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Posts by Magdalena  

Joined: 15 Aug 2007 / Female ♀
Last Post: 27 Mar 2015
Threads: Total: 3 / In This Archive: 0
Posts: Total: 1,837 / In This Archive: 310
From: North Sea coast, UK
Speaks Polish?: Yes
Interests: Reading, writing, listening, talking

Displayed posts: 310 / page 6 of 11
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Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

Dear Bubba - firstly, I am not translating what you have said into Polish. I am just trying to understand what you wrote. This probably means that you are not expressing yourself very accurately. Hm?

Yes, true, you did not say it was the Germans pushing the trend, but you brought them up anyway. I have nothing against the Germans in this respect. Yeah, they have apologized and moved on. Then, you tell me the Polish should do the same - i.e. confront their past (which means there are bad things lurking there) and move on. The Poles would actually be very happy to move on, myself included, if not for the fact that somehow perception of WW2 Poland is being changed, and this is not a figment of my imagination. I do not wish to "move on" into a future in which Poland is continuously forced to apologize for wrongs not committed, or re-apologize over and over again for things it had already acknowledged and apologized for (vide Jedwabne). When I look back at Poland during the war, I do not see much I would need to confront and deal with, and rather little to be ashamed of. As long as that's OK, I am fine to carry on into the next century and shut up. The problem is that once you look round the net a little, and visit some websites and forums, you realize that this is not OK, and will not be OK anytime soon. This is why the Polish people will continue to present their version of events. If you call it moaning, so be it. Over and out - I need to work on some wildly inaccurate translations now.
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

i have no idea what youve read into the words this time but youll find that the germans have confronted their past, dealt with it and moved on. you are well advised to do the same

i hope your not a translator

Well, actually I am, and so I happen to know what "to confront the past" means. If you did not mean to say what you have actually said, then maybe you should choose your words more wisely next time. ;-p

Also, as an aside, I never said it was the Germans pushing this trend I speak of. So maybe you are not so good at reading other people's posts either? (I know, I know, I have offended you again - but actually, I am just teasing you. Z góry przepraszam). :->

Jewish holocaust is a political tool.It has a significance.Polish holocaust is a bother,an unpleasant discussion,a burden to political development.So you cannot compare the two things because they serve different purposes.

Very true.
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

there is no such trend. you really are making some wild claims

Unfortunately, what you say below confirms my wild claims:

the germans have confronted their past, dealt with it and moved on. you are well advised to do the same

Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

i do go on soe of the other topics and tell people to stop moaning about the past and look to the future :).

Well, fair and square then.

I mentioned rememberance day because i think it would be appropirate for Poland to have a day to remember all those who were lost in the war 'armed forces' or 'civillian'.

That would be November 1st. This is a day to remember all our dead.

I would not be getting agitated by all this if not the recent trend to absolve Germans of any WW2-associated guilt and actually turn the tables on the Poles, claiming that they were rabid Jew-haters and murderers, happy to help the Nazis with their work. In this context, telling Poles to shut up and get on with it means this distorted view of history will not get corrected, and in the long run we might end up as the greatest villains of WW2 :-( BTW, I know I'm exaggerating a bit here - but not as much as you might think.
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

I DO understand what you are trying to say. But do you understand what I am trying to say? Not a chance. Visit any thread about Jewish suffering in Poland, and say the same things you have said in this one, like "oh stop the moaning, it's done and gone, move forward" and see what happens then. I have been struck by the inequality of approach - very much. Why are some victims deemed to be superior to others? So, by all means, stop the moaning - everyone. If it's history, it's history - for everybody.

I should really ask for an apology but i doubt you have the stomach for it.

I am really sorry I upset you. I just wanted to pinch you a little bit to get a genuine response. My bad.
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

Just an impression I got while reading about Polish people moaning on and on about what happened to them during WW2. I allowed myself to react in the same way a Jewish person would react if someone said the Jews were moaning on and on about pogroms and stuff. I would like to put some things in perspective. Why shouldn't Poles moan all they want about German occupation? Didn't they suffer? The only reason I can find is that someone thinks they did not *really* suffer that much. Hence my evil assumption as above.
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
Language / Computer terms in Polish [11]

I don't think Bondi knows what "pulpit" means in Polish, and takes for granted it has the same meaning as in English ("to preach from the pulpit"), but in Polish that particular piece of equipment is called "kazalnica" ;-p
Magdalena   
9 May 2008
History / Poles executed in Warsaw '1939-44' [112]

while i usually hate it when somebody posts about 'historic events' in Poland such as these so that people can come on and moan and talk about how hard done by the Polish people and country are.

