What an underrated country. By the way, I'll be posting videos from Italy, Holland and the Baltics only on Patreon. Check that out for as low as $5 a month: www.patreon.com/sabbaticaltommy
@Johnny-Michael3 ай бұрын
It is despicable that you expose countries like this when they should be kept a secret.
@percyhawkins7163 ай бұрын
No ice in their lemonade? I am shocked and appalled!
@cgtatted41453 ай бұрын
Gota listen to the song Poland 🇵🇱 by lil yachty!!! 😂😂 it's a banger mi amigo!
@gradycooper74163 ай бұрын
keeep islam out and these countrys will thrive
@wildforagedfare92563 ай бұрын
Hey there the tree you liked with the berries in Warsaw was a Rowan tree.
@PrzemysawNizioek3 ай бұрын
Nope. Poland did not surrender. Poland is the only occupied county that never ever surrendered or colaborated. And nope. In 1939 Germany and the Soviet Union (Russia) together ivaded Poland. Together. Great Material! Thank You.
@webcreator90932 ай бұрын
it wasn't a "SOVIET UNION" - it was top down russia. And Poles took over ruskies and burned moscow in 1610.
@Danilla2292 ай бұрын
@@webcreator9093 ikr, so funny how the west always try to make Poland look an innocent victime. Like they never invaded Russia or Czechoslovakia allied with Nazis.
@vladm59202 ай бұрын
lol, love how Russia is always propagandized when Stalin was Georgian, Kruschev was Ukrainian, most of the Bolsheviks were Jewish, the red army consisted of Ukrainians, Belorussians and many nationalities other than Russians, yet Russians are always the only ones to blame. Btw Poland invaded Czechoslovakia first together with Germany.
@smerfdzikus23342 ай бұрын
@@vladm5920 When you think about, Soviet does not mean Russian. The Soviet Union was a nation without one national identity, but rather it consisted of several ethnic groups and Russians were the biggest one.
@vladm59202 ай бұрын
@@smerfdzikus2334 Yes, but there’s a trend where anything negative about the Soviet Union is blamed on Russians and those other nations act like they had nothing to do with it and they were the victims, but then whenever you see certain achievements of the Soviets, they all quickly change their tune and say how it wasn’t only the Russians but everyone else contributed.. I’m just tired of the double standard, pick a side and stick with it.
@rob41n3 ай бұрын
Poland is my favourite country on earth, ive been there 3 times already and i visited 35 countries / best regards from Sweden
@1337MTs2 ай бұрын
Ja Polen är så jävla nice på sommaren :)
@sourdeezal98072 ай бұрын
thank you Ragnar ;)
@playthegame74452 ай бұрын
Well Sweden is a Islamic nation, so no wonder. Getting out of Sweden into Poland is like going into civilization from stone ages
@Anchwolf133722 ай бұрын
@@playthegame7445 thats why we go there lol. as a swede i went to poland this march and was amazed by the lack of diversity among the people. wherever you looked you saw the native population((with a few exceptions)) and not invaders arabs and enemies
@TheFrenchscot2 ай бұрын
@@playthegame7445 I love Poland, my wife is from there. It's a great country, but saying that Sweden lives in the stone age is a bit rough i guess. I get though the thing about "migrants", as i am French...
@Midas_kek2 ай бұрын
Moved from the UK 6 years ago. Best decision of my life. Great country and wonderful people. My grandfather was Polish and fought in WWII so I have right of blood to citizenship.
@JulianWilhelmIII2 ай бұрын
Nice to see you back bro
@RokenPL2 ай бұрын
no you don't... unless you pay taxes here.
@nsz-lf6yk2 ай бұрын
WITAMY W DOMU.
@romantyczka86012 ай бұрын
Yeah, thats right bro ! Polish blood !
@21NATALCIA2 ай бұрын
Congratulations 🎊
@BollocksToThat3 ай бұрын
As an Irish man, i have worked with many Poles. I haven't met one i don't like yet. They are a strong nation with great patriotism and great people. Even when in other countries they work and pay their taxes and live their lives without bother. Nice people 👍
@ronnies18993 ай бұрын
I had the pleasure of working with many Poles as well when I was in Chicago (largest Polish population outside of Poland) and I have the exact same sentiment. Some of the most genuine, hard working people you will ever meet.
@Aithis.3 ай бұрын
Same thing here, work with a few polish guys and all of them have been good craic, hard workers and they can manage to keep you awake through the night shifts with techno or metal on their speakers lol
@skaworld5093 ай бұрын
💯They've improved our country immeasurably
@stiepanholkien6053 ай бұрын
So Ireland is like early 20th century US now.
@johnathandaviddunster383 ай бұрын
I have some bad experiences with poles
@TheMsAlexthesinger3 ай бұрын
Poland is a therapy session for me as a French person. Im just speechless about the quality of life in Poland. All the issues that Western European capitals face is non-existent in Poland. No immigration, number one in the list of safest countries in Europe for women, very good infrastructure and modern, banking system is amazing here you can pay and transfer with your phone number and the prices are low comapred to France. You have the same or even bigger opportunities here. I can walk in the center of Warsaw at 3am and will not encounter one bad problem. It's beyond my undertanding how Life is better here than in the West. Those work in IT should absolutely move here as it is the European hub of IT companies.
@paulsteen76413 ай бұрын
If I could speak polish I would move there
@TheMsAlexthesinger3 ай бұрын
@@paulsteen7641 you don’t have too really. People in Warsaw speak very good English. For example even your process of getting a visa (if you need one) or just being able to read documents that you received like bills etc are translated to English if you wish to. No language barrier here.
@paulsteen76413 ай бұрын
@@TheMsAlexthesinger yes it looks like the younger ones do - under 30ish but I’ll be 55 soon so I imagine meeting older people would be hard without knowing polish. I can speak some Spanish, n bit of Russian but not sure how motivated I’d be to learn polish unless I really loved the place
@B0R0M1R3 ай бұрын
Germany has also a lot of immigrants but its much safer than France
@TheMsAlexthesinger3 ай бұрын
@@paulsteen7641 Yep that’s the case for the majority of the ex soviet countries. Young people do speak English and even French or Spanish but +55 is getting difficult as they learned Russian in schools back then. Polish as a language to speak is a nightmare I will not hide that. It’s only a question of motivation really. In my case, I learned Polish not to because im obliged and that I cannot do without, I’ve learned it because I live here and it’s the minimum I can do. But I have loads of foreign friends here in Warsaw they live here more than 10 years but still struggle with the language.
@marchauchler16222 ай бұрын
I am a German who has many Polish friends and am glad that I had the chance to visit many of their hometowns. I always had a great time and enjoyed the hospitality there. The quality of life is great there..
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
I am also partially German (or should I say Prussian maybe to be exact) since my grand... grand... ancestral families were Hoffmanns and Schmidts. From other interesting stories my grand etc. was enrolled into Keiser Army in 1914 as 18? 19? yeasr old and lived thru two of the great trench/gas battles in France, afterward he was transferred to fight Tzars troops, then again to Belgium... after he got back in 1918 he fought gainst his former comrades in mentioned above Greater Poland Uprising (1918-1919) to finisj his battle trail fighting with Ukrainians for disputed territiries and switfly after with Bolsheviks... TLDR! "Momma I am going to the church, brb" ... ... ... ... ... ... 5 fronts, 3 wars and one Iron Cross later... .... .... "I am homeeeee. sorry for the delay"
@zozole71642 ай бұрын
🇵🇱🤜🤛🇵🇱
@michaglaza33642 ай бұрын
Germany should pay reparations for war damage and the killing of 6 million Poles.
@andyf95602 ай бұрын
have You seen white bears?
@Uzytkownik_portalu_Youtube2 ай бұрын
@@andyf9560no we have only white-red bears
@davidwhite48743 ай бұрын
Varsovians always used to say that you get the best view of Warsaw from the top of the Palace of Culture because from there you can't see the Palace of Culture.
@manchagojohnsonmanchago63673 ай бұрын
Hahaha narr the palace of culture isn't so bad.. look at the filth and shit they built in the west at the same time.. crumbling rubble.. ape pens?
