Rob Reacts to... IPNtv: The Unconquered

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • The Unconquered by IPNtv is the incredible story of Poland's strength and resistance during World War 2!
    Original Video: • IPNtv: The Unconquered
    OUR VLOG CHANNEL: Charlie & Rob - As We Are
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    #poland #polish #theunconquered #ww2

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @RobReacts1
    @RobReacts1  Год назад +119

    If you are enjoying my Polish Reaction Videos, why not go check out our vlog channel where we have visted poland!
    ruclips.net/p/PLw4JaWCFm7FeHG7Ad5PtaZzoYd1Vq5EXW

    • @korinogaro
      @korinogaro Год назад

      6:22 British government stole polish gold deposited in british banks as a payment for fuel, planes and ammo used by polish pilots in air battles over Britain... It abandoned polish airmen figting for safety of Britain. No support, no help with staying in Britain, nothing. It is not just that Poles were not invited.

    • @smiechuwarte-qt8pn
      @smiechuwarte-qt8pn Год назад

      Here's another interesting topic ruclips.net/video/lWnr3g-phvQ/видео.html

    • @kamilciezak6836
      @kamilciezak6836 Год назад +1

      z Bogiem z kims czy bez oszczedzajac w jakiej by pracy nie bylo - mimo strat - dodatkowo - w wolne 24h - zamiast imperek- 250 lat -

    • @tomaszkarol4574
      @tomaszkarol4574 Год назад +3

      Hi Rob I have some incredible proposition for you to watch and react on some more history about my country. The channel is called Modern Historian and there is two titles that you might be interested in: Why Poland doesn’t trust anyone, Why Poland hates Russia. 👍🇵🇱👍🇵🇱👍

    • @PlGimli
      @PlGimli Год назад

      You missed the previous video :
      ruclips.net/video/13Nn_2sAnR4/видео.html

  • @gabrielaryfinska
    @gabrielaryfinska Год назад +225

    - Kto ty jesteś? (Who are You?)
    - Polak mały. (A little Pole)
    - Jaki znak twój? (What is your symbol?)
    - Orzeł biały. (The White Eagle)
    - Gdzie ty mieszkasz? (Where Do you live?)
    - Między swemi. (Amongst my own)
    - W jakim kraju? (In what country?)
    - W polskiej ziemi. (On Polish soil)
    - Czem ta ziemia? (What is that soli?)
    - Mą ojczyzną. (My Fatherland)
    - Czem zdobyta? (How obtained?)
    - Krwią i blizną. (With blood and scar)
    - Czy ją kochasz? (Do you love her?)
    - Kocham szczerze. (I love her heartfelt)
    - A w co wierzysz? ( And what do you believe in?)
    - W Polskę wierzę! (I believe in Poland!)
    - Coś ty dla niej? (Who are you to her?)
    - Wdzięczne dziécię. (A grateful child)
    - Coś jej winien? (What do you owe her)
    - Oddać życie. (To give my life)

    • @mariuszjanusz5421
      @mariuszjanusz5421 11 месяцев назад +3

      nie czarny krzyż .

    • @thenickerpl
      @thenickerpl 10 месяцев назад +8

      W Boga wierzę*

    • @marchewkaaron9951
      @marchewkaaron9951 6 месяцев назад +6

      @@thenickerpl Oryginał to ''W Polskę wierzę!''.

    • @GabrielaStafij
      @GabrielaStafij 4 месяца назад

      ​@@marchewkaaron9951To komuniści usunęli ten zapis o Bogu i zastąpili ją Polską.W Boga wierzę nie w Polskę.

    • @ZamilczWiec
      @ZamilczWiec 2 месяца назад +2

      Babcia mi to recytowała za dzieciaka każdego dnia

  • @charliebone126
    @charliebone126 Год назад +609

    I'm a 50 year old Australian man and my wife is Polish. Poland is the greatest country on earth. The people are educated, hard working and they don't take s**t from anyone 😊 I wish that I was Polish.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +36

      Oh man you are the merger of my content in one place! :D

    • @charliebone126
      @charliebone126 Год назад +5

      @@RobReacts1 Funny that you say that. I just finished watching your reaction to "This is Bathurst" with Mark Larkham 😂 God damn that's a great video.

    • @krzysztofwozny3002
      @krzysztofwozny3002 Год назад +44

      I'm a 67 Australian of Polish parents. My father's regiment 63rd was destroyed September 15/ 16th during the only successful counter attack on the Bzura river.1939. After 9mths in hospital was sent to Germany as Labour. Mum's family had the distinction of being on the 1st train load of Polish deportation to the USSR. Archangelsk was their destination, it was10th February 1940. Russia never left our home in Australia, never a day without Mum mentioning that accursed time.

    • @Rosa-ng8uu
      @Rosa-ng8uu Год назад +7

      Thank you. ❤

    • @darekcoventry
      @darekcoventry Год назад +6

      Cheers Charlie!

  • @beatas6412
    @beatas6412 Год назад +940

    As a Pole, I always cry when I watch "The Unconquered". So emotional.

  • @anuskas9244
    @anuskas9244 Год назад +1687

    Poles fought first, Poles were and are the first to help. They helped in the fights for the freedom of England, France, Norway. They helped in the fight for American independence. When Poland needed help, nobody helped. This is history and the past, but it is worth remembering and drawing conclusions. Thank you for this reaction

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Год назад +91

      We have helped and continue to help Ukrainians. What price will we pay for it? Because the fact that our country has always been kicked in the ass is known to every Pole. Hence all these prejudices of the older generations, intolerance. In some Poles, a lack of trust in other countries, mainly Russia, Ukraine and Germans, has been ingrained for generations, which is caused by such and no other history. Of course, it changes with each year, but I think that there are still a lot of people who, if you asked on the street - who they don't like, would say, for example, Germans, and for what reason? For no reason! This aversion to other countries is in many people's blood, even though so many years have passed

    • @herkulespoirot2697
      @herkulespoirot2697 Год назад +27

      The history of the 20th century is a connected vessel, every event in Europe is felt to a greater or lesser extent in all countries, such as the civil war in Spain due to the participation of the International Brigades. The outbreak of World War II gave the Greeks a great national hero, Jerzy Iwanow-Szajnowicz, the son of a Russian and Polish, who settled in Greece. It so happens that during almost all twentieth-century conflicts in various countries, on the European or African continent, Poles participated directly or indirectly, and therefore our history is intertwined with the history of other countries and nations, some remember it because they want to, others do not remember because they do not they know or don't want to.

