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@hofimastah Жыл бұрын
5% of polish people don't have a bathroom in their home. It's a lot but the thumbnail is misrepresenting this number.
@JmKrokY Жыл бұрын
Always bro
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
The toilet map is fake. The old houses, some of them made of woods were transformed into barns or warehouses on the countyside, they "technically" are considered homes, but factually they are not. You are making videos before even analyzing and verifying information. And also you are German, knowing absolutely nothing about the country and making the video about it you are showing your utter ignorance, lack of will to research topic and your lack of eductaion. So please stop embarrassing yourself and delete this video immediately.
@czwarty7878 Жыл бұрын
@@hofimastah it's straight up misinformation and clickbait, he should take down this video and put up fixed one
@death-istic9586 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos!💚
@MrJaswedrowniczek Жыл бұрын
I just want to clarify few facts: 1. In Poland in 2023 it is extremely hard to find building without a toilet. 2. Map description states "percentage of flats without a toilet" it does not state that those flats have no access to one. For example you may have a old social housing with very small flats with shared toilet/lavatory for each flor of the building. Most of statistical data comes form years prior of 1989(Polish People Republic ). It is possible that data might not have been properly updated because in Poland (unlike in USA) many changes to a private building are not subject to building permit (you just declare that changes are going to be made ). I find it hard to believe that such big percentage of flats has no individual toilets. It leads me to believe this map might be connected to social housing data. 3. Social hosing in Poland is long and interesting story, but in nutshell a lot of buildings for less cooperative tenants (for example drunks )will have shared toilets because government is obliged to give them shelter and it is much cheaper to make a 20 flats per floor with just few toilets and showers. Plus it is easier to maintain and check for damage ( copper piping, radiators and anything that can be ripped out of the wall is a welcome source of income for above mentioned citizens). 4. Why in eastern Poland toilets were outside ? They used to be. In 1920's after defining Russians Felicjan Sławoj Składkowski (polish prime minster , doctor, freemason, Polish Army General) has made it his mission to improve medical standard of living for common people and forced local authorities to encourage building latrines in rural areas. People at first didn't understand the importance of clean water and made fun of him calling those toilets "slawoiki". Why outside ? Because there were no sewage systems in rural parts of Poland. They would dig a pit and put a wooden outhouse/WC on top of it . Later after WWII those pits would evolve to become septic tanks connected to indor toilet. But in many places outhouses were left as additional toilets. Currently almost everyone has access to toilet in Poland. 5. Yes mentally you can see a big difference between different parts of Poland and how people think. You can se influence of prussian, austrian and russian occupation on their mentality and how they behave.
@avishnevsky7394 Жыл бұрын
Same thing about toilets in Ukraine. During soviet times, people in villages were not able to build a new house or extend existing one, indoor toilet was luxury. The only option for villagers was wooden VC (like shed) on top of hole in the ground. Moreover, toilet paper was not available for many people, even in cities. That's why every household loved to read newspapers 😆😆😆 (first toilet paper factory in the USSR was built in 1969) After soviet union collapse, people in villages were able to renovate houses and, as important part of renovation, add indoor toilet, start to use toilet paper etc.
@tomaszzakrzewski379011 ай бұрын
According to GUS (statisticall bureau of Poland) in 2021 800k houses doesn't have toilets. So it not a made up story but hard fact from official goverment body.
@Dazaioak11 ай бұрын
@@tomaszzakrzewski3790 As he said "common lavatory", They have the access to toilets.
@tomaszzakrzewski379011 ай бұрын
@@Dazaioak It can be that 100 years old wooden houses, abandoned or where some elderly people still live, have toilets outside. But honestly, I don't know anyone who doesn't have a toilet inside. And I live in Poland. But in a part that has been ruled by Austro-Hungary during the partition :)
@anantea11 ай бұрын
Also the difference in thinking is mostly rural thing. In cities and especially big cities the difference is not really noticeable imo.
@DominiqEffect Жыл бұрын
In Poland we have a running joke about, when we see a map of Poland no matter of the subject it show we say: "widać zabory" - it mean: we can cleary see partitions of Poland time period. We even use this joke phrase when the weather forecast is show.
@AltIng9154 Жыл бұрын
The weather forcast follows old borders.... 😊
@Rude_i_Wredne Жыл бұрын
Couple comments from a native: First of all, you skipped a MAJOR point in this history which was the Napolleonic wars, when Poland briefly gained "independence". After Napolleon was defeated, this French satellite state was occupied by Tzar Russia and the Tzar called himself the King of Poland and the process of unifying this new Poland into Russia began. That's why the so called divide between "Poland A" and "Poland B" doesn't follow the 1795 partition borders, it follows the 1815 ones. Second, minor correction - Gdańsk was Polish prior to partitions, so it wasn't that long gone. However Szczecin and Wrocław haven't been under direct Polish control since the Piast dynasty, so almost 1000 years. Third, minor correction as well - the area in the north east you've shown around 5:00 isn't a big metropolitan area, but rather it's the area where the Lukashenka-caused migrant crisis is the strongest. Although the remaining two red spots are Warszawa, Łódź and Kraków respectively. And in terms of those pesky bathrooms - the eastern Poland is way less urbanized and it's a common practice in the Polish countryside to build so called "latrynas", moving the toilet part of the bathroom outside of the house, for the simple reason that there is no sewage system connected to those remote farms. In general it's not that practical to build bathrooms when you still get your water from a well of sorts. As far as I know, the urban apartments build by communists usually have bathrooms inside. There are also some rare instances where the less "exclusive" flats could have had a bathroom shared with couple of neighbours, but I don't know whether that counts for the statistics.
@moscuadelendaest Жыл бұрын
What are you on about with the latrynas. I haven't seen a functioning one in a quite a while. There's a thing called a 'septic tank'...
@ten_tego_teges Жыл бұрын
The area in the North-East is populated by Orthodox and/or Belarusian speaking Belarusians and Muslim Tatars, who are not keen on a party centring its message around Poland+Catholicism. They've been voting liberal long before the migrant crisis.
@ten_tego_teges Жыл бұрын
@@moscuadelendaest Same, I have never seen that anywhere...
@jerzyjerzykowski1281 Жыл бұрын
Wrocław was Polish, then Czech and only for the last 200 years German.
@입체적-별스타 Жыл бұрын
I have a question. Is Poland a left-wing nationalist country?
@czwarty7878 Жыл бұрын
From 2020 data the percentage of homes with indoor toilets in Poland is 94%. Of remaining 6% majority comes from pre-war tenements, which were built with shared toilets per floor - not outhouses. First 13 seconds of your video and it's already nonsense
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
He really needs to delete this video. Sit back and reflect on his life. Lying and spreading false information to make money out of it should never be tolerated
@czwarty7878 Жыл бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6h I think I know what could be up with it. He might not lie, but mistaken "percentage of houses connected to municipal sewerage" with "percentage of indoor plumbing (as in, toilets)". Thing is, many houses in country are not connected to sewerage, but have septic tanks. But this is the same in US or Germany, there many countryside houses have septic tanks too - but nobody would say "US countryside doesn't have toilets", it's insane. If it's honest mistake then okay, but he should delete the video, edit it and put it up again. And get rid of this horrible misinformation clickbait miniature that makes Poland seem like India of Europe, what the hell is even that?
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
@@czwarty7878 When you want to make a money out of video you play and expert about you need to first research the topic properly
@overlord165 Жыл бұрын
Good point
@Vielenberg Жыл бұрын
The map clearly shows those 6% are in the rural areas were there are no tenement houses. The houses without bathrooms are mostly wooden houses occupied by the older generation.
@JamesL42 Жыл бұрын
Because when Russia and Austria owned the Eastern parts, they didn't care for them as they were still ethnically Polish, so their development was slow over those 100+ years of Poland being occupied. Meanwhile the "German" half was treated not as a foreign subject, but as an integral part of Germany as it was ethnically German in many areas and colonised by Germans in others, so it received far more development and industrialisation. It also helped that Germany was an industrial power far more so than Austria or Russia too, so naturally the German areas would be more industrialised, "modern" and western. Them being more transient and therefore less traditional and more progressive also makes a lot of sense.
@defendfreedom1390 Жыл бұрын
Germany wanted to germanize, Russia Wanted to russify, but Germany had something called Rule of Law. Germany was just a better organized country.
@JamesL42 Жыл бұрын
@@defendfreedom1390 True but do also remember Poles were also simply not a majority in most of the regions of what is now Western Poland, as it was a German majority, so again I do think that plays a massive role in why the west turned out more developed. In general, states are more incentivised to help their majority cultures and to care less for the minority groups. This also explains why it's also true that the former Austrian (south) Poland, where cultural assimilation was less of a driving force than in Russian Poland, and where it was also a very ordered country like German Poland, still to this day has more in common with the east than the west.
@JesusMagicPanties Жыл бұрын
@@JamesL42 "Western Poland" consists of lands that belonged to Poland before the war like Wielkopolska (Poznań) which was always ethnically Polish despite Germanization and was the site of the only successful, Polish national uprising ( "driving out" the Germans after WWI). As well as consists of former East German lands "granted" to Poland by Stalin theoretically in exchange for the eastern lands taken away - but really to create a root of Polish-German conflict for a long time , which Russia would play out geostrategically to its advantage. These lands are populated with people deported from eastern Poland taken away by the Soviets. So the argument about "German civilizational influence" as a reason for a progressive political stance on this population completely collapses, because it never had anything to do with Germany.
@JamesL42 Жыл бұрын
@@JesusMagicPanties I'm aware of this, sorry if I offended by acting like Germany used to always own that land, I'm aware that originally the land that is now Polish that was German was not always German and as I think I even mentioned, was colonised by Germans over many years. Indeed I don't think it has anything to do with Germany as a Civilisation, it simply has to do with the fact more Germans lived in German Poland than Austrians lived in Austrian Poland or Russians lived in Russian Poland. It has nothing to do with German Civilisation and I even pointed that out in another comment where I talk about how Austrian Poland still votes alongside Eastern Poland despite being occupied by Germans as well.
