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Posts by Lyzko  

Joined: 12 Jul 2013 / Male ♂
Warnings: 2 - AO
Last Post: 10 hrs ago
Threads: 45
Posts: 9,417
From: New York, USA
Speaks Polish?: tak
Interests: podrozy, rozrywki, sport

Displayed posts: 9462 / page 2 of 316
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Lyzko   
7 Mar 2015
News / Why no reprivatisation in Poland? Holocaust-era property ownership. [119]

As far as I can recall reading, each województwo/Wojewodschaft in pre-War Poland had its own particular restrictions regarding Jewish "rights", specific to that region! Similar to many European countries, Jews had been invited in solely at the behest of individual nobles, only to be summarily thrown out (again) at the whim of those same nobles.

This left Jews between a rock and a hard place, so to speak! Those who converted to Catholicism and joined the Church, would thus be granted Polish citizenship, making them one step closer to being bona fide property owners:-) This seldom occurred, and so, the matter became compounded, sometimes long, long after the Second World War, when, as late as the new Millenium, former Polish Jewish Holocaust survivors demanded redress for "stolen" properties in Poland. The government though, has been often somewhat recalcitrant to even acknowledge such claims as valid.

The experience with (re-)privatization vs. re-patriation vis-à-vis the "return" of purloined goods/property wrested from Jewish hands before 1945 in Germany, for instance, was that Jews had long since become citizens until roughly 1938 and the advent of the Nuremberg Laws, thereby robbing all German Jews of any citizenship rights whatsoever!

After the War, Jews in Poland continued to be the victims of isolated pogroms, e.g. Kielce and Jedwabne among them. This was not the case in Germany, Werwolf-bands roaming the occupied, impoverished German countryside notwithstanding. Acts of anti-Jewish violence were few and far between.

Property belonging to Polish gentiles after the War and taken by Russia or Germany was returned, so long as restitution was considered appropriate.

Jews continue to try and wrest funds owed them as part of their "Wiedergutmachung" or restitution claims from the the German and Austrian governments, yet to little avail.
Lyzko   
7 Mar 2015
News / Why no reprivatisation in Poland? Holocaust-era property ownership. [119]

Yet, Jon, in the latter case you mentioned, now come on here! Who's more likely to have their rightful property returned expeditiously, the Jew or the gentile?

Post-War rules of government were obviously different from wartime. However, the question remains as to who is legally entitled to possess in the first place? The answer anywhere on earth is "a citizen" (presumably without a criminal record).

Fact is, fella, we're talkin' black market! Buy off some shyster and anything's possible:-)
Lyzko   
8 Mar 2015
Language / Polish Language Exchange Thread [133]

Informatik = Information technology (I.T.)

Hmm, sounds interesting! Zatem potrzebujesz jezyk angielski dla tej pracy:-)

Are you from a suburb (przedmiasto) of Poznań? I unfortunately only know Szczecin from first-hand knowledge.
I'm happy to point out mistakes, as I trust you in turn won't hesitate to point out mine!

I learned Polish for mostly practical purposes. Whilst I have no family in Poland, I do have acquaintances (znajome) with whom I'm still regularly in touch. Frankly speaking, their English is so halting, I find it easier to simply talk to them in Polish.
Lyzko   
10 Mar 2015
Language / Polish Language Exchange Thread [133]

Believe me, Danny boy, it's no big deal! Same in Germany! Soooooo many Germans insisted on speaking English with me until they heard my German. They never had to revert back to English:-)

For one thing, I took the trouble to read Goethe, Grass and Boell! The Germans I met, didn't even bother to read Stephen Crane, Hawthorne or Emily Dickenson. American "culture"??? 'Coulda knocked 'em over with a featherLOL
Lyzko   
11 Mar 2015
Language / Polish Language Exchange Thread [133]

Dzięki, Piotrowi Olsztynu aka 'Peter Allenstein' LOL

I readily realize the mistake....(yes, it was a basic one, apologies)

@Danny,

As I said, I started running out of patience with the halting English of my friends from Rzeszow, and so I decided I'd better simply bone up on my Polish.

