news site, Onet, also published an "important message for all Swifties who are going to the concert" explaining the significance of the day. "We ask you to remain calm and not to panic. In this way every year residents pay tribute to the heroes of 1944. Those who will be at that moment already outside the stadium, please remain quiet and get up."

On Aug. 1, 1944, poorly armed young city residents rose up against German forces, battling them in the streets of the capital for over two months. The Soviets were approaching in their march westward against the German forces, and the Poles held out hope for help. That help didn't come, and Germans killed 200,000 Polish fighters and civilians and razed the city in revenge. Germany in past decades has made many gestures of remorse, helping to bring about reconciliation. Poles, however, remain bitter toward the Soviets for allowing the slaughter when they could have intervened. Today the uprising is remembered by Poles as one of the most important moments in a long history of independence struggles against Russia and Germany.

(More Taylor Swift stories.)

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