PolishForums   Poland Now and Then
Home . Polls . Search Witamy,  [Guest 38.103.63.16]  Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts
 Please register or login below:

 » Username  » Password 
Polish Forums / Polish Culture /

Polish people and racism.


Page:  «« 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 8 9 10  »»
posts: 281
 
Grzegorz_
  Apr 18, 08, 12:49  #91

Sensational BS produced by a media w*hore. The same could be done in any other country.


Member
Posts: 4886
Joined: Nov 16, 06
                              
 
tornado2007
  Apr 18, 08, 12:51  #92

Grzegorz_:
Sensational BS produced by a media w*hore. The same could be done in any other country.

right ok greg, yes your right there is racism in other countries and it includes yours i'm affraid. I mean look you always have a picture of a white dog, what about a black one now and again :) It would be a little more PC don't you think:)


Member
Posts: 2300
Joined: Jul 11, 07
                              
 
ArcticPaul
  Apr 18, 08, 13:00  #93

I often find that racial attitudes are more a generational than national trait.

My Father says the most racist things but refuses to even accept they ARE racist statements or he is a racist.

I wonder what the average age of the Daily Express or Mail reader is?
You don't see many under 50s reading them.

Member
Posts: 120
Joined: Apr 7, 08
                              
 
Wroclaw Boy
Edited by: Wroclaw Boy  Apr 18, 08, 13:00  #94

White dog/black dog whats the simbolic difference? for an avatar. G is a self confessed racist what more proof do you need.

I recall him saying that Black people may experience a "monkey imitation" scenario once in a while in Poland.

ArcticPaul:
I often find that racial attitudes are more a generational than national trait.

Ive seen racial issues published in national papers here in Poland WTF you talking about.


Member
Posts: 832
Joined: Oct 12, 07
                              
 
isthatu2
  Apr 18, 08, 13:03  #95

ArcticPaul:
I wonder what the average age of the Daily Express or Mail reader is?
You don't see many under 50s reading them.

Theyre good for a giggle,Ive been collecting the classic British war movies dvds this last week...Oh boy,those Mail readers must never leave their front doors with all those hordes of dangerous Polish Gypsy Muslims invading this green and pleasant land of maggie ,gawd bless er,thatcher...


Member
Posts: 565
Joined: Apr 3, 08
                              
 
Wroclaw Boy
Edited by: Wroclaw Boy  Apr 18, 08, 13:07  #96

isthatu2:
classic British war movies dvds this last week

I bet you have, Question:

What was the shoulder badge for a soldier of the Royal Artilery, assigned to the third Scotts division?


Member
Posts: 832
Joined: Oct 12, 07
                              
 
isthatu2
Edited by: isthatu2  Apr 18, 08, 13:11  #97

Shoulder badge would be ROYAL ARTILERY in red on a blue background in a ( turned on its side shape,for 3rd div,give me a few minutes and I'll get back to you....although,off the top of my head the 3rd Div was a standard british army infantry division,not a "highland " division..

edit...
yep,I was right first time,3rd infantry(monty's ironsides) were a British army infantry division,the badge is a black triangle with an inverted red triangle in the center...just found this site if your interested;
http://www.unithistories.com/units_british/3InfDiv.html

As far as Im aware there werent any rascists polish or otherwise in it though,who knows :)


Member
Posts: 565
Joined: Apr 3, 08
                              
 
Wroclaw Boy
  Apr 18, 08, 13:17  #98

isthatu2:
the 3rd Div was a standard british army infantry division,not a "highland " division..

I totally made that up, well done!


Member
Posts: 832
Joined: Oct 12, 07
                              
 
isthatu2
  Apr 18, 08, 13:18  #99

you b***er :)
right,last time I go all asbergers for you then :)


Member
Posts: 565
Joined: Apr 3, 08
                              
 
miranda
Edited by: miranda  Apr 18, 08, 13:19  #100

Wroclaw Boy:
I totally made that up, well done!

you are on a roll today:DDD


Member
Posts: 3616
Joined: Nov 13, 06
                              
 
isthatu2
  Apr 18, 08, 13:22  #101

yeah,got sus because Scots divisions tended to start from number 50 up....
you know Im fun to have around if a war films on right "no,thats just sooo wrong...whats he meant to be wearing...they didnt have that shape hat untill 3 months later ..".:)


Member
Posts: 565
Joined: Apr 3, 08
                              
 
Matyjasz
  Apr 20, 08, 03:28  #102

Seanus:

Is a country like the UK where u c large numbers of communities like Pakistanis, Indians, Chinese, Europeans etc etc. Poland has small clusters or pockets of foreigners. I'm sorry but Lithuanians are fellow Slavs and are not as different as people from the Middle and Far East. My girlfriend is Polish and I asked her if she thought Poland was multicultural. Her reply, "w życiu". I take it u understand



I get the message, but I do have a tingling feeling that I must have had said something wrong as we clearly talk about two different Polskas.