@MrBowman563 ай бұрын
Based
@Dadgrammer3 ай бұрын
so true :D
@pawekauzynski29392 ай бұрын
I don’t like the palace. It ruins the urban atmosphere in the centre.
@webcreator90932 ай бұрын
true. Palace of culture is an ugly building
@ramjet66773 ай бұрын
Im Australian but my family emigrated from Poland, but i do have many relatives still in Gdansk, I speak, read Polish and even danced when i was young in a Polish folkloric group, Im incredibly proud of my history and if war comes to Poland I'll be the first to enlist
@Eternal18113 ай бұрын
Glad to know cannon fodder still exist among men. Thanks buddy!
@tomaszmankowski91032 ай бұрын
I hope it doesn't come to that and Ukraine will kick Russia's ass, but POL army will be ready just in case. Polish-Aussies are quite a community. No wonder it includes Mad Max (Max Rockatansky), so thanks man! Take care!
@nsz-lf6yk2 ай бұрын
Wracaj do Polski 🇵🇱👍
@camouflageartist88972 ай бұрын
Why do you want to enlist? To fight and die for Israel?
@movemelody12 ай бұрын
@@Eternal1811 "Mięso armatnie" to w rosji, która napadła na suwerenny kraj. Obrońcy ojczyzny nie są "mięsem", tylko bohaterami, czego ty nigdy nie zrozumiesz, bo ojczyzna jest ci obojętna.
@agnesricher84123 ай бұрын
I moved to Warsaw from Toronto 4 years ago and could not be happier 🥰 its clean, safe, great food scene, fantastic transportaion system. It is a very green city, always something happening and its being centraly located makes it easy to travel anywhere within Europe 😊
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
I was born here and having travelled all across EU i say with 100% conviction i would consider moving to aby other city as a capital punishment. :D check out nature 2000 preserve from metro Wawrzyszew - just walk straight north from it :D
@wielaxe37892 ай бұрын
Więc mam nadzieję, że umiesz już trochę polskiego ;)
@turbo98262 ай бұрын
@@wielaxe3789 a jak nie to co?
@wielaxe37892 ай бұрын
@@turbo9826 no trochę słabo jeżeli planuje to zostać nie znając języka:)
@turbo98262 ай бұрын
@@wielaxe3789no nie do konca tak to działa
@MichelePonte3 ай бұрын
Poland is the safest country in Europe! And Warsaw is a massive international hub with million restaurant possibilities, interesting museums and beautiful all around. But as a tourist, Krakow or Gdansk will suit better!
@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p3 ай бұрын
What places would be best for somebody looking to permanently move there? I'm a remote worker and I'm looking for somewhere more traditional and Christian
@davidwhite48743 ай бұрын
@@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p Go to the eastern border regions.
@ZoesitaCT3 ай бұрын
Who said is the safest?
@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p3 ай бұрын
@@davidwhite4874 where do you suggest? Also my paradoxical issue is id like somewhere more conservative but they are less likely to accept me right? I am a Romanian American and I am white and have been told I look Polish and I learning the language currently
@davidwhite48743 ай бұрын
@@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p I really wouldn't know specifically. I remember on my many visits to Suwałki, for example, seeing an orthodox church still in use. Most people are catholic, though. I would suggest doing some research online and perhaps going for a visit to scout some places out. As a rule, though, the further East you go in Poland, the more Slavic it is, the further west, more Germanic influences. Bear in mind that Warsaw is very different from the rest of Poland.
@webMonkey_3 ай бұрын
My grandfather used to talk about the Polish soldiers he served with, decades later the British attitude to the Polish who came over to work was disgraceful, shame on the British. It won’t be long before british are emigrating to Poland for work and I can guarantee the Polish will be much more hospitable. I wish I could live there, I visited and was blown away by how clean and well run the place is.
@sirrathersplendid48253 ай бұрын
Sadly, the once beautiful UK has regressed. I don’t think any sane-thinking person needs to ask why.
@mpo87322 ай бұрын
Karma ha ha. They didn't like Poles who work as hard as hell, now they have to work to meet rising expectations of a different kind of immigrants
@-_-naab-_-2 ай бұрын
@@sirrathersplendid4825i feel like we all see it man. My country has totally changed and im only 24😢
@mistep4442 ай бұрын
Thank you for your kind words - obviously you're a bit idealising the Polish reality, but seeing the whole Polish oikophobia from within, we the Poles we're in need of it (a bit).
@muckle82 ай бұрын
@webmonkey I wouldn’t be too sure about that , nobody likes to see their jobs taken by people from another country.
@alexcastillo89833 ай бұрын
I spent my summer vacations in Italy and Poland, and I like very much Poland.
@BabzV2 ай бұрын
As a Dutchie I really like the Polish people, I have several neighbors who are Polish and they are genuinely the kindest people.(we've exchanged many dishes, great food) Always ready to lend a hand. Plus we won't forget that they helped liberate our country in the WW2. 🇳🇱💜🇵🇱🌷
@LMB2229 күн бұрын
I can confirm, the Polish military cemetery in - where was it, sorry - was immaculate.
@petermorheim67273 ай бұрын
visited recently for work and honestly was surprised by how many tech firms are in the city, not to mention the variety of great restaurants. appreciated the architecture and infrastructure as well. can definitely see where the phrase rising of star of europe is used.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
True - great and innovative restaurants and many IT startups incoming. Soon we will resettle most of those (and their capital) who went to UK some years ago s ince they have difficulties because of BREXIT (never thought that Britaing could do something so stu... Beleiviong Faragae was the same as beliving that THIS TIME in that lonely truck behind the school there will FREE CANDIES ;p
@camouflageartist88972 ай бұрын
Too many of these losers are coming to Poland. That's not good. More of them will follow, and then the whole of Africa will come. Bring the Berlin Wall back!
@ipodman19102 ай бұрын
You’re not going not a hater of Poland but also a manipulated halfbrain. Brexit was the best Uk could do, you clueless emptyhead…
@user-fj3en5pm4q2 ай бұрын
At the Polish-German border, there is no need to change the gauge of the tracks. Both Poland and Germany use the standard gauge of 1435 mm, which is typical in most European countries. This allows trains to cross the border without needing to change the undercarriage or switch carriages.
@Pit2x2 ай бұрын
Currently, locomotives are multi-system , so there is no need to replace them. However, the train crew still needs to be replaced, particularly the locomotive driver, as there are different regulations in Poland and Germany.
@Uzytkownik_portalu_Youtube2 ай бұрын
Yes, the same with Czech and Austria.
@walterweiss71242 ай бұрын
tsarist imperium had wider gauge
@filipek124Ай бұрын
@@Pit2x Ale nigdy nie było w Polsce rozstawu torów rosyjskiego.
@piotr5338Ай бұрын
@Pit2x Speaking about the multi-system nature of locomotives, you suggest that the tracks in Poland are of different from Europe what is false . Wide in the USA the track gauge is similar to that in Russia . In 1922 was written treaty. In Europe is the same size
@hankwest56623 ай бұрын
Coreection, in 1939 - the germans AND the russians invaded Poland.
@wineotautollc73693 ай бұрын
Don't forget SLOVAKIA ! 3 countries crossed Polish borders at the same time !
@fdk70143 ай бұрын
Indeed. They had decided to split Poland between them, something that is illegal to remind people of in Russia now.
@bertrecht9133 ай бұрын
And Poland invaded Lithuania, Belarus and committed many crimes on minorities and joined the aggressor site.
@debil4773 ай бұрын
@@bertrecht913 Bullshit. Liar or idiot.
@Januszhh3 ай бұрын
@@bertrecht913in 1939 bielarus and lithuania was a polish territory after 1ww…
@julianshalders60473 ай бұрын
Poland seems very friendly and helpful and clean, i would luv to go there.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Tourist welcome :)
@camouflageartist88972 ай бұрын
Too many of these losers are coming to Poland. That's not good. More of them will follow, and then the whole of Africa will come. Bring the Berlin Wall back!
