If you are enjoying my Polish Reaction Videos, why not go check out our vlog channel where we have visted poland! kzitem.info/door/PLw4JaWCFm7FeHG7Ad5PtaZzoYd1Vq5EXW
@TheRezro
Жыл бұрын
Yeh, about Poland and racism. Poles for almost half of century were trapped isolated from the world by Soviets. In 90's or early milenium, many people strength not see black peron. And have no idea how to behave toward foreigners. But lot did changed in past decades. In many cases you would not recognize Pole on the West.
@TheRezro
Жыл бұрын
Yeh. Polish food is extremely diverse. Even many Poles don't like specific dishes and love others. Generally Poland has three major "kitchens". Noble food include cold meats, roasts and cakes (most really good). Commoner food include stuff like pierogi, bigos, cutlets, cabbage rolls, etc. Those tend to be made from simple ingredients and pickled. Finally Polish soups are basically own industry.
@tompetervonsiedlce2683
Жыл бұрын
Polish pilots protected the sky over London. Polish sailors protected the seas around the UK. The Polish Land Army based in Scotland protected the northern lands of the UK. Poland - the first to fight. What did we get in return... disrespect. No opportunity to take part in the Victory Parade after the war. Read the story of General Maczek. Especially the story after the war.
@RadoslawAdamStachnik
Жыл бұрын
Czy on przypadkiem nie pracował jako barman po wojnie?
@wladekszczakowski4760
Жыл бұрын
Tak. Sosabowski podobnie
@Max.J.H.
Жыл бұрын
Actually, part of W. Churchill's speech (This was their finest hour): "We shall fight on the beaches..." and so on... perfectly describes also spirits of polish fighters. They fought on the beaches, in the sea, in the air and struck opponents from the air. On all fronts, from Great Britain and France to the Far East (Flying Tigers). Have a good one!
@BrandonKono
Жыл бұрын
@b b dobrze zrobil niech wiedza , nie boj sie mowic prawdy, nie wazne co inni mysla
@viclimited9081
Жыл бұрын
.....never forget enigma.
@miroslawturski
Жыл бұрын
Kudos to the last gentelman for pointing out mistreatment of Poles after the 2 WW. Thank you sir!
@loose4bet
Жыл бұрын
@b b Przypominanie o walce polaków z nazizmem to szkodzenie, dziwna logika
@loose4bet
Жыл бұрын
@b b nie no spoko, wymyśliłem to sobie, Polacy w czasie 2 wojny światowej walczyli wraz z Anglikami nie nazizmem tylko Marsjanami, nakryłeś mnie na kłamstwie i manipulacji, dyskusja skończona, wygrałeś 🤣
@loose4bet
Жыл бұрын
@b b No nie musisz objaśniać. Z Marsjanami walczyliśmy, przecież mówię XD
@loose4bet
Жыл бұрын
@b b A kim mieli walczyć pozostał tylko Stalin psychopatyczny masowy morderca i jego czerwona horda. Wybrali mniejsze zło.
@nerysghemor5781
Жыл бұрын
Before, during AND after!!!!
@dominik36127
Жыл бұрын
If a poor emigrant without knowledge of the language, without family or connections can come and "steal" you job it pretty much means you are sh*t are your job.
@GraVity2k13
Жыл бұрын
W cudzysłów było wziąć jak angielskie standup cytujesz ;P
@kaspey29
Жыл бұрын
@@GraVity2k13 Mówi, że to ich słowo, a nie jego.
@katarzynamuszynska5426
Жыл бұрын
Lol
@katarzynamuszynska5426
Жыл бұрын
Not all Poles cant speak poor english or are uneducated I am Pole living in UK 15 years ,i am resident here with right to stay and work I dont have british nationality or british passport,honestly I dont believe that would change the british people thinking because I will be still Pole origin Look at important figures in british culture now Prime minister is Indian pakistanian origin , Mayor of London is Indian origin Boris Johnson ,if you know his background ,has German, jewish origin Lots of Poles needs to work harder then british ,they speak better english that british will never learn polish language Britain is mixture of different nationalities and cultures I used to work in hospital and if I ever said to elderly małe patient that I am Pole they always remember some polish pilot or sailor or friend they had who was Pole I dont know why is a issue with Poles? But they dont have problem with Indian,pakistanian who has large family and getting benefits , Personally i dont know anybody polish who doesnt work And polish children pick up english language quicker and has better knowlegde of history or geography then british kids
@dominik36127
Жыл бұрын
@@katarzynamuszynska5426 I think you should return to Poland to pick up your sense of humor. Apparently it got left behind.
@anthonyferris8912
Жыл бұрын
They tend not to smile without good reason. 😊
@bishbish9111
Жыл бұрын
This is eastern Europe feature, not only polish.
@kamilosowski3889
Жыл бұрын
We are not rude. We are just direct and honest. But I understand why Brits may see it as being rude cause you on the other hand are the most indirect nation I know. Like... You have to always read between the lines and it's difficult for us. For example, a British client will praise your work, thank you for everything and never call you back. Meanwhile we don't waste time sugarcoating things :) and when it comes to racism... well... there are racist morons in Poland like in every country but that's not the point. It's just... We never had such issues before cause we have never been a colonial nation. Some people of color may feel uncomfortable in like a small Polish town cause people will just stare at them. Why? There are probably the first black person they have ever seen :D it's that simple. And we don't really understand all this racial sensitivity, we are stripped of white guilt and hate PC. We are not afraid to speak our minds and we have no filter. We also strongly believe that facts don't care about your feelings and being offended doesn't make you right so we will choose open discussion and bold statements instead of sensitivity. I'd rather agree with calling us homophobic than racist but that's cause a lot of Poles are Catholics and they follow church's vies on this subject ;) Btw... It's funny to hear that you do not like pickled food while your nation makes pickled eggs (wtf?!).
@hmmtentego5542
Жыл бұрын
Exactly. Regards :)
@MowMiDi
Жыл бұрын
And pickled frankfurters, I busted out laughing while seeing that 😂
@MowMiDi
Жыл бұрын
@@user-el4zp1rg8m wrocilem i to jeden z najwiekszych bledow jakie popelnilem. I pisze to z przykroscia, ale tak jak kiedys czulem sie patriota, tak od 2018-2019 zaczelo to we mnie zanikac az zaniklo. Czuje sie wyobcowany, brak tozsamosci poza tym, ze mowie po Polsku. Zalatwie swoje sprawy, ktore musze i spadam.
@mypointofview1111
Жыл бұрын
Agree
@malgorzatamakowska9910
Жыл бұрын
@b b to niby wy narzucacie się wszedzie a innym nie wolno
@Logan11thMEU
Жыл бұрын
I have lived, worked hard and payed my taxes for over 13 years now in the UK and as much as I get nice people and respect, I have also been called a " bloody foreigner " as well
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
That's some nationalist racists for you unfortunately
@nerysghemor5781
Жыл бұрын
I'm curious, how do you think it would go in reverse, with a foreigner living long term in Poland? Genuinely curious. :-)
@sewwilson4185
Жыл бұрын
Most of Britain has been invaded through the centuries from before the roman conquest and lots settled here in Britain, whicb makes nearly all of us part foreign!!