    • @misiat.6460
      @misiat.6460 Год назад +154

      ​@@aggiecat Don't like germans for no reason?!
      You're joking, right?
      I'll give you one reason and it is german intolerance of Poles. Remember german Katerina Barley who stood in EU parliament and said "We need to starve Poland" , just because she doesn't like choice of Polish voters? There are tons of examples where germans treat us as a second category of members of EU.

    • @aggiecat
      @aggiecat Год назад +7

      @@misiat.6460 ok, you have a reason, I have my own one too, but I've met people who currently don't have any specific reason, they haven't met any German, and if they don't like it, it's because the war where such a person is 20-30 years old and this war he/she didn't know. I don't know about your reason because I haven't watched TV in 5 years and I just don't care about political bullshit. Remember, there are a lot of people in our country who are also not interested in this topic, as long as there are 500+, and they will still say how much they dislike Germans without any specific argument, because someone said or because this hated has been in the family for generations

    • @ukaszrosiak3364
      @ukaszrosiak3364 Год назад

      @@aggiecat We don't need a reason to don't like Germans, but if you need one ask people in northern Poland how old germans behave on their vacations - no basic respect, very judgy and rude. But with neighbor you don't like, you can live in peace and have common goals. Russians on the other hand... Damn they are something... My grand mother once told me that when Germans came, they killed men and raped women. When Russians came, the kill men, rape and kill women (not allways in this order) and kids, kill live stock. And at the end they even shit to barrels with food. To sum up : Germans - not that bad, Russians - to hell with them. Let's not forget Ukrainians... we do have beef with them too for mass murders of Poles during WW2 and not appreciating us after orange revolution. But despite this, they are in need. And Poles help nations in distress even if we are not appreciated. Cause this is honor which Russians don't have [and Germans think they do :) ]

  • @majkimajk9532
    @majkimajk9532 Год назад +387

    Watching the reports of youtubers from different countries visiting Poland, I often came across the statement that Poles are "cold" in perception. They don't smile on a daily basis, they are rather closed and distrustful. or we keep our distance. Everything changes with closer acquaintance and later we are perceived completely differently. our affairs without meddling in the matters of others. We ask "how are you?" when we really want to know, not when they are empty words. We keep our distance while getting to know and "examining" the other person to be sure whether it's worth opening up without getting "stabbed in the back" .All our history has shaped us in this way, but it has never changed that we have always been a helpful, trustworthy nation, able to support even by shedding their blood for it.

    • @kurdebalans2531
      @kurdebalans2531 Год назад +7

      You get the clue in these phrases. Dzięki :)

    • @sukayna7026
      @sukayna7026 10 месяцев назад +3

      Jesteśmy normalni tylko nowoczesna głupkowata nowomoda na ciągłą (sztuczną) szczęśliwość wmawia nam co innego. Człowiek ma prawo przeżywać życie tak jak chce i mieć zdrowy dystans do innych. Ja osobiście znacznie lepiej się z tym czuję.

    • @wojtekmarciniak1173
      @wojtekmarciniak1173 18 дней назад +1

      i trully encourage you to read book 'Traumaland' it pretty much explains your observation from psychological view. Polish society is not anything extraordinary in that 'cold' vibe, after centuries of constant threats our society is simply damaged. Our war did not end in 1949 but in 1989 (USSR occupation). There are many people in Polish society who still live amonghst us, who lost their entire families, homes and wealth either in WW2 or post war soviet harassment - of course we are traumatized and we dont smile that much.
      I just dont understand why it is not common fact taught at schools that we are still traumatized society and that going to psychotherapy if you need one is perfectly normal and good thing to do (many people still percieve that going for psychological help is as sign of weakness/ being weirdo/psychopath and thats why they prefer not to).

  • @DanielDaniel-ok3tk
    @DanielDaniel-ok3tk Год назад +380

    Polacy są nie do zajebania. Szkoda tylko ze potrafimy się tak zjednoczyć gdy jest już aż tak beznadziejnie a wcześniej się sami żremy między sobą.

    • @Pucor7
      @Pucor7 Год назад +44

      to sie nazywa handicap :D zjednoczona polska byla by nie fair wobec innych :D

    • @gabrielaryfinska
      @gabrielaryfinska Год назад +8

      Otóż to.

    • @justynasalamon2658
      @justynasalamon2658 Год назад +21

      Warto nad tym popracować! Nie dawajmy się 'wkrecac' w sztucznie tworzone konflikty, aby nas skłócać. Do pracy Rodacy!

    • @p3run
      @p3run Год назад +6

      Jeszcze kilkadziesiąt lat temu tak było.. a teraz spójrz na ulice i zastanów się czy to by teraz naprawdę było możliwe.

    • @p1etrek785
      @p1etrek785 Год назад +12

      Ciężkie czasy tworzą twardych ludzi
      Twardzi ludzie tworzą dobre czasy
      Dobre czasy tworzą słabych ludzi
      Słabi ludzie tworzą ciężkie czasy
      Sami możecie postawić kropkę w miejscu w którym się znajdujemy...

  • @piotrrozynek9658
    @piotrrozynek9658 Год назад +268

    Don't worry Rob. Nobody blame you for the past. In fact, it's nice you try to teach young generation real history to prevent potencial the same kind of mistakes in the future. Thanks for that.