@isabeligbar2 ай бұрын
@@pawekaczmarek2542- Depends what kind of tourists. I don't want in my land any muslims! 🙄
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
@@isabeligbar cause you are simpleton that says before thinking :) Tartars are for example polish - well I think can say that - polish native muslims and proven faithful to the country. Personally following any religion isn't a very wise thing... But If you do it for personal reasons and need. Feel free to do so IDK. And would gladly welcome any tourist religion . If theyll keep their 'truths' fir themselves (quite opposite about their money :)
@isabeligbar2 ай бұрын
@@pawekaczmarek2542 - Yeah, right, whatever. I had a sad reality working with arabian people who are muslims. They never treat a woman with respect, especially a Christian one. So if you want to believe in fairytales about how "nice and friendly they are" it's your choice then. That's my story and I will stick to it.
@Yohoo272Ай бұрын
I served along side of Polish soldiers in Afghanistan. Solid dudes and was willing to die fighting next to them.
@piezoman7925 күн бұрын
Same here, real soldiers, which is more than I can say about most of our other ‘allied-forces’ that would send a dozen guys over to watch tv for a few months. We could always rely on them for our security escorts, and they were always great people to spend time with.
@Avastidas23 сағат бұрын
😂Dying for Yankees? 😂
@terere83233 ай бұрын
I spent a few weeks in Poland earlier this year and was very impressed. It’s a very pleasant place.
@sneakyalpaca51673 ай бұрын
Visited Poland 14 years ago. Truly amazing place with the nicest people.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Check with us gain - we had Update 6.0 and you saw Beta 0.5... we ve changed A LOT
@pucioy2 ай бұрын
@@pawekaczmarek2542 ;)
@Peter-MH3 ай бұрын
Poles work hard, and do not have a ‘Western entitlement’ attitude. They’ve literally held half of Western Europe together for the last 25 years with cheap, but effective labour.
@ElfinHat963 ай бұрын
They also held Europe from being flooded with communism for 20 years in XX century and held Britain from being under German boot. UK general after battle for britain said without the Poles they wouldn't defend themselves in the sky, if Britain lost the air superiority Germany would make an invasion at a time where Germany was winning the war.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Mostly cheap, according to general statistics our averaged work is still very inefficient (because we have effects, just spend way to many hours to achive them then its needed) in comparison to others. Unfortunately - still - having a Polish team in multinational company means job done at least as well as in 'old EU' but WAAAAAAY CHEAPER ("best bang for your back").
@UncleLesterCam3 ай бұрын
TOMMY! You went to two of my favorite places in the World that I have ever visited as an American- Warsaw and Krakow. Krakow is like the beautiful flirtatious woman that you have a one night stand with. Warsaw is like the woman that seems a little cold at first and then you get to know her and fall madly in love with everything about her. The bone chilling moment for me in this video was the couple you met outside the Palace reconstruction project. My most vivid conversation in Krakow, while visiting Auschwitz, was from a random Uber driver that could speak some English. He told me one thing during my entire ride while leaving the Auschwitz Museum: "What you saw today was not from the Nazis; it was from the Germans". That always stuck with me and then I heard it again. Thanks for all you do and bringing back vivid memories to two places that I fell in love with.
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
That term was coined i think in 50-60' as a płoy to muddy the waters with some mythical nazis. There was never a country called Nazia or smth like that. That whole term is pure sociotechnics to shift the blame and change narration.
@Polans-gd3 ай бұрын
Yes, Nazis weren't UFO - they were Germans.
@copricorn_moon88332 ай бұрын
Beautiful comment
@nsz-lf6yk2 ай бұрын
GERMAN not nazi. ☠👍
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Oh! you are one of those not beatiful but very flirtatious men that ends up being scammed in unregistred go-go clubs to celebarte the end of the day with "Puking Studs Roadshow on Tour in Poland 2024 + Auschwitz Package"? [sarcasm off]
@TeamMcGrath3 ай бұрын
Hey mate, I went to Poland too, like yourself I enjoy learning languages and learnt enough to get me by, it's a fantastic country with some of my most favourite people. If you're interested in Polish phrases I have a video on KZbin where I teach some phrases, enjoy your time in Poland my dude! 🙂❤️🇵🇱
@McMacsi2 ай бұрын
18:49 Because Poland is located in Central Europe, and was ALWAYS part of WESTERN Civilization. It's just last 80 years that people call it eastern europe, because of being part of Soviet block.
@barbarakomar34852 ай бұрын
Polska nie jest częścią bloku sowieckiego
@freedomisfromtruth2 ай бұрын
All of eastern europe was only the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth, till Russia pushed POland west after WW2 as Poland got German land, but lost alot of land to Ukraine, Belarus
@lienwhite6818Ай бұрын
@@freedomisfromtruthlook up the first map of Poland.
@quigonjinn35673 ай бұрын
2:57 nope Poland also uses the standard track gauge (1435mm) same as in North America & most of Europe. Trains that go from Poland to Ukraine have to change gauge cuz Ukraine uses 1520 mm gauge. Maybe that's what you confused by.
@SabbaticalTommy3 ай бұрын
Yeah you got it
@two-sense3 ай бұрын
It's a good thing the tracks in North America are the same as Europe. Makes it easier to get there.
@deanl03 ай бұрын
@@two-sense They don't really have trains in America or at least they don't really use them
@miahconnell233 ай бұрын
We DO have trains--for urban use & also for interstate long-distance. Urban denizens: we love ‘em. It’s true that USA infrastructure is car and highway-centric, but many people who appreciate urban geography value the train systems that we do have. Taipei’s subway system is WAY better than Boston’s or New York’s, but that got built recently so it’s a li’l unfair to compare…
@piotr53383 ай бұрын
Northern America has different size of tracks like Russia ,Ukraina , Belarus , they are just wider .
@robertpavey56153 ай бұрын
I returned home on Sunday, having spent 2 weeks in Poland. I found it to be an admirable, highly-functioning country that seems to have a clear sense of itself (obviously not saying everything is perfect!). Definitely recommend visiting. I wouldn't move there though, I doubt the Poles need any unnecessary outsiders from any other country at this time.
@mirka3 ай бұрын
Spot on. I'm Polish American, vacationing in Poland now. I'm shocked how safe the country is, comparing to Western EU, not even mentioning US. Poland is a nation country, we fought for independence for 123 + 50 yrs, we are an independent, free country now. Poles finally have a home of their own, and currently we don't need foreigners with their problems moving here.
@paugasolina50483 ай бұрын
@@mirka poland has learned from western countries and are more sensitive to migration from primarily muslim countries.
@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p3 ай бұрын
Why do you not recommending moving there? I'm considering it
@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p3 ай бұрын
@@mirkaI'm a Romanian American that is trying to move away from the West because I can't stand how non traditional it has become. Would you say that I'd have a hard time integrating into Poland even if I learn the language at a conversational level?
@AndreiGeorgescu-j9p3 ай бұрын
@@paugasolina5048is it just Muslim or in general?
@shotgunwound3 ай бұрын
Visited krakow for a week in 2022. Great country, Poland.
@walterweiss71242 ай бұрын
me in 1991 :P
@enzolai62053 ай бұрын
Can't believe you're actually in Warsaw! I've watched many of your videos. From my hometown Canton to the city I now live in, Warsaw. If you ever need it, I would like to show you around the city. By the way, Poles prefer to call Poland as a Central European country rather than an Eastern European one (since Eastern Europe is associated with the Soviet Union). Geographically, Poland is indeed located in the center of Europe.
@Tanaka19433 ай бұрын
France is west, Germany is central, Poland is east. It has been settled
@enzolai62053 ай бұрын
@@Tanaka1943 get more education
@Polans-gd3 ай бұрын
@@Tanaka1943 Poland is in Central Europe IT is a country where west meats with east. Germany is not a Central Europe. Poland is even western country from geografical point of view.
@Polans-gd3 ай бұрын
@@Tanaka1943 what a nonsense. Go to schools to learn geography and history.
@nasekespana2 ай бұрын
@@Tanaka1943 who settled that, you?
@nymetsfan9123 ай бұрын
Every person I’ve met here in the US that is either from Poland or who’s parents immigrated here from Poland, are very intelligent, well-kept people.
@dregga76383 ай бұрын
Yea and i met many that were not so what's yozr point? Poland has some intelligent people?