@Laretz Жыл бұрын
But the Germans in Poland still felt as if they were dealing with an inferior race to be “improved upon”, and it was Prussian poles that wanted to distinguish themselves from Russian poles; German economist Johann Karl Rodbertus-Jagetzow ([1861] 1890: 280-81), wrote “We are a colonizing people. But our colonies are not overseas, they are grafted directly onto the trunk of our race: east of Elba they reach Lake Peipus and the most southeastern corner of the Carpathian mountains […]. Centuries ago in Lusatia, Silesia and Pomerania we freed them from that serfdom within which Russia still flounders today.” Quoting from Petri (2018: 107), “Not so paradoxically, for these Prussian Polish the usurping foreigner became a reason to not only protest, but also to proudly distinguish themselves from the poor conationals forced to live in underdeveloped conditions under the rule of the “anachronistic” Tsarist regime”
@georgebalan8452 Жыл бұрын
We have exactly the same situation in Romania, where borders of the former Austro-Hungarian Empire are clearly visible in all these aspects of society, social development, economics, political choices, not to mention architecture...
@evilmonkeyfromchriscloset1211 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. And which areas are thought to be more conservative or progressive, more developed or undeveloped?
@arondebreceni9464 Жыл бұрын
Transylvania was never part of Romania, it only became part of Romania after the treaty following WW1.
@belagarzo63 Жыл бұрын
Transylvania, as part of the Kingdom of Hungary for 1000 years, is still a better place. In the 13th century, the Vlachs of Slavic origin came under the control of the Cumans in the area beyond the Carpathians from the Balkan mountain peoples. After 150 years of genocide by the Turks, which destroyed half of the Hungarian population, they began to infiltrate Transylvania. They lived much better there than in their original kingdom founded in 1881 with the German king. Entering the war on the last day of WWI, Transylvania was annexed as a "territory returning to the motherland" along with 3 million Hungarians. The "returnee" area was almost as big as Romania at the time. Not to mention the architecture, for the known reason. Social aspects, social development, economics, political decisions are still strongly rooted in the remnants of the former communist dictatorship and anti-Hungarianism as a permanent trump card.
@bigbarry8343 Жыл бұрын
the guy is obviously lying, he must be funded by powerful german lobby working for decades to smear Poland and Polish people.
@Donkeypapuas Жыл бұрын
@@belagarzo63 Really? It was part of a Kingdom who disapeared after Mohacs? And reapered only at 1867. So for you a milrnium is equal to 600.
@Pawel_Mrozek Жыл бұрын
In Poland we used to say "The only maps of Poland where you don't see partitions are geological maps"
@smerfdzikus2334 Жыл бұрын
haha dobre xd. To smutne, jak nasz kraj jest podzielony, pod każdym względem: politycznym, gospodarczym, historycznym...
@tomislawowczy3750 Жыл бұрын
@@smerfdzikus2334 nic dziwnego, jesteśmy tworem polsko-niemickim
@Dziki_z_Lasu Жыл бұрын
Yes, luckily Trans-European Suture Zone - residue of ancient mountains, from which only Holly Cross Mountains are still visible on the surface, don't correspond to the "partitions" pattern. However this division is still visible on several maps, like income of counties or the Nowak/Kowalski most frequent surname division.
@smerfdzikus2334 Жыл бұрын
@@tomislawowczy3750 No nie zgodzę się. Jesteśmy Polakami. Jasne, zabory zrobiły swoje. Ale mamy własny język, własną historię i kulturę. Nie jesteśmy żadnym tworem tylko narodem polskim.
@ThePresentPast_ Жыл бұрын
Someone sent me a map of soil acidity between the east and the west and there is also a clear division there, so many interesting stories
@wojtekpolska1013 Жыл бұрын
FYI its not that these houses dont have bathrooms and ppl crap in outhouses. its just that in these areas rarely the buildings (kamienice) to have a shared bathroom for multiple people living on the same floor (kind of like bathrooms in cheap hotels where you have to go out of your room and use a shared bathroom) BUT thats still not the majority, even in the areas that are in white, look at key of this map, its kinda ridiculous, they put 56%-80% in the same colour on the key. even in the white areas, the majority of people still have their own bathrooms in their house. basically for all the map keys, its just kind of ridiculous colouring, same with the housing one, they put 30%-80% in the same colour, thats just stupid.
@EruWan_Ernest Жыл бұрын
It's a map that classify people connected to city/public sewer system and ones that have own septic tanks.
@sarantis1995 Жыл бұрын
@@EruWan_Ernest is it? That's not the same as having own toilet, by any means
@adrianxx7363 Жыл бұрын
@@sarantis1995yes , but it can’t be map about toilet access, because nobody asked about it in last census like Mr. Pifczyk claim on X. They asked only about source of running water
@adrianxx7363 Жыл бұрын
PS I checked it because by statistics eastern Poland currently start to overtake western in average income. And I think just legend for this map which Mr. Pifczyk found was mistake of GUS (Polish statistic bureau). I posted that to Mr. Pifczyk but he didnt wanna talk about this. Probably „fame” is more important 😅
@chud-of4yb Жыл бұрын
Every single map in this video is cherry picked manipulated data, this video was made by an idiot for idiots.
@marcosv.418011 ай бұрын
I am a portuguese living in Poland for 20 years, in Malopolska, and I am a Geography teacher - hence, I do pay attention to stats. The information you are trying to pass is wrong, as is the idea behind it. Certainly, most houses have bathrooms inside - what many of these houses have is septic tanks, rather than being connected to the sewage network, which for statistical purposes is often perceived as not having sewage at all, since you do not pay taxes for it. Please, inform yourself better before saying such things... or just visit the places first!
@user-mh2uj7ns6h11 ай бұрын
He's literally makibg money out of disinfomation and poor research, but KZbin enables this because of clicks. It's unfair.
@---.-----9 ай бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6hhe is surely gay.
@yamao49388 ай бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6hYour guys were shaming and defaming a credible KZbinr for slight mistakes. What's going on with you Polish?
@user-mh2uj7ns6h8 ай бұрын
@@yamao4938 If you want to make money out of youtube it's best you do not mislead people. KZbinrs aren't immune from criticism. And especially not make dumb thumbnails implying the other half do not have toilets
@yamao49388 ай бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6hThanks to your guys fuming and over cynical attitudes (reducing others products and research to just "money", maybe you can also be classified as " money" in a different sense). I skimmed through google to fact check a bit. Turns out there really isn't much to criticize about his toilet stats. Only because they don't count outside toilets as toilets and you are here like they just fabricated justification for Polish genocide. Now you can all just chill and take a bath or whatever. Have a good day and use a toilet
@lisamirako1073 Жыл бұрын
In post-war western Poland, the lands of the expropriated and expelled Germans were only privatized to a small extent and nationalized to a large extent, in contrast to the old Polish regions. This explains the difference in the extent of collectivization between the two parts of the country during the communist period.
@heartsofiron4ever Жыл бұрын
While a lot of Poles didn't like the idea of losing their old eastern homeland and moving to the new western lands, which felt complety German. The German lands were a lot more developed and industrialized.
@tancreddehauteville764 Жыл бұрын
@@heartsofiron4ever That was the whole point as to why the Polish communist government wanted the border to be pushed as far west as possible.
@Slashplite Жыл бұрын
Its one of the few elements , but there is no simple answer
@nurval1093 Жыл бұрын
it was like when the ussr took kaliningrad.
@leoprg5330 Жыл бұрын
So who owns the farming land in western Poland now, if not individuals? Corporations, state, church? Here in Czechia, most of land confiscated during communism was privatized to previous owners, often they resold it or rent it to bigger farmers, that's why we have much bigger average size of farming land per one farm compering to Austria etc
@Artur_M. Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry, but this video is very shallow in some aspects. You jump from 1795 straight to 1922 and then attempt to analyse and explain the lasting legacy of pre-1918 imperial borders. But anyone paying attention can see that these borders look nothing like those in 1795. That's because they were drawn in 1815 at the Congress of Vienna, one of many important things you didn't address at all. At around 5:00 you highlighted five areas outside of Western Poland, where the opposition decisively won, describing them as bigger cities. This applies to three of them: Kraków, Łódź (my city), and Warsaw with the surrounding area, but very much *not* to the two in the very east. That considerable area by the Belarusian border, aside from the middle-sized city of Białystok, is very rural. It even includes the Białowieża primaeval forest. And that part in the very south-eastern corner of the country is an even more sparsely populated relative wilderness of the Bieszczady Mountains. It would suggest that other factors might be at play beyond the simple "rural areas are conservative, urban areas are progressive". But why let complex reality get in the way of simplistic explanations? Before anyone asks, no, I'm not a PiS supporter. I strongly recommend checking out the channel Sir Manatee. It's run by a German history student from Göttingen, who (among other topics) made several very good videos about Polish history in the XIX and early XX centuries, including its intersections with German history. He actually bothered to learn how to pronounce Polish names before attempting to educate the world about Poland. Imagine that. Speaking of pronunciation, I also recommend the video "How to read in Czech and Polish" made by an Australian. It's not that hard: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qKDLYmear6mgbKc
@RXJis300Ай бұрын
I only understand america only
@whfn2277 Жыл бұрын
As a polish person who's family lives not far from Przemysl I can confirm that my parents didn't have a toilet indoors when they were growing up simply because it was cheaper to build a small shack with a bench and a hole in it rather than buy pipes, a ceramic toilet, water pump, make a septic tank out of concrete and also connect the well to the house with pipes. To my grandparents this would be quite an investment and considering they were still in process of building their 3 story house by hand, they just didn't have the time or money. However now I can proudly say they installed toilet around 17-20 years ago😁.
@kapitanXbomber1989 Жыл бұрын
This is so Polish :D "No indoor toilet? No problem, but I must build a three-story house because it must be larger than the neighbor's house."
@whfn2277 Жыл бұрын
@@kapitanXbomber1989 my neighbour's house is my grandads brothers house which is also massive haha, also don't forget the carpentry "shed" which is two stories but that was built a couple years after the 3 story 😂
@pawemarciniak4929 Жыл бұрын
@@kapitanXbomber1989 It's so Polish: we think about our children and their grandchildren, but not about ourselves, and the house is supposed to serve future generations. Unfortunately, we are westernizing and becoming stupid, egoistic people convinced of their intellectual and moral superiority, just like Westerners.