8:47 heart is growing when you listen the older gentleman.
@agatastaniak7459
Жыл бұрын
As for the last part of this video, you may wanna check some day how many people know that Polish pilots were the ones fighting in the Battle of Britian in Squadron 303 ( Dywizjon 303). ;-) And that one of them was a Polish woman- one the first fight jet pilots back then. Just curious to what degree people are aware of all this now.
@kazepl8988
Жыл бұрын
I live in Poland and I have never encountered racism, for example against black people. So it's funny to me that people from other countries know better than me what country I live in. 😂 A few years ago, when Poland was not so developed and was just opening up to the west, a black boy attended our school. Nothing bad ever happened to him. Maybe somewhere in Poland there are such people, but not in the whole nation, which, as you can see, various media in the world try to attribute to us. It is rather Poles who encounter racism. I recommend reading some history or coming to Poland. And you will see what attitude Poles had to colonization centuries ago, for example in relation to Madgascar or Haiti. Poles have never considered themselves a master race and will never enslave anyone or treat anyone with contempt. We don't like people who lie and talk nonsense about us or meddle in our country's politics, which apparently many Western politicians do to divide and weaken the nation. And non-Polish media help in this. That's why I advise you and others to be careful who you listen to. Especially since there are a lot of paid trolls. I will repeat, Poland has open borders, so no one forbids you to come and experience this pseudo-racism for yourself he he 😂 In any case, Poles may seem cold and unsmiling, but ask yourself how would you feel if someone rewarded you with a low salary for a job well done. Poles can be tired and they have a right to be. That's why you can't force a Pole to smile. There may be a cold reaction, but it is not out of hatred. All in all, Poles are just normal and smiling at strangers seems just strange to them. But if you talk to us and get to know us a bit, you'll notice that Poles really like to socialize and have fun. Do we drink a lot? I don't think so. It depends more on the standard of living and upbringing. Among the homeless or pathologies, probably yes. But among normal people, we hardly have time to drink during the week. And on weekends or at parties it's normal. A Pole is not a camel, he must drink. 😂 But without exaggeration. Just because we like strong alcohol doesn't mean we're a nation of drunks. You will be disappointed and you will not find people drinking in the streets. The more so that Poland is restrictive regarding the consumption of alcohol in public places. If it is not a separate lolakl or zone, e.g. during parties, you can get a ticket for drinking or go to the sobering-up centre. However, from what I can see, Poles drink quite reasonably and most of them know how to behave. I think this opinion about drinking is caused by construction workers who have gone abroad. That is why it is said that Poles have a strong head, but this is rather due to the fact that we know how to drink alcohol. So much from my side. If anyone wants to know at least a little bit of the truth about Poles, I'll tell you. And I advise you not to spread nonsense if you don't live there and don't know what it's like there. However, if you meet a bad Pole, don't put them all in one bag. Greetings from Poland. ;) I forgot to add about the food. It used to be much better and healthier than it is now. Now imagine that the food you think is as delicious as it must have been back then. Unfortunately, only in Polish villages you can taste better food. This shows how negative Poland's opening to the West was in this respect.
@mehow357
Жыл бұрын
The thing is, Poles are honest and straightforward. They give a sh#% to political correctness and sometimes it is seen or called out as racist even though nothing racist was said 😉 We're just straightforward and we say what we think.
@boskee
Жыл бұрын
It’s funny that you, a white Pole, think you know better about the experiences of non-white people
@dc8667
Жыл бұрын
Ow fuck, dude, as a dark skinned Aussie, 1/4 polish(grandpa's site), I can tell ya, during my trip to Poland, I felt myself like a fucking Allstar, never experienced any fookin shade of racism
@ewazalewska482
Жыл бұрын
I live in the USA close to Chicago and I met a lot Polish racists against black people here. Much more than Americans. I am Polish myself and moved to the USA 3 years ago and that shocked me a bit 😢.
@mehow357
Жыл бұрын
@@ewazalewska482 nowadays in US it's enough to be white to be called racist 🤣 Are you white? 🤣
@mehow357
Жыл бұрын
@Rob Reacts - the last guy referred to the WW2 fact that a lot of Poles were defending UK, on UK's land. You wouldn't be successful to defend your sky without division 303 (aircraft), ect. Fun fact: after WW2 UK stole our gold (Polish gold reserves were moved to London) claiming that we must pay for aircraft, guns misssiles, ect. that were used by Poles while defending UK land. It's hilarious claim 🤣 We took the lesson, that's why we (as the country) are keeping less and less gold in London, especially after brexit 🤣 Poles were fighting on different fronts, not only defending Poland on Polish soil. Example: middle east, Italy, UK, Russia and of course Poland. We were fighting on literally every front we could stand against Germans. Cheers.
@krzysztofd9164
Жыл бұрын
+ Africa, + France😉
@paulinarapicka
Жыл бұрын
Za wolność naszą i waszą ;)
@tjurzyk
Жыл бұрын
One more important thing to remember about that times is after Germany surrendered, Polish pilots were only ones who refused to participate in bombing of Dresden. For them the war was over, and there was no point in causing additional deaths and damage.
@mehow357
Жыл бұрын
@b b odpuść sobie z teoriami spiskowymi (jak te tu) i rasistowskimi wpisami (pod innymi kanałami i wątkami). To tylko i wyłącznie skaża ci mózg i wypacza cię. Jak przestaniesz bzdety oglądać to po czasie aż ze wstydu się zarumienisz co pisałaś i w co wierzyłaś.
@dandared6395
Жыл бұрын
Wrong pal, everything been returned, gold was sent to UK, Canada and USA, all other diaminds and art treasures etc sent to canada they returned them in 1961, otherwise all gold now returned, quote: Amid the outbreak of the Second World War, the entire Polish gold reserves were secretly transported across three continents to be stored in London, New York and Ottawa. Now, Poland has seen the gold that was kept in the UK returned to them and placed in a high-security location
@magdastoch-mg4ox
Жыл бұрын
You know that you are right Polish people are very straight forward with talking they will tell you what they think
@miroslawturski
Жыл бұрын
There are quite a few stereotypes about Polish people. One, probably most misleading, is that we are heavy drinkers. Statistics do not confirm that, actualy. Overall, we drink less than Brits, Irish, French... Also, our drinking habits are different. We typically drink during family or friend meetings and then we drink heavy. Typically 😉
@times4937
Жыл бұрын
It's funny, I mean creating stereotypes and the image of other nations on the basis of the least representative part of a given society, i.e. immigrants. In Poland, to this day, many Poles think that Romania is the homeland of Gypsies, because in the 90s Poland was flooded by a wave of Gypsies from Romania.
@ArthLud
Жыл бұрын
It's not a stereotype. I can drink two bottles of JD and still pilot a jet plane.