@paugasolina50483 ай бұрын
@@dregga7638 they have some, they have lots of alcoholics too
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Probably yes but if they are from old emigration I would recommend to taste and experience PL personally cause amount of made up stories e.g. about polish popular traditions I've seen on their Facebook groups amaze me ;) Unpopulart opinione here but having voting rights in nowadays election of the country you've not living in for decades to decide about lives of ppl living there right now... is just wromg for so many reasons.
@metanoian9652 ай бұрын
@@paugasolina5048 old useless stereo story. Poland 22% / Britain 56% / USA 85%
@wielkoduszny74012 ай бұрын
@@paugasolina5048 Did You compare official data to other countries? I'm pretty sure You don't ;)
@TheWorldofGood792 ай бұрын
My dearest friend is Polish & she has relatives in Poznań we visited there in the summer of 2023 & that central square in Poznań was still being finished it looked a mess then but it looks great now in the video. I'm off to Grodzisk Mazowiecki next month & if I could I would happily live in Poland. The Poles are truly fantastic people. Great video.
@adamwacki168216 күн бұрын
What exactly You are going to do in Grodzisk?
@KL-ii1xt3 ай бұрын
Moved to Poland about 14 mths ago my entire family does live here, my entire family history grandpatents, great GPs etc my mother came to US alone long long long time ago so it made it easier for the move etc. Waiting for my PR card, new passports etc. Poland is a safe and fabulous country...enjoy cheers !!!
@NPNGxD3ATH3 ай бұрын
My great great grandparents were from Poland too and came to the US in the 1930s. We have old pictures from 1890s and on in our family.
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
By the right of blood you can apply for citizenship:)
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
Welcome home my friend :)
@NPNGxD3ATH3 ай бұрын
@@cathulhu3772 that’s neat
@vitekzi26152 ай бұрын
Welcome home new Polish brother we are happy to have you and your family there. As Poles we dont want thirld world and illegal immigrants but you are welcome
@theo70493 ай бұрын
Poland is an amazing country and totally deemed my preconceived notions about the country very false (for the most part). Been there three times, two in Gdańsk and once in Kraków, and still urging to visit more places.
@tomaszzych90233 ай бұрын
Mongols never ruled Poland . They did in medieval Russian principalities for three hundred years.
@dissco.partysan33332 ай бұрын
300 years? It were hardly 150 and they crushed them. But the Russians together with the Germans partitioned Poland and ruled them for almost 130 years. And after WWII the Polish again became Russian vassals in the Warsaw pact.
@europeets2 ай бұрын
Это тебе монголы рассказали?
@vabgwozdz30842 ай бұрын
he says 'mongols rolled through here' not ruled.
@leno_o172 ай бұрын
@@dissco.partysan3333 take your meds, Ivan
@dissco.partysan33332 ай бұрын
@@leno_o17 I'm not Russian. Poland was partitioned 3 times and ceased to exist as a sovereign country from 1795 till 1918. It is a historical fact.
@kristiant963 ай бұрын
Yes Sabbatical, i've worked with poles in the UK (field work kinda tough job) they were good workers and the farm had more than 15 poles (farm was around 50 people) which was even less than it was used to before, but the second year i went there there were no more than 6-7 (this was 2018) they left mid season which was very unusual of them so i spoke with one of them and i asked why is he going back and he responded with, i earn the same money back home and my job is stable i don't need to come here anymore (he works as a plumber back in Poland) the others said the same but their jobs were different, so they left home and our boss had quite a headache trying to find good replacements, but he got lucky and he found decent workers, this was also the last year for farm and it closed down. I believe the farm was working with eastern european workers for more than 17 years but due to many things mainly the lack of decent workers and big businesses fucking around with farmers my boss decided to close it down, on this job i also earned the most money in my life.
@JustExperience1013 ай бұрын
I'm currently working on a farm UK the eastern Europeans have gone now we have people from Uzbekistan and Kenya agency picking apples
@kristiant963 ай бұрын
@@JustExperience101 that's tough, i guess they will search for laborers from different countries hence with brexit and all, but hey if they are honest working people let them earn some money i bet they need it more than most of us also we had indians and pakistani's but they were only "cleaning" the field they weren't pickers.
@simmorg2903 ай бұрын
Yeah UK farms do need access to a desperate labour force that they can exploit.
@kristiant963 ай бұрын
@@simmorg290 it's the same everywhere.
@JustExperience1013 ай бұрын
@@simmorg290don't worry English and Uzbek are exploited equally bonus is we all pay 70 a week rent we pick average 10k apples a day teams of 6 400 each a box 24 crates a day 100 pound a day 😭🔫
@Kaygee793 ай бұрын
I was in Poland in 2010. I went to Krakow. I really enjoyed it. Did the salt mine there and with their currency everything was reasonably priced compared to other countries in Europe. Enjoyed good food and drinks there daily as well! Poland is a nice place to visit for sure!
@Stanislaw932 ай бұрын
If you don't know why the Poles are getting a bit upset, when you're calling Poland being the Eastern Europe, not the Central Europe - just simply cross the Bug river and go further East and you'll realize these are two different worlds.
@hadeseye22972 ай бұрын
I love that people call us Eastern Europeans. And I'm Polish.
@minimouse02852 ай бұрын
Poland is geographically in Central Europe. What do you mean cross the river and see the difference? Have u ever been to Belarus or Russia, or are you delulu?
@Uzytkownik_portalu_Youtube2 ай бұрын
We are on Eastern Europe, for thousands of years border was in Konstantinopol, the last european city. Everything to east was Asia and everything to west was Europe. Going to the north border should be at the Dnyepr River.
@moscuadelendaest2 ай бұрын
@@minimouse0285 I mean Bug IS our eastern border with Ukraine and partially with Belarus. Although I think that those countries have much more in common with us then their eastern 'neighbours'
@minimouse02852 ай бұрын
@@moscuadelendaest right, especially ukraine with their love for nazis
@paaahto3 ай бұрын
Beautiful. I've been pondering a couple of years if I should visit Poland. This video assured that I will. Thx Sabbatical!
@TheBenzKid3 ай бұрын
Thanks for making these videos for us people that are unable to travel the world. 🙂
@jakehands3 ай бұрын
And people who can’t go outside cause they’re in jail.
@davewong48343 ай бұрын
Same here, thank you for sharing!
@PhantomOfDarkness3 ай бұрын
I've been to 5 countries in Western Europe so far and Czech republic and poland, Estonia are high on my list moving east. my parents were originally born in poland and then legally came to the states in 1988, so I was born in the US, but I almost feel proud of poland as if it were my country.
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
Getting Polish citizenship by the right of blood is actually quite easy :)
@nsz-lf6yk2 ай бұрын
A ja jestem PRAWIE W CIĄŻY 🤣🤣 ALBO JESTEŚ DUMNYM POLAKIEM ALBO NIE,NIE MA INNEJ OBCJI🤣🤣🤣 pozdrowienia dla Rodziców
@D-Ogi2 ай бұрын
In fact, according to the right of blood, you are Polish. If you apply for citizenship, you will be subject to the procedure of "recognition of citizenship", not "granting citizenship".
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
in late 80s? were they in Poland afterwards... Asking because whenever I am talking to americans with polish heritage or 'original migrants' from before 1990 it 'frightens me' how confident they are about their understanding of nowdays Poland (hint: they hav eno clue ;) and even offensive if somebody would like to provide them with reality checks ;)
@camouflageartist88972 ай бұрын
Not everyone born in Poland is actually ethnically Polish. Many jews have Polish names, like the one Zelesnky, who has just murdered 500K ethnic Ukrainians.
@leszekk.733 ай бұрын
The train stoppage at the border may result from differences in the power supply of electric traction in individual countries. In Poland, we have a 3 kV DC power supply. The same power supply is available in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, but here, importantly, only in half of the country. Both countries, Slovakia and the Czech Republic, are divided in half and the southern regions of these countries are powered by 25 kV alternating current, and the northern regions by 3 kV. Most of Ukraine's trains are powered by 25 kV alternating current, except for the western part of the country, where the power supply is the same as in Poland. It is similar in Belarus, except for the sections leading to Poland (Terespol - Brest and Kuźnica Białostocka - Grodno). Germany, in turn, has a voltage of 15 kV. Not all international trains are equipped with multi-system locomotives, because such locomotives must be certified in individual countries, and this may take a long time.