@bunEmom11 ай бұрын
In the USA, we use the word "outhouse" for a "small shack with a bench and a hole". Many farms lacked indoor toilets until the 1940s, or even 1950s. For toilet paper, they'd use pages ripped out an old department store catalog (e.g. Sears Roebuck). We still have outhouses today (with modern toilet paper) at nature/hiking areas, lakes, etc. that don't have septic systems;
@yurikoshokugan439511 ай бұрын
przemysl- the most beautiful Polish city :)
@nilsmadej9091 Жыл бұрын
As we say "widać zabory" The division is well known and a meme of sorts.
@Zestrayswede Жыл бұрын
In our Discord server we call it the Ghost of Prussia... or at least that's how I was introduced to the meme.
@chud-of4yb Жыл бұрын
Only western idiots say that to tap themselves on the back about how cool you think you are.
@DarwinskiYT Жыл бұрын
Yeah I’ve been to that subreddit before
@asamniewiem3040 Жыл бұрын
Ty też z polski!
@Vatras888 Жыл бұрын
We say that? I dont think so. It is not a proverb. It is just a casual sentence.
@patrykkulpok6908 Жыл бұрын
Breslau didn't "become" Wrocław. Silesia-Schlesien-Śląsk-Ślůnsk as a border region between German states, Poland, Czech and Austria has complicated history. The city was probably founded by the Czech duke Vratislav I. In Czech language, Wrocław is literally Vratislav. It was here that great European conflicts took place: the Hussite Wars, the Thirty Years' War, the Silesian Wars, the Napoleonic Wars and finally the fighting during World War II in 1945. Before 1945 Wrocław/Breslau had German and Polish history.
@pawew.6830 Жыл бұрын
Also Wrocław (Breslau) was longer in history ruled by Czech or Poles, than by Germans.
@ellidominusser1138 Жыл бұрын
Ruled yes. @@pawew.6830
@nightytime Жыл бұрын
Constantinople didn't "become" Istanbul either.
@lisamirako1073 Жыл бұрын
In the early and high Middle Ages, there were no nation states in the modern sense. The borders of the territories were determined by the success of the rulers in wars or marriages, not by the nationality of the inhabitants. Today's city of Wrocław (Breslau), in its function as an important commercial, industrial and administrative city with its typical architecture, has been developing since the 13th century. In all the centuries since then until 1945, it was inhabited and developed almost exclusively by Germans. This only changed when the Germans were forcibly expelled after the Second World War. Even though the city now belongs to Poland as a result of the Second World War, I cannot understand why history has to be bent in this way. The "Polish" history of Wroclaw in the early Middle Ages has no direct connection to the modern history of Poland, but since the late Middle Ages Breslau has always been part of German history.
@semitangent Жыл бұрын
@@pawew.6830 The interesting thing here is that while Wrocław has indeed been longer ruled by non-Germans, it has been German for the longest time in recent history: 1335 - 1945 it has been a German city (in the widest sense).
@zyrafff_6832 Жыл бұрын
I'm Polish and I want to say something about the toilets. These were just easier to make outside, because when the houses on the eastern part of Poland were built, in many places there were just no sewers. Have a nice day :)
@PaulRakoczi Жыл бұрын
According to eurostat, back in 2017 which was 7 years ago, Poland had 2% of households without bathroom indoors. Lets not pretend like Poland is the same as Russia where it was 13% ☠
@sharpasacueball Жыл бұрын
This is the same thing I saw in south east asia and india
@VashDs Жыл бұрын
Yeah, thats what i was about to say. Same way someone could be suprised of having dugout, since there are fridges right? Well yah... if theres electricity.
@paulb7207 Жыл бұрын
excuses.
@VashDs Жыл бұрын
What?@@paulb7207
@Vielenberg Жыл бұрын
9:13 the reason why in the west more houses survive since before 1945 is simple - they were made from bricks. Yes. It's like in the children story about three pigs. The reason was that strict Prussian fire regulations essentially required that houses are build from non-flammable materials. In the Russian and Austrian parts most houses were wooden untill WW2 and only after 1945 brick houses started to be build with old wooden houses being torn down. And this process has accelareated after 1990. This is why most houses in the east were build recently. While there was no need for such a change in the west were old prewar housing is still good enough to live in. And yes. The political divide has all to do with the percentage of people working in agriculture. Small farms in the east = more farmers = more conservative voters.
@Vielenberg Жыл бұрын
And one more thing. Population displacement after WW2 would also only explain the voting patterns in the pre-WW2 german lands. But the area around Poznan is also voting progresive despite being Polish before WW2. My guess is that it is all in agriculture structure, not in the displacements that happened 3 generations ago.
@healthytrout5 ай бұрын
the reason is that it was germany and germans did not bomb their own houses
@james-cucumber Жыл бұрын
Just want to say how appreciative I am that you subtitle your videos!
@terennNR1 Жыл бұрын
Wprowadzanie ludzi w błąd. Przyjedźcie do Polski zobaczycie jak tu jest pokazywanie map że nie ma toalety w domach to jakaś paranoja. Nie znam domu gdzie nie ma toalety nawet na wsi tak samo telefon i wodociągi są prawie wszędzie.
@mskiptr Жыл бұрын
To pewnie było jakiejś pół procenta vs jeden promil albo coś…
@mattiwet5526 Жыл бұрын
U mnie sra sie z balkonu i glosuje na PIS.
@technouber Жыл бұрын
Moi dziadkowie w lubelskim nadal nie mają toalety w domu tylko tzw. drewnianą sławojkę na zewnątrz. Podobnie jak wiele innych domów na tej wsi i okolicznych wsiach.
@cyrkielnetwork Жыл бұрын
Wiele starszych domów nie ma toalety. Mój Dzidek budował nowy dom w latach 70 i nie chciał toalety w domu, bo uważał, że nie należy załatwiać potrzeb fizjologicznych w domu. Dopiero 20 lat później po wielu kłótniach jego syn zrobił toaletę w domu, ale dziadek jeszcze przez wiele lat chodził do sławojki za stodołą.
@technouber Жыл бұрын
Właśnie sprawdziłem w Banku Danych Lokalnych i mapa wygląda na prawdziwą. W mojej rodzinnej gminie w lubelskim niecałe 18% mieszkań i domów nie ma łazienki, brzmi to dość realistycznie. Zamiast fikać i odpalać husarię to pogadaj z danymi, ich nie przekonasz.
@almerakbar Жыл бұрын
One small criticism, the statistic maps often look more like the pre-WW1 congress poland borders, but in your analysis you used the WW1-WW2 borders and how that changed. Seems like a tiny oversight but it could jeopardize the entirety of the analysis
@leandrrob Жыл бұрын
the russian bot down replying to ou really got angry
@AndyFromBeaverton Жыл бұрын
@@leandrrob Go find somewhere else to feel important.
@Santrix125 Жыл бұрын
@Andreyas-ou7fq This video is made in style of Johnny Harris who is know in the history community to be very inaccurate and following in his shoes, this youtuber has also shown many inaccuracies in his analysis, I expect an accurate video when talking about a serious topic like this and not dumbing it down just to make it more "understandable" and 'relatable". Even if it is not a documentary, many of the points he makes are false and that should not be the case when he claims he is explaining the story of the map he presented.
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
His “analysis” is complete bogus. He doesn’t understand anything about Poland…
@Santrix125 Жыл бұрын
@@ipodman1910 I agree, he has made several videos regarding European history and always paints the USSR and Nazi Germany as the cause of the issue, while some of them are true, most of them are completely false or just don't matter in the context, while his analysis is not true, the way he presents it with high production makes it seem like it's factual but the map he uses is wrong too as it has too much range for just 1 color.
@peterfireflylund Жыл бұрын
Silesia was extremely well suited for industrialization: coal, iron ore, and rivers (for transport).
@AltIng9154 Жыл бұрын
And skilled people!
@simonsadler9360 Жыл бұрын
There us a plant with the name similar to Silesia that indicates copper ore nearby .
@AltIng9154 Жыл бұрын
@@simonsadler9360 Interesting! The mountains around there were literally called Ore Mountains by the Germans. Obviously worthless stuff.... ok, the Ore Mountains are at the border of Saxony... but Silesia is not far East. The same kind of old mountains.
@freightntether865611 ай бұрын
That right. There were 10% of analphabets in Warsaw and only 1% in Silesia in 1918. Poles are basically uneducated Russians with different language.
@BAHLANsarrola2223 ай бұрын
Not true white supremacist @@AltIng9154
@Pinzpilot10111 ай бұрын
I,m English, I have lived in Eastern Poland for the last 15 years.........maybe 15 years ago you could find people who had an outdoor toilet IN VILLAGES....hear that ?? I shouted....IN VILLAGES and that is because the traditional farmhouse was built around one big barn, the living part was one half of the barn and the other half was given over to animals downstairs and feed was kep upstairs.....the hot animals kept that inner wall warm.....there was a passageway through the barn from the house part...to go to the toilet you went through to a small room which was the toilet and your faeces etc went into the same pit out side where the cow poop went, it all mixed and was put on the land. I have only last year gained access to 'Town' water.....I have previously (indeed still do) use my well......I have a proper toilet, bath shower and bidet.....My water is simply pumped from a well and my wastes go to a cess pit, which I have to have pumped out every few years. Does that map say that I do not have a proper toilet.
@СтражникПравды10 ай бұрын
In England, even now, cold water is not combined with hot water and there is no central heating.
@Pinzpilot10110 ай бұрын
@@СтражникПравды Ha ha I lived in UK and I had central heating, powered by Gas....I had hot water combined with cold...but older systems that are still working just fine are kept working in the old way.
@qwerasdf3420Ай бұрын
@@Pinzpilot101 This is a Russian bot, I see it under all the comments about the West and there it works off its rubles))) he doesn't realize that Russia is a 3rd world country, and England is a 1st world country)))
@qwerasdf3420Ай бұрын
@@СтражникПравды Конечно, мне по рн тв тоже самое путен велике царь сказал, слава богу мы живём в расее, а не в Омереке урааа рася пердээ !!! Пукен презерватив мира !!! ураа !!! путен помаги !!! 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤❤🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺☝🏾☝🏾☝🏾☝🏾🐷🐷🐷🐷💪💪💪💪🐒🐒🐖🐖🐖🐖
@szymenxd1 Жыл бұрын
The fact that the Congress Poland was completely omitted kinda ruins the whole video.