    • @Agulkk
      @Agulkk Год назад +2

      Nobody blames Rob for the past. But we are champions in fighting... sometimes I think our nation fells sick without fight. So is here, Pole against Pole. I love my people, so faisty and stubborn ❤😁

    • @rapper3d1b
      @rapper3d1b 2 месяца назад

      @@Agulkk that is true, when we don't have outside enemy we fight between us. hehehe

  • @AngelinaAndBrad
    @AngelinaAndBrad Год назад +257

    Pope John Paul II, Karol Wojtyła, when asked why God put Poland between Germany and Russia, replies that: no one else could stand it"

    • @mpingo91
      @mpingo91 Год назад +15

      You will know great people by their one-liners.

    • @cherylk.2474
      @cherylk.2474 Год назад +56

      You also heard the early history of mankind when God placed people all over the earth, he heard many, many complaining. One group of people didn't want fertile farmland, farming was too much work and they wanted oil, so God gave them oil deposits but took away the fertile land, leaving sand. Others wanted gold, diamonds, etc., which he gave them, but he took away fertile land and sufficient water. God stopped over Poland, and saw the people farming and singing and asked why they were so hapy. The Poles told him "We love our land, we have mountains, but not too many, thick forests, but not too thick, rivers and lakes but not too many, snow in the winter, but not too much snow, and warm sunny summers but not too much sun. We are grateful for our perfect land and all you have given us and we thank you!" God smiled and thought, "At last here are people who appreciate..." God stopped in mid-thought, then said to the Poles "You haven't met your neighbors yet, have you!"

    • @AngelinaAndBrad
      @AngelinaAndBrad Год назад +12

      @@cherylk.2474 hahahahhahaha...good one 🤣🤣🤣

    • @mpingo91
      @mpingo91 Год назад +5

      @@cherylk.2474 😁

    • @malgorzatamakowska9910
      @malgorzatamakowska9910 Год назад +7

      ​@@cherylk.2474 Dzięki bo świetne!

  • @r.trebor5494
    @r.trebor5494 Год назад +134

    no country in the world has been as damaged as Poland for centuries

    • @zawiszaczarny1749
      @zawiszaczarny1749 Год назад +23

      Poland in all its over +1070 years of history has won more battles and wars than the Roman Empire
      even Napoleon said: ''where others cannot pass ,the Poles will conquest!''
      there is monuments all over the US even in front of the white house in remembrance of Polish heroes, big Universities are named after Polish commanders who fought for the freedom of the USA

    • @thaib2724
      @thaib2724 Год назад

      korea have similar history getting fucked by hordes japans and china not as bad as Poland but that's the reason koreans that know about polish history and vice versa know the pain

  • @krzysztof_wu
    @krzysztof_wu Год назад +74

    death penalty for saving jews was only in Poland despite that only in Poland people saved them on that scale. Death penalty was for the whole family not only parents.

    • @viktoriaskorpion4184
      @viktoriaskorpion4184 Год назад +8

      Dodam ,że jeśli rodzina żydowska była ukrywana w wiosce, kara śmierci groziła całej wsi.

    • @n0rmalna
      @n0rmalna 11 месяцев назад +3

      Zwykle brano 10 osob za 1 zyda

  • @ogoemtojestesmuem7708
    @ogoemtojestesmuem7708 Год назад +71

    Best allies of poles were fighting on other side and im talking about hungary they didnt let germans attack poland from their territory, they saved a lot of poles, helped with warsaw uprising and beautiful words "prędzej wysadzę nasze linie kolejowe niż wezmę udział w inwazji na polskę" eng. I'd rather destroy our rail lines than take part in invasion of poland

  • @gabrielaryfinska
    @gabrielaryfinska Год назад +215

    Zawsze mam łzy w oczach, gdy widzę ten film. Ileż my wytrzymaliśmy i ciągle trzeba walczyć o prawdę

    • @kapitanbaobao9222
      @kapitanbaobao9222 10 месяцев назад +2

      To samo, 22 letni mężczyzna a rozklejam się za każdym razem jak to ogladam

    • @Jan_Sobieski_drugie_konto
      @Jan_Sobieski_drugie_konto 7 месяцев назад +1

      Ja też ale dopiero gdy tak naprawdę sobie uświadamiam jakim pięknym narodem są Polacy i ile przetrwali

    • @eugenesits
      @eugenesits 7 месяцев назад +1

      я Тебя понимаю.
      Wychowałem się śród Polaków. A większość nauczycieli byłi polskiego pochodzenia.

  • @Sandro_de_Vega
    @Sandro_de_Vega Год назад +506

    I've always been amused by this distinction between the Na-zis and the Sov-iets. Especially the fact that many Russians think that they were some kind of heroes who helped defeat the Naz-is. And the truth was that for Poles occupied by both sides there was no difference. It was just Naz-is on the left and Naz-is on the right. Both sides led by angry mustache man.
    Oh and about Allies. There is fun polish joke on that. What represents colors on polish flag? White is for honor, red is for blood, and blue is for loyal allies.

    • @artursmya2052
      @artursmya2052 Год назад

      Even with shooting civilians in the head, Nazis were more civilized occupant than what came from the east.

    • @robkal7076
      @robkal7076 Год назад

      Nazis and communists.

    • @nabuchodonozor6531
      @nabuchodonozor6531 Год назад

    • @robk2167
      @robk2167 Год назад

      Wrong in here Both Nazis and Communists were Left. Nazi comes from National Socialism and Communists are just Communists, both are far left and both were using totalitarian fascistic methods or repression and persecution.

    • @Fiolek84
      @Fiolek84 Год назад +15

      Funy joke.

  • @_mikkoxd_292
    @_mikkoxd_292 Год назад +193

    🇵🇱"Jeszcze Polska nie zginęła, kiedy my żyjemy"🇵🇱

    • @Made_in_USSR_Limited_Edition
      @Made_in_USSR_Limited_Edition Год назад

      Your government ruined Poland at the beginning of World War II, and now it's doing the same thing to make Poland suffer again.

    • @cichy5397
      @cichy5397 10 месяцев назад +1

      Wiesz że oni nawiedzą o czym piszesz.😅🇵🇱

  • @piotrsupski5182
    @piotrsupski5182 Год назад +113

    The first words of the Polish anthem are: Poland has not yet perished as long as we live. As a Pole, I know that we will never beg anyone for anything!

