Keith
17 Feb 2008
UK, Ireland / any polish ppl in aberdeen who make there own music [5]
I know exactly where you're speaking about, as I work in that area. I can assure you it's not true at all about the shop. I spoke to the owner about it and he was genuinely shocked that anyone thought that. It is possible that there has been some language barrier at some point that has given someone the wrong impression, and the story has grown as stories tend to do when they are wrong...
Are you trying to talk to Polish people in polish or english? My experience in that area is that Polish people are very quiet and reserved, until you speak even a little bit of polish to them, when they open up into some of the warmest, friendliest people I've ever met. Even a quick 'dzien dobry, jak się masz?' works wonders.
Think of it this way - if you went to live in Poland, how easy would you find it to talk back to people on the street? It's a fair bet you'd spend most of your time with other Scottish people that you could talk to, at least until you could get to grips with the language.
Interestingly, just 50 yards away from that Polish shop is a language centre which is packed out the door with Polish people learning english...
on another note in my area there has jus opened a polish hairdresser and a polish shop .
I know exactly where you're speaking about, as I work in that area. I can assure you it's not true at all about the shop. I spoke to the owner about it and he was genuinely shocked that anyone thought that. It is possible that there has been some language barrier at some point that has given someone the wrong impression, and the story has grown as stories tend to do when they are wrong...
Are you trying to talk to Polish people in polish or english? My experience in that area is that Polish people are very quiet and reserved, until you speak even a little bit of polish to them, when they open up into some of the warmest, friendliest people I've ever met. Even a quick 'dzien dobry, jak się masz?' works wonders.
Think of it this way - if you went to live in Poland, how easy would you find it to talk back to people on the street? It's a fair bet you'd spend most of your time with other Scottish people that you could talk to, at least until you could get to grips with the language.
Interestingly, just 50 yards away from that Polish shop is a language centre which is packed out the door with Polish people learning english...