@PizzaPartify Жыл бұрын
what is Congress Poland ?
@Artur_M. Жыл бұрын
@PizzaPartify The unofficial name of the Kingdom of Poland in personal union with the Russian Empire - a state created by the Congress of Vienna in 1815, as part of reorganizing Europe after the Napoleonic Wars. It included great powers deciding what to do with the "Polish question" and the Duchy of Warsaw, which Napoleon established on Polish lands. Congress Poland got absorbed into the Russian Empire proper by 1832. Here's a video explaining it all: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qqK1enipe8dji9ksi=c9FCmvBqANk90rG9 Interestingly, it was also made by a German, but one who has a genuine interest in Polish history and does proper research. The Congress of Vienna also established the Grand Duchy of Poznań/Posen as Polish autonomy within the Kingdom of Prussia and made Kraków an independent city-state Republic. Both survived until the 1840s. There are videos about both on the same channel.
@MatthewTheWanderer Жыл бұрын
@@Artur_M. Also, Congress Poland's borders were almost identical to the area of Eastern Poland that stands out on all of these maps.
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
The whole video is crap and just a smearing campaign against Poles who love family and traditional values.
@ericcarlson3746 Жыл бұрын
it was Russian occupied and eventually more and more Russified wasn't it?
@Nikolas_Davis Жыл бұрын
3:28 Wroclaw is pronounced "Vrots-lav" (sort of, more like "Vrots-wav"). You were wise not to attempt Szczecin.
@scvcebc Жыл бұрын
I took a couple of online Polish classes last year. I would pronounce it SH CH ETS IN (but as one syllable!) At one point, I complained to the instructor that my mouth was just too old too learn to make all those sounds together! She said to keep listening and practicing.
@sirrathersplendid4825 Жыл бұрын
Szczecin is actually quite similar to the German pronunciation, biggest difference being the “chin” at the end instead of “tin”.
@Pidalin Жыл бұрын
only correct name is Vratislav 😀
@Ass_of_Amalek Жыл бұрын
breslau and stettin, easy.
@Zzzooooppp Жыл бұрын
@@Ass_of_Amalekexcept you didn’t pronounce Stettin with a SH
@kamilmarkuszewski7306 Жыл бұрын
From o-e-c-d report In terms of basic facilities, 97.7% of dwellings in Poland contain private access to an indoor flushing toilet, slightly above the OECD average of 97%. But yes, there is huge difference in west and east Poland. Why is my comment with o-e-c-d link removed automaticly?
@wiktorad-xx8bs Жыл бұрын
I'm not sure about other cities mentioned at 3:22 but regarding Wrocław/Breslau it's actually the other way around. We are not sure who founded the city, there is a debate between it being founded by Czech prince Vratislav I (hence the name, Vratislavia= Wrocław) or later Polish princes (940 and 985 are mostly mentioned). The German name, Breslau, came much later as a slightly incorrect translation of Czech/Polish/Latin name to German.
@Ultima-Signa Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t matter as it still became known as Wrocław ever since 1945 while before that it was known as Breslau due to the city having a German majority for like at least 8 centuries. Also there really is no debate about that. Never heard of it until this video where poles claimed it in the comments… until now it’s been clear that a Czech founded the *SETTLEMENT where later the city had been founded (by Germans and according to German city law).
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
@@Ultima-Signain your imagination only…
@therat1117 Жыл бұрын
It's the same with Szczecin. It was originally Polish (or at least Slavic) land until the 1100s, when Germans started progressively engaging in settler-colonialism and brutal religiously-motivated violence in Eastern Europe. Danzig is similarly a German corruption of Gdansk, which was recorded as the name of the area prior to the 1100s.
@fe-jo Жыл бұрын
@@therat1117Very strange to think about such things as ‚Polish‘ or ‚German‘ sentiment in 1100.
@therat1117 Жыл бұрын
@@fe-jo Languages and cultures that called themselves 'Deutsche' and 'Polski' existed in 1100. There was a whole 'Kingdom of Poland' at the time. Maybe read a book?
@tojebe3388 Жыл бұрын
Just to clarify something. The part when you've showed that the big cities vote not for conservative party was somewhat misleading. The place that you highlighted in the video has a lot of Belarusian minority that is not fond of conservatism and national catholicism
@sirrathersplendid4825 Жыл бұрын
Yes, there was a big blob near Bialystok and the Belarusian border, which looked like a major city, whereas this area is in reality very rural.
@ThePresentPast_ Жыл бұрын
Yes I should have mentioned that
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
@@ThePresentPast_you should stop lying. The divide is alongside culture and politics. People loving tradition and family values versus brainwashed resettlers
@varimatra2088 Жыл бұрын
Hi as a non european i am confused i thought Belarus would bee the most conservative people there
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
@@varimatra2088 not true. Belarusians had been a subject of soviet genocide and cultural destruction. Homo sovieticus mindset is prevalent there… nothing to do with traditionalism…
@christianhornla610 Жыл бұрын
My observation as a German who travelled through Poland (in 2018) was how surprisingly open the people in the Western part dealt with the past of their cities (and actually houses in many cases) as having a German past. This is especially visible in the meticulous reconstruction of Gdansk and Wroclaw (in the latter case, apparently against the wishes of the central government), but also in pieces of art commemorating the links between the present and the past. In some places, there were even newly erected signs at the highways to show where the pre-1939 German border was.
@henningbartels6245 Жыл бұрын
this is more a recent development in the last decade or two. In the 1950's and 1960's many German inscription where knocked off buildings making sure that little reminds of the German past. Especially in Wroclaw you can often see the knocked off letters making the embossing sometimes still readable.
@TikoVerhelst Жыл бұрын
I've always been furious of the fact there's no train connection between Eindhoven and Antwerp..... Turns out there has never ever been a direct connection between Eindhoven and Antwerp. Mediaeval trade routes always went via Maastricht or Den Bosch/Tilburg/Breda. Which is reflected in the train network that exists today. You still have to go through Tilburg and Breda before you can get to Antwerp from Eindhoven by train. Mediaeval and maybe even Roman trade routes literally affect the fact that i can't take a direct train from Eindhoven to Antwerp! Flixbus is the big exception though. They are the only ones who do a Eindhoven-Antwerp connection. But the fact no train connection exists between the two. It literally reflects mediaeval trade routes and I love that!
@ThePresentPast_ Жыл бұрын
😮
@JanHouben Жыл бұрын
Until they rise of Philips and DAF, Eindhoven was only a smalle village, so there was no reason for a direct rail connection... later there was a freight rail line from Eindhoven to Valkenswaard and across the belgian borders. This line was closed in the 60's. In recent years, local politicians from both countries have been lobbying to reopen the line from Weert to Antwerp for passenger rail. So with a bit of luck, you will soon be able to take a train with 1 change in Weert. But I'm not sure if that will be faster than your current route... Another alternative is to take a bus of car to Neerpelt or Lommel (not sure what is the easiest) and take the Belgian train there... (I just happend to read this comment, not entirely sure how it is related to a movie about Poland ☺️)
@robertskrzynski2768 Жыл бұрын
Draw a line from Lublin to Dublin and see how many old settlements contain the letters "lin" in the name. I was told at school in the 60's that it indicated a line of trading spots at the edge of the melting European ice sheet.
@SievaRahojsha Жыл бұрын
@@robertskrzynski2768 Have you drawn such a line and counted how many such settlements there are? tell us.
@AttilaKattila Жыл бұрын
@@robertskrzynski2768 And according to the Bock Saga supposedly all European countries, at least in some languages, that have the word "land" in them were once under the icesheets, and all European(?) languages normally spoken in countries west of Finland use a 12 number system (e.g. one, two, eleven, twelve, thirTEEN in English; ett, två, elva, tolv, tretTON in Swedish), and all countries to the east, including in Finland use a 10 number system (e.g. yksi, kaksi, yksitoista, kaksitoista, kolmetoista in Finnish.)
@A_lu0____ Жыл бұрын
Well, firstly the "toilet map" states the statistics for period before 1945. I would personally assume it was like this because in rural farm houses the toilet used to be located outside, in a form of toilet shed sort of thing. I still remember how in early 2000s you could find those abandoned "toilet - sheds" near old farmhouses.
@Trupen11 ай бұрын
3:28 I was so confused why you haven't simply read Szczecin and just looked at it, but then I realize it might be a bit tricky to pronounce for no native speaker
@EruWan_Ernest Жыл бұрын
toilet/ no toilet map from thumbnail is kinda wrong. It's a map that classify people connected to city/public sewer system and ones that have own septic tanks.
@Vielenberg Жыл бұрын
No. It's about having a bathroom inside. Out of 14.5M Polish households 800K do not have a bathroom with 500K not having even running water. Google the 2021 census results on this matter if you don't believe me.
@CezaryCezary-vf4hy Жыл бұрын
@@Vielenbergthey have toilets but outside
@hofimastah Жыл бұрын
@@Vielenbergwhich is 5.2% citizens and this map looks like 1/3 of the poles don't have a toilet at home.
@arpa9009 Жыл бұрын
@@Vielenbergstop this Hitler lies, you want us to be inferior, but sorry we have toilets at the houses...! Western 1d2ots
@charlesowen719 Жыл бұрын
Please Report this video as malicious misinformation. This manipulator must be German.
@aviadilo Жыл бұрын
Wroclaw is pronounced "Vro-tswaf", not "Vro-klau".
@marlenakiepinska1190 Жыл бұрын
it came from Bres-lau
@Zzzooooppp Жыл бұрын
@@marlenakiepinska1190no it didn’t, it came from Czech, and the Latinized version. German had less than nothing to do with it.
@marlenakiepinska1190 Жыл бұрын
@@Zzzooooppp I only said it was because of that how they've pronounce Breslau, I didn't even thought of Germans, they mean very little to me
@Zzzooooppp Жыл бұрын
@@marlenakiepinska1190 I didn’t mention Germans, I mentioned their language, like you did
@mad_max21 Жыл бұрын
Well, the Poles need to fix their words, don't they?