Well, it is a legitimate part of Polish history, and this is a Polish forum, so people are welcome to talk about it, or "moan" (BTW, if you said that Jews talking about the Holocaust were moaning about it, you would be branded an anti-Semite in an instant). It seems you do not quite believe in the atrocities committed by Germans in occupied Poland? Come on, a few folks got shot here or there, whatever's the problem :-/
Magdalena   
28 Apr 2008
Real Estate / Why are homes in Poland more expensive than in the USA? [27]

You've obviously never used a Dyson ;)

A vacuum cleaner is just that - a paper bag (or other dirt-collecting gizmo) inside a bigger or smaller appliance with a tube sticking out of it. It's supposed to help you clean the floor, not fly to Mars. If there is a cheap vacuum I can buy, I will. I have actually recently bought a vacuum cleaner at Asda, it cost me all of £15.00 and and is a no-name Chinese product, but what the heck, it collects dust and bits and pieces off the floor, so what's the big deal? I don't need a status symbol in my kitchen.
Magdalena   
26 Apr 2008
Life / Cultural readjustment... returning to Poland from the West. [58]

"Hi, How are you" does not mean that the person is taking a personal interst in me.

When I walk in a store, I smile and say Hello! Nice weather! (or something to that effect), and I get a smile back almost every time :-)

Of course there are gonna be surly people out there as well, but some of them actually do crack half a smile too...
I don't wait for the other person to be nice to me first just because I happen to be the customer. If you want smiles, smile yourself. :-))))
Magdalena   
25 Apr 2008
Real Estate / Why are homes in Poland more expensive than in the USA? [27]

Have you considered buying Polish products? Zelmer and Polar are very good choices in the appliance section, for example. Zelmer vacuum cleaners are excellent quality, I have had one for years. Same goes for shoes and clothes, you need to shop around and go less for the big brand magic, more for the actual feel of quality you might get. I can't give you any brand names off the top of my head, nevertheless I know these products are accessible and affordable. Apart from that, you might actually consider visiting a dressmaker, as they are comparatively very cheap, and you can easily buy wonderful fabrics and really go to town. One of my American friends went back home with a mountainous bag full of brand-new tailored clothes :-)
Magdalena   
25 Apr 2008
Work / Moving to Poland with my work - which town should I choose? [25]

Cos you never see Poles outdoors actually smiling.

They don't need to smile just to make YOU happy. From reading your posts, I am beginning to think it might be you who is having a problem. BTW, I have been to several European countries (Denmark, the Netherlands, Germany, the UK, the Czech Republic), and as a casual observer have not been able to detect any great mirth within the general populace either. It's only when you start actually interacting with people on a one to one basis that you can really see what they are. And most of them DO smile. But not indiscriminately. BTW, have you ever been to Finland or spoken to Finns?
Magdalena   
25 Apr 2008
Life / Cultural readjustment... returning to Poland from the West. [58]

t's not newness that's the problem. It's the staleness, the unsmiling, lack of joie de vivre, the total lack of spontaneity that most Poles seem to exhibit. Once you have experienced this in the West, and return to Poland, people here seem to be zombies.

I must be a zombie myself then, because I find life in the so-called West boring and stale, but when I visit Poland, I feel joy and energy, and am extremely happy to jump right into the middle of things, even if this does include completing my dad's annual tax return (yes, I always did it when living in Poland, and I am still expected to) ;-)

What is this a lot of you seem to have about unsmiling Poles? Polish people do not grin needlessly, but smile when they mean it, and laugh when they are happy. A "smile for everyone" usually means no really warm feelings for anyone. This has been said before on this forum, if I recall.

I have always had fun chatting to the lady at the local store or to the old man waiting for a tram with me, and I can assure you we are all smiles and giggles then. It's a question of reaching out to a real person as opposed to expecting everyone to be overjoyed to see you just because you happen to be there.

Yeah, some of my Polish friends go to Poland and come back complaining of the dismal melancholy of the place. So when I visited last year, I took extra care to track this terrible depression down and have a closer look. No such luck. I was exquisitely happy and hated going back. And this is definitely my last year in the UK.
Magdalena   
25 Apr 2008
Law / About foreign names registration in Poland [4]

There are definitely rules in place for the official transcription of place names and probably given names as well. My father, as an Orientalist, does on/off work for the Head Cartographer of Poland (yes, there is such a person), and this work consists precisely of agreeing upon or disputing the transcription of place names in South-East Asia (not the Far East, a Sinologist would do that). The popular method of using English or French transcription is both outdated and frowned upon. People in the street might say Pekin, but maps should not. I think this applies both to Asia and Africa.

Related: Registering a newborn in Poland. Names on Birth Certificates.

when registering a newborn in Poland I was told that the authorities would only allow Polish names or Polish variations of names. Is that correct?

