You have a good point there, Kith but even if people heard the man's story,
they would just keep saying...
Yeah, that's exactly the problem...if the Nazis had won they would had told stories how brave
they fought against the opressing Poles and how they suffered under polish rule.
Truth was that nobody was forced or beaten to subscribe...and you had to bring some evidence about your roots.
Be careful with what people told AFTER the war was over....Europe then was suddenly full of victims and resisters - no Nazi or collaborateur in sight anymore!
Not even that if he had told the truth that this would had meant in afterwar Poland misery/expellation/gulag/death for him and his family?
Yeah...why should he change a story he kept alive for more than 50 years now?
Do you think that would endear him to patriotic Poles like you???
All this "the big bad mean Germans made me do it" was an Europe-wide mantra.....after the war was over that is ("Victory has many fathers - Defeat is an orphan"!).
...but, as I said - I will consider your idea.
I don't speak Polish, but my grandparents did. Unfortunately, they died before I was born. Dad is in his 80s, but still can understand and converse a little in Polish. We speak English, but we love our Polish culture.
Interesting - so you don't speak Polish, but love your Polish culture?
I always thought that language is the main and most important carrier
of national identity - guess I was wrong.
Oh, well - fair play to you anyway. It must be really hard cultivating Polish
culture without knowledge of the language. What Polish customs and
traditions are still cultivated in your family, Kith?