@TheBlobik Жыл бұрын
Western part of PL was easier to collectivize, cause many land owners that were German were deported. Its easier to take land when the owner isn't there, or is simply repossesed. PS. in Polish the map about bathrooms says about "apartments" not "houses". I assume one source of this might be buildings with communal bathrooms, where apartments do not have their own, but instead one that is shared between a few appartments. Its also possible the situation was rectified and some bathroom-less apartments got their own ones, but those changes may be underreported (for example if some work was done without permits etc).
@cozy_ross Жыл бұрын
Would love to see a similar video about Ukraine, because it had pretty the same difference between its western territories which have been a part of Poland (rzecz pospolita and so on) and central and eastern territories which have been a part of russia (soviet union)
@janeviemuz524 Жыл бұрын
Pretty same in Czech republic and former Sudetland :D On diference, from former Sudetland were at first deported Czechs and then Germans, and then communist goverment sent there mostly the scum of society.
@cozy_ross Жыл бұрын
@@janeviemuz524 Eastern European countries have a lot in common, huh :)
@jeanssold2131 Жыл бұрын
@@cozy_ross yeah, only the southeast was overall more wealthy before 2014
@janeviemuz524 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, slavery of Nords, Mongols and Osmans and Cars. Rule of tyrany and fear. Extremly large undeveloped poor forest and steppe lands. And they all speak basicly same language. Pretty diferent from for example Central Europe. @@cozy_ross
@AgusSimoncelli Жыл бұрын
That's a very different case. Those parts of Ukraine were under polish control for less than 20 years. There were under russian control for more than a 100 years before, and another 50 years under soviet control. There are definitely differences between west and east, but it can hardly be attributed to Polish rule
@Frank-Lee-Speeking Жыл бұрын
For what it's worth, Solzhenitsyn was a captain of artillery during the early months of 1945 as the Red Army was pushing towards Berlin. He mentioned how his surroundings became dramatically more prosperous as they crossed the German border and all of his fellow soldiers noticed it. This must have raised questions in their minds over how horrible repressive capitalism gave people more prosperous lives than the workers' paradise of the Soviet Union. (He was arrested before getting to Berlin so didn't get to see it until *much* later.)
@leme5639 Жыл бұрын
EVERY European country had better living standards than Russia, including Poland Romania or Yugoslavia.
@pacivalmuller9333 Жыл бұрын
@@leme5639 At what time? If we are talking about Soviet Union I will disagree. Prosperous Europe is slowly dying out.
@KrotowX Жыл бұрын
@@pacivalmuller9333 So former Soviet Union except former republics with muslim majority (and they have different means to procreate).
@pacivalmuller9333 Жыл бұрын
@@KrotowX I do not get what you mean 100%, but here in Germany we have those Knife-throwers from Somalia or bombers from Afghanistan. For example in Russia there is and was a bigger cultural exchange between muslims and christians. I would say they live 100% more peacefully then in Germany, where we have shadow comminities (communities inside communities), that do not have any exchange.
@KrotowX Жыл бұрын
@@pacivalmuller9333 It's complicated :) And highly depends from your ethnicity and in which part of former Soviet Union you live. Russia _modus operandi_ always was constant expansion. With killing elites and more educated individuals and then turning the rest into nameless cheap labor force who are equally ruled by heavy fist of current ruler in a way he see fit. In such social structure there is no place of racism inside society in a way it is considered at today. There are more or less equal ethnicities (by Orwell) with nameless hodgepodge of russified people called Russians as ruling nation, but that doesn't matter. That is why Africans and Asians was considered kinda the same as locals. Also during building Soviet sphere of interest into Asia and Africa heavy propaganda about friendship with countries inside this sphere of interest took place and that left a mark too. Russified Asian and Muslim ethnicities from Caucasus area in Russia are considered "theirs" as well. After dissolution of USSR things somewhat changed. In Muslim areas communism was replaced with Islam easy because both de facto both are just another form of religion. Otherwise not much changed. Due to huge influx of Muslim people as workforce in Moscow we can expect Moscow turning into next Muslim capital in near future. If China as new sole owner of Russia will allow that. In western Russia neighbor countries things are completely different. We have no hate towards Asian and African ethnicities. But we know we know the dangers of uncontrolled mass immigration of people who have completely different social structure and religion from Soviet annexation era. Particular in Estonia and Latvia we have around 30% of Russian speaking former colonists who mostly arrived from inner Russia. In comparing with populations of Estonians and Latvians they still are simply too much and that still cause various social and political issues. There simply are no place for immigration from Asia and Africa anymore. Luckily those mostly want to go to Germany and Sweden... still. Until now, we and also Lithuania and Poland catch illegal migrants and send them back over Eastern border from where they came. Again - that is not because racism or hate against Asians and Africans. But because we have no wish to turn into ghetto shithole.
@bruterasta11 ай бұрын
In the first few seconds you suggested that there are regions in Poland which have lower percentages of homes with bathrooms, which is pure nonsense in modern date.
@abcdmefgh2843 Жыл бұрын
5:42 Yes, there's a difference, but the rest is wrong. Every year, students from Małopolska and Podkarpacie (the former poor Austrian partition, yet where Polish culture was not persecuted) write the matura exam with the best results. They also tend to have the best academic results. This is Poland B, the supposedly "underdeveloped" and not progressive region.
@abcdmefgh2843 Жыл бұрын
It also seems strange to me to only focus on the vices of the east, when in the west there is more crime, more alcoholism, more single mothers etc, which is also the result of less 'social control'. This video looks pretty biased, or at least poor researched.
@ch36799 Жыл бұрын
Poland B is patriotic.
@michachodkowski8499 Жыл бұрын
@@ch36799in same style as Z-patriots in russia…
@ch36799 Жыл бұрын
@@michachodkowski8499 no! Eastern Poland is pro western. Western Poland is pro Putin. Without patriotism Poland has no chance. Unfortunetly now the new Gouverment are German and Russian puppets. Poland was a dictatorship until 2015. Now the dictatorship comes back. Germans now rule Poland. Under the PIS Poland boomed and was democratic. I am young and sad how Poland is dying. Media in Poland now is in hand of one party.
@ch36799 Жыл бұрын
@@michachodkowski8499 now communists are in Power. Russia and Germany support Donald Tusk. He is a traitor. He destroyed Poland between 2007-2014. Over a million people left Poland under his rule.
@eqramer Жыл бұрын
well, Gdansk was not in German hands for centuries. It belonged to Poland until 2nd partition of Poland in 1793 and it ceased to be German in 1918. Not to mention that it was also a free city during Napoleonic wars time.
@TheRezro Жыл бұрын
Actually it was also free city during Interwar.
@tomeckb29 Жыл бұрын
@thesnownigro7932 German speaking...not german. Thats quite a big difference. You cannot translate tracings from the 19th century into earlier centuries.
@Occident. Жыл бұрын
Danzig was 96% German in 1939.
@eqramer Жыл бұрын
@thesnownigro7932 not really. These German speaking population was very loyal to Poland as they understood that only trade links with Poland enable Gdansk's prosperity. Looked what happened with Gdansk in 19th century after annexation by Prussia - it lost its importance and soon was taken over but Szczecin (Stettin) which used to be a much smaller town.
@eqramer Жыл бұрын
@Westman.-fe5wn statistics show it was more like 85 - 92 per cent German. well, interwar period was a very shameful time for Gdansk. Its German population indeed supported Nazis even stronger than Germans in Germany proper...
@patrickk5806 Жыл бұрын
I would like to nitpick on a statement you said, ``Higher education is linked to more progressive views.`` I don't necessarily think that they had 'higher' education, just more wealthy. Furthermore, as a part Pole myself, I can say that during the Soviet Era, there was a big push for physics and strictness in schools which did lead to educated individuals, although not more free as Russia was conservative while Germany was progressive. However, after watching the video, I am a bit confused as to why you posted the video. Despite the difference in views, there hasn't been a lot of turmoil in Poland until recently as the government and president have been mostly conservative until now. I think an interesting video to post would be to analyze how the government remained conversative while also shifting away from Russia and improving infrastructure. Warm regards, Patrick K.
@AshiRonin Жыл бұрын
You are first person that pointed that people on the west of Poland really are from the far east ex-territory. Thank you for video!
@awuma Жыл бұрын
Yes, they came from the areas annexed by Stalin. However, two million or more were deported to Siberia, Kazachstan etc., of whom between 100,000 to 200,000 got out through the Middle East after Barbarossa. Another 100,000 or so were slaughtered by the Ukrainians. A lot of Ukrainians were deported from Poland to Ukraine after WWII. One thing the video didn't mention is the possibility that the Eastern backwardness is related to Russian passivity in the face of autocracy and theocracy.
@eqramer Жыл бұрын
not really. that is an old stereotype. in fact only around 25-30 percent of settlerts came from Easterm Borderlines.
@hansjorgkunde3772 Жыл бұрын
I found that out in1991. I made my Diploma in CS together with a Pole from Danzig/Gdansk. He told me that his parents lived in eastern Poland roughly 100km east of Lwow and got forcefully expelled from the region.
@qj0n Жыл бұрын
@@hansjorgkunde3772 I live in Gdańsk and my grandparents where expelled from those regions. If you studied with Kubica then he's my uncle ;)
@hansjorgkunde3772 Жыл бұрын
@@qj0n sadly no, but there were many who took the chance to study at a German University or Fachhochschule after the fall of the Iron Curtain. The sad thing were also my parents came from Pomerania 80km east of Stettin. So were driven out of their homeland. That Poles suffered the same fate was never mentioned by my parents. Maybe they did not know or did not care, i can not judge it.
@mi5iu491 Жыл бұрын
This title is misleading. It implies that half the country doesnt have a indoor bathroom... this map just shows that theres more outhouses in the eastern part, the country side..
@g.peters244 Жыл бұрын
I live in a medium-sized city in western Poland. I have my theory why western Poland is less conservative and more open to the world. It must be remembered that a huge part of the ancestors of the inhabitants of western Poland come from the very conservative east. After the war, my city was inhabited by people resettled from Vilnius, Lviv, Brest, Poznan and Lublin. Many soldiers from the Polish army in the west also settled there, as well as many forced Polish laborers returning from Germany. Various traditions, cultures and dialects met in one city. Families from different regions of pre-war Poland lived in one house. All families suffered serious wounds from the German and Russian occupation. They learned to live together and tolerate regional traditions and customs brought from their home regions. A Catholic lived next to a communist atheist, a believing communist, an Orthodox Christian or a Greek Catholic. From birth, we were aware that someone might have a different way of life.