If at least one parent is not Polish, the rule is waved. However, some registrars will still refuse to register any female name which does not end with the letter 'a'.
Magdalena   
24 Apr 2008
Real Estate / Prawo Odkupu [8]

How can you get "caught out" on it when it's right there in the contract?
Magdalena   
24 Apr 2008
Life / The strangest things in Poland [468]

Some anecdotes about the naive American in Poland: I used to interpret for a lady from Texas, she was a certified accountant with a university degree, so no laughing matter intellectually.

1) One day, she told me she was surprised because there were no potatoes in Poland. Is there a potato famine, she asked. I thought Poland lived on potatoes, but I can't seem to be able buy any, she added.

I must admit this really sounded outlandish to me. We were in a small town surrounded by villages, and potatoes were everywhere. I took a walk and made note of all the fruit and veg stalls, overflowing with the stuff. I then asked her to come out and pointed out this starchy abundance. She was genuinely shocked. She had looked for potatoes ONLY in the local small supermarket, which did not bother to stock most vegetables because you could buy them fresh on every street corner. And blinded by her assumption that you bought stuff in supermarkets, she somehow subconsciously chose not to see what the reality was.

2) I was accusingly confronted by her one day: your stupid Polish washing machine has totally ruined my laundry!
The facts of the case were:
- she had put in white and black stuff at the same time
- then turned on the 90 degree Cent. cycle
- the washing machine was actually Italian (which doesn't mean anything, but was fun to point out to her) ;-)
I know she was intelligent, or smart at least. She did know that Poland uses the metric system. How could she have possibly assumed the 90 degrees were meant to be in Fahrenheit? And most interesting of all, why was all this perceived to be my fault - or Poland's?

3) Sour cream was another ongoing problem, she couldn't find it anywhere, but when told to buy fresh cream and keep it in the fridge for a day or two, she recoiled in horror because it would be "spoilt". Whereas as far as I know, sour cream is just that, it is "soured cream". You cannot scoop sour cream fresh from a jug of newly collected milk. The poor soul rather went without.

Every day was a source of new, unexpected culture shocks of this caliber. I tend not to sympathize with people who get so upset over such minor and frankly stupid issues. I have lived in several different countries myself, and while adjusting is not always easy from day one, it is really rude to assume that if anything goes wrong, it is "their" fault.
Magdalena   
24 Apr 2008
Law / About foreign names registration in Poland [4]

There are transcription rules for each language, set down by an official body. These rules apply to languages with non-Latin alphabets only, of course. So if an African language is written in the Latin alphabet, the names should be left as they are. Diacritic marks might be omitted for obvious reasons, but this applies to other European languages as well.

I know there are international transcription rules e.g. for Chinese, so the Polish spelling Peking is being replaced by Beijing, but I'm not sure about other languages in this respect.
Magdalena   
24 Apr 2008
Travel / Who do you use to make calls to Poland? [33]

I don't know then... :-(
I can't say the service I got was seamless, but I did get through any time I needed to call - sooner or later, but still did.
Magdalena   
23 Apr 2008
Travel / Who do you use to make calls to Poland? [33]

This number I used to call the Polish Ministry of Justice, and it worked like a dream:
0844 861 25 25
- it's 1p per minute and has never let me down in three years. Enjoy! :-)
Magdalena   
22 Apr 2008
Life / The strangest things in Poland [468]

THIS :-)))

osiol: The Fiat 126p was the Polish version, produced in Poland (I think).

They were produced in Poland on an Italian - what's the word I'm groping for - licence or suchlike. I've seen pictures of Rome with those little buggers parked all over the place, seems really outlandish, but when you think of it, it's their mother country ;-)
Magdalena   
22 Apr 2008
Life / The strangest things in Poland [468]

Why didn't you ask? Had she run out of regular towels, or is it the newest in hair care?
By the way, are you happy with the way she did your hair?
Magdalena   
22 Apr 2008
Life / The strangest things in Poland [468]

[quote=Threegigs]

Washing machines with no hot water hookup.

- the washing machine heats the water inside all on its own, you see... I've heard it's actually more efficient that way.

No screens (skeeters, I think they call 'em here) in the windows.

- skeeters? Well, never mind. I hate them things either way. Windows are there to be opened wide and leant out of, and if I hate flies so much, I can always install a screen, they're available.

Shops where you have to tell someone behind the counter what you want. Everywhere.

- Where do you live? Out in the country somewhere? The counter style shop has been in decline in Poland for many years now. I'd say supermarkets are the norm now.

No 24 hour convenience stores.

- ??? There's lots of 24 hour stores... again, where do you live?

Paying your bills at the post office.

- How's that different from any other country? You can pay your bills online or at the bank if you want to...

An entire supermarket aisle dedicated to ketchup (catsup, whatever).

- so there are supermarkets after all! ;-P

The near absence of, or extreme prices for stainless steel kitchen utensils.