@joanna.m
Жыл бұрын
Ii hardly drink alcohol
@miroslawturski
Жыл бұрын
@@joanna.m Same here ;-)
@miroslawturski
Жыл бұрын
@b b Indeed, in Poland you will very rarely see drunken women in public. In general weekend binge drinking is not so prominent here.
@hmmtentego5542
Жыл бұрын
Hi, I'm Polish. I have lived in London for 18 years..and I feel really good when I meet English and British people..thank you for your hospitality... A large part of this opinion is true :) ... and stereotypes are always not entirely ... but I will explain some of them :) We Poles are 99% white and 99% Catholic .. :) so when we came here we were very surprised by the different religious and cultural races and we talked a lot about it :) out loud ), which often looks like racism, even if it is not: D.. we often look rude because we don't smile too much ... our face is very serious :) which can be read as aggression ... but it is not :) due to our history and many generations had a hard life, wars, cold, communism ... betrayal of people in power ... we take life very seriously ... no time for mistaken pleasantries ... that's why it looks like this ... but thank you for understanding thank you Remember WWII We appreciate it.... All the best Rob :) Al
@hmmtentego5542
Жыл бұрын
@b b :D... ty pewnie juz bys nim byl ...kazdy mierzy swoja miarka ... prawdziwy Polak nie musi sie zrzekac Obywatelswa i nie skundli sie nawet po 100 latach na emigracji ...zal mi ciebie ... skad ten atak ???? skad ta agresja ??? :D Ochlon i nie rob smrodu na forum miedzynadrodowym ...popraw sie
@a.c528
Жыл бұрын
@b b to jakis zart????
@ObscureArtEnjoyer
Жыл бұрын
@@user-el4zp1rg8m would you say the same to Skłodowska-Curie, Chopin or Wojtyla? They also was emmigrate to other countries. Your avatar show your ignorance. Shame for you.
@siouxiee9958
Жыл бұрын
I used to live in UK for about 10 years, and people there are just like everywhere; once I was told, that polish pilots saved our country, and the other day from workmates I've heard "you dodgy illegal immigrant". Same country, same education, different perception. And, just to add as a funny thing, I got the highest score in English (as the only foreigner) on forklift driver exam. Now I'm happy back in my HOME, in Poland, living 10 miles away from Toruń, so Rob, whenever you'll get an idea of visiting Nicolaus Copernicus place - feel invited. And - many thanks for the job you're doing!
@imbol89
Жыл бұрын
I really appreciate all of your work with learning our culture and trying to get better understanding of our background. I believe that yours channel is amazing medium "building bridges" between our nations . All the best for you and the family !
@jerryorange6983
Жыл бұрын
They can be reserved at the beginning, especially when they are surprised by a stranger. They just need a moment to assess who they talk to and the language barrier might be an issue too sometimes.
@GawraNiedzwiedzia
Жыл бұрын
As a Pole myself, let me chime in. :) Generally speaking I wouldn't say Polish people are rude or racist. We're definitely not as politically correct as some other nations, that's for sure. We also have a specific sense of humour. We like to make fun out of racial or cultural stereotypes but not in a spiteful way. It's hard to explain to foreigners sometimes but when you're Slavic you would get it. I worked in London as a bartender at some point in my life and once I was accused by a lady of being rude. I was squizing through a massive crowd of customers with three stacks of beer glasses and I was shouting "watch out" left and right because I was afraid that I may bump into somebody. And so I was informed by this lady who found me rude that I should've used more polite "excuse me". This made me laugh and realise that British can be quite sensitve at times. Our food is an acquired taste. There's a lot of meat, gravy, hardy soups, pickled stuff and I understand not everybody will enjoy it. I love Polish food though and especially our bread. UK has nothing on our bread, let me tell you.:) "Pierogi" doesn't require and "s" at the end because they're already in plural form. The one lady in the video that compared Polish food to Irish, I'd say that Irish and Polish people are quite similar too. I lived in Ireland for a while and I really felt at home there. The myth about us being hard working sort... I am as lazy as a cat myself. xD I'd say we are very creative in working enviroment. We prefer to work smart and find ways to make our job easier. Cool video, and I hope my comments made some sens. Cheers!
@nedtruck
Жыл бұрын
Hi ! I am Polish truck driver, 7 years in UK already. I will always be grateful to this country for the opportunity it has given me. England has a special place in my heart. There are things I don't like and don't understand, but there are also things I love! I myself pay around £800 a month in taxes on people who are on benefits and I have never taken any. we are all human and we are all different! greetings to all Poles and Brits :)
@BibaSenana
Жыл бұрын
True... This is true story employee told me. He is refugee from Afghanistan..he works part time TAX FREE and receive benefits around £ 1600 or so . Company asked him to work full time .he refused coz he said he will loose benefits. This system in UK is bad...I'm suprised that ANY government didn't change it ! ( like situation with illegals on boats and government Keeping them ..pay for 5* hotels...gives benefits..health care etc. )🤦
@nedtruck
Жыл бұрын
@b b ale Ty jesteś groźny :D jakiś Ukrainiec Ci pracę zabrał czy dziewczynę? Haha
@lukaszkochanski8023
Жыл бұрын
7 lat zapierdalania na angielskiego chama znaczy się + 800 już teraz dla karolka co miesiąc. Oto cudowny obraz kraju w którym wielu przyszło żyć.
@nedtruck
Жыл бұрын
@@lukaszkochanski8023 żeby nie było tak strasznie to jeszcze 4ys zostaje dla mnie, a ile zostanie za pracę dla bombelka Kariny? 🤣
@kacperramach6004
Жыл бұрын
Feel same god bless england
@majorlaff8682
Жыл бұрын
Many Poles are returning to Poland. There's more money to be earned and life is so much safer.
@parziiich
Жыл бұрын
I think it’s because a lot of polish youngsters used to to work in Britain way below their education level. Doing shitty jobs whereas in Poland they can work as specialist (although they will probably earn less for the same professional position). Obviously in these shitty jobs many were discriminated by older Brits. The standard of rented place to live is waaaaay better in Poland than in the uk and usually cheaper. Plus we are still open towards others and very-family oriented so it’s easier in Poland when it comes to social interactions. Western and northern people are rather closed in their own relations- circle. It’s hard to get British real and close friends. Another benefit - poles have more bank holidays and more traditions which add to the social life as well
@parziiich
Жыл бұрын
Personally I think it has nothing to do with safety. There are many bad stereotypes about safety in Western Europe because of Muslims and polish people are islamophobic but in the reality when you live in Britain (don’t know what about London) is ok when it comes to safety. I live in Muslim-Indian zone - walking alone at night and never anything bad happened, not even bad talks. Actually (and that surprised my biases) every Muslim I have contact with here was kind and helped me here. They are many times rejected by English people as well so they closed up in their own communities. Many poles are doing the same here in England (especially the older ones, the ones who can’t speak English) they are closing inside polish circles- many didn’t even visited an English pub, didn’t eat proper English cuisines (apart from cheap ready meal from the supermarket), polish church, polish shops, polish potatoes xD
@zepter00
3 ай бұрын
@@parziiich islamophobic? Poles? Poland is the only one country in Europe what had not terorist attack. never ever..and Poland has own muslim minority since few hyndred years...aboy 500 years old minotity. they are well resoected, hrd working loyal to Poland and fought inll wars on the Polish side. It is much about safety. Poland is one of the safest countries in the world with 0,6 homocides per 100.000 people. No scooter gangs in Poland, no drug dealers everywhere and no piles of trash on streets. Poland has much better infrastructre. Polish houses are much better quality, bigger, more modern or new..without fungus on the walls...and without neighbours which think that you are worse than them.