While I'm scarcely chastising the Germans I encountered for not knowing Emily Dickenson, if one doesn't know literature, how is one to (literally!!!) sound literate in the language they are speaking?? Once there was a higher standard in America. Even TV was once the gold-plate ring which we all strove to emulate, e.g. the late Walter Cronkite, Jack Paar etc..

See any of those guys on the horizon?? I sure don't!

Back to Polish, I always loved Jan Brzechwa's verse, used to play Chopin and was hooked on Polish cinema. So, there ya go:-)
Lyzko   
14 Mar 2015
Language / by, aby, żeby differences? [10]

"On studiował polską literaturę, BY zostać dziennikarzem." or "On studiował polską literaturę ABY zostać dziennikarzem."

Would both of the above sentences be considered correct?
Lyzko   
14 Mar 2015
Language / by, aby, żeby differences? [10]

Great! I'm much relieved:-)

Having been away from native speakers for as long as I have, it's indeed reassuring to know that I still remember what I learned in school.
Lyzko   
14 Mar 2015
Genealogy / Polish version of my name -Sławomir? [17]

Makes perfect sense! "Sław-" = glory + "mir" = peace/world (like Russian) < "Rum-" (> "Ruhm" = glory in German) + "fred" = peace > "Frieden" in German, "fred" in Danish, Swedish and Norwegian:-)
Lyzko   
14 Mar 2015
Language / How are names in Polish " nicknamed "? [10]

A Polish friend once told me that in Poland, nearly EVERYBODY is called by their nickname in casual or private address, e.g. "Cześć, Romku!", "No, gdzie jest Romek?" etc.. and almost never "Roman", for instance. Not to do so, would seem snobby or standoffish, therefore making one extremely unpopular with their peers. Social solidarity is apparently very strong among Poles.

Is this so?
Lyzko   
14 Mar 2015
Language / Does this phrase mean anything to you in Polish? "Up to you" while drinking. [17]

As opposed to the English idiom "It's up to you.", meaning "You alone must decide."?

We have the expression in the States, "Bottoms up!", meaning "Cheers!" (not in the UK formula for "Thank you!" in certain contextsLOL)

A gentleman I once knew had always though the expression was "Bottles up!". Not a completely insane confusion either:-)
Lyzko   
15 Mar 2015
History / The Celts in Poland. [71]

I've previously observed of late (in another thread of this Forum, by the way) that certain Poles from around the vicinity of Kraków do have a certain oval-shaped face reminiscent of various Celtic types encountered.

On the other hand, there are a variety of Polish "types", and so I really oughtn't generalize:-)
Lyzko   
16 Mar 2015
Language / Polish Language Exchange Thread [133]

Erika, I take it you're also looking for a native English speaker to help improve your English?
marekzgerson@yahoo

Don't be fooled by the moniker, I'm an English native speaker:-)
Lyzko   
18 Mar 2015
News / GERMANS WANT TO GERMANIZE KOPERNIK (COPERNICUS)! OUTRAGE! [1016]

The answer is, to the Germans he's German, to the Poles he's Polish. It's really quite simpleLOL

Fact remains, the Poles claim for example Chopin as a Pole, while the French (because of his birth father Nicolas!) are more than willing to concede that he's French:-)
Lyzko   
18 Mar 2015
Language / What are the hard aspects of Polish according to its learners? - home essay [21]

Welsh is in fact an excellent analogy! It's almost as mutated as Polish (and, what I'm told, far less predictable).
Actually, there are many languages out there with even greater irregularities. For me, the number quirks along with the aspectual distinctions were what I had trouble with at the start.
Lyzko   
18 Mar 2015
News / GERMANS WANT TO GERMANIZE KOPERNIK (COPERNICUS)! OUTRAGE! [1016]