@Mr__Singularity3 ай бұрын
you missed majority of the interesting and best looking places in Poznan and Warsaw, besides few obvious (Old Town in Poznan and Palace of Culture and Science in Warsaw) you were wandering around mostly around some 2nd/3rd tier locations :). If you will be returning from Eastern Europe through Poland, I recommend few other cities - Wroclaw, Gdansk and Krakow
@jokubas33913 ай бұрын
especially krakow
@cathulhu37723 ай бұрын
As a born Warszawiak i support that message xD
@filipek124Ай бұрын
To są oczywiste i polecane w każdym przewodniku lokalizacje. Ja polecam Przemyśl i Zamość.
@stephenmilton99982 ай бұрын
My uncle was in the US state department and served in Warsaw in the 70's. He had great stories. He drove ,with the family from Berlin to Warsaw, during 70s cold war! He bought the ambassadors Ford Galaxy sold it to my Dad. Poland is an interesting place,for sure !
@Seccussion2 ай бұрын
31:53 for clarification. what they meant was that in many places people talk mainly about Nazis. Nazis did this, nazis did that. Forgets that the Nazis were mainly Germans. We don’t like it and We don't want this to be forgotten. soon people will think that the Nazis disappeared after the war…
@Outstay-h8k3 ай бұрын
When I was in Warsaw back in 1990, that tall modern building was LOT's. Now it turned into Samsung's. In 1990, there was no sign of Japanese anime cosplay gatherings. A quite big change to an Eastern Asian like myself. One thing I noticed has not changed is its people. Even back then, they were very friendly, helpful and nice.
@Joey-be8eh2 ай бұрын
It depends how you’re experiencing the people. Poles are very operational and show no vulnerability like Americans etc. It’s very “proper” and respectful
@arturjj87612 ай бұрын
Miałeś o tyle łatwiej, że u nas Azjaci są postrzegani jako bardzo pracowici ludzie honoru.
@sueannpeters47373 ай бұрын
Poland is a beautiful country! Glad you are there and showing it off!!
@tommahnke3 ай бұрын
I have been to Poland and loved it. I think about getting back often. The people were great as was the food.
@curious5254Ай бұрын
Hey thank you for the nice and interesting video ☺ It's always nice when people discover the reality and stop thinking with stereotypes. Poland have hard and painfull history but we always have "western mindset" in my opinion and when you check our culture it always was close to western culture countries. We still have a lot of work to do but we are doing our best and I'm very happy you enjoy your time here 😃
@annawarner10786 күн бұрын
Poland is a wonderful country. I used ot live in Warsaw and I loved it. Nice people, many speak english, great culture. SAFE! Poland has the lowest crimes rates in Europe, and significantly lower crime rates than in US. Also cost of living is much lower than in US.
@curious52546 күн бұрын
@annawarner1078 Thank you for kind words ☺️ US have beautiful nature 😍🌲🌳 maybe one day I'll visit US and Canada haha
@hallitoff38833 ай бұрын
Tommy, Warsaw is the financial and transportation hub of Poland - but, there is much, much more to Poland. Krakow remains the cultural and traditional heart of Poland. Then, there is Gdansk in the north and, of course, Czestochowa in the south. Plus many other places of cultural and historical importance. The Polish countryside, itself, must be seen and experienced to begin to understand Poland.
@marcinmarcin58022 ай бұрын
Czestochowa is a shithole
@blackmarketgirl1012 ай бұрын
You forget about Wrocław, one of the most beautiful city in Poland 😅
@freedomisfromtruth2 ай бұрын
Zakopane the mountain scenic historic City Town
@hallitoff38832 ай бұрын
I didn't forget about these other places - just wanted to keep my posting fairly short and sweet. That's why I threw in "many other places...." Please read CAREFULLY what someone else has written before criticizing.
@dopefiendlarz1333 ай бұрын
When I was in Poland in 93 very few people spoke English and they didn’t want to speak Russian. I knew more Russian but it was met with contempt so I learned as much Polish as I could. I’d love to go back
@stevens10413 ай бұрын
They had to learn Russian as the second language until early 90s. No one that I spoke to from Poland was happy about that arrangement.
@JulianSki3 ай бұрын
Russian classes were mandatory during Communist rule so people don't like it when you speak Russian as its a reminder to them of Communism but also just general hatred of Russia itself. If you go back to Poland you will probably only be able to speak Russian to elderly people but even than it's not really spoken at all.
@manchagojohnsonmanchago63673 ай бұрын
@@stevens1041hmm the poles always learn Russian for more than 200 years. Additionally it's very close to polish and very easy for them..I never met many poles who "didn't want to speak Russian" with you.. it is more than they seemed to get annoyed that people thought Russian and polish were the same thing.. but you can use Russian with polish people easily ..
@marlk19653 ай бұрын
@@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 Poles don't speak russian. The only people in Poland who speak russian are the economic migrants from Eastern Europe.
@agnesricher84123 ай бұрын
@@manchagojohnsonmanchago6367 Incorrect, Polish people were forced to learn Russian at school till 1989. Nobody I knew wanted to learn it. Not sure where you get this info from, but it is simply not true.
@DutchPlanDerLinde3 ай бұрын
We are some of the most overworked people in europe. Our country is great but we’re too stressed to enjoy it 😂 Im happy you enjoyed my country Tommy, can’t believe the same guy who walked around Buenos Aires and Chinese megacities walked on so many streets I used to walk.
@quigonjinn35673 ай бұрын
Pause at 23:27 The building on the left is the Varso Tower. It's the tallest building in the whole EU.
@davidwhite48742 ай бұрын
Only because it's got that stick on top of it.
@quigonjinn35672 ай бұрын
@@davidwhite4874 And? The former biggest & now second biggest building in the EU the Commerzbank Tower also has a Spire that is included in it's total Hight. It's like saying a Giraffe is only so tall because of it's long neck. Fun Fact: From 1974--1991 The Warsaw Radio Mast with a hight of 646.30 m was the tallest structure in the World but then it collapsed ^^. The reason it was so tall, was the goal to make signals from Warsaw receivable in all of Poland with one big old single mast. Today all of the Skyscrapers just get a Spire on top making huge Radio masts no longer necessary.
@davidwhite48742 ай бұрын
@@quigonjinn3567 The Commerzbank Tower is now about the 22nd highest building in Europe and yes, it has a crappy stick on it which makes it so. The top 5 tallest buildings are in St Petersburg and Moscow and they are all solid building to the top. "It's like saying a Giraffe is only so tall because of it's long neck" a better and more accurate analogy would be to say "a giraffe is only so tall because of its long horns". EDIT: Ok, you said the EU and you are correct about the position in the EU, but I still think a big stick on top is cheating and the analogy still stands.
@quigonjinn35672 ай бұрын
@@davidwhite4874 Seems you have selective reading my guy, I clearly wrote in the EU! I couldn't give less of a damn about ruzzia's petrodollar skyscrapers were the common people live in wooden huts or gray soviet era commie blocks falling apart in viewing range of massive glittering oligarch palaces. Go to google street view & see for youself how ruzzians live just outside of Petersburg, Moscow & the other oligarch cities, look like in much poorer African countries. Ruzzia a third world country a mafia state nothing there impresses me in the slightest. Or in other words Ruzzia is a IRL Mad Max wasteland just in cold. The developed World is transitioning away from fossil fuels & then there will be no more ruzzia.
@davidwhite48742 ай бұрын
@@quigonjinn3567 That part of Russia is still Europe and, yes, it has its problems, but don't kid yourself about fossil fuels. Only the countries marked for de-industrialisation are (attempting) to transition away from fossil fuels, the industrial countries in the east are building more and more power stations and reliant on coal and oil, they'd never be able to operate without it.
@frankly703 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video, I love this country , I lived in Poland till 1999 and now I see there are a lot of changes , good for polish people , they deserve it.
@OmegaLaser-xy4ip3 ай бұрын
Poland is like Western Europe before mass migration. Clean, white and safe.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Alexa... please generate me sociopolitcal comment on European history using random words incl. "white" and "Safe".
@ipodman19102 ай бұрын
Only halfbrains use Alexa and references to it…
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
@@ipodman1910 is it someone that reads sarcasm? .. .. .. nooooo kids its just ipodman1910... ... dont be afraid... Say hello to him.