@steelfabric
Жыл бұрын
I went to a Polish party here in Sydney once, many moons ago, and I was the only non-Polish person there. Learnt about "the bump", I think they called it, where you throw somebody up and they hit their hands and feet on the ceiling - the bump bit. Alcohol flowed freely, and, as you'd expect, interesting times ensued.
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
That's like when it's someone's birthday and the group throw them up in the air however many years old they are
@katarzynamuszynska5426
Жыл бұрын
You see Poles are everywhere ...lol
@Miko80
Жыл бұрын
That was very interesting to hear peoples opinion on Poles in Britain. I'm sure there are a few of Polish troublemakers on Islands (that is a common used word for Britain in Poland) but most of Polish people are very well adapting into British society. Greeting from Poland.
@Thalaranthey
Жыл бұрын
Well i call this vid bs. Most brits hate poles, at least in London. I got called names just beacuse i was talking to my GF in Polish so many times, refused promotion beacuse "our british workers wouldnt feel comfortable with Polish supervisor" etc
@RS__7
Жыл бұрын
And the great thing about Poles their children basically become British unlike other non European people... apart from their surname you wouldn't be able to tell the difference between a English kid and a Polish
@lifeisgameplayit
Жыл бұрын
fun fact : there are around 400 types of polish kiełbasa ; }
@dawidwierzbicki5501
Жыл бұрын
I believe the rudeness comes from the difference in the languages and translating Polish sentences to Englsih word by word. For example: Polish: - Dasz papierosa? English (literall translation): - Will you give me a cigarette? (ugh, rude, implies an unmet expectation) English (maintaining the politeness level): - Can I have one cigarette please? This can be why Poles might come out as rude before they reach a certain level of English.
@antekp2965
Жыл бұрын
recently learning Italian, I listened to a lot of Italians on yt and discovered that many are far from stereotypes and the distribution of personalities is similar to that among Poles. what clearly differentiates nations one from another is culture and historical experience. it is very difficult to require the average Dutchman to imagine what it is like to live under communism.
@Michalaniol487
Жыл бұрын
Your video helps me a lot. I have noticed that when I tell British strangers that I am from Poland, their attitude towards us has improved significantly in recent years. I really feel good as a Pole in Great Britain, the British as a whole are very understanding, nice and respect you if you respect them. You won't find this in other European countries. I respect you so much for being so empathetic as a nation. Polska🇵🇱 & Wielka Brytania 🇬🇧 we will always be allies 🌟
@izabela1961
Жыл бұрын
It's definitely true that we the Poles are more direct/straightforward in conversation so you can think we are rude. We say what we think which is good and bad at the same time. And there is a culture difference in greetings and "being polite". In Polish language you do not use all these super polite expressions a lot unless you meet people in formal situations, e.g. at work. And yes, we are negative, with low self-esteem and a bit distrustful. It's because of our climate, history, experience. I love the English politeness though, all the "thank yous and pleases", it makes the contact much nicer even if it sometimes sounds a bit artificial. I was in the UK last July for the first time on a tour across the country and loved it.
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it over here. I hope you visited more than just London 😊 something parents say to kids is "remember your please and thank yous"
@izabela1961
Жыл бұрын
@@RobReacts1 I wrote "a tour across the UK". I was in Devon, Canterbury, Stradford upon Avon, Alnwick Castle, Edinbourgh, Liverpool, Cardiff. Land’s End, Stonehenge, London.
@SlawekM.
Жыл бұрын
@@izabela1961 So you missed Warwick (and its castle), Cheltenham, Lichfield (and its cathedral with its own wine) and Worcester? Not to mention Oxford and its Natural History Museum? What a shame! You must atone 🙂.
@joannakuchta278
Жыл бұрын
Polish people do not sweet small things, very honest, very loyal, brave... They like you or not, they do not pretend.😊...
@PK1999
Жыл бұрын
Love British people :) Cheers from Poland!
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
💗
@jacquelinejob2766
Жыл бұрын
And we love the Polish .
@robertrobski1013
Жыл бұрын
U got to be kidding they are racist and bigots typical Englishmen
@GosiaM-
Жыл бұрын
❤❤❤
@alexander211974
Жыл бұрын
Thank you my friend..your most welcome here..cheers from an englishman
@exactlyLondon
Жыл бұрын
Yeah, that guy at the end gived me goosebumbs when he talked. That is so true... Not many ppl remember squadron 303... (mean english ppl)... N that's sad...
@dawidmaecki3259
Жыл бұрын
I must say it Rob, as a Polish person which lives in UK since 2014, 9 years already. I love your videos ❤ and appreciate that you willing learn about our history and people. Also need to say, that I love ur English accent, is so nice to listen you and understand everysingle word from you while you say it. Unfortunately in county I live (yorkshire) is a bit to harder to understand the accent 😂. Just keep doing what you do, for us. Greeting from Doncaster of South Yorkshire.
@OstblockLatina
Жыл бұрын
Somebody once said the Poles are the continental Irish. I think it's on point: we both love potatoes, drinking, we both work hard and we're Roman Catholic too. Also we get along with the Irish very well, I still remember the Irish folks invading Poznan etc. during 2012 Euro soccer championships. I'd fight for them in the trenches.
@TallisKeeton
Жыл бұрын
IMO życie pod tyranią politpoprawności sprawia, że normalna uczciwość wobec drugiego człowieka - sądzenie innych po ich czynach i ich charakterze, a nie po ich poprawnym kolorze, płci, i pochodzeniu - wydaje się wam niegrzeczne. Stąd na zachodzie myslicie, że jesteśmy niegrzeczni. :)
@Yazu-Farm_Symulator
Жыл бұрын
8:56 HMMM, so yeah. Poles shed blood on all fronts of the Second World War, from Iran, Tobruk, through North Africa, Italy (Monte Casino) to landing in Normandy. Under Maczek's command, the 1st Panzer Division passed through France, Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. In 1944, she took part in the Allied invasion of Normandy, the largest airborne operation in history. The division played a significant role in the Battle of Falaise, closing the encirclement around the German 7th Army and 5th Armoured Army in the so-called cauldron. He also participated in the liberation of Breda and the capture of Wilhelmshaven. Not to mention the 303 Squadron, which was involved in defending the British skies, you can read about their statistics. Unfortunately, we were sold to the Russians for all this during the Yalta conference. The Allies, as Churchill insisted, gave Poland to the Russians. Let me also remind you that after the end of the war, during the victory parade in London, Polish troops were not allowed to parade in the victory parade and some of the gold that was deposited in British banks was confiscated towards the cost of equipping the Polish military, it's like hiring a cleaner to clean your own house and then billing her for the bucket, washing up liquid, brush and the work itself.
