Saturday, March 28, 2026

"Our Class" Play at Z Space

On Saturday, March 28, 2026, Inna and I drove to San Francisco to see the play "Our Class" at Z Space (in the Mission District).

Before seeing the play, we decided to park at Crissy Field and stroll along the waterfront. As we were hungry, we stopped for lunch at Cracked & Battered (one of our favorite local eateries). We were finally able to get a table (inside), as our past 2-3 attempts ended in failure (Cracked & Battered closes at 2:00pm).

We ordered the following items from the Cracked & Battered lunch menu:

  • Boris: Fried Chicken & Waffles, Coffee
  • Inna: 3 Pieces Fried Chicken, 2 Eggs Over-Medium, Coffee
The Fried Chicken was excellent, and Inna shared 1.5 pieces with me (as she actually received 4 pieces). The Waffle was soft and fluffy - just perfect!

After lunch, we walked along the waterfront to Equator Coffees and then all the way back to Crissy Field. There were lots of people jogging, bicycling, running, and many soccer games (for young boys & girls) on the fields.

We stopped by for two cappuccinos at Equator Coffees (there was a long line).

At around 17:00, we drove our Tesla Model Y to be closer to the play (in the Mission district), and we decided to park at the San Francisco General Hospital's parking lot (to minimize potential parking tickets and car burglaries). Mission is not the safest neighborhood in San Francisco, and we saw a few interesting people on the street.

From the parking lot, we walked toward Tartine Manufactory, where we decided to eat dinner. We arrived there around 117:45. It looked mostly empty, but we were told that reservations would have been desirable. Fortunately, a free table was found for us, and we ordered the following items:
  • Appetizer: Green Goddess Salad with Chicken
  • Main: Mushroom Pizza
  • Drinks: Sincere Apple Cider
  • Bread & Butter
The Green Goddess Salad was excellent. The Bread & Butter were delicious (but we had to remind ourselves to eat less bread). The Mushroom Pizza was not bad. Inna loved the Sincere Apple Cider.

At around 18:45, we finished our dinner and quickly walked to the nearby Dandelion Chocolate 16th Street Factory. It was closing at 19:00, but we snuck in time to order a hot chocolate. The creamy, European-style hot chocolate was out (what we love to taste at Thierry in Vancouver), so Inna ordered the standard. It was not bad, but I wouldn't go out of my way to order it. We did try a few different chocolates on display (there was a range from different beans and regions of South America and Africa). The 100% pure chocolate was quite bitter, and I preferred the 85%.

From Dandelion, we walked about 5 minutes to Z Space for our play.

Inna wanted to see the play because of the famous Russian actress playing in it. The subject matter was quite dark, and we left after the first half (as I was not really enjoying the play). I felt that the lack of context (for each lesson) made it difficult to understand. One really needed to know Polish history to make sense of all the events.

Here is what ChatGPT has to say about the play:

Our Class is a powerful and disturbing contemporary play that explores memory, identity, and violence in 20th-century Eastern Europe.

What it’s about

The story follows ten classmates—five Jewish and five Catholic Polish— from the same school, tracing their lives from childhood in the 1920s through World War II and into the late 20th century. What begins as an ordinary shared upbringing slowly fractures under the pressures of war, occupation, and rising antisemitism.

Historical backdrop

The play is inspired by real events, particularly the Jedwabne massacre, in which Jewish residents were murdered—shockingly, with participation from their non-Jewish neighbors. The play doesn’t just recount history; it examines how ordinary people can become complicit in atrocities.

Themes

  • Friendship vs. betrayal – childhood bonds collapse under ideology and fear
  • Memory and guilt – how people remember (or distort) the past
  • Identity – religious and national identities become life-or-death divisions
  • Moral responsibility – who is to blame, and how history judges them

Style

The play is often staged minimally, with actors narrating their own lives directly to the audience. This creates a stark, almost documentary feel, making the emotional impact more immediate.

Why it’s significant

“Our Class” is widely regarded as one of the most important modern European plays because it forces audiences to confront uncomfortable truths about human nature and history—not just what happened, but how and why it happened.

 

 Simple Plot Summary (Act-by-Act Style)

The play is structured as a series of “lessons” rather than traditional acts.

Early Lessons (Childhood – 1920s/30s)

  • Ten classmates (Jewish and Catholic Polish) grow up together.
  • They joke, flirt, argue—basically normal kids.
  • Subtle tensions already exist (religion, stereotypes), but nothing extreme yet.

Middle Lessons (WWII – 1940s)

  • Everything changes with war and occupation (first Soviet, then Nazi).
  • Power shifts—some classmates gain authority, others lose everything.
  • Antisemitism intensifies.

👉 The turning point is the massacre inspired by the Jedwabne massacre:

  • Jewish classmates are brutally attacked.
  • Some of their former friends participate or stand by.
  • This is the emotional and moral core of the play.

Later Lessons (Postwar – 1950s–2000s)

  • Survivors deal with guilt, denial, or justification.
  • Some emigrate, some reinvent themselves, some cling to lies.
  • The past never really goes away.
  • The play ends with reflection: memory is incomplete, uncomfortable, and contested.

👥 Main Characters (Simplified)

You don’t always need to memorize all 10, but here are key ones:

  • Zygmunt – Becomes violent and opportunistic
  • Rysiek – Aggressive, openly antisemitic
  • WÅ‚adek – More passive, conflicted
  • Abram – Jewish classmate, thoughtful, becomes a victim of events
  • Menachem – Jewish survivor who emigrates

👉 The characters represent types of human behavior:

  • perpetrators
  • victims
  • bystanders
  • survivors

💡 Key Themes (Explained Simply)

1. Ordinary people can do terrible things

These aren’t monsters—they’re classmates. That’s what makes it disturbing.

2. Peer pressure & power

People act differently when they feel powerful—or afraid.

3. Memory is unreliable

Characters rewrite their past to avoid guilt.

4. Friendship isn’t always stronger than hatred

Childhood bonds collapse under social and political pressure. 


Our Class Play Review 

Highlights

  • The play is very unconventional and has creative uses of the blackboard

Lowlights

  • It was difficult to understand each time period, as there was minimal context provided. It would have been very helpful to understand the year of each lesson and the major issues.

Links

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