@Harry,

You never "stop being" any particular nationality/ethnicity/religion into which you were born and raised! That's just plain silly. Does a horse cease to be a horse if only because it happened to be conceived in a chicken coop? Because somebody marries into someone else's culture doesn't really mean they forfeit their own. Chopin's mother obviously wished to please Chopin's father (her husband) and so became a French citizen, that's all. Deep down though, she was a Pole "z krwi i kości"!! A Catholic who converts to Judaism still remains a Catholic, as well as vice-versa:-)

@Zimmy,

Indeed Chopin glorified Polish national music, put her on the map, he did. Yet, he shared two different heritages, was BORN however in Poland (in Zelazowa Wola, to be exact), not in France. Herein lies the difference!
Lyzko   
18 Mar 2015
News / GERMANS WANT TO GERMANIZE KOPERNIK (COPERNICUS)! OUTRAGE! [1016]

Tak jest, goofy! Spot on, matey:-)

Yet a gentle exception might be made for Joseph Conrad. A trained seaman, he was born in and lived in Poland until his twenties, at which time he acquired the English language. Despite the fact that he spoke English like a Pole and not a Brit, he WROTE English with such stylistic conviction, most English aka Anglophones out there think he's English, when in fact he wasn't!
Lyzko   
18 Mar 2015
History / Terrible past for the Jews in Poland? [930]

It is a fact that Jews and Jews alone were blamed by the Nazis especially as harbingers of despised Communism, therefore demonized as none other to become symbols of all that is evil, corrupt and pernicious in the world, not the Gypsies etc. Only the "international Jew" was perceived as a direct threat! The failed Eisner government before 1919 in Bavaria was seen as proof of what happens when Jewish Communist try and take over. Sources??!

How curious that sources are required in order to confirm basic facts of history, whereas no such sources are ever (or rarely!!) required among anti-semites for evidence as to why the Jews are evil. THAT they accept at face value:-)

A bit hypocritical, don't you think?
Lyzko   
19 Mar 2015
History / Terrible past for the Jews in Poland? [930]

TheOther, I was only being sarcastic:-) For a minute though, I thought this was gonna be another "The Jews were responsible for their own fate..!" type deal, sorry!
Lyzko   
20 Mar 2015
Life / Can many young Poles speak German? [72]

Amen, The Other!

I think the case for German has been made:-) Spot on!!

When I met Poles for the first time over twenty-five years ago, their English was virtually non-existent. At that time I knew no Polish. Thank heaven I spoke German, or we wouldn't have been able to talk with one another.

I should amend my last post!

It's been said of late that more and more younger Poles are opting for English over German.
(:-
Lyzko   
21 Mar 2015
Language / What are the hard aspects of Polish according to its learners? - home essay [21]

I agree, Wiem! I continue to have to think, even re-think, when I'm writing (as well as on occasion, speaking) whether for instance, it's "przynosi" or "przyniosi" etc. along sometimes with whether I'm speaking perfectively or imperfectively. Usually, I'll nail it from the get go, other times, I'm slightly less sure:-) Italian though, like many Romance languages, has far more "irregular" verb conjugations than Polish. I'm simply more familiar with them, that's all.

Furthermore, I find myself second guessing my own instincts. What I never have to even think about in German, I often have to think twice about in Polish!

Stuff like "On śpiewał w swojim pokoju." vs. "On ZAśpiewał koncert w Krakowie." are basically clear to me by now. Nonetheless, I console myself in the knowledge that Poles frequently make analogous errors in English with simple vs. continuous tenses, e.g. "How many language are you speaking, Mark?" vs. "How many languages DO YOU speak..?" etc.
Lyzko   
21 Mar 2015
Work / Advice on Teaching English in Poland [709]

Advice on Teaching English in Poland

...slower, pleaseLOL

Seriously folks, anyone interested in teaching English in Europe should AVOID language schools and aim straight for the university track, both in terms of sheer standard as well as pay scale!!

I think that should already be a given, frankly.