@Tearnor
Жыл бұрын
To all people considering visiting Poland - you are welcomed here, don’t be afraid! We live in truly special times when we can travel all around the world. There’s nothing better than coming to Poland and making your own opinion. My top 3 tips as a Pole would be about smiling, staring and openness. It’s funny and sad at the same time, but sometimes smiling too much can be considered weird and fake in PL. Anyway they say smile is universal language and I believe saying dziękuję and giving a short smile will be received well. Same situation with staring - I believe someone staring at you might be a sign that the person knows you, but in Poland it’s viewed as creepy and suspicious. At the same time if you come from Asia or Africa I’m sure people gonna stare at you 75% of the time but don’t worry - it’s a sign that they see you as a visitor and they are just curious. Once in Warsaw in metro I saw old lady just staring at a girl so she asked the old lady like what’s going on and someone translates to her that this old lady never saw a haircut like this and just couldn’t take her eyes off. About openess- Polish people can look cold and angry. You might think they want to harm you or something. In reality Polish people show little emotions, but when they’re at the party or they know you’re friend of someone they gonna ask you about everything and they gonna be curious if you know any Polish words 😉 To sum up - please come to Poland, try our food and speak to the people. I can’t speak for every person and every city but I have friends outside Poland and they like being here. Also in Warsaw you can find a lot of foreigners and I always try to help them and be kind. Have a great day! 🙂
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
I have said exactly that. I have a lot of Aussie subscribers on my channel and I've heard Australia says not to go to Poland due to the Ukraine/Russia was, which is disgusting to say
@Tearnor
Жыл бұрын
@b b zapraszam ludzi ale w jakich celach przyjeżdzają to nie moja sprawa i nie mam żadnego problemu
@nerysghemor5781
Жыл бұрын
I want to visit SO BAD!!! :-D I need to wait until I have more vacation benefits (we don't get as much in America as in a lot of EU countries), but once that happens I definitely plan to come. I probably won't be able to help myself with smiling a lot though. In the US it can be such a habit that some of our faces almost default to that position. XD
@LewicowyPatriota
Жыл бұрын
Brtitish people find polish people rude sometimes for the same reason, why some polish people find british people insincere. We (the Poles) are quite straight forward and that's it - maybe not as much as spanish people but still. For example in polish there is nothing wrong if eating a dinner with someone, you say e.g. "pass me sugar" - "could you pass me some sugar, please?" sounds like you were a lord, and it's too long for us, ;) and we often use in polish "I want" when the British would use "I would like". Also we don't like it when someone is nice when they really don't like us. We like to know the real attitude of other people towards us.
@AdeM-kc7sc
Жыл бұрын
Polish, Irish, Italian food. Because of the history - we had been through a lot of shit - our food must provide energy, therefore mainly bread, potatoes, beans and pasta. Also, Polish dinner is always two courses, starting with a soup, which provides warmth.
@rafapaka9174
Жыл бұрын
9:09 that guy make my cry, im so glad to hear IT. Many of Polish ppeople died on second world war. They was fighting for your country as well. But nobody knows that's, absolutely nobody.
@adamnowak7232
Жыл бұрын
How can you write that nobody when you write it under the influence of someone who apparently knows about it?
@rafapaka9174
Жыл бұрын
@@adamnowak7232 o co Ci chodzi, Anglicy nie znają własnej historii a co dopiero pamiętanie o Polakach którzy za nich walczyli
@adamnowak7232
Жыл бұрын
@@rafapaka9174 Zdecyduj się. Bo wychodzi na to, że "that guy make my cry, im so glad to hear IT", ponieważ nie zna swojej historii.
@rafapaka9174
Жыл бұрын
@@adamnowak7232 bo płakać się chce ze chociaż jedna osoba o tym wie, i mówi to na glos
@adamnowak7232
Жыл бұрын
@@rafapaka9174 Przecież napisałeś, że nikt. "absolutely nobody"
@davepoole5582
Жыл бұрын
Poland.....Central Eurpoe !!! But most people in the UK , STILL think its East Europe... And having lived in Poland...They are the best !!!! The foods good, its a clean country with no litter. They work hard and......... if you don't work !!! YOU DONT GET ANY HAND OUTS !! So that's why ,when they come to the UK..They work hard....
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
Yea i think most brits think poland is eastern. I know I did. But nothing offensive. I think we forget how far russia goes land wise
@hubertzubrzycki4234
Жыл бұрын
@Julia Poland chill,calling any place eastern is not offensive
@danieldpa8484
Жыл бұрын
When Britons come to Poland to seek new jobs and opportunities, I hope Poland and our people will be able to offer them same chances that many young Poles got when moving to UK. It’s a shame the Europeans among each other still cannot see beyond their own horizon.
@ghostmaro1
Жыл бұрын
I'm from Poland and I greet all Brits 🇵🇱🇬🇧💪
@cogitationescaecae1125
Жыл бұрын
Rude and racist? Do you agree with it !?
@robertpewsey8931
Жыл бұрын
I'm English, and have no problem with the Poles at all, they're hard working hard drinking honest folk. Like we the English like to imagine ourselves. Plus they hate m23lims even more than we do. In fact I married one in 1988 and we're still together.
@Dexiefy
Жыл бұрын
We do not hate them though. Muslims live in Poland and no one harasses them or anything. There is a difference between a muslim living in Poland and minding his own business and just living his life, being part of society and a muslim who tries to thread on Polish culture or faith and act as if he is the host in the country he visits. We suffered enough throughout centuries to give away our culture that so many have died for to protect. However, we do hate what these types of migrants do to UK and we hate it and if they tried something like this in Poland they would quickly receive reality check. Polish migration to the isles might have been too large for the short amount of time it happened in, but in the end Poles and Brits really are not that different and no Polish person I know would ever disrespect English culture or history, unlike certain groups of people currently migrating en masse to the UK. Not too long ago I even seen a video about some anti-muslim(or more like anti middle-eastern) marches in the UK and the person being interviewed even mentioned that Poles march with the English in support to protect English culture. So yeah, different country, different language but the same values.
@alexander211974
Жыл бұрын
@@Dexiefy thank you my friend..as an englishman I couldn't agree more..we need to learn and understand this..thanks again.
