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10,000 ISRAELIS READY TO CLAIM FOR POLISH CITIZENSHIP AND POLISH LAND!


ukpolska
30 Dec 2007 #271
Carol, if you feel so strong about your past then sell up and come home.
You seem to have a big chip on your shoulder and you should lay this past to rest and get over it and start living a modern Poland as most Poles are.

What good can come from going over old hurt making yourself feel bad all the time?
As I said my wife's family have more then their average share of crap in the second world war and through the communist times, but what do they do, they pick themselves up, dust themselves down and get on with life and try again, and will keep on trying as the Polish spirit has proofed throughout history.

Respect to you carol, but you really should move on :O)

Escape? These people didn’t escape – they were arrested and deported

If they were arrested most of them wouldn't have the opportunity of being "deported".
And no Polish people were deported to the USA, they fled to the USA, because the other choice as you said would be arrest.
vodka 1 | 38
30 Dec 2007 #272
you are not going to find more Jewish European nation than Poles , just look on Pilsudski life partner Ola or on Agnieszka Holland and in some places it was popular to mix as to anty semitism in Poland before WWII, bright side won (Pilsudski fraction)

and Polish Jews are mix of European Jews.

medianet.pl/~naszapol/IMG/0504rog4.jpg

what we can do, we are Jews OMG :(((( ;-) better not think

after lecture of all "Jewish threads" on this forum I m disappoited and annoyed. No body have noticed that Polish Jews are Jews form western countries who found Poland good place to live. This maps are better. We have a lot of Jewish blood in our nation. What is nationality of those all Jewish commies ? POLISH ! because most of them are atheists but they have Jewish origin. What is more there were regions and parts of our history when mixing between Poles and Jews was popular.

what about those Jewish survivors killed in "pogroms". Jews seam not to see that the most important offices in apparatuses of oppression in commie regime were occupied by Jews. So some of famous pogroms were inspirated by Jews, ekhmmm commies they were not jews any more !!! enormously big Jewish representation in commie regime offices (unproporcjonal) is fact. Of course not all jews collaborated with commies but their role was noticeable. When I read realigous Jews opinion about Polish anty semitism before WWII it is noticable that they compare Poles to Austrians in XIX century, according to Krakow or Lwów it is prove of colaboration with another occupant of Poland. Generaly they had opportunity to taste Austrinas during WWII ekhmmm wasnt Hitler Austrian ? yes he was ... I think it is very good that there is country like Israel those Jews who feel Jews have place to live in Israel. Polish citizens who have Jewish origin but prefere to be Poles can live here peacefuly and situation we have now is great.

and I send best wishes foe our Friends in Israel HAPPY NEW YEAR NA ZDROWIE ^ ^
omniba
30 Dec 2007 #273
If they were arrested most of them wouldn't have the opportunity of being "deported".

I’m speaking of the Poles who were arrested by the Soviets, locked in cattle trains and deported to Siberia, etc. This wasn’t re-location of people out of harms way, this was a punishment for being bourgeoisie hence “corrupters of the people”. Many of them belonged to the families of those men who would be shot in Katyn and other places of mass execution.

Once the war was over and Poland’s fate sealed, the survivors of this mass deportation who had, in the meantime, been moved West via Iran, couldn’t go back to Poland because of the Soviet presence there. Very often those who would not resign themselves to a life abroad and insisted on returning to Poland simply disappeared without trace somewhere en route. They never got back home. They were never seen again.

However, there is a load of information about these people all over this Forum. If you are interested in their fate perhaps you could take a look at the other relative threads.
ukpolska
30 Dec 2007 #274
However, there is a load of information about these people all over this Forum. If you are interested in their fate perhaps you could take a look at the other relative threads.

There is no need my friend I know the history :O)
My point was that no one was deported to the USA from Poland.
lesser 4 | 1,311
30 Dec 2007 #275
Yes,no one doubts Pilsudskis greatness

Although blind glorification of this person among polish society is huge, still large group of people don't have too much of sympathy for him.
omniba
30 Dec 2007 #276
My point was that no one was deported to the USA from Poland.