I never tried to imply that today’s Poland is a multicultural country. My posts were just a response to isthatus claim that Poland never had a multicultural society when in fact not only it had but it made a huge impact on our national identity today, whether some poles are aware of it or not.

So maybe there were no Pakistanis, Indians and Chinese but there were Armenians, Vlachs, Karaites, Tartars, Turks or Jews who were just as exotic and different for Poles from those days as those three nationalities were/are for your people now/few decades ago.

As I mentioned before Poles made only about 50% of the whole population of The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth with the rest being all those earlier mentioned nationalities in this and my previous post, which made quite a colorful mosaic. Basically in the ol Republic you could see a catholic church, protestant church, Jewish Synagogue, Karaites Kenese, and Muslim mosque standing in one city without any bigger problems. If you would go to the market you would most likely hear polish, ruthenian, german, greek, turkish, persian, yiddish and what not. Of course just as it is in today’s uk, sometimes the communications between the communities were better and sometimes there weren’t any, but the truth is that all those cultures influenced each other. Everything started to change after the partitions of the first Rzeczpospolita and now you will see a strange look on some poles face when he hears that some Belarusian’s claim Koścuszko and the 3 may constitution to be a part of their history, or when he hears that Lithuanians consider Adam Mickiewicz, polish national poet, to be Lithuanian. Oh well..


Member
Posts: 1401
Joined: Jul 20, 06
                              
 
Seanus
  Apr 20, 08, 13:16  #103

U seem to mistake the presence of certain foreigners as representing multi-culturalism. It depends on the scale of their representation.


Member
Posts: 4094
Joined: Dec 25, 07
                              
 
BubbaWoo
  Apr 20, 08, 13:23  #104

the white british working class is becoming invisible. what we need is some sort of discrimination that will make them feel included.

Member
Posts: 4941
Joined: Sep 26, 06
                              
 
Seanus
  Apr 20, 08, 13:34  #105

What do you propose BW?


Member
Posts: 4094
Joined: Dec 25, 07
                              
 
BubbaWoo
  Apr 20, 08, 13:40  #106

lets build a wall and put them behind it. not apartheid as such but some form of segrigation

Member
Posts: 4941
Joined: Sep 26, 06
                              
 
z_darius
  Apr 20, 08, 13:40  #107

BubbaWoo:
the white british working class is becoming invisible.

nah, they just stay indoors and devour ungodly amounts if junk food. In fact they are very much visible






Member
Posts: 1956
Joined: Oct 18, 07
                              
 
BubbaWoo
  Apr 20, 08, 13:46  #108

lets set fire to them. they reproduce and reach maturity faster than an average tree and would provide a fantastic renewable fuel source

Member
Posts: 4941
Joined: Sep 26, 06
                              
 
Mali
  Apr 20, 08, 14:05  #109

BubbaWoo:
they reproduce

BubbaWoo:
lets build a wall and put them behind it

Think of the inbreeding possibilities. They`ll end up like the kooky royal families of centuries past.


Member
Posts: 482
Joined: Mar 3, 08
                              
 
ArcticPaul
  Apr 20, 08, 14:35  #110

Matyjasz:
I never tried to imply that today’s Poland is a multicultural country. My posts were just a response to isthatus claim that Poland never had a multicultural society when in fact not only it had but it made a huge impact on our national identity today, whether some poles are aware of it or not.

So maybe there were no Pakistanis, Indians and Chinese but there were Armenians, Vlachs, Karaites, Tartars, Turks or Jews who were just as exotic and different for Poles from those days as those three nationalities were/are for your people now/few decades ago.

As I mentioned before Poles made only about 50% of the whole population of The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth with the rest being all those earlier mentioned nationalities in this and my previous post, which made quite a colorful mosaic. Basically in the ol Republic you could see a catholic church, protestant church, Jewish Synagogue, Karaites Kenese, and Muslim mosque standing in one city without any bigger problems. If you would go to the market you would most likely hear polish, ruthenian, german, greek, turkish, persian, yiddish and what not. Of course just as it is in today’s uk, sometimes the communications between the communities were better and sometimes there weren’t any, but the truth is that all those cultures influenced each other. Everything started to change after the partitions of the first Rzeczpospolita and now you will see a strange look on some poles face when he hears that some Belarusian’s claim Koścuszko and the 3 may constitution to be a part of their history, or when he hears that Lithuanians consider Adam Mickiewicz, polish national poet, to be Lithuanian. Oh well..