@kikixchannel
Жыл бұрын
Poland is, surprisingly, the most tolerant country historically, legally speaking. It was not attacking others based on race, religion, nationality etc. (even though Polish people certainly have their 'friends' and 'enemies'). It was open to foreigners coming as well. However, Poland is Poland, it is governed by Poland, in the way that is chosen by the Poles and following the Poles wills. People from all paths of life are free to come to Poland, BUT while in Poland they have to abide by the same laws and rules as Poles do. It's that simple. The people you have leet-speaked there had their immigrants refused from Poland and I assume that you base Poland hates them based on that. Though I can say that Poles do not have the best opinion of that religion and people following it in general, that is based on those people being well-known for trying to demand their hosts to abide by THEIR rules, which is unacceptable to Poles in Poland. And those particular immigrants...they weren't escaping from war. They were economic immigrants and they never met the legal conditions for entering Poland. By law, they were very much invaders or terrorists, so they were already treated very kindly. If you read more in-depth about them, many of them were offered opportunity to try for an asylum but THEY REFUSED. They didn't want asylum, they wanted to enter the country and move freely as they pleased, get extra benefits etc. And they stopped escaping from war when they first set foot on a safe country, several countries before entering Poland. Every time they crossed borders after that, they were economic immigrants. THAT is the law, international law in fact. Not only Polish law. Entire European Union signed this same treaty. It's just that only Poland and few others (mainly Hungary) actually adhered to that law.
@katarzynamuszynska5426
Жыл бұрын
Good on you Have you ever been in Poland to visit?
@katarzynamuszynska5426
Жыл бұрын
@b b honestly you could describe almost every nationality in that way I am Pole living 15 years in UK,never been on benefits ,i work 5-6-7 days a week ,overtime if necessary I teach myself english in writing so sorry if I make any mistake ,reading and speaking , I am proud to be polish even if after all these years living here and working sometimes I get comments regarding my staying in UK There are nasty people in every nation ,there is good people in UK and Poland and there is bad people But why Poles get all this abuse ,when there is so many other nationalites who comes with large family and living on benefits and have no intention of working if you get houses and everything on plate Polish people i know they are working Children going to school picking up language quickly and sometimes I heard from my friends they are better then their british friends If every person living in UK do this DNA tree probably would find out that they have some eastern european or some other country ancestors and they didnt know about it
@andrzejprzesniak4842
Жыл бұрын
Im Polish and proud God-bless Poland
@koolaevah
Жыл бұрын
I'm Polish and have been living in England for two decades now. Plenty of spot on opinions in the video but we don't drink more than English, we are not rude - rather more open and honest in conversations, we are not more racist than English. I'd say we are very similar to English people. I do find English people fantastic and have never ever had any problems with them. Nice video mate, keep going!
@georgewall2322
4 ай бұрын
My feelings about Polish people! Everyone I’ve met is fantastic and the country is beautiful! 🇬🇧 🇵🇱 🤝
@witoldknitter4995
Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the great programs about my country!
@dariuszciuleja1339
Жыл бұрын
Many People from Poland are ambitious and working hard ... Dariusz 🇵🇱❤🇬🇧❤🇵🇱❤🇬🇧
@blooky102
6 ай бұрын
I'm Polish and my greatgrandad used to be a butcher and my grandad is a hunter so in my family we do like quality meat like sausages, sometimes I eat wild boar sausages as its my favourite type of sausage.
@Czarnapannajoanna
Жыл бұрын
Greetings from Poland 🇵🇱 ❤ Amazing content and you can learn a lot about Russians and they true nature in the levels of power. Younger generation of Poles are very different. Many Poles have high education. I was born after communism and we are less negative than older generation. Thank you for embracing our history and culture. I think many times what would happen without communism- this system destroy the soul.
@pepperday100
Жыл бұрын
As an English man my missus of 9 years is polish and I have a half polish daughter. Polish are good people and very welcoming, iv been poland about 12 times and it's an absolute brilliant country I would recommend 👌
@gola-golka4196
Жыл бұрын
Americans say our customer service is really bad. For example at restaurants it's hard to call a waitress when they need her to assist them. More water, more coffee, good dish, bad dish, something too cold or too hot and hundreds of questions. We Poles don't like to be bothered by anyone especially during a dinner. We want to spend this time with friends or family not necessarily with others. That's why some people think we are rude. On the contrary, we give people peace of mind they need to contemplate their meals and digestion 😂😂😂
@TallisKeeton
Жыл бұрын
I remember when Terry Pratchett has visited Poland and they took him on lunch between their meetings with fans and he got pierogi with chese and lard over it and he said smt like "I was given fat rolled in fat and smeared with fat" :D
@cryptolover827
Жыл бұрын
Not a fan of generalisations but being a polish there are some truths in the mentions. Yes, poles mostly are more negative than brits that’s because they had more troubled life from people in western countries, living standards do play a significant factor. Yes, poles often “speak straight from the bridge 😂”, trying to be nice if you don’t feel like it’s difficult. I had a trouble to understand at the beginning why most brits on question “How are you?” always answered “I am all right mate” even if someone was not ok. At the end I very much appreciate the fact I could experience cultural differences, it’s a great life learning. Fantastic work!
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
If it helps, im a grumpy bastard too! :D
@cryptolover827
Жыл бұрын
@@RobReacts1 😂 love it.
@sebastian-ic1mz
Жыл бұрын
8:50 I do appreciate people which know history of they country,he knows a lot
@top40researcher31
Жыл бұрын
In 2021 45,884 Australian residents declared that they were born in Poland. The Australian states with the largest Polish populations were Victoria (14,202), New South Wales (13,830), and Queensland (5,740). Since 2006 the Polish-born population has decreased by 6,370 people.
@alh6255
Жыл бұрын
In Poland, Australia has the opinion of an interesting country to live in (definitely not boring). That's why I'm a bit surprised that according to the statistics you provide, only 6,000. people have settled there in all the years since 2004.
@kasiaklejment5523
2 ай бұрын
Yes. Thank you ❤
@TheMacienty
Жыл бұрын
I think I know where “ hard working” come from. Basically many of us come to England with no ability to speak any English. Like myself 25 years ago. If you can’t speak English you need to work much harder to be sure you will keep your job, because to find new job without the language it’s extremely difficult. That’s why many of us worked really hard on the beginning. Anyway that’s only my experience:)
@Thereal_prettyinblack
Жыл бұрын
Yes, we are "straight" and blunt because of our history. We just learned how not to wrap up on cotton as we say. I don't know where this "vinegary" thing came from because we tend to make your pickes, not vinegary. It is the British who pickles everything starting from eggs, while Poles only put baby mushrooms, baby cucumbers into vinegar for "korniszony". Polish sausage has no milk, whey in it, no any additional stuff that makes sausages "swell" in its skin. Just meat, garlic, pepper etc. Working- we were taught to work hard because our nation believes that what we put in, we will draw out. English do tend to have multiple tra breaks, they would often do basic minimum and won't like us to work hard at their presence. Years ago, me and my friend, working at Tesco were TOLD by co-workers to slow down because we were always on a "green" and they were on "red" for Years proving the work could not be done any quicker. 17 years later, in a teacher in secondary school and I'm been told "to stop working hard in lesson" like the fun from teaching was not a part of the contract. When I explain I love my subject and it makes me feel happy to talk about it they give me funny looks. I have been working in many places and most of people I worked with were "quiet quitters" comparing to Polish workforce, at Tesco, in offices, warehouses, medical surgery, high end software developing company- worked in them all, same everywhere.