Who on earth ever said that anybody was deported to the USA?
ukpolska
30 Dec 2007 #277
Hmmmm, must have got that one wrong then, could of sworn I saw it somewhere, apologises :O)
kaliszer - | 99
30 Dec 2007 #278
Wojtyla apparently had great sympathy for, and/or was influenced by Jewishelements...his mother was reportedly a Jewish woman from Lithuan

This is really amusing. If the Pope's mother was Jewish, then he was Jewish! I'll leave it to the members of this forum to chew on that for a while. I thought he was a nice man. So for my part, as a Jew, I accept him into the fold.
celinski 31 | 1,258
30 Dec 2007 #279
Carol, if you feel so strong about your past then sell up and come home.You seem to have a big chip on your shoulder and you should lay this past to rest and get over it and start living a modern Poland as most Poles are.
What good can come from going over old hurt making yourself feel bad all the time?

I wish I could. As with my family leaving Poland in 1951, I have built my life here, it's all I know. I would be in the same boat they were. Going to another country and having to start all over. Selling my farm here and my horses. Not to mention the family that have been born here, my own children would not understand.

After many years the USA has grown an appreciation for the Polish in the USA. It was not always this way. As a child I recall being told to go home to Poland as I did not belong here. A "ski" in your name made you a target in school and an outcast/misfit that simply did not belong. Yes, children can be cruel. I do not say this for pity as I have a happy ending. Around 7th grade I became popular for who I am. I never forgot though the feeling I had as a child, and know first hand the damage prejudist can do, Each and every person is the same reguardless of color or religion.

My chip is due to Polish family's mostly non Jewish that never spoken out like the Jewish family's and are not taken into consideration. We were all victims. If you are Polish you were targeted. Some lost entire blood lines, some were lucky and lost only a few. My point is reguardless of your loss we all have scars. My father as with many victims, lived a lifetime in silence and pain within his heart vs. having a "holocaust" as the Jewish have and a nation digging for the truth. If you see this as "a chip" so be it. In the USA since 1989 groups that never spoke out are now finding a voice. We are at long last doing what Jewish family's have always done. Documents that we did not have access to in the past are at long last being released.

Don't get me wrong I know of the suffering that the Jewish family's endured. Jewish also were aware of what took place to ours. If the tables were reversed and the only ones looked at as victims were the ones that were born in Poland or just Roman / Greek Catholics I believe Jewish would be saying the same thing I am, what about our families? Remember we are all the same.

And no Polish people were deported to the USA, they fled to the USA, because the other choice as you said would be arrest.

arrest or death.

My point was that no one was deported to the USA from Poland.

I believe the word that should be used is, "exiled".
webster-dictionary.net/definition/Exile

Definition of Exile
Ex`ile'
n. 1. Forced separation from one's native country; expulsion from one's home by the civil authority; banishment; sometimes, voluntary separation from one's native country.

Let them be recalled from their exile.
- Shak.
2. The person expelled from his country by authority; also, one who separates himself from his home.
Thou art in exile, and thou must not stay.
- Shak.
v. t. 1. To banish or expel from one's own country or home; to drive away.
[imp. & p. p. Exiled ; p. pr. & vb. n. Exiling.]
Calling home our exiled friends abroad.
- Shak.
a. 1. Small; slender; thin; fine.

Carol
lesser 4 | 1,311
30 Dec 2007 #280
I thought he was a nice man. So for my part, as a Jew, I accept him into the fold.

You and Joe have something in common, you believe in the same crap :)
celinski 31 | 1,258
30 Dec 2007 #281
Polish independance day was 11/11/18,the same day WW1 ended.