    • @kandarayun
      @kandarayun Год назад

      When we live...

    • @RomaInvicta202
      @RomaInvicta202 Год назад +4

      Trouble is most people here are Poles; folks in the West still haven't learnt: now with the war in Ukraine I keep reading that Ukraine "should" start talking with Russia, it's easy to give away someone's else land :(

  • @ireneuszpyrak961
    @ireneuszpyrak961 Год назад +136

    Piękny krótki filmik a tak wiele mówi o nas - Polakach. Zawsze się wzruszam kiedy go oglądam...

  • @RoMan-uv6ll
    @RoMan-uv6ll Год назад +46

    Pozdrowienia z Polski dla Ciebie :)
    Zawsze będziemy silni - znamy to z historii.
    Siła i Honor
    Dziękuję że pokazujesz fragment naszej historii

    • @weronika1954
      @weronika1954 Год назад +1

      Bóg Honor Ojczyzna to jest motto prawdziwych Polaków ale nas rząd do nich nie należy!!!!!

  • @LukaszKolo
    @LukaszKolo Год назад +140

    That face when he heard "we break the enigma code" 😂
    Yup that's not what they teach you. Same as Maria Skłodowska Curie or Chopin is french for french people...

    • @grodt88
      @grodt88 Год назад +15

      Poles did not cracked enigma code alone but they provide key informations without which it would not have been possible. Enigma code was cracked by colaboration of French secret service, British government and Polish Cipher Bureau. Sadly many books point only Alan Turing of the one who cracked code but it was great team work

    • @jutrzenka7503
      @jutrzenka7503 Год назад +32

      ​@@grodt88 not true, it was cracked in 1932. But there were 2 things: during war key was changed everyday so more frequently then before war and Warsaw was under occupation and possibility of loosing whole project was high but also improving process in this invironmrnt was way too slow, hence Poles decided to share.

    • @marynarz79
      @marynarz79 Год назад +17

      @@grodt88 learn history from books not from movies… please…

    • @grodt88
      @grodt88 Год назад +3

      @@marynarz79 its literally wrote in Encyclopedia Britannica. Learn history from books without propaganda

    • @bialyninja
      @bialyninja Год назад

      @@grodt88 if you want the more exact thing we are taught in Poland Poles cracked the Enigma code first not quite meaning we cracked the whole machine at once. We got our hands on the enigma machine and cracked the first code , then we shipped off the machine as well as the first Code we cracked and the method we used for cracking it that lead to cracking the whole machine later so in fact we did crack the Enigma code. Then the people who you mentioned cracked the rest of the machine and remaining codes. So yes Poles cracked the Enigma Code first.
      Imagine you just cracked the cesar's cipher by moving the letter one forward then some one sends a different message with a 4 letter forward difference since you cracked the one letter forward code you know now the basic working of the cipher and can just move it one forward until you get the right solution. Would be a d#ck move if someone said they cracked the cesars cipher because they made like 30ish tables with each variation of the cipher when you were actually the first one who cracked the first code and understood how the cipher worked

  • @senpairag88
    @senpairag88 Год назад +100

    Respect brave Polish people from Lithuania.

    • @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic4111
      @grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic4111 Год назад +8

      Szanuje Litwinów Litwiński Husarz jedną kopią przebił 5 moskali jesteście mega silni

    • @1ramyus
      @1ramyus 10 месяцев назад +4

      We have a great history together, and IMO we should still live together. Through the centuries, together we were one Polish--Lithuanian nation. Commonwealth, and powerhouse in Europe.

    • @eugenesits
      @eugenesits 7 месяцев назад

      @@grzegorzbrzeczyszczykiewic4111 с истории - Гусары были только в Польше.

    • @rapper3d1b
      @rapper3d1b 2 месяца назад

      @@eugenesits did you hear about mercenaries?

  • @mikolajgrotowski
    @mikolajgrotowski Год назад +228

    As I mentioned in the commentary to the film about how Poland is arming itself today in fear of Russia, Poland has had bad luck with alliances many times. In 1939 England and France stood on the border of Germany while Poland was fighting. In 1945, the Western Allies gave Poland to Stalin. In 1920, when Poland was fighting to stop the Bolsheviks, the Allies urged Poles to surrender. Hence, most Poles are distrustful of alliances. We want to have allies, but we have a conviction in the back of our minds that we can be alone again. And the EU is even worse, because today Germany has the most important voice in it, and why we cannot trust them to the end is probably obvious to everyone. Especially when the contemporary policy of Germany towards Poland consists mainly in preaching from the position of superiority. And we remember this in a different context. And when these Germans start to make deals with Russia, we get especially nervous.

    • @Mordring
      @Mordring Год назад +38

      Agreed. I don't believe in NATO's Article 5. Based on its wording: an attack against one is an attack against all, so it should make us feel safe, right? (spoiler alert, wrong) However, then the Article also adds that each member state should react to such an attack as they "deem necessary". Well, what if the major member states "deem necessary" abandoning us all over again to avoid potential WW3 and all the remaining states have no power to help us anymore as most of them will be similarly threatened by that time (I'm thinking about Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, etc.). We must be able to stand alone so that all the major players see the profit in standing with us. Si vis pacem, para bellum.

    • @kuba6156
      @kuba6156 Год назад +7

      Well, that's not much different from what we are doing now... Ukraine is fighting and we are standing on the borders... Doesn't mean we are not helping. Nobody really wants to go to war until they can't avoid it... We can't be one sided when talking about history.

    • @phoearwenien4355
      @phoearwenien4355 Год назад +42

      @@kuba6156 No, the difference is we don't have an alliance with Ukraine to intervene militarily, but England and France had an alliance with Poland. And nobody helped us then as we're helping now with supplies and other stuff even despite not having any obligation.

    • @malgorzatamakowska9910
      @malgorzatamakowska9910 Год назад

      ​@@Mordring niemcy czy Francuzi zanim by zareagowali na atak na Polske upłynął by rok, conajmniej...