@adriaankurek50262 ай бұрын
Western europe Never was white
@ipodman19102 ай бұрын
@@adriaankurek5026 hahahaha - keep trying to lie! Maybe you convince yourself eventually!
@les69op3 ай бұрын
2:52 There is no gauge change between Germany and Poland - both countres use the same track width (1435mm), the same as almost all of Europe. Probably the locomotive was changed at the border or the semaphore light was simply red... ;)
@jacobshhm3 ай бұрын
It's interesting that Wartburg (the car you saw) reminds you of east Europe, it's actually a German car, ok maybe East German but still 😂
@Dziki_z_Lasu3 ай бұрын
Let's not correct him in this part. Yes it is as primitive as Ford Crown Victoria (frame in 90'!) definitely Eastern European car 😂
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
Wartburg, Tarpan, Skoda(s), Dacia(s), FIat iterations, Syrena, Żuk and lots more :)
@Dziki_z_Lasu2 ай бұрын
@@pawekaczmarek2542 When did you see Syrena outside a museum or someone's cars collection? Żuk and especially Tarpans are also extremely rare. Do you think people elsewhere don't keep old cars? Dacias and Skodas are being sold in the whole damn Europe and Fiats also in the USA, so I don't understand, what you mean by them.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
@@Dziki_z_Lasu but you are calling... I just mention car brands that may bring US tourists that 'Warsaw Pact' vibe... and some if them are working 'oldsmobile' units that you can see on streets if lucky (on yellow pkates). You jumped on we with assumptions you've made yourself... Luckily theres your last sentence when you just ask for clarification. Recommend starting from that ;)
@Dziki_z_Lasu2 ай бұрын
@@pawekaczmarek2542 They are hoping to see Zhiguli, Gaz and Zaporozhets (I hope I transliterated that correctly), they know from films, everywhere on streets not single old cars on yellow plates, especially fiat 125 - generic compact sedan from 60' or even 126 - some stylistically ruined descendant of the cult model 500, moreover from the brand well known to them - "Fix It Again Tonny". Tarpan literally looks like their more shitty redneck utilitarian trucks, maybe only Żuk will drag some attention, by its unimaginable ugliness. Syrena is also just a small pontoon body car from 50', interesting for car enthusiasts, but nothing special, same as the Warszawa sedan - some European old car, probably an Opel or something.
@bleachyunknown20003 ай бұрын
That mysterious tree is called jarzębina in Polish, or mountain ash in English. You can find it basically anywhere in Europe, Scandinava, Russia and even China.
@filipek1242 ай бұрын
A z owoców robi się świetną nalewkę - jarzębiak
@piotr78052 ай бұрын
31:40 what those people mean is, Nazis were not some random people which came from "all around", like the narrative being pushed through the last decade claims along the lie that concentration camps were Polish. Nazis were mostly German, and so is the responsibility for the committed atrocities. It might feel weird, but the topic is very important to the Polish people; our heroism during WW2 is something we cherish deeply, while there are not many things which makes us more angry than being blamed for something we fought against, especially when it's pure evil.
@LMB2229 күн бұрын
But Germans are NOT rejecting their responsibility for the NSDAP.
@Cypekeh3 ай бұрын
26:20 they were from Belarus/Ukraine/Russia and asked you for a cigarette in Russian, and then they asked where you're from, what is your nationality
@AirborneAnt3 ай бұрын
From the tone it didn’t seem like they “asked” seemed more like gimmie a cigarette…
@GILFHunter1213 ай бұрын
@@AirborneAnt I dont think so he just kept saying cigarette, then they said it in polish papieros(Cigerette) then they said in Spanish fumar(smoke) and after he says something like hurry comrade (Bigom Tovarishch) and then he asked who are you what nationality. They even tried to pay him for the smoke you can see the second guy hand him money lol
@Cypekeh3 ай бұрын
@@AirborneAnt Yeah, but it was more like "cigarette? cigarette?"
@andym93283 ай бұрын
@@GILFHunter121 They spoke russian. In russian there are papirosy and sigarety. Они говорили по-русски, в русском языке есть папиросы и сигареты.
@brys5553 ай бұрын
@@GILFHunter121 He asked "What language do you speak? Who are you? Nationality?" in strange russian. They might be really hungry for nicotine or trying to steal the phone like Gopniks do. Better to avoid these interactions if you don't know how to deal with them.
@dylanwardlow94383 ай бұрын
I'm an American living near Warsaw for ~8 years. The economic opportunities and social relationships are a bit tougher than in the U.S. but it's actually quite chill and nice to live here overall. Extremely safe as well
@sirrathersplendid48253 ай бұрын
Agreed. Poles are not as open as westerners and it’s quite hard to form long-term friendships as an outsider. The rules of social interaction are simply quite different.
@Tomm40702 ай бұрын
@@sirrathersplendid4825 this is language barrier
@sirrathersplendid48252 ай бұрын
@@Tomm4070 - Maybe. Even if you speak reasonable Polish there is a culture difference. Polish social life is much more family-oriented (which at the end of the day is not a bad thing).
@tadzique2 ай бұрын
@@sirrathersplendid4825language man. You live here you better start learning. Otherwise you'll always be considered an outsider. I know a guy from Congo, who came to Poland for his studies. He had integrated so well he had forgotten French. Speaks Polish , lives Polish life. Integration and an effort made by immigrants is the key to successful future life in another country
@Zeebee19713 ай бұрын
@4:50 Monument commemorating Polish soldiers who fought in the Greater Poland Uprising of (1918-1919) @13:03 Poznan Army Monument (WWII 1939) @31:16 Excavated foundations of the Saxon Palace and Brühl Palace. The only existing above-ground remnant of the Saxon Palace is a fragment of the colonnade which was the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
@johnnesbit23713 ай бұрын
In our variously under-educated generational now, it serves greatly to mention that for generations, for centuries, Poland was a great power. Until the early 1700's this was indisputably the case. And Poland's great explanand for today is that the many expressions of classicality, et grandeur, that we see around us in an urb like Warsawa are home-grown and NOT imported.
@Stan-mp8zz3 ай бұрын
Moved to NYC in 89 from Poland wow my country has changed
@tiko46213 ай бұрын
If you weren’t already retired I’d say pack it up and take your money back home 🤣 it’s much better there
@Fil133 ай бұрын
Just if you want to answer, why did you move? Was it really that bad under communism? I'm curious to hear one personal opinion
@justaguy92243 ай бұрын
@@Fil13Poland in the 80s was one of the poorest countries in Europe. Despite Poland being an agricultural giant, food was rationed, with the rations being so low, that the average Polish household was almost starving. The currency was also pretty weak. Polish families that had a car regularly went to markets in different eastern bloc countries (especially to Hungary) to sell clothes and other stuff that was relatively cheap and available in Poland to buy quality groceries from that market.
@rrolf713 ай бұрын
@@Fil13 1989 was the rock bottom for Poland after all the turmoil of 1980s, including a period of martial law and massive country-wide strikes. The ruling party agreed for semi-free elections because the country was practically non-functional and they knew they couldn't keep it much longer. One of the poorest countries of Eastern Bloc at the time, and it really says something.
@yakoobski3 ай бұрын
@@Fil13 After WW2 our Western Allies (Churchill and Roosevelt) sold us to Stalin and left us behind The Iron Curtain (Yalta Conference). Even though we won the war we were basicaly a slave state controlled by the Soviets. Stalin installed a puppet regime in here fully controlled by the Kremlin. 50% of Poland (85% of Warsaw) was turned into rubble during the war. Under the Soviet regime everything that was produced in Poland was packed into trains and transported east to Mother Russia which didn't allow Poland to rebuild properly after the war. Extreme poverty, borderline starvation, extreme policing of the nation and any form of activism meant imprisonment or death. Towards the end of Soviet Union in the 80s it was the worst. Millions of Poles fled to USA, Canada, France and West Germany in the 80s. The remaining population that stayed joined countrywide strikes and overthrown the puppet regime but at very high cost due to Martial Law during which tanks and militarized political police was rolled out throughout the country. Nearly 10 years of striking against the regime finaly resulted in first free elections in '89. In the world WW2 ended in '45. For Poles WW2 actually truly ended in '89 due to 44 years under the thumb of Soviet puppet regime.