Jozef Pilsudski was also born in todays Lithuania but seems to be considered Polish.
Meyer Lansky's Polish birthplace had changed nationalities when the U.S government attempted to deport him in the 50/60's.
When a Nation has had it's borders changed as often and as dramatically as Polands it's not really surprising.

Member
Posts: 120
Joined: Apr 7, 08
                              
 
Matyjasz
  Apr 21, 08, 14:42  #111

ArcticPaul:
Jozef Pilsudski was also born in todays Lithuania but seems to be considered Polish.
Meyer Lansky's Polish birthplace had changed nationalities when the U.S government attempted to deport him in the 50/60's.
When a Nation has had it's borders changed as often and as dramatically as Polands it's not really surprising.



It is something slightly different though. For Adam Mickiewicz it wasn't contradictory to call himself a Pole and write "Lithuania, my fatherland..." For him it was obvious that he can be both and that was the beauty about The Republic of Both Nations.


Seanus:
U seem to mistake the presence of certain foreigners as representing multi-culturalism. It depends on the scale of their representation.


Certainly, it depends on the scale as well as on the influence those communities have on the mainstream culture. I agree.

It is a very fascinating topic, and a very underestimated and forgotten period in the history of Poland and Central/Eastern Europe at the same time. Somehow people prefer to read about the failed uprisings than about Jagielonian or RoBN times. It really is a pity.

Unfortunately I will have to disappear for some time as I have a lot of work to do and can’t be distracted but I will give you a link that will make a quite interesting introduction for the topic we have discussed here. Or at least I hope it will be interesting for you. :))

www.commonwealth.pl

Enjoy.

PS: I still don't get it why they mentioned French people and forgot about Dutch communities in Poland. Oh well, you can't have it all right? :)

Pozdrawiam

Maciej


Member
Posts: 1401
Joined: Jul 20, 06
                              
 
Lukasz
Edited by: Lukasz  Apr 21, 08, 14:54  #112

Matyjasz:
The Republic of Both Nations.


After 3rd May constitution it was no longer "The Republic of Both Nations" it was just "Republic of Poland" and Lithuanians voted for it in their local parlaments. What is interesting last time they started to celebrate anniversary of 3rd may constiotution.


Matyjasz:
www.commonwealth.pl


great site you can make separate thread form this in history section. :)))


Member
Posts: 2220
Joined: Sep 1, 07
                              
 
Matyjasz
  Apr 22, 08, 15:49  #113

Lukasz:

After 3rd May constitution it was no longer "The Republic of Both Nations" it was just "Republic of Poland" and Lithuanians voted for it in their local parlaments. What is interesting last time they started to celebrate anniversary of 3rd may constiotution.



Thats a long story.

Lukasz:
great site you can make separate thread form this in history section. :)))


Well since it's not about immigration into the UK I doubt that it'll be a smashing success here on PF. :P

But yeah, it is a very interesting site. It could have been more detailed, but you can not have it all...


Member
Posts: 1401
Joined: Jul 20, 06
                              
 
z_darius
  Apr 22, 08, 20:20  #114

BubbaWoo:
lets set fire to them. they reproduce and reach maturity faster than an average tree and would provide a fantastic renewable fuel source

Yeah, I'm with you on that one, although... imagine the amount of methane you could extract from them.


Member
Posts: 1956
Joined: Oct 18, 07
                              
 
plk123
  Apr 22, 08, 21:48  #115

capellanna:
Polish people and racism.


polishforums.com/last_breath-40_22284_0.html#msg424949 - here is a good example


Member
Posts: 2785
Joined: Aug 29, 07
                              
 
southern
Edited by: southern  Apr 23, 08, 08:16  #116

For me the fact that Poland had over 3 million Jews before WW2 is enough to prove lack of racism.No other nation would ever accept such a large number of Jews.
They also had commonwealth.Have you ever heard of a french-german commonwealth,or an english-french commonwealth,or even a dutch-german commonwealth or french-belgian?Only skandinavian countries had some similar form of unity(where all parts were not always satisfied or not forced to accept union).