    • @seboho6938
      @seboho6938 Год назад

      @@kuba6156 Kubuś, przygłupie,a dlaczego powinniśmy włączyć się w wojnę dwóch wrogich nam państw? Dlaczego tak łatwo ci przychodzi wysyłanie naszych chłopaków na wojnę która nie jest w żaden sposób naszą i to jeszcze ze wskazaniem jednej ze stron jako tej słusznej? Myślisz czasem przygłupie?

  • @_amtb_
    @_amtb_ Год назад +43

    As a Pole, thank you for the video and especially for mentioning the attitude of Churchill.
    You are 100% right, the sons should not suffer for sins of the fathers, we must move on, but it is very difficult for the Polish nation, because it is not only the WW2 when we were treated similar way by some of the neighbours.
    Keep doing the great stuff you do, Rob! You are great!

  • @SebaKoza
    @SebaKoza Год назад +49

    To najpiękniejszy i najprawdziwszy spot histori Polski łzy cisną się do oczu pieknie byłoby gdyby swiat poznał prawdę prawdę o Polaku żołnierzu bohaterze Czesc i Chwala Bohaterom zawsze Bóg Honor Ojczyzna

  • @NullPointer871ICant
    @NullPointer871ICant Год назад +16

    You know, the resentment may be coming from the fact that we're talking about our mom/dad or grandpas'/grandmas' stories involved. My granddad was imprisoned by Nazis during the WW2 because he was a reserve officer and he didn't showed up on their calling. He was a polish teacher actually. He spent the whole war inside the prison, worked in Majdanek concentration camp. He barely survived, was saved from death only by catching typhus - ended up in a death cell, basically waiting to die, but then the Soviets came and he was put to hospital. His wife, my grandma was going 30 km by foot every day to try and get him anything so that he wouldn't die of hunger. So as you can imagine, it can be hard to not be at least a bit sad or being somewhat distant to ww2 allies. It's true - not one of us was living at those days but some stories are still living in the current generations...

  • @mycornersoftheworld7655
    @mycornersoftheworld7655 Год назад +14

    „Poland has not yet perished,
    So long as we still live”
    This is how our anthem begins.❤

  • @dorotaolachowska9523
    @dorotaolachowska9523 Год назад +78

    thank you for appreciating :) You make great and touching films :)
    My beloved grandma fought in the Warsaw Uprising (she was a corporal and a medic), she escaped from the camp. She passed away 2 months ago at the age of 100...
    My grandfather fought against the Germans in Warsaw, he was an officer in the Polish army. I'm very proud of them!!
    Regards! :)

    • @otkaczalkawariatka
      @otkaczalkawariatka Год назад +2

      Cześć i chwała Twoim Dziadkom 🇵🇱

    • @dorotaolachowska9523
      @dorotaolachowska9523 Год назад +2

      @@otkaczalkawariatka bardzo dziękuję... łezka w oku się oczywiście zakręciła.. dziękuję ❤️

    • @Jan_Sobieski_drugie_konto
      @Jan_Sobieski_drugie_konto 7 месяцев назад

      Nigdy o nich nie zapomnij

    • @dorotaolachowska9523
      @dorotaolachowska9523 6 месяцев назад

      @@Jan_Sobieski_drugie_konto nigdy. Cały czas są w moim sercu, codziennie. Dziękuję

  • @wojciech666666
    @wojciech666666 Год назад +17

    Nice video :)
    as a Pole I have to admit that we always fight when our freedom is threatened but as soon as we have our freedom, it's hard for us to respect that gained freedom for a longer period of time and we tend to argue a lot between ourself only to unite again when a next threat arise. That's hard to understand but that's how it is 😅 a mad circle.

  • @darksonlolo6039
    @darksonlolo6039 Год назад +51

    The fact that we were not invited to the Victory March we remember to this day and we teach our children about it so that they remember that you have to count only on yourself and not on your allies.

  • @qPolakq
    @qPolakq Год назад +83

    This may be the wisest commentary on The Unconquered I've heard on youtube. Well done, very accurate observations

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +6

      Thanks mate. I do my best. Always honest and humble

  • @meras1549
    @meras1549 Год назад +31

    Sad part is that nobody pays enough attention to underground state which is unique in entire history.

  • @tomtomkowski7653
    @tomtomkowski7653 Год назад +16

    - God, why did you place us Poles between Germany and Russia?
    - Because no other nation would survive it.
    And now we are facing another wave of communism, this time on a global scale.

    • @Mordring
      @Mordring Год назад +5

      And we will resist it, as we always have!

  • @kapitanyt3751
    @kapitanyt3751 Год назад +4

    Pozdrowienia z Polski 🇵🇱🇵🇱🇵🇱

  • @roksaplays1842
    @roksaplays1842 Год назад +21

    Polska mój piękny kraj!
    Oby nigdy więcej wojny!

  • @mpingo91
    @mpingo91 Год назад +12

    7:24 That part with the soviet iron fist (technically: polish communists) crushing Polish cities may be unclear to foreigners. These are the cities in which Poles grabbed their weapons and instigated fights or mass protests against the Soviet system. In my city, Poznan, in 1956, the Communists used 10,000 soldiers and 400 tanks to crush the protests.
    This makes the Poles different from the Russians. The Russians never revolted. And they still don't revolt.

  • @dariuswroclawski5521
    @dariuswroclawski5521 Год назад +11

    Its hard to understand from outside how we feel,when we,Poles,watch even that kind of movie,simple cartoon movie. Our history,so paintful,with constant up and downs.Humans have this weird,yet phenomenal condition-attaching your soul to land when u was born,where your roots are strong,where u live...For us is very important to world see us,our achievments,our determination..maybe cos deep inside us is still pain..and anger about 90% last 230 years.We feel pride now,that against all odds,our country exist and we can again climb on this ladder of geo-politic opportunities.