@tymonpawlicki6573
10 ай бұрын
Speaking of Poland and Ireland, as a bartender I have witnessed the interaction of Poles and Irish people several times and it always looks great haha I've never met an Irish person I didn't get along with haha
@extractedslav2432
Жыл бұрын
95% Polish emigrants in 2005 left country because goverment kept them without chance to normal life, same time offered quick emigration to UK and monthly polish wage in week. Now....not much space for us in own country... Sad
@scyth6225
Жыл бұрын
This is a very good video Rob. And I watched some of your vlog videos from Poland. Good job man!
@jerzykzet1596
Жыл бұрын
You said I do not like polish pickled vegetables. Mabye You did not try well prepared. Our sauerkraut made in a proper way (without vinegar), with bean and dried mushrooms from the forest cooked, ground and finally baked with a bit of duck lard.... I got hungry.
@presentalinkwalterbak2426
Жыл бұрын
Go to Kraków in the Summer. See the Roma (Gypsy) Festival where the whole city turns to one big Gypsy music town. Same thing happens during the Jewish Music Festival. The whole city joins in and turns into one huge party. Not one evening. A whole week! So that would be racist, right? Really? Hmm..
@wladyslawbukowski
Жыл бұрын
Yes, Poles are generally strait forwards. They value gray reality and honesty more than insincere smiles and false kindness. When a Pole calls you a friend, it means that you really are for him. I think that Poles in Poland are much different than when they are abroad. Besides, the British at home also do not treat Poles very friendly.
@Kubae38
Жыл бұрын
Polish are mistaken of being rude as the language is different and lots of Poles try to do direct translation from Polish to English which doesn't always work. The biggest thing (I think) is that we don't say please everytime we ask for something but PLEASE is hidden in our intonation. So in direct translation it doesn't appear in the sentence and with our Terminator /Eastern accent we seem rude.
@arturb.1595
Жыл бұрын
She did not say eastern Slavic so I do not know what you are taking about. Intonation is important in polish and it can say much about attitude of a person (being polite, angry etc) so she is right: you do not always say please to be nice and polite in polish, but by the same token the word ‘please’ in English does not mean that an English speaking person is polite and respectful.
@Kubae38
Жыл бұрын
@@user-el4zp1rg8m A co komu Polacy w UK przeszkadzają?
@Kubae38
Жыл бұрын
Ojojoj, zmień lepiej kanał z TVPis na coś innego, bo Ci mózg wyprali. Najlepiej niech wszyscy Polacy mieszkają w Polsce 😅, Chińczycy w Chinach, a murzyni w Afryce. A jak chcą mieszkać w Europie, to niech się przemalują na biało bo nie są prawdziwymi Azjatami czy Afrykanami. "Daj pan spokój "
@a.c528
Жыл бұрын
@b b jak sobie zdasz sprawe ze, zaden czlowiek nie jest wieczny, ba nie zna dnia I godziny to moze przejdzie ci ta chora ideologia I sie wyluzujesz I zaczniesz chwytac kazdy dzien, pozdrawiam
@Dann9x834
10 ай бұрын
I live here in the UK for 13 years out of 30 in my life. And I think that English people are more positive and more easy than we Polish are. And I like that. There are some things we could learn from English people too.
@janwitek4817
Жыл бұрын
Rude ? No just straight forward and honest .
@tomaszlepiochin3697
Жыл бұрын
I love that last gentleman conclusion ❤
@xenocide2210
Жыл бұрын
If you want to have an amazing and unique expirience go to Wrocław Christmas Market! I live in Krakow and our market sucks in comparison 😅
@emteiks
Жыл бұрын
I like the honest answers of respondents! it is mostly true and some things are misunderstandings due to language (lack of skill probably). The "directness level" in England is far different than in Poland. I guess similar directness as with Dutch.
@pl-hq5hr
Жыл бұрын
an anecdote Migrant quarters. First floor Albanians, second floor Nigerians, third Carabesns, fourth is filled with Poles. One day around midday there was a gas leak and huge explosion. 25 Nigerians, 30 Albanians and 57 people from the Carabesns were buried in the ruins. Not a single Pole was even injured.. They all were at work at that time.
@awedsgtsvfcgtre7269
Жыл бұрын
This last one, I am not sure if you understand what he was talking about: "In 1946, the British Labour government, under pressure from Stalin, did not invite the Polish Armed Forces, who fought with the Allies, to the Victory Parade in London"
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
I've learnt about the 303 squadron in a later video 😁
@adamnowak7232
Жыл бұрын
5:59 - The sad thing is that the quality of the meat has decreased significantly in recent years :( If you tasted sausages from the 80's... It was something. Even a bit later. The requirements of the European Union meant that the quality went strongly towards what is everywhere.
@ligo5516
Жыл бұрын
It is true that we are racists, as a Pole, I am ashamed of it, but I am also a little proud of it, because thanks to the fact that we have such a feature, we did not allow our country to be flooded with immigrants from the Middle East and I must mention here that this racism does not apply to skin color or religion because people of different faiths and ethnic backgrounds live in our country. Now we have accepted about 1.5 million refugees from Ukraine. I think we have a problem with a very different culture of the East, which is so different from our... European one. I guess that's what it's all about, it's not racism, it's pride and the desire to preserve your own culture above all else.
@walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
Жыл бұрын
The Polish people have nothing to do with whether foreigners flood into your country or not, its the globalist puppets who have now been insinuated into the governments of all previously western democracies who decide. The puppets in the UK parliament are intent on carrying out their globalist financiers wishes to flood the UK with coloured migrants.... the time will come for Poland eventually.
@TheSzybas
Жыл бұрын
As for Polish being rude, we're straightforward and we have no bs attitude most of the time. I mean in English "Would you pass the salt, please?" is common, in Polish "Proszę o sól" or "Podaj sól" is common during the family meals. So when the person becomes a friend or just becoming closer than a stranger, we tend to drop all of the formalities.
@clincpb8903
11 ай бұрын
Saying Kurva at each end of a sentence is not straightforward but RUDE.
@annakrysiak7134
Жыл бұрын
I'm Polish living in England and yes, Poles are straightforward compared to the British. Often I'm just tired of waiting for the statement to get to the point. 😅
@ObscureArtEnjoyer
Жыл бұрын
2. People in Poland says similar things about Ukrainians. Whats more - people who go to England/Netherlands/Norway for a few months to work, come back to Poland and... complain about Ukrainians or people from Middle East...
@Adam_Ce
Жыл бұрын
Rob you missunderstood the last gentleman. He was saying about Poles that fought in UK in Battle of Britain. Most famous was 303 Squadron, there were others as well. Without them I doubt Britain would win that battle. After the WW2 they were not even invited to the victory tour in London because Churchill was afraid of Stalin. Sad but true 8:48
@marekjurek3433
Жыл бұрын
Rob your comments are spot on ,bang on if you like . I am Polish myself have been leaving 20 years in this country .