I was not referring to just WW1 and WW2 but ...

youtu.be/HwNpVsdIb-k - RED STAR VS WHITE EAGLE

Carol
kaliszer - | 99
31 Dec 2007 #282
You and Joe have something in common, you believe in the same crap :)

I don't understand what "crap" you are referring to. What I meant was that according to Jewish religious law a person whose mother was Jewish is considered a Jew, meaning that he has all the obligations and legal standing of a Jew. He is obligated to keep the laws of the Torah and can marry only another Jew, etc. In the spititual sense, he is part of the nation of Israel. If a person is not aware of his being Jewish then he's not held responsible by Jewish law for not having kept the laws. (Unlike Christianity and Islam, we don't believe that non-Jews are required to keep the rules of our religion, only the 7 laws of the children of Noah.)
ukpolska
31 Dec 2007 #283
You and Joe have something in common, you believe in the same crap :)

lesser why do you attack someone's religion?
As a good catholic as yourself you are a fine advert for the catholic religion, peace and understanding!!!

Thank god (or not) I am a atheist, no competition here among non-beleivers :O)
kaliszer - | 99
31 Dec 2007 #284
Celinski,
I finally found something we have in common. Actually two things:
1. We both were frozen in time in the 1940s, in the sense that our attitudes toward Poland, Jews, etc is pretty much set by the situation during and after the war. Whatever changes have occured in Poland since then, especially after Communism fell, have little effect on the impressions we got as children learning from our parents and grandparents. In the long term, our perspective might be more accurate than people who judge the situation according to the past 10 years. And by the way, although it's true that there's more awareness of Jewish suffering than of Polish suffering, that's not because Jews suppress the Polish story. Who's stopping Polish people from writing books and making movies about Polish narrative? I would love to read more about that.

2. You have horses! I love horses and I go riding every other friday at a ranch near my town. I go with 2 or 3 people riding (western) in the orchards and fields of the Sharon valley. If you're ever in israel you are welcome to join us.
lesser 4 | 1,311
31 Dec 2007 #285
kaliszer

ukpolska

JPII mother was not Jewish, she was church going Catholic, educated in Catholic school. Surname Kaczorowska doesn't sounds Jewish either.

Of course I don't care about any silly competition among religions. In fact I don't like when the Catholic Church blandish to people, because it extends the number of low quality Catholics and this is not the point.

About atheism being non-religion, this is questionable if you take a look how some atheists in this forum behave in "religion threads". They seems to care so much to extend the number of atheists. This is their obsession.
omniba
31 Dec 2007 #286
And by the way, although it's true that there's more awareness of Jewish suffering than of Polish suffering, that's not because Jews suppress the Polish story.

That's not correct. You will remember the tremendous fuss kicked up by the Jewish community when the Germans wanted the Berlin Holocaust Memorial to include all victims off the Holocaust, not just the Jewish ones. In the end the Germans caved in to Jewish pressure, and that was that. The Memorial, inaugurated just two years ago, is strictly about the Jews. No-one else is mentioned - it's as if the other victims just didn't count. And this is just one example.

Not to mention the Auschwitz Crosses - an amazing story in itself.

Who's stopping Polish people from writing books and making movies about Polish narrative?

I take it that by "narrative" you actually meant "recent history".
You have made a good point here - it is high time the Poles started telling their side of the story - warts and all. And, preferably, this should be in English.

Since you've brought books up, may I suggest this book:

"The Holocaust Industry" by Norman G. Finkelstein, ISBN 1-85984-773-0

Norman G. Finkelstein (now living in the USA) is the son of two Polish Jews who survived the Holocaust. His is a very enlightening book - well written, well balanced and a must read for all those interested in these matters.
kaliszer - | 99
31 Dec 2007 #287
Celinski, you say "When I do research for documents I have been unable to seach because I am not Jewish."
Are you saying that you've tried to do reasearch in a Jewish holocaust library or museum and they refuse to allow you to do research because you are not Jewish? That doesn't sound plausible to me.
celinski 31 | 1,258
31 Dec 2007 #288
refuse to allow you to do research because you are not Jewish?