  • @DarkMatter1992
    @DarkMatter1992 Год назад +8

    Have you heard about the Winged Hussars? Sabaton did a song about them.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +1

      Erm, no I dont think I have

    • @agnieszkazuk
      @agnieszkazuk Год назад +3

      @@RobReacts1 Sabaton - the Swedish band also singing Aces in Exile (about the Battle of Britain) and Uprising and some more about Poland... - I strongly recommend!

    • @julianozaur444
      @julianozaur444 Год назад

      ​@@RobReacts1 Winged hussars are what you may call Polish Overpowered counter on almost anything you want. A 16th century cavalry (the strongest in Europe I will add).

  • @Blanquefort
    @Blanquefort Год назад +3

    Its really heartwarming when I see people from other countries appreciate my homeland

  • @irokishingai
    @irokishingai Год назад +20

    I'm very proud of what Poland went through and though many people say Kraków or Gdańsk, or whatever city is "more beautiful" than Warsaw, in my eyes Warsaw is the most beautiful city in the world. Not just because of how it looks like today but because of how it looked like when the war ended. It was only 78 years since WW2 and Warsaw, from a total ruin, became one of the most prospering cities in Europe... It makes me so damn proud.
    That being said, I'm also very happy and proud seing Poland becoming a real "leader of the west" when it comes to Ukrainian war with GB and USA standing strong with us, helping us push other European countries to help Ukraine as much as possible. And it really brings me joy to hear, after years of Poland being portrayed as poor country and basically a backyard of Russia, that now our allies speak about us with great respect and tourists from all around the world come to Poland to see for themselves how much we grew since reclaiming our freedom in 1989

  • @Nelrielify
    @Nelrielify Год назад +21

    As a Pole, I am incredibly proud of the history of my country. Thank you for showing this to more people abroad. :)

    • @1ramyus
      @1ramyus 10 месяцев назад

      It's created and published for Poles, not for foreigners.

  • @j.ms.2285
    @j.ms.2285 Год назад +65

    Bravo Poland ! ❤

  • @piotrw2492
    @piotrw2492 Год назад +6

    Hi, so I have something to say about the Poles not trusting England, and whole NATO. So because what happend to us those 100 years ago, some of us are terrified that we are going to be left alone AGAIN. In our history, it happend too many times, but 100 years ago, when we had a document signed with france and England, that they would not let GERMANS, invade, there was no saying about the russians, so all Polish forces came together at the Russian border, and we were quite surprised when there were no intensions from our allies to help. It just showed us, how signed papers are nothing to anyone. Its so much in our roots, that it plays a very big margin in todays politics. The most heard of were the words of Mateusz Morawiecki "We won't get ANY support from NATO, if we won't be able to defend ourselves".
    Sorry for my bad engilsh, I'm a Pole

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад

      No you did a great job with your English! :)

  • @gabrielaryfinska
    @gabrielaryfinska Год назад +2

    Kilka dni temu trafiłam na "Bogu, wal do sznura", teraz... o naszej historii. Ciągle mnie życie zaskakuje

  • @anitas.6761
    @anitas.6761 Год назад +13

    Polski duch walki, poswiecenia, wiary i patriotyzmu to nasz kod narodowy!!!

  • @jakubstroz9254
    @jakubstroz9254 Год назад +2

    All of it in this animation its just a scrap of our history that is sad but beautifull.
    Poland never dies beacuse it survived in polish hearts

  • @lukaszb6483
    @lukaszb6483 Год назад +29

    Cześć i Chwała Bohaterom.

  • @mepik15
    @mepik15 Год назад +82

    The saddest part for me is.. we always helped everyone around. Always, even NOW even tho MOST of Poles dont like Ukraine, because of their cruelty toward Polish people during WWII, we help them as much as we can.

    • @AnthemsOfEurope
      @AnthemsOfEurope Год назад +20

      I don't think most of Poles hate Ukrainians.
      Forgive but not forget

    • @123pik1
      @123pik1 Год назад +24

      @@AnthemsOfEurope I would rather say, we don't trust them in many reasons
      "Forgive but not forget"
      Yeah it is important, but to forgive the other side need to say "sorry" in the right way (it isn't only about Ukrainians but also Germans or Russians)

    • @bohomazdesign725
      @bohomazdesign725 Год назад +5

      You rather mean the polish far right doesnt like Ukraine which lines up pollings

    • @beheroot
      @beheroot Год назад

      i think lots poles are ..tired of ukraininans. Personally i dont understand that, but you sure heard voices that tell 'i want a free monthly train ticket too' when some cities give that to UA citizens. anwser to that was 'there is free metro in Kijów, go there' :> There is fuckin war there, people dying, civilians dying, schools being bombarded to the ground and poles being jelous of some small benefits that were given to ukraininans is so stupid that it amost looks like those people are hired russian trolls :P noone forget about wołyń. Less and less care about it in context of nowadays events.

  • @mru24
    @mru24 Год назад +2

    Sean Bean without Yorkshire accent sounds like... Sean Bean without Yorkshire accent. Nice film, epic reaction. Thanks for sharing Polish history. Very important nowadays.

  • @_Peperek
    @_Peperek Год назад +11

    Every Pole watches a reaction video to "The Unconquered" at least once every two years.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +1

      Haha well make sure you just rewatch mine in 2 years time 😉

  • @anna_natalia5712
    @anna_natalia5712 Год назад +31

    I got so used to people saying we (Poles) are just thieves, heavy drinkers etc. It's so nice and refreshing to watch someone be so so so respectful towards Poland and Poles. Thank you

    • @demolek22
      @demolek22 Год назад

      Because during peace time we fight with each other about everything but when the external enemy comes we inite truly. That was during WW I, WW II,the beginning od pandemy, the russian invasion on Ukraine. We are the same for centuries. If we are the same as 100 years ago, so do other nations. That is why we should not trust entirely to our allies.

    • @maggg.a
      @maggg.a Год назад +4

      Co za bzdury i jeszcze w dodatku powtarzane na publicznym forum!

    • @1ramyus
      @1ramyus 10 месяцев назад

      It depends on what's are your circles.