@mayonnaise12713 ай бұрын
Been waiting for a Poland episode for a LONG time
@brianjschumer3 ай бұрын
My grandmother was Polish, from what I understand they loved Poland, but with a big family to feed they migrated to USA about 120 years ago
@leredditcommander82083 ай бұрын
They loved poland so much that they didnt want to live there. Ok my guy. LOL
@sirrathersplendid48253 ай бұрын
@@leredditcommander8208- Poland in the 1900s to 1920s was a very different world than it is today. Very rural and very poor after a century of foreign occupation.
@watchdog1633 ай бұрын
@@leredditcommander8208 You can love your country and seek better income, you know. Maybe that's too much complexity for your little brain.
@nsz-lf6yk2 ай бұрын
@@watchdog163👍🇵🇱
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
So technically it may be that she left Russia, Prussia or Austro-Hungary [didnt want to be mean!]... I ve recently found a genetic match with a great-great-... cousin that had also some of his ancestor migrated around that time to US. COuldnt find the connection with two wars in between our families stories but hips...I mean GENES dont lie ;)
@VisionofTomo2 ай бұрын
Poland is an amazing country My Australian father lives there with his polish wife not far outside of Poznan. Great to see you visiting there! and nice to see the main square of Poznan finished . It was being renovated for a few years
@Tennessee64473 ай бұрын
Shout out to Poland for standing strong against the migrant invasion. The US could learn something from them.
@gloryglory56883 ай бұрын
Shut it you ignorant, insular cousin humping troglodyte
@marchauchler16222 ай бұрын
Why? You are all immigrants or children of immigrants.. ir whom are you referring to?
@suchlimk2 ай бұрын
half the people in the video he talks to are immigrants
@antonironstag50852 ай бұрын
@@marchauchler1622 immigrants work in the country they move to, learn the language and integrate. Migrants do none of these things and harass locals. They also get free room and board from the government
@vitekzi26152 ай бұрын
White immigrants from countries with similar culture not haitans somalians and others africans and asians@@suchlimk
@Ivuk73 ай бұрын
26:20 They were not Poles, they sounded more like Ukrainians or Russians. Poland accepted 2 million Ukrainians when the war broke out, unfortunately many bad elements also arrived who are harassing people on the streets of big cities :(
@martindworak3 ай бұрын
They were definitely not Polish, in Polish we call a cigarette “papieros”, they looked like Russian bums, they obviously heard you speaking English and that’s their #1 target!
@AirborneAnt3 ай бұрын
What were they saying? Gimmie a cigarette?!???
@Priest923 ай бұрын
That's fucked up
@Ivuk73 ай бұрын
@@AirborneAnt Yes, they wanted to smoke, but they didn't spoke polish also they look like Russians (or east Ukrainians), they have this east fenotype of face.
@BillBondsHasAPosse3 ай бұрын
We need to get them out
@Knurek0073 ай бұрын
Ah, that's crazy, you were in my country! I followed your travels in Africa. It was so interesting! It's so fun to see you here now. Thank you so much for visiting us!
@Resc0ne2 ай бұрын
The thing about being called "middle europea" rather than eastern is rather more related to the history and language more than geography itself. Yes we are in central europe and the slavic language group we belong to is a westslavic group (with Czech, slovak and łużyk - gerrman minority language) while eastslavic is russian, ukrainian and belarusian. Those are completely different languages even while we share some words or some sound similar. Also due to history of fights with russia, that they occupied Poland for over 40 years and what they are doin now we dont want do be anyhow assosiated with them and when you say east eurrope in europe first thing that comes to mind is russia. It's also related to when europe wass divided into two blocks: east and west. We just want to be ourselves, not eastern nor western, just a different culture.
@captainshakesbeard24533 ай бұрын
Mass migration is the reason Brussells is a dive and Warsaw is clean and beautiful
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
You know nothing John Snow...
@ipodman19102 ай бұрын
You know nothing emotyhead. Ukrainians are basically Poles - they have the same culture as they were civilised by Poles for hundreds of years when they were citizens off Rzeczpospolita. Są cages from Africa and Asia is entirely different thing.
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
@@ipodman1910 civilised by...? Well its a pity that 'programme' skipped your lineage somehow...
@pawekaczmarek25422 ай бұрын
@@ipodman1910 btw why you use close up picture of vgina as profile picture? (Ill show it tomorrow to my UA students on their first classes in the morning to motivate them to learn hard at "Basics of being civilised". Thanks!
@S4v3_w3st2 ай бұрын
Mass non white immigration *
@webMonkey_3 ай бұрын
I am telling you the people of Poland are the the real gems, a little reserved initially but wonderful people and helpful. But they are going down the same Economic hole that the rest of the west is going down, making everything too expensive.
@1Reddd3 ай бұрын
That's what happens when your economy grows. It's a sign that Poland is progressing. Polish people now are making more than they ever have, the prices of things will reflect that.
@webMonkey_3 ай бұрын
@@1Reddd it’s not inevitable that house prices have to grow so fast. It’s just a misallocation of resources.
@bannedeverywhere3 ай бұрын
@@1Reddd No it's a sign government has large deficits and prints lots of money to devalue debt impoverishing population so much you have homeless millionaires in california. It's basically global Weimar nowadays.
@gma72052 ай бұрын
@@bannedeverywhere Maybe the Fed should´ve tight their balance sheet after 2008 just like they did in 1929. Great times... or should I say, Great Depression?
@mireklalas2 ай бұрын
It has a refreshing attitude toward Poland: good pacing and video quality, curiosity mixed with historical tidbits, open-mindedness, and a great sense of humor to top it off. I enjoyed watching all of it despite the rather challenging length.
@TRICK-OR-TREAT2363 ай бұрын
DUDE ! YOU'RE IN POLAND AND YOU'RE NOT CHECKING OUT THE PIEROGIS 😂🤣😂
@arminiuszmazowszanin26703 ай бұрын
its pierogi.
@sgolowka3 ай бұрын
@@arminiuszmazowszanin2670 it's pirogi
@Aldronex3 ай бұрын
@@sgolowka its pierogi.
@sgolowka3 ай бұрын
@@Aldronex if you're Polish, sure it is pierogi to you.. if you Russian or other Slavic it's pirog plural pirogi , etymology is the same... LOL
@mif47313 ай бұрын
@@sgolowka no
@markg1553 ай бұрын
Travelling by train in Germany, buy a seat ticket as well. You can enforce it if someone is sitting on your spot. You're gonna be standing otherwise. Regarding Poland, they are now where we were in from 1988 until 1995 and that is a GOOD thing, as it was probably the peak of 'western european' society.
@RevoeLad3 ай бұрын
I love the fact that Poland is proud and not ashamed of its culture and it’s willing to fight to preserve it. Britain is the opposite today unfortunately.
@archidecydent2 ай бұрын
I was in Britain last summer to visit my sister, and I visited a lot of stunning places. It is beautiful country when you know where to go. So please don't underestimate it. Cheers
@RevoeLad29 күн бұрын
@@archidecydent I didn’t say it was beautiful. It’s the best country in the world I said it’s being run by people who are ashamed of their history and culture. Read my comment!
@LMB2229 күн бұрын
Isn't Italy or France proud of their culture?
@skaworld5093 ай бұрын
Southern europeans escape the heat by travelling to Poland, Germany, England, Ireland, France, etc., And northern europeans go south in the winter. It works out quite well - no visa requirements!
@doseofjean3 ай бұрын
Compared to a few months ago i feel like the happiest you’ve been in your recent videos. I love the energy 🎉🎉 cant wait for the next one!
@yvettechodek85012 ай бұрын
Polacy walczyli na wielu frontach w obronie wolnosci z okrzykiem na ustach " Za wolnosc waszą i naszą" z tego tez powodu zostawili Francuzów i stanęli po stronie haitanczyków jak poznali sytuacje z bliska , rozumieli co to walka o wolnosc kraju. Nasz kraj to nasz dom i nasze zasady. Wszystkie miejsca pomieci w polsce z czasow wojen czy powstań odnosza sie do walki glownie przeciwko zaborcom Niemcom, Rosjanom i Austryjakom nie wazne w jakim okresie dziejow.