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
Cheers Marek
@bathroomlew
Жыл бұрын
Problem with racist Poles is that in their culture, many things that are considered racist in the West, are not racist to them, they're a bit more thick-skinned overall.
@wojciechgrochowski82
Жыл бұрын
8:49 Let's bring some vodka to this man
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
Haha and if you can't get it to him... Il have it 😸
@dandared6395
Жыл бұрын
Until the last chap i wanted shout this, i love the Poles, of all europeans i'd say Greeks + Polosh my (generalised) highest opinion & respect. The number of Poles who faught so so bravely for the RAF & died, was amazing and sadly not as recognised as perhaps should be, sadly many poles think poorly or Britaon as we didnt rush in and support them but fact sadly was we totally unprepared for war and as Germany conquered poland in 35 days (same as france) then the Soviets also invaded wasn't much could do even to begin to mobilise. What happened to warsaw & Krakow was such a terrible shame but for me, they tops, Solidarnost helped bring down the sovoet union, i remwmber that moustachio guy, something lile Lek Welansa or something from the Gdansk shipyards he helped end communism in europe big up the polish man!
@alexm5435
Жыл бұрын
Well as some already have pointed out...we are rather direct. ...when you ask a Polish person that expect to hear about all the struggles from the last week. What hit me hard is when someone asked me "how are you?" he didn't even waited to hear the answer. Also we still remember how Poland was treated after the World War 2. It was humiliating... we lost 1/6th of population (6 million people killed) and were - at least thats how we felt- "given" to Russia as a prize. If anyone is interested there is a good, short vide called Unconquered from IPN (Institute of National Remembrance) kzitem.info/news/bejne/sm5up5-Eapp_jII
@NVRAMboi
Жыл бұрын
There is dignity in every form of honest work. May God bless Poland the the Polish people.
@ricardorios9478
10 ай бұрын
My dad may have Polish or German in his mother’s side of the family 🇵🇱🇩🇪and if heard something really about egnorant comment’s about English saying bad things about their countries he would be very angry because he now’s it’s not true
@dumbalek6001
Жыл бұрын
I think part of the impression that Polish people are rude just comes down to a language barrier. When someone has a rudimentary knowledge of English, some nuances of the language may escape them. That would account for the bluntness as well. The way politeness works in Polish is quite complex, and the way we express politeness and respect through language doesn't really translate into English. English in comparison to Polish is less hierarchal, and the way English builds on politeness is very different. English is easy to learn but quite difficult to master. Foreign language education at school teaches you how to communicate in terms of conveying meaning but learning the nuances of expression is up to you once you go into the world and communicate, so some people fall short.
@pepperday100
Жыл бұрын
Polish people are very nice good people I'm English and my missus of 8 years is polish we have a child together so I visit Poland around twice a year and the people are very welcoming when in poland. If there is anyone that is racist to polish in the UK its the lazy benifit sucking people for some mad reason they say polish steal there jobs but most of them have always and will always be on benifits
@kamilowski6295
Жыл бұрын
Did you know that the Polish 303 Squadron shoted down the most German planes during the Battle of Britain in 40's. It was 110 planes. But after war british goverment just forgot about polish heros who defenced GB and lot of officers had to work just as a sellers in markets? This is not a complaint but just a memory of the heroes
@Perialh
11 ай бұрын
Kiedyś myślałam,że my Polacy lubimy się dobrze zabawić (w dniu wolnym od ciężkiej pracy oczywiście:)), ale to co Brytyjczycy odstawiają chociażby w Krakowie (mieszkam niedaleko) w weekendy, to przechodzi nawet moje ,polskie wyobrażenia ; P Słychać ich najgłośniej, dają po prostu o sobie znać , cisza nocna dla nich nie istnieje:) Jak przyjezdzają na 5 dni, potrafią tyle dni pić. Oczywiście , nie można tutaj też uogólniać, ale generalnie zastanawia mnie czy u siebie też się tak zachowują?
@krzysztofwierucki3986
Жыл бұрын
Good video.thanks mate👍
@GeoDizzy
Жыл бұрын
I do believe you've twisted words of the last person interviewed who said "they have fought for THIS country and have not been recognised for that" which you have smoothly omitted to comment on. Well done 👏
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
If it helps I did a seperate video after to learn about the polish squadron
@pawellewap9179
10 ай бұрын
Poles are often perceived by English speakers as too direct and rude, because even those who speak English well - under stress, for example - forget about polite phrases that are necessary in English and do not exist in Polish language. Well, the word "please" in Polish is at the beginning of the sentence, not at the end... Example: Poles will say "Please, give it to me." instead of "Could you give me that, please?" In Polish, there are no such rigid rules for creating sentences, especially polite ones.
@OstblockLatina
Жыл бұрын
I suppose the stereotype of a hard working Pole in England is just a result of specific selection process. A huge majority of Poles come to UK to work, and if they turn out to not be good at anything or slack, they get kicked out.
@adamnowak7232
Жыл бұрын
3:10 - I'm not so sure. To put it simply - if there are 100 jobs and 200 Poles come, they will take those 100 jobs and the remaining 100 will benefit. It doesn't have to be contradictory ;)
@Michauu
Жыл бұрын
Thing is, its not easy to Express yourself in a second language. Alot of Polish people have problem with it unfortunately.
@xxx-gp2sx
Жыл бұрын
I live in UK 10 years, I don't see big difference between British and Polish people. At work can feel normal treat, strangers are sometimes so rude but it's not my problem, it's their mindset, doesn't has any effect for my life :)
@miger38
6 ай бұрын
A fight for a weekend hehe...by the way do not forget and do get it, a Tuesday is a little Saturday, hehe...
@br.1299
Жыл бұрын
1:13 Honestly, a lot of people are saying that we Poles, are racist but we are most likely very accepting (there are some people that are not) and we don't have a problem with black skinned people, Chinese, Korean or Japanese people. Sure, a lot of us (mostly adults) sometimes joke about other races, but after, they say that its a joke and that they respect everyone. Of course there are some racist people (mostly teenagers) like in most countries, but belive me there are a lot countries that are more racist and intolerant that us Poles. Its no hate to that lady or you, but i have seen a lot of videos with people saying that Poles are really racist and i started to get irritated and wanted people to see that we aren't that bad. I'm also speaking from my personal experiences, love your videos btw!
@AnonimowyAkwarystaAmator
Жыл бұрын
05:25 - nice t--shirt
@Magdalena-jp7gd
Жыл бұрын
If you like polish food you need to visit southampton bitterne willage polish shop its huge and a variety of meat is huge out here
@RobReacts1
Жыл бұрын
Hey, I went there yesterday and picked up a couple of bits actually ☺️
@kkkikinoova1716
Жыл бұрын
Market na Walthamstow, mieszkałam w tej dzielnicy prawie 10lat...
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