  • @dominika2145
    @dominika2145 Год назад +54

    My grandma's uncle fought in the Anders' Army, including under Monte Casino. Because of the fear of retribution from the comunist regime, he didn't get to come home until late 1960s. His sisters spent over 15 years not knowing if he was even alive

    • @cherylk.2474
      @cherylk.2474 Год назад +8

      So few people in the West acknowledge or even know of how dreadful life was under Soviet occupation and control. My father and his brothers always hated Roosevelt, Truman, Stalin as well as Hitler and it wasn't until I was older that I understood the full extent of what had happened. My grandfather and grandmother were born in preWW1 Poland, which officially didn't exist, but they always identified themselves as people from Poland on all documentation, they spoke Polish, my father, his brothers and sisters all spoke Polish and I learned some Polish as a child, too. My father and uncles were very aware of the betrayl of Poland, but this was never taught in US schools, of course. One of my uncles was a pilot in the US Army Air Corps in the 1940s, and I found an old picture of him in uniform in a trunk after my father had passed. My uncle was wearing both the US Army Air Corps wings and the wings of the RAF. I asked him about this, he told me he had been seconded to the RAF, but wouldn't say anything else, and I knew to not press for information. I think he flew B-24 Liberators, possibly out of Northolt, but definitely out of England. I had actually not even known he was in the Army Air Corps until I was going into the US Air Force and my mother mentioned it. That was in the late 1970's, and he didn't give me any information. Even in 2002, he still did not speak of it. I think there was just too much pain for him to open the door to that room of his soul. I pray he and my father, and all of my deceased relatives are finally at peace.

    • @kamilkocon7546
      @kamilkocon7546 Год назад +2

      Anders był zdrajca , żaden z niego bohater , Niemcy byli otoczeni ze wszystkich stron pod Monte casino więc 3 tys polskich żołnierzy poszło na marne ...

    • @n0rmalna
      @n0rmalna 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@kamilkocon7546nie do konca polaxy I nowa zelandia przelamqly Oporto- opowiesci wuja dziadka

  • @kurdebalans2531
    @kurdebalans2531 Год назад +2

    Firstly I watched Your films about komedians- "Bogu wal do sznura" 😉 . Now watched this one. As You see, many commentators grandparents survive that hard times showed in "The Unconquered". Our families lived with that drama locked in our grandma's and grandpas. Our parents were shaped by tough characters of theirs parents- "you can count only on yourself". We arguing each other, sometimes very hard. In this commedian/cabaret films jokes were about ourselves. About our poor part of characteristics and vices our nation. But, and this is important- only we can do that, no one else. There's saing "where two Poles, there three opinions". But only we can say that. That hard history led to situation, when you see two arguing Poles, but if you try to involve- they both kick your ...ss. Well, we're little bit complicated 😉 Thanks for that what You're doing. Cheers. 🙂

  • @AmiRa-wj9jt
    @AmiRa-wj9jt Год назад +4

    I'm from Poland, I'm a woman and tears come to my eyes every time I see this wonderful video that sums up the history of my country wonderfully.
    I disagree with you that the current Germans have nothing to do with the Nazis. Look at current Russia, how its citizens behave, how they manipulate history. They aren`t afraid of anything. Why? Because on the example of Germany they know that there is no responsibility for such crimes. The Germans have never been responsible for the deaths of Poles. They never paid my country any war reparations, they even promised that they would come back to our lands and take them from us again. Not only did they kill, but they enriched themselves with their crime by robbing my country of everything. The current Germans are their ancestors, proud and not feeling any responsibility for their actions. They are masters of speech, they serve other countries with word salad and what do their actions show? The Germans contributed to a huge extent to the current situation in Ukraine, enriched Russia, convinced other countries in Europe to cooperate with them, to buy their oil and gas. This isn`t a coincidence. I'm of the opinion that Germany is still on the dark side of the force.
    I hate them just as the Ukrainians hate Russia now... and only those who understand the history of war will understand us. Such trauma lasts for generations and the fact that Germany doesn`t treat us with respect on the international arena, even in the European Union they throw logs under our feet is a clear signal for us - history will repeat itself someday. All that remains for us is to remember who we are and why it is worth fighting for our country.

    • @Made_in_USSR_Limited_Edition
      @Made_in_USSR_Limited_Edition Год назад

      Poland should finally begin to learn from its own mistakes, as well as send Russia a huge reparation for the half a million dead Soviet soldiers who liberated Poland from the Nazi occupation in 1944.

  • @Bronek.Konarski
    @Bronek.Konarski Год назад +2

    Geography's not kind to Poland. Countries like the UK and the US are located very favourably when it comes to development and defence, Poland most certainly isn't.
    Poland must eventually grow up and realise from its history that alliances are not worth the paper they are written on and that no one is coming to help. For hundreds of years Poland has fought alongside her allies only to be betrayed by them; sometimes she has even been treated far better by long-standing enemies.
    Simply as a matter of survival, Poland has no choice other than to have the most modern and potent army in Europe. It will be good to have the means to fight and die and win in defence of Polish soil on Polish soil, instead of fighting for so-called allies as unpaid mercenaries only to be betrayed and eventually expunged from their histories.

  • @robertkukuczka9469
    @robertkukuczka9469 Год назад +13

    But Czechs were present in the military parade in Britain and they as well were under the Sovie regime.

    • @MD-uc8bx
      @MD-uc8bx Год назад +2

      Czechs always were suburbs of Europe, distant in their mountains.
      Poles conquer Moscow for 2 years.
      Russians do remember those types of facts.

    • @KrysFG
      @KrysFG Год назад +6

      Czechia had a minimal impact on the war, being freely annexed by Germany and later conquered by the Soviets, while Poland had actually fought with the Soviets and were also enslaved by them so there was clear resentment and animosity

    • @mpingo91
      @mpingo91 Год назад +4

      "Not Germany, but Poland is our greatest war conquest" - Stalin in June 1945. See? He probably had this obsession since 1920.