@hishamalaker491 Жыл бұрын
Wasnt Western Poland Ethnically German for centuries?
@samsara4085 Жыл бұрын
@@hishamalaker491 depending which centuries we are talking about.
@g.peters244 Жыл бұрын
@@hishamalaker491It depends on which period of history and which region you are asking. History is not black and white, especially in the center of Europe. There were regions that retained the vast majority of their Polish (or if you prefer slavic) character until World War II. Some regions were fully Germanized and colonized by Germans already in the Middle Ages, and other regions only until the 19th century. It is also difficult to talk about German nationality or language in relation to the times before 1871... By the way - two "Germans", actually Saxons, were Polish kings :)
@tomaszs-hq1ql Жыл бұрын
@@samsara4085he is not interested that slavs had been living for centuries up to Laba River, and Berlin was founded by slavs.
@keineahnung5466 Жыл бұрын
@@hishamalaker491It's always how you look at it. The towns were (in the 19th century) almost always German, but this only means that the determining layer was German. The Poles were the staff. In the countryside it looked similar, German large ground owners owned the land and Poles worked it. My grandmother, who came from Silesia, always told me about her childhood, her father was the doctor in a small town, the mayor, the priest and other influential people were Germans, the rest were Poles. In other words, a very colonialist society.
@Enkaptaton Жыл бұрын
The small fields in the east are interesting! The seize of a field has an enormous influence on the biodiversity in general and especially on diversity and numbers of insects. 10 times more then organic vs. conventional agriculture
@Pidalin Жыл бұрын
Yeah, this is something we speak about very often in these days in Czechia where most of fields are still massive fileds like during communism. Only difference is that it was owned by state before and now it's owned by few billionares. But governments and local mayors are making new laws which prevents making of these massive fields because it's bad for ecosystem, now you have to have some green lines and little lakes, or maybe it's not like you literally have to, but you have some grants and tax benefits when you do that. These massive fields really cause ecological disasters like floods, sand flying in the air for longer distances, bees are dying....we know about that and a lot of people want to talk about that and something is finally changing here. Communists really damaged our nature by their 40 years of rule that it will take another decades to fix that damage.
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
@@Pidalinbingo!
@ipodman1910 Жыл бұрын
@@rayaan1233ahh! Denazification missed you and your family, clearly…
@keineahnung5466 Жыл бұрын
The difference between real division and everything for the eldest son also exists in Germany. For this reason, a major redistribution was carried out in the 1970s in the areas (in the south) so that the agricultural land could be profitably farmed again. You should also do it in Poland., Ok, ecologically this was a disarster, because every hedge and tree was removed.
@amortalbeing Жыл бұрын
@9:53 a toilet outside of the house was the norm in the past especially if you have a large land/home. this simply doesn't happen in appartments/flats, so everything became self-contained obviously, and after sometime its convenience made everyone to just adopt the inhouse toilets even if you have a large house. we for example have both! my grandparents as well had both (they initially had one outside of the house, but as the got much older, they built one inside as well for easier access.)
@KrotowX Жыл бұрын
It indeed worked like that and I believe almost everywhere. Through times people had different living standarts. And even a century ago shared bathrooms, toilets without water and outhouses outside house was normal thing. And those are pretty hard and expensive to change. Think even about all necessary piping installing in 100+ years old house.
@il3more7 ай бұрын
In Italy we have a similar situation, you can search every map (occupation, richness, education) and you will always see the difference between south and north and the borders between the Napoli Kingdom and the rest of Italy.
@urkeka9534 Жыл бұрын
it's only a little bit true. Before the outbreak of World War II, there was a brilliant plan for the development of the eastern (then still central) areas of Poland. The Central Industrial District was to be established. This was intended to eliminate the problems created by the Great Depression. It was partially successful, because this region is still active today and is still the main arms producer in Poland. Although in recent years, due to the transfer of many productions to China, this region has declined even further. However, if it were not for the outbreak of the WWII and the subsequent annexation of Poland by Russia, this gap would not exist. Unfortunately, after more than 40 years of communism, development in these areas has stopped. Now we are trying to keep up, but these regions no longer have the same support from the state as in the interwar period. The fact that the population votes differently here is most likely due to generational trauma and fear of the influence of foreign countries, because this part of Poland was the greatest victim of the ongoing disputes. Western Poland did not feel it so strongly, which is why they have more trust in, for example, investors from Germany. The eastern part of Poland believes that it is a wolf in sheep's clothing that has not actually stopped the process of Germanization. This part of Poland is also very critical of social progress that goes beyond known realities, so it is considered a threat. The dynamics of work are also different, people work longer and harder than in the West, and earn less, and therefore have less time to engage in news and understand certain issues. They usually spend time with family, e.g., taking care of dependent people such as children or the elderly because they cannot afford caregivers), while in the West, people more often meet for social events, for which you also need money. It's a closed circle and the only way to break it is some kind of mental revolution. This is happening slowly, so unless there is another global crisis, we have a chance.
@madboots25 Жыл бұрын
"Who Poland is divided"?
@user-ge2es2bp2x Жыл бұрын
did they mean 'why poland is divided' or 'how''?
@madboots25 Жыл бұрын
@@user-ge2es2bp2x can Poland be divided?
@yashashsgowda6662 Жыл бұрын
I'll do one better, what Poland is divided?
@madboots25 Жыл бұрын
@@yashashsgowda6662 who's Poland is divided?
@ThePresentPast_ Жыл бұрын
which poland is divided?
@jakestechtravels48649 ай бұрын
As a (I hate to admit it) British guy, Poland is one of my favourite places on this planet, ironically typing this whilst in Poland
@bogdan.801 Жыл бұрын
In Ukrainian election result maps you can see almost the exact same thing, but it goes even deeper to the Rus' times
@davidmaisel8062 Жыл бұрын
Regardless if Poland itself considers itself A or B currently rural life is generally more "traditional" where urban culture tends to be more "cosmopolitan". Ukraine is deeply divided, that's an old story. Poland for better or worse, historically did a better job of getting over regional differences.
@ukaszhya5354 Жыл бұрын
Of course, there are many reasons why toilets were not built in-house, but toilets outside are more useful on a farm. You work on the farm for the whole day, so you don't want to get into the house to pee/poo or wash yourself. In Silesia where I live many people had toilets in-house and outside. In-house - because most people were factory workers, outside - because sometimes they still had some land, goats/rabbits - so toilet outside was more convenient when they were taking care of their little farm (my grandpas are an example).
@CzaroJawor11 ай бұрын
you must visit Poland (especially eastern Poland) and see what it looks like
@filipnecinski773 Жыл бұрын
There is yet another, perhaps even more important aspect than religion and the role of the church in shaping the worldview of people from the East, which you did not mention in the film. When the Ribbentrop-Molotov Pact outlined the new border between the USSR and Germany, Stalin had a different approach to subjugating the territories under him than the Germans (presumably taking into account the mistakes of the 123-year colonization, which allowed Poland to easily re-emerge in 1918, the origins of social memory, etc.). So, when he occupied eastern Poland, he began gathering data on the Poles, their education, much like the Germans did with the Jews. The goal was to eliminate the more intelligent and educated part of society needed for national-liberation uprisings (such as in 1830). Thus, the idea was born to exterminate hundreds of thousands of Poles, including in Smolensk. Western Poland could prosper better because the resources of educated, well-read people were preserved. As you can see, the socio-historical topic is very complex and deserves more than just a comment on the film. Jochem, bedankt voor dit filmpje!
@awuma Жыл бұрын
The Germans also ruthlessly executed the intelligentsia.
@Madej16x Жыл бұрын
Germans also murdered the "intelligents" and under Russians you had a better education than under Germans lol
@KrotowX Жыл бұрын
German Nazi, who considered Poles the next subhumans after Jews, also worked hard to exterminate Polish elite, military, more intelligent and educated part of society and of couse - catholic clergy. Many of them ended their lives in concentration camps. Stalin/Soviet occupation differ only by tendency to exterminate occupied nation elites, but keep lower class as cheap workforce.
@weirdstuff_tm8942 Жыл бұрын
if you don't know how to pronounce something just check google translate, it's not that hard. Although considering you didn't do any research when it comes to the city names part of the video, it doesn't suprise me
@adretter9 ай бұрын
You don't need to feel so offended by that... But indeed, English native speakers are I'd say the most lazy ones in terms of putting effort into pronouncing foreign words.
@thomasbergbusch3641 Жыл бұрын
The most important factor, which dominates all, is that the "new", western areas were heavily collectivized whereas in the central and eastern areas, by and large, except right up against the Soviet Union, agriculture remained in the hand of small-farming individual land holders, with the result that the hold of traditional village and town life remained stronger, and with it religious attachment.
@aleksanderkochelak3586 Жыл бұрын
The idea, that in the half of my country houses don't have toilets is just dumb.
@MarioIvancic-HR Жыл бұрын
This phenomenon can also be observed in Croatia. All regions that were under Turkish control at some point experienced the displacement of the original Croatian population. When these regions were reclaimed under Croatian, more precisely Austro-Hungarian control, they were mainly resettled with refugees from Turkish areas. As a result, today we have areas in Croatia that have been under some form of Austro-Hungarian influence for nearly a thousand years, and which are now more advanced in every aspect, with a better standard of living, and surprisingly, do not vote for conservative parties. A similar situation exists in Serbia, where Vojvodina and Belgrade seem like a different country compared to the rest of Serbia. The difference is that Vojvodina was also part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. It seems that the breakup of Yugoslavia was caused by this difference, as the former Austro-Hungarian regions, which were visibly more advanced and wealthier, found it difficult to accept rulers who, from their perspective, were incompetent. In Croatia, this division is still very evident today, in different cultures and work ethics. Although it is a generalization, just an hour's drive is enough to feel like you have entered another country. Given that Croatia is small, the inability to do business due to distance is not a valid excuse. Simply put, the culture of craftsmanship, work ethic, order, and discipline, which was formed in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, still influences how people raise their children, contributing to these richer and more orderly regions
@japupkind8493 Жыл бұрын
I was there in 1990th - absolutely agreed with You, that's feeling of different countries.