Yes, on line sites this has happened to me two times. You cannot enter unless you join and you must be Jewish to join. I was in a site and ran my family's name and it told of documents in this other site I was trying to go into. I never did see the documents.

Carol
joepilsudski 26 | 1,388
31 Dec 2007 #289
Surname Kaczorowska doesn't sounds Jewish either.

Kaczorowska anglicized to Katz?...from Lithuania?...something to ponder.
Some more discussion on this:

cephas-library.com/catholic/catholic_pope_has_jewish_mother.html

There are quite a few 'Jewish' cardinals right now.
Seanus 15 | 19,672
31 Dec 2007 #290
Kaczorowska sounds Polish, not far from Kaczynski. Kaczor is drake
kaliszer - | 99
1 Jan 2008 #291
Kaczorowska anglicized to Katz?...from Lithuania?...something to ponde

Hmmm. Katz... Kaczorowska. Now why didn't i think of that before? Well that proves it! JPII was an alien from a Jewish planet who's been broadcasting radio messages to unsuspecting Catholics to make them like gefilte fish. The only way you could have known that is if you were a freemason yourself, Pilsudski! Don't think we don't notice that "joepilsudski" backwards spells "iks dus lipe oj", which is talmudic hebrew for "have a pleasant shabbes". We've got your number.
Przemas 1 | 101
2 Jan 2008 #293
If any entity on this planet should be aware of a little self-disciplined prudence it surely should be the Jews.

These restitutional demands only help to fuel the hatred amongst the masses.

Put the gears in neutral, Jews.

Such monetary lust will only compound and galvanize those already with hatred in their hearts.
kaliszer - | 99
3 Jan 2008 #294
Reply to Przemas:
Where it's possible to compensate for stolen homes and businesses, then compensation should be made - to Poles, to Jews - it makes no difference. (Germans are another story, since they caused the whole mess in the first place, so they deserve no compensation.)

If any entity on this planet should be aware of a little self-disciplined prudence it surely should be the Jews.

Why is that? I honestly don't understand your point. Did we invade Poland? I wasn't aware that we had an army back then.
ShelleyS 14 | 2,893
3 Jan 2008 #295
What I meant was that according to Jewish religious law a person whose mother was Jewish is considered a Jew

She married out and most likely decided to turn her back on the Jewish faith, her son was baptised and raised in the Catholic faith - so whilst his mother may have been born into a Jewish family she gave up practicing, married out of the faith and brought her son up not as a Jew but as a catholic, so her son was not a Jew. Not that it matters, his life time experiences and his mothers views obviously came in useful in later life.
lesser 4 | 1,311
3 Jan 2008 #296
No serious source claims that she was Jewish. Some other conspiracy theorists claim that she was Ukrainian or Lithuanian.
kaliszer - | 99
3 Jan 2008 #297
I realize that. I was just pointing out what his status would be according to Jewish law. Of course his mother wasn't Jewish anyway, so it's not really important.

On the other hand, his head covering did look a bit suspicious to me...



isthatu 3 | 1,164
3 Jan 2008 #298
lol,thats always puzzled me too,whats with all the catholic dudes in kippah's about :)
but,on the back of that,whats with all the dudes in fedoras and fur lined coats in Israel? Surly they must sweat like the proverbial....eeh,religious garb,aint half funny....
omniba
3 Jan 2008 #299
his head covering did look a bit suspicious to me...

Not only the Pope wears this head cover - so do all the cardinals and the bishops! It quite a big fashion statement in the Vatican. I've always wondered about that, too.

fedoras and fur lined coats in Israel?

And about that! Is there a summer version?
kaliszer - | 99
3 Jan 2008 #300
Actually there is a summer version. They have a lightweight long black jacket for the summers. I was wondering if there is a Polish origin for the "shtreimel" the fur hat worn by hassidic Jews on sabbath and holidays. Some of them (originally from Gora Kalwaria) have fur hats called "spodek". Any information on that?

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