  • @renatalofek7527
    @renatalofek7527 Год назад

    Thank you very much...for your love to Poland ,my country ...I'm Polish

  • @TakNaMarginesie
    @TakNaMarginesie Год назад +9

    If this happen then, it would happen again. Historia magistra vitae est. A co nie zabije to cię wzmocni, ewentualnie trwale okaleczy. ;)

    • @Bronek.Konarski
      @Bronek.Konarski Год назад +2

      Jeden z dowcipów kanadyjskiego komika Norma Macdonalda ŚP. Masz dobre wyczucie 😁

  • @SalisburyKarateClub
    @SalisburyKarateClub Год назад +9

    Your ikea cupboard looks good. Not just the Poles that Churchill screwed over, so was Australia, no where near as bad as what happened to Poland.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +1

      There you go, something the Aussies and poles have in common

  • @pepsaj86
    @pepsaj86 Год назад +5

    Well, I cried

  • @Krokmaniak
    @Krokmaniak Год назад +12

    Fun fact. It's part of trilogy of these animated short movies by IPN. It's "Game of Independence", "Unconquered: Trying times" and finally "Unconquered"

  • @agnieszkazuk
    @agnieszkazuk Год назад +24

    I'm glad you've liked this video. Every time I watch it (always in English) the lector's voice stick in my head.
    There is SABATON - Uprising (Official Music Video) I strongly recommend. They sing in English and there are English subtitles. It's about Warsaw Uprising 1944. One of the actors is former Polish general Waldemar Skrzypczak, Sabaton's fan, active comentator of Russian - Ukrainian war. The other actor Peter Stormare - also their fan and some Polish actors. There is also Sabaton's amazing concert which spread their fame in Poland - Woodstock Live 2012 - my favourite music concert ever, I've watched it a few times already. :-)

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад +4

      It certainly helped having Sean Beans voice as it created incredible tension.

    • @captainbaboo7677
      @captainbaboo7677 Год назад

      Cześć Agnieszko.
      W 1940 gdy Francja kapitulowała któraś z polskich brygad odmówiła kapitulacji i postanowiła się przedrzeć do Szwajcarii, zresztą z sukcesem, byli internowani do końca wojny.
      W polu sąsiadował z nią jakiś pułk Legii Cudzoziemskiej (chyba spahisi z Mauretanii/Algierii ?).
      Ich porucznik przywiózł Polakom sztandar pułku i powiedział:
      - w waszych rękach nie będzie zhańbiony.
      brgds cpt Baboo

    • @cherylk.2474
      @cherylk.2474 Год назад +2

      I've been amazed by Swedes, writing songs in English about Polish military history.

    • @MichaJurek-ws7tk
      @MichaJurek-ws7tk Год назад +1

      Add "40 to 1" from Sabaton to your list. It is about first days of war fight.

  • @Dastanren
    @Dastanren Год назад +25

    Yes lot of poles dont trust allies and even so far that they say we need to be strong on our own because nato is gonna leave us if things go sour. Because when we needed help from allies they left us to rot. This is why we help ukrain so much because we know the fealing and we have honor. So we will fight for freedom not only ours but ukrainians as well maybe not on front lines now but certain is we fight diplomaticly for ukraine and we help them as much as we can

    • @viktoriaskorpion4184
      @viktoriaskorpion4184 Год назад

      Do tego mamy świadomość , której wydaje się zachód jest pozbawiony, że "jeśliby" Rosja wygrała , pójdzie dalej. Jaka jest przeszłość ,na ile krajów napadła choćby po 2000 r?? Stale się odgraża Łotwie Litwie, Estonii. Co wyprawia na Białorusi

  • @Triball
    @Triball Год назад +17

    Chwała dla Bohaterów !!!

  • @bluemario9101
    @bluemario9101 Год назад +7

    Poles fought for your country and you simply betrayed them and fell into the hands of Stalin

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Год назад

      I would say, it probably wasnt as simple as that

    • @pepsaj86
      @pepsaj86 Год назад +6

      @@RobReacts1 Or it was. Churchill thought about his country, Poland was useful, so he helped us, but when it was no longer helpful he left us with soviets for another 50 years.

    • @EnderPlayerTV
      @EnderPlayerTV Год назад

      @@RobReacts1 Yeah I mean Britain probably didn't want to risk getting into another war against the Soviet Union right after WW2.

    • @djin1475
      @djin1475 Год назад +5

      @@RobReacts1 Churchill once said "We have no lasting friends, no lasting enemies, only lasting interests" let that quote sink in with the context of this video

  • @YelonLP
    @YelonLP Год назад +11

    You should listen a polish version too.
    Mirosław Zbrojewicz with his deep voice is as good as Bean ❤

  • @adamrudzik9756
    @adamrudzik9756 Год назад +3

    I'll tell you Rob that we Poles have always been brave and thanks for thinking otherwise you have respect for us and that Great Britain and France deceived us but even today we could do it all

  • @ChamsinGamePlay
    @ChamsinGamePlay Год назад +3

    Sadly our "allies" sold us to ZSRR after the war...

  • @Memmax13
    @Memmax13 Год назад +7

    Maybe our country is not the best but i always as a Pole will be proud of our history, that not many countries would survive as we... We had no country and we fight for other because we are like this!

  • @kitsune13
    @kitsune13 Год назад +13

    Politicians were to blame, not ordinary people, that was the reality.
    It's important that people like you show the truth. THANK YOU

    • @adamkowal7428
      @adamkowal7428 Год назад

      Ale ci ,,zwykli,, ludzie(bandyci i zbrodniarze Niemieccy) wymordowali 6 milionów obywateli Polskich... a nie politycy.

  • @danielnagag4572
    @danielnagag4572 Год назад +10

    Could You tell us about the history of the Green Jackets?
    Oraz proszę o reakcję na "Legendy polskie" by Allegro.

    • @agnieszkazuk
      @agnieszkazuk Год назад +1

      O! Byłoby super! Legendy Polskie są the best, a już dawno nie widziałam na to reakcji :- )

  • @oskijaba3259
    