- all my friends have them, personally I hate the stuff, but never found it difficult to buy.

Air conditioning in a house is unknown.

- in the Polish climate, you don't need AC, you need a good heating system ;-)

Freezers and ovens seem optional in kitchens, as do ?washing machines?.

- Washing machines are put in the bathroom, where they rightly belong - or in the laundry room, if someone has the space. A medium sized fridge has enough freezer space for the average family, and cookers come with ovens, so where's the option (of not having any?)

Maluchs(Maluchy?), those little Fiats.

- those are Italian, actually...

Buying milk at room temperature, that doesn't expire for 3 months.

- UHT processed. You do need to put in the fridge after opening, though, and it'll not last three months opened anyway ;-P

It's preferable to dig around your pockets and spend a minute and a half giving the cashier exact change, instead of them making change for you to speed the line along.

- I flatly refuse to hunt for change and the change is found for me pronto. I just don't get all flustered about it. On the other hand, if I do have the change and know it, I am happy to hand it over. Never been given a dirty look or anything. Just don't act guilty when you say "no".

Bribing your doctor.

- never have, never will, have been very happy with my healthcare.
If people believe they must bribe doctors, who's to blame when some doctors succumb to the temptation? I just refused to acknowledge this, and have never been pressurized into bribing anybody.
Magdalena   
10 Apr 2008
News / My Tribute To Poland [29]

I have never found gays to be oppressed in Poland. They have the same rights every citizen has. Yeah, I know, they can't get married. But marriage is a tricky thing legally and socially. It's supposed to create families and new children, that's what at the back of everyone's minds. But being denied marriage does not equal oppression. Many famous Poles are and were (also pre-WW2) gay or bisexual and it was never a terribly big deal, they definitely did not go to jail for that or get prosecuted. I have a gay friend, hang out with him a lot in Poland and he never seems oppressed or timid or wary or in any other way shy to express his sexual preferences ;-)

(And doesn't get into trouble for it, either).
Magdalena   
10 Apr 2008
UK, Ireland / Life in the UK for some Poles (sad article) [124]

It talks about the hardships poles go through in the UK

I am sorry to say this, as I am Polish myself and feel embarrassed by the truth, but this article talks not about "hardships" Poles go through, but describes the utmost stupidity of those who won't even register at a GP "because they can't speak (the language)" and then go on to buy some disgusting mixture of herbs (?) from a suspicious individual to abort a child that was conceived by accident, even though Family Planning Clinics hand out free contraceptives and Polish interpreters are readily available - I assisted at pre-abortion interviews and suchlike many times myself. Even worse - some of these ladies actually have backstreet abortions done by conmen, entrust their bodies and future health to someone they had never even seen before, just because this person is Polish, and so seems more reassuring. Is this stupidity or what? In a country where abortion is free, legal, and easily available until the 24th week? I am flabbergasted. And truly ashamed of my countrywomen.

- Not that I am so hot on abortion, because I am not. But I cannot judge another woman's decision. It's just that if she really wants to get rid of the baby, doing it the way described in the article not only threatens her health on so many levels, but also degrades her, as if she were not a real human being and unworthy of normal health care. But nobody is passing such judgment on these women, except themselves. SAD. :-(
Magdalena   
10 Apr 2008
History / What Happened in the Danzig Corridor 1939? Poles Slaughtering Germans? [133]

'The Tin Drum',

...is a movie based on a novel by German novelist Gunter Grass, and concerns the German inhabitants of Gdańsk, a city with an uneasy history and complicated ethnic makeup since the Middle Ages. The novel describes the rise of Nazi ideology among the ordinary people of German extraction living in Gdańsk, the way nasty things become acceptable when spoon-fed with a lot of sugar. I read it, I should know. Poles are mentioned of course, but more in passing, as a backdrop to the main story, and I do not remember them being portrayed as anti-semitic.

Actually, maybe reading a few books by Gunter Grass would be a good way for you to start learning the history of this area.
Magdalena   
6 Apr 2008
Love / My polish girlfriend has changed following death of dad.. [153]

Call her in a day or two, or text her... But try to stay in the good friend mode for a while. That's what I'd do, at any rate. And try no to confront her. Just go with the flow. I honestly don't think this is a question of your relationship falling apart. Her world has fallen apart, more or less. This is why you and your relationship seem small to her by comparison.
Magdalena   
6 Apr 2008
Love / My polish girlfriend has changed following death of dad.. [153]

her sons father is thier

Face the facts:

1. His son is the late father's grandchild
2. He knew the father
3. He once constituted a part of this family (see 1).

Don't be paranoid. Just chill and let things happen. Don't try to rush anything, or force a decision one way or another.
The Wise Woman of the Internet has spoken ;-)