@AltIng9154 Жыл бұрын
But you are right!
@AltIng9154 Жыл бұрын
@@japupkind8493 Yes, culture creates people. It is the Austrian/ German culture . One of the biggest mistakes the Austrian Empire did was to swallow the rotten Bosnia. All the countries under Turkish rule do not fit. Very easy. Has almost nothing todo with genetics . Isn't there a saying. "In the next war the sons will kill their fathers"?
@tomekes6584 Жыл бұрын
Nice and thorough - I like how you addressed the inheritance law between the partitions - this was very important to highlight and this is admirable you put in your video.
@RicardoPetrazzi Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. Thank you. 👍
@mrbanditos3583 Жыл бұрын
Alright, so the thing about being closer to Germany is right, just that PPR(aka Polish People's Republic) basically traded a lot of goods with East Germany(or simply GDR), while eastern side usually exported more goods than imported to rest of the countries related to Warsaw Pact or Soviets. So the idea was basically there beforehand(not just in post- 1989). And even for the bathroom map case, it is another key point to notice architectural standards. That division prodably could have been there all that time since the creation of Polish-Lithuanian Commonweath. Why, you may ask? Eastern Poland side was heavily mixed with other cultures. Which means different styles of building, traditions, clothing, et cetera. But ultimate fact why this lingers is that not much was done by the all sides to reduce the division(just like the known divisions between West and East Germany and many other cases including even Vietnam, United States, Canada and Italy). Can answer more questions if these gonna pop in replies.
@rogink Жыл бұрын
I know he mentioned industry in the west and south, but isn't that also because that's where the coalfields are? I don't know a lot about Polish geography, but I do know that Silesia has the coal! Possibly iron ore as well? And of course Danzig/Gdansk is the major port for shipbuilding. As for agriculture, I'm wondering if the west is more fertile, hence the bigger farms? I can see what he says about how farmland is split between families in the east. That's what happened with Ireland and why so many smaller plots meant not enough land to feed the family during the Great famine.
@covfefe1787 Жыл бұрын
@@rogink the east is more fertile hence why eastern Ukraine was once reffered to as the Dzikie Pole or wild lands.
@keineahnung5466 Жыл бұрын
@@rogink The south (Silesia) is a coalfield, the west mainly an industrial and trading centre with the Baltic Sea ports of Danzig and Szczecin. Wroclaw was an important industrial city in Germany, but also one where the Nazis were able to win a majority in elections, which didn't happen often and which says something about the German population there.
@x_mazda8235 Жыл бұрын
WTF!? Every single house has a bathroom!
@ronaldl9085 Жыл бұрын
Interesting. Thanks for sharing this video.
@MiSt3300 Жыл бұрын
I wonder where you took the "houses with no toilets map". Really ridiculous, I live in Eastern Poland and I don't know anyone who hasn't got a toilet in their house.
@ГлебПисаревский-ы8ь Жыл бұрын
It's joke lol
@pacivalmuller9333 Жыл бұрын
I feel you man, Ukrainian state TV says the same about us Russians, that we have no fridge, microwave or toilets.
@hishamalaker491 Жыл бұрын
You lack humor
@twinboo529 Жыл бұрын
Sponsor ends 2:35
@stevemanlp3 ай бұрын
Thank you!
@thisismetoday Жыл бұрын
I just loved your use of a overhead projector. Reminds me of school in the 90s/00s. :) And it looked great!
@islamicschoolofmemestudies Жыл бұрын
Somehow as an Indonesian i can relate with the Polish being occupied and even after long time of independence, the occupiers/colonist still left it's mark on it's country. You as Dutchman would've also understood too LOL. It's history afterall, but it's awkward to see how relatable this is for me as an Indonesian😂😂.
@trondurkd4201 Жыл бұрын
Well you do have the same flag
@wanneerde8854 Жыл бұрын
As a Moluccan I still see my country colonized by Indonesia. That leaves a huge mark on the Molucca’s
@conveyor2 Жыл бұрын
Germans lived there for centuries. Hardly 'colonizers", your far left label.
@islamicschoolofmemestudies Жыл бұрын
@conveyor2 Far-Left? Try again. Dude our country literally purged and erased the communist party in 1965. Hardly any far left available in our country, certainly not as much as in Europe today where literal Socialist were elected. We did more to remove the radical far left communist than Europe in 50+ years especially Germany where eastern part was essentially a Communist state. We are more right wing than any Western country will ever be. You know shit about our country's history.
@islamicschoolofmemestudies Жыл бұрын
@@trondurkd4201 Just the opposite
@domel3898 Жыл бұрын
My Greate Grandfather always said " You don't shit where you eat" in polish " Nie sraj tam gdzie jesz". So toilets were built outside of the house.
@krunomrki3 ай бұрын
Ne seri tamo gdje jedeš. ... po Chorwacku /na hrvatskom ... ;)
@Michal23511 ай бұрын
Insane clickbait, as many others pointed out. Even earning the lowest wage in Poland you're wealthy enough to satisfy all the very basic living needs, such as having a toilet LOL
@Rubinrus Жыл бұрын
Before Russian Empire annexed Poland, Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth took quite a chunk of Russian territories during Smuta, even holding onto Moscow for a bit. It's not that they were unlucky with their position, it's just that Poland felt that it doesn't need any friends, Polska Gurom as they say. I think if Poland would somehow try to spread it's influence into Rus' during Smuta instead of taking a chunk off it, it would've turned much better afterwards. With weak Russian state it languages sharing similarities, Poland could first develop a pan-slavic idea.
@jedrek112233 Жыл бұрын
We do not care about russia or it's land it was litteraly AGES ago you can do what you want with YOUR LAND but we are allergic to war and occupation nowdays
@andriyshepard3095 Жыл бұрын
yeah and before ''smuta'' what was the ''friendly'' muscovite state doing? Offering alliances? No they invaded.
@Rubinrus Жыл бұрын
@@andriyshepard3095 Russian Tsardom invaded Lithuania, who was yet to be a part of a commonwealth. Before Smuta, the only interaction between Poland and Russia would be words. And Russia DID offer alliances to Poland, including creating Christian commonwealth.
@РубероидОтважный Жыл бұрын
@@Rubinrus Hello from Russia. most likely, this was due to the fact that Russia is Orthodox and you are Catholics. I think it played a crucial role.
@Rubinrus Жыл бұрын
@@РубероидОтважный does it matter when you have turks knocking on your door?
@tohuvabohugbanshee3962 Жыл бұрын
Modern Poland borders sure do look different from Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, but aside from addition of East Prussia (the northeastern region) it's actually pretty close to what the first borders of Poland looked like (under the king Bolesław Chrobry). The areas west were under German rule for a long time, but they were originally (well, at least if we take only the last 1000 years into account) within Poland's borders with a mix of slavic and germanic ethnicity (during a large part of the middle ages it used to be that city dwellers were often German speakers and those living in the country spoke Polish. It was really a time when ethnicity didn't matter that much, nations in a modern sense are a rather new concept of the last 200 years or so. You were a subject of your king and you didn't care that much if he's even speaking the same language as you, in feudalism you felt more community and union with people from the same social strata as yours rather than ethnicity)
@bifa5414Ай бұрын
I'm coming from a city that is located on pre WWII western border of Poland (which now is closer to the middle than to the border) and here (but probably also in other parts of Poland) we have this saying: "the only map where you can't see the partitions is the geographical map". Sad but true. I also remember reading an article where it was written that "Poles are most traumatised nation in the world with around 19 percent of Poles having symptoms of PTSD" and I can see it very well in generation of my parents of grandparents for example when the elections are coming, they are always like "I will vote for the former party" and I'm like "But they did this and this..." (listing all their mistakes) and they are always like "But when they were in charge there was no war". That's it, that's the most important reason why it is like this. Oh, and also regarding toilets INSIDE of the houses I think that meant it at some specific time like for example shortly after WWII or during PRL period because since I was born I have never seen a house without it. I know that some very old apartments were build in a way that 2 or 3 separate apartments were sharing it on the same floor but I have seen it only once in city called Katowice, where "toilet next to corridor" was still existing but people created their own bathrooms inside their apartments as well.
@diomuda79038 ай бұрын
I feel sorry for our Polish neighbours. The Russians did so many damages. At least the Germans left behind industries for them.
@Robertz1986 Жыл бұрын
This video should be called "Why is occupied Germany more advanced than Poland".
@user-mh2uj7ns6h11 ай бұрын
Except it... isn't? He made so many lies in this video he should get his channel deleted
@Robertz198611 ай бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6h How so? 🤔
@aronraszkiewicz194211 ай бұрын
My uncle once told me that my great-grandfather strongly opposed building a restroom in his already-existing house, because "who normal ever saw crapping inside a place where you live?", Well, he eventually accepted that. Yes, he came from the once-Russian part of Poland.
@TheCrowsClaw Жыл бұрын
This is one of the most insightful videos on modern day Poland I’ve seen in a while. Kudos.
@SievaRahojsha Жыл бұрын
0:35 It was NOT Poland, but Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (Rzecz Pospolita Obojga Narodow, where Lithuania included modern Lithuania and Belarus)
@jorgvillger3591 Жыл бұрын
It's very simple - German part was more urban and industrial while Russian part was mostly agricultural. So people on east live more like village lifestyle while western part is more urban.
@WeedMIC Жыл бұрын
Very nice, thank you. It never occurred to me the reason jews value learning/education so high is it is an asset you can take when you are moved, which unlike gold, cannot be taken away.
@Edekje Жыл бұрын
Interesting point
@warreneckels4945 Жыл бұрын
Widespread literacy was considered necessary to the proper worship of God among Jews and later Protestants. It's not that Catholicism hated literacy in most cases -- it was just not considered necessary or proper for everybody to read the Bible for themselves. It must be said that widespread reading of the Bible amongst Catholics was encouraged with the Douay-Rheims translations of the Bible into the vernacular. By WWI, the Roman Catholic Church attached indulgences (partial or complete remission of time in Purgatory) to prayerful reading of the Bible, with the plenary (full) indulgence proclaimed for an hour's reading "under the usual conditions". (Confession, Eucharist, prayer for the Pope's intention -- December 2023's is "We pray that people living with disabilities may be at the center of attention in society, and that institutions may offer inclusive programs which value their active participation.")