Member
Posts: 2474
Joined: May 17, 07
                              
 
Magdalena
  Apr 23, 08, 10:51  #117

As an aside - why do some of you think that being "multicultural" must mean "more than one skin colour"? Asia is a huge continent and surely extremely multicultural, yet no more than two skin colours prevail - or rather, two skin tones. Also, why is it that Poland is often slammed for being racist because sometimes, some people stare or point - which in my opinion is more curiosity with a bit of bad manners thrown in than outright rudeness or racism - while e.g. in India, where I spent three years as a child, people would routinely stare at us fixedly, walk up to us to touch us, follow us round, and laugh at our language and clothes, but such behaviour is not to be considered rude or racist by the tourist or visitor? Can you explain exactly why? Also, an American friend of mine repeatedly claimed Poland needed more "colour", it was "too white", would she make the same comments about India being too "brown" or Africa being too "black"? We all know she never would. Why is the existence of Europe and white European nations such a problem for so many of you? BTW, I have lived in Poland for most of my life, and it's been quite a long one, and I have truly never seen anyone being rude to a foreigner because of their skin colour. I have seen people who were fascinated by the difference in skin colour and/or clothes, but hopefully this should be taken as a sort of compliment. :-) I agree that somewhere out in the boondocks people might be genuinely shocked by someone who looked "different", but then they would be equally shaken by a white Polish girl immodestly dressed (in their opinion). It's not racism. It's just a lack of perspective, just like the Indians running after me and my parents, pointing and laughing their heads off reacted that way because to them, we were genuinely funny. If I can accept that when abroad, I want visitors to my country to be able to exercise similar understanding.
I exclude the real "white power" or "black power" or "whatever power" blockheads from my musings, as they are everywhere in the world and their problem is political, not sociological. At least that's what I think. Howgh ;-)


Member
Posts: 216
Joined: Aug 15, 07
                              
 
Bratwurst Boy
Edited by: Bratwurst Boy  Apr 23, 08, 11:13  #118

southern:
For me the fact that Poland had over 3 million Jews before WW2 is enough to prove lack of racism.No other nation would ever accept such a large number of Jews.


Not like the Nazis but "lack of racism"????

ANTISEMITISM IN INTERWAR POLAND 1919-1939

THE KOSHER SLAUGHTERING BILL

LIMITING THE NUMBER OF JEWS IN PROFESSIONS

FORCING JEWISH EMIGRATION: THE "MADAGASCAR PLAN"

southern:
They also had commonwealth.Have you ever heard of a french-german commonwealth,or an english-french commonwealth,or even a dutch-german commonwealth or french-belgian?Only skandinavian countries had some similar form of unity(where all parts were not always satisfied or not forced to accept union).


Germans lived most of their history in one commonwealth (Staatenbund) or the other...starting with Charlemagne, the holy roman empire of the german nation spanning nearly whole Europe, the Hanse, the many duchies and kingdoms included often
also neighbouring people etc...
The nation state Germany came only into existence 1871!


Member
Posts: 1465
Joined: Apr 2, 07
                              
 
Lukasz
Edited by: Lukasz  Apr 23, 08, 11:18  #119

Bratwurst Boy:
Bratwurst Boy

Germans pointing at Poles ? (using your neo nazi websites)

www.commonwealth.pl


it was beautiful country before your Nazi German invasion. of course not everything was perfect. Now we want to achieve what you Germans and later Russians have destroyed.

http://www.jewishfestival.pl/index.php?lang=e

jews

it is Kraków (during this festival)

jew

Why do you think there was the bigest european Jewish society in Poland before WWII ? Second after USA in all over the world.


Member
Posts: 2220
Joined: Sep 1, 07
                              
 
z_darius
  Apr 23, 08, 11:19  #120

Bratwurst Boy:
Not like the Nazis but "lack of racism"????

You got a point. Denying the existence of antisemitism in Poland is plain silly. It has and does exists everywhere Jews live.

The only issue with antisemitism in Poland is that is has been blown out of proportion. In fact, considering non-islamic persons, Germany has had the highest number of antisemitic incidents in this decade.


Member
Posts: 1956
Joined: Oct 18, 07
                              
 
Page:  «« 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 8 9 10  »» Similar Threads¦Latest Discussions Go UPtop of page

Home / Polish Culture /


Only registered and logged-in users may post here. Please login or register.

Newer thread in this forum: Older thread in this forum:
WINKING - A GOOD POLISH SIGN??? Best Man's role at Polish Wedding.

129 users online in the last hour [Guests - 78 / Members - 51] All times are CST (GMT -6)

Home . Latest Discussions . Unanswered Posts . Statistics
© 2005-08 PolishForums.com | About Us | Contact Us | Privacy, TOS, Rules | Poland Advertising | Support PF