@MaxQWERTY-d5x23 күн бұрын
Raptem dwieście lat historii Haitii... i niestety państwo upadłe gdzie właśnie wszyscy Haitańczycy pròbują się przenieść do gdziekolwiek tylko jak najdalej od Haitii kraju gangòw i voodoo gdzie człowiek żyje średnio 35 lat... Piękna jest karta polskich legionistòw ktòrzy wysłani przez Napoleona aby spacyfikować powstanie niewolnikòw przyłączyli się do nich. Niestety ich awersja do cywilizacji zewnętrznej nie pomogła w wywalczeniu sobie w pełni funkcjonującego państwa. Korupcja i przemoc to dzień powszedni Haiti. I naprawdę nie widać światełka w tunelu. BTW pracując w Londynie dwie dekady temu miałem przyjemność pracować z Haitanczykiem - potomkiem po Polakach. Potrafił tylko jedno słowo po polsku po pradziadach powiedzieć: Psiakrew ... 🤣
@irsalman3 ай бұрын
I visited Poland 2 weeks ago, by far the most surprising country of my visits... I was not expecting the progress I saw especially after visiting Bulgaria and Romania the neighboring countries. BTW most people greeted me with dobrý den (Hello).
@Ivuk73 ай бұрын
Yeah, we mostly using Dzień Dobry or Dobry wieczór (Good Morning, Good Evening), Cześć or Hej like Tommy said (it's just Hi), we also using Witam (Hello :)
@sirrathersplendid48253 ай бұрын
How did Bulgaria and Romania compare? Back in the bad old days of the Warsaw Pact they used to be quite similar to Poland.
@irsalman3 ай бұрын
@@sirrathersplendid4825Bulgaria had good roads, was very nice in some places but there were places that felt Eastern European still whereas Romania has done nothing for their roads and there are lots of buildings that still look communist. I have to mention the people of Romania have a bad reputation but were nothing but hospitable in my experiences I was purchased a kabob by a total stranger because the street vendor didn’t take cards, dollars, euros or pounds and then I was offered a coffee or drink by a taxi driver who had to stop for water on our route which was his entire payment for the ride. Romania also has a big wealth disparity, you will see poverty and a $500,000 Rolls Royce at the same time. Both countries are safer than a typical city in America.
@manchagojohnsonmanchago63673 ай бұрын
That means good day
@IhaveBigFeet3 ай бұрын
@@sirrathersplendid4825In order it’s Poland>Romania>Bulgaria. The infrastructure in Poland at this point is better than half of Western Europe, they’ve done a great job at transforming the country. Romania has done great in Bucharest, it’s become a rich city but outside Bucharest they’re not changing much and Bulgaria just seems to have given up due to corruption. Bulgaria is one of the only countries that looks back at their time as a Soviet puppet happily as life back then was better than for them now.
@filip_rain_bow3 ай бұрын
Na zdrowie! Dziękuję za wizytę 💪
@bbustin17473 ай бұрын
My dentist was a teenage survivor of the Warsaw arising against the Germans… it was a literal trip back in time when he was describing that time in his life as I would sit in the dentist chair. Not a big man but a massive heart. He had to be. At the time he was 85 if I recall and still wanted to work. Not because he had to. He liked to. He retired and sold his practice. This totally reminds me of those conversations
@Stan-mp8zz3 ай бұрын
Tommy great to see you jn Poland
@aye36783 ай бұрын
The polish people are beautiful and so kind hearted.
@ScOOrK_2 ай бұрын
10:30 you are forgetting one thing here - Soviets JOINED Nazis on attack on Poland - it was a join venture.
@Staroy3 ай бұрын
The tree at 19:06 is Sorbus aucuparia, commonly called rowan. You can make really good jelly with it!
@biglance3 ай бұрын
Wielkopolska, Greater Poland...lots of fighting happened there, good people out there that love freedom.
@Jongo12 ай бұрын
Whenever you go back to Poland you must visit Gdansk. It's has some of the most interesting architecture and there's something about it that makes it stand out amongst all the other Polish cities.
@Mantis112352 ай бұрын
Some would say that ‘something’ is that it’s German 😅 Well, Germanic anyway
@kindbud3 ай бұрын
my last name is polish, dont know anything about my bloodline but i'd love to visit
@bluered32283 ай бұрын
My mother's side of the family is Polish. When they came over in the early 1900's they specifically refused to allow the children to learn Polish as they wanted them to be Americans. How times change.
@nhlibra3 ай бұрын
Very sad that there are people in this country that know nothing about their lineage. It has NOTHING to do with not learning the language of your elders and much to do with someone not teaching you about the country where your elders are from.
@bluered32283 ай бұрын
@@nhlibra that simply wasn't a thing back in the day. People came here to be American.
@Nswix3 ай бұрын
@@nhlibrawhy? I'm like 8th generation. I don't even know which country my last name is from...
@nhlibra3 ай бұрын
@@bluered3228 My family came here to find work and definitely assimilated. One side was English, my great grandfather was a stone cutter and my area employed granite quarry workers. The other side are Scottish. I was informed of both sides of my family. My son is next layer down in my lineage and Ive passed on all the stories, music, trade information, etc. I took him to the Scottish Highland Games in my area when he was growing up. There are no questions because I made the effort to pass it along. My father's cousin did our family tree, we all received copies from her. Im sorry you weren't encouraged to learn your family history. It's beyond not wanting your progeny to learn a language. I have friends with many different ethnicities, they don't speak their grandparents languages either. But they know the foods, the holidays, the music and their family's stories nonetheless.
@Celticcross6883 ай бұрын
WARSAW went through hell during WW2😢
@musical_lolu48113 ай бұрын
It saw war. It was raw.
@RaphaelDelaney2 ай бұрын
@@musical_lolu4811 especially in War Saw
@johnners9112 ай бұрын
My first interaction in Poland, in 2002 wasn't so good. I had tried to learn some Polish and went to a Tourist Information centre in Warsaw. I was very excited to try out what I had learned. I said, " Hi how are you? Do you have a map of the city please?" The lady surprisingly understood me but looked disgusted and said in English, "Is that the only Polish you know?" while handing me a map. Talk about being deflated. Poland is a great country with great people and has changed a lot since then, but can still hold a few little surprises for visitors.
@nickeywilson78832 ай бұрын
Maybe she was disgusted because in Poland you don't address a stranger as "you", but as "Mr., Mrs."?
@johnners9112 ай бұрын
@@nickeywilson7883 Yes my behaviour was thoroughly disgusting. You are right, of course.
@Hitithardify3 ай бұрын
I was in Poland this summer before I went to Volunteer in Ukraine. I think Poland is a heavily underrated country. My experience with the people wasn't as pleasant as yours, but I would gladly go back.
@jerkomirko3 ай бұрын
Perfect timing! Love your content. Interesting and educational that's not in a boring way.
@michaelmckelvey51222 ай бұрын
3.08 I used to take the train that started at and went all the way from the Dutch port of Hoek van Holland to Moscow via Warsaw in Poland. The train wheels were never changed at the Polish border, only when the train reached the Russian Federation.
@RassTIE3 ай бұрын
My Boy in my home country finally ! :D Welcome and enjoy your stay
@Adnan-nz4bb3 ай бұрын
I was at that part of Estonia, Narva, at the end of the video once. Very interesting and tense place to be, but indeed eye opening. Looking forward to the video!
@thefernwehtype2 ай бұрын
As a Pole living in Spain, it makes me so happy to see so many happy foreigners living or visiting Poland. Guys, you are always welcome to come because Poles love to interact with other cultures 🫶!
@Damonm683 ай бұрын
Watching you walk through Berlin's Hauptbahnhof and living in Berlin for about 3 years, brings back good memories for me. Never took the Train across to Poland but it was nice to see. Appreciate your videos.
@SULLYco3 ай бұрын
You’re the best sabbatical. Never change
@Ekowal19652 ай бұрын
I was born in Poland and live in North America over 40 years. I visit every few years. Progress in my country is amazing. Every time it is very hard to leave. I would like to come back but think It would be hard for me to integrate in workforce. But in few years I will be retired and it will be much easier.