@baton90 Жыл бұрын
About the age of housing: in western Poland (ex German lands) building material was almost always brick, which can last a lot longer than wooden houses that were built in the eastern part of Poland (ex Russian Empire).
@kaloschke Жыл бұрын
Why ex german lands ? According to Kadczinski we must only pay reparations to get them back 😂
@baton90 Жыл бұрын
@@kaloschke kommst du aus DDR oder BRD? BRDigen waren nicht zufrieden wenn Deutschland war wieder vereint, ich glaube dass vereinigung mit west Polen wäre für euch noch schlimmer :D Aber mir ist egal, ich bin echte preußische oberschlesier;)
@evilfisher6934 Жыл бұрын
True 😂
@deadeye003 Жыл бұрын
@ThePresentPast_ 9:55 - the map shows the lowest percentage category as a range of 56-80% (a group spanning of 24%), whereas the following categories span per 5%. This map you're showing is taking into consideration APARTMENTS with bathrooms inside, not houses or building. Also, what counts as a bathroom for this report are again - APARTMENTS, that have both waterworks connection and a sewage connection. What I think might be the case, is that in a lot of eastern municipalities there are still a lot of buildings with a water connection directly to their own well, and using a septic tank for sewage - thus, placing them in the 56-80% range.
@cutieb00tie8 ай бұрын
There is whole subreddit called r/Widać zabory which whole essence is trying to find maps showing phenomenon showed in this video
@StormMarek Жыл бұрын
Wow, please make similar video about Sudetenland in Czech Republic. There are the same invisible border on many maps for more or less different reasons.
@statsguy1446 Жыл бұрын
Except it's the other way around. The former Sudetes are a lot poorer and more conservative than the rest of Czechia (somewhere even far-right which may be due to its proximity to Sachsen and Eastern Germany).
@StormMarek Жыл бұрын
Yes, most parts of the Sudetenland are poorer, less educated, distinguished by different voting preferences than the rest of the country in every election, more burdened by personal debt, more xenophobic, and much more. I grew up there, that's why I left.
@pikachuthebananasplit90619 ай бұрын
The thumbnail had me cackling! Showing where there are toilets in poland is absolutely hilarious!
@Tom-Lahaye Жыл бұрын
This was mega interesting, never thought about many reasons which explain the differences. But now thinking about this, there are more countries in eastern Europe where this difference is visible. Like Czech republic and Slovakia, formerly Czechoslovakia, and Hungary. In all these countries we can see the east having lower income, being more rural and seeing young people leave these parts of their countries. So maybe you can do a video about these, especially Hungary as this country has a very eventful history as well. I have somewhat of a bond with this country, I was not born there of have ancestors there, but I knew many Hungarians who moved to the west after the revolution in 1956, and have regularly visited the country once it was safe for them to travel to their families.
@japupkind8493 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, You made a point. I had such observation there + in my country - Belarus. But in Sweden (North versus South) the differences are visible too. Let me say it feels in cultural/social standards of behaviors, by my own experience, of course, without any pretentions for ultimate truth.
@gyozop Жыл бұрын
If you like this subject here are some interesting historical facts for you from the Austro-Hungarian times. The Austrian emperor decided to use the countries differently and keep Hungary down which had the most power to possibly break away. So Czechia was industry, Northern Hungary (now Slovakia) wood and mining, today's Hungary agricultural, Transylvania similar to Slovakia. Croatia, for sea products. Part of the strategy was to support smaller populations' national movements and turn them against each other. Eg. my great grand father as hussar colonel was sent to Galicia in Poland to police them and conflict the Poles. (he made friends with them instead) This way the Austrian administrative center could rule them. In the WWI. it all fired back when the empire fell apart exactly because of that.
@lilnunu1553 Жыл бұрын
In Czechia, the former Sudetenland borders are also visible. The former border areas that used to have a German population (then resettled by farmers from Ukraine, Serbia, Bulgaria, Romania and so on after the Germans got expelled in 1948) are now much poorer, have a worse life quality and lower life expectancy, higher drug use, lower education and higher criminality.
@cheetocatto01 Жыл бұрын
Takeaway: People who poop in toilets are more prone to identify themselves as bowel movement enjoyers compared to those who poop in outhouses just to relieve themselves.
@madtechnocrat9234 Жыл бұрын
This is fake, pretty much all houses in Poland have toilets, unless it's some data from 70s... Poland is 21 economy of the world right now. Between Argentina and Switzerland. Ahead of countries like Norway or Sweden. Per capita is of course worse in Poland, but not by that much...
@czwarty7878 Жыл бұрын
@@madtechnocrat9234 2020 data says percentage of homes with toilets in Poland is 94%. First 13 seconds of video and it's already fake data...
@cheetocatto01 Жыл бұрын
@@madtechnocrat9234 It was a joke. I'm from Brazil 9th largest economy and 15% of the population don't have access to clean water let alone sewage. We're in no position to really mock Poland for that. 😅🤣🤣
@lashlarue7924 Жыл бұрын
THIS.
@scvcebc Жыл бұрын
@@cheetocatto01 I visited Brazil in 1995 and our tour guide pointed out how the poorest homes all had satellite dishes even though they didn't have plumbing. It was all about watching World Cup Soccer!
@TimChuma Жыл бұрын
My grandparents could not get back to Poland from West Germany after WWII and ended up going to Australia. It was not until 1952 that they left Europe
@ttttt-yy3ij11 ай бұрын
Bzdury. Jestem że Śląska i toalety w domach zaczęły się pojawiać w latach 70tych (w PRL). Ludzie tam mieszkający pochodzą z byłego zaboru rosyjskiego. Czyli te mapki nie mają sensu.
@buildingandfixing43979 ай бұрын
i vote toilet
@xxswissguyxx691511 ай бұрын
The claim is made that the population of eastern Poland is generally older, yet in that moment a map is shown stating the opposite?
@DejtuTV11 ай бұрын
I live in Poland in Łódzkie and I have toilet in my house my friend. In Podlaskie, Warmińsko Mazurskie Mazowieckie, People have a toilet too.
@henningbartels624511 ай бұрын
Warmia and Masuria would feed the "former German" theory.
@Dekogangster20711 ай бұрын
"I know people who got toilets, so there are no people who dont have them"
Great video! Had a rough idea of this, but You have explained that to me in verry nice details. Greetings from descendant of those moved to the west.
@naumprihodyaschy8629 Жыл бұрын
So basically former german part of Poland is rich and former russian part sucks.
@janeviemuz524 Жыл бұрын
In middle od 19 th century was in Czech part of AH something called "National Revival" after centuries of strong Germanization. People looked on Russia as a role model, till statesman Havlíček Borovský (who is on 1000 bill) visited Russia with enthusiasm and after he came back he said : "It is a land of poverty, squalor, booze, and vast works of literature about squalor, poverty, and booze. And it only brings the aforementioned to the world. Without exceptions."
@defendfreedom1390 Жыл бұрын
@@janeviemuz524 Correct. 'Russia' is a continuation of Mongol Empire.
@oryxantilope591 Жыл бұрын
@@defendfreedom1390 how so?
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
No it is not. Lots of the Russian part is now richer than the German part. Former East Prussia is a 2nd poorest region in the entire country.
@nobleman9393 Жыл бұрын
Not much of a difference in living standards between Lublin and Szczecin to be honest.
@blairseo1 Жыл бұрын
Great video Poland has an interesting history you also have to include that in the past Poland was one of the most successful countries for example quite a lot of people who live in Poland actually have Scottish heritage as well. Regarding toilets no idea .
@michaelw7311 Жыл бұрын
@@basilmagnanimous7011 map about toilets is from pre-WWII times
@grzegorzskora497 Жыл бұрын
I live in southern Poland and I don't know anyone who doesn't have a toilet or bathroom in his house.
@Eric-zo8wo Жыл бұрын
0:00: 🗺 The video humorously discusses the confusion between different maps of Poland throughout history. 2:34: 🇵🇱 Poland's shifting borders and occupation by Stalin and Hitler. 5:30: 🗺 The video discusses the impact of the end of World War II on the borders and population of western Poland, particularly in relation to migration and social changes. 7:31: 🌍 The video discusses the historical and economic differences between western and eastern Poland, particularly in terms of industrialization and agriculture. 10:09: 🗺 The video discusses the division of Poland and the influence of Russian Tsars on city names. Recapped using Tammy AI
@PolishDane Жыл бұрын
Why is Gdańsk German on ur pre WW2 map.
@camelopardalis84 Жыл бұрын
If you check on Wikipedia, there's an English-language article on "Gdańsk", but an English-language article on "Free City of Danzig". Apparently, the Polish version of the name is normally used in English while the German name is used when it comes to Wolne Miasto Gdańsk.
@thebigcheese8169 Жыл бұрын
WMG
@camelopardalis84 Жыл бұрын
@@thebigcheese8169 What's the initialism mentioned for?
@thebigcheese8169 Жыл бұрын
Wolne Miasto Gdańsk @@camelopardalis84
@DolphLongedgreens Жыл бұрын
The presence of an outhouse doesn't eliminate the possibility of upgraded houses with indoor facilities.
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
Please guys report this video as a false information. Nearly everything in this video is wrong in some way.
@augustiner3821 Жыл бұрын
can you point that out? To me it makes sense, without being too incremental.
@user-mh2uj7ns6h Жыл бұрын
@@augustiner3821 Toilet map for example is completely manipulated, because it is not true. The old village houses are transformed into barns but they are technically counted as homes, but in reality they are not. It's not that the actual homes do not have toiets or bathrooms in there
@hofimastah Жыл бұрын
Reported
@rozsadnymarek5988 Жыл бұрын
That's an old song. Germans are showing lies about Poland to drag away big money from investments in central Europe and keep attention on themselwes. This is geting boring..
@augustiner3821 Жыл бұрын
@@user-mh2uj7ns6h ok, I see. What about the rest? I could fully understand the divide, as we have something similiar in Germany with the forme GDR.
@tu1kozaQ Жыл бұрын
As a polish person, I disagree with the thumbnail. In the east we surely DO have toilets bruh, it's not like we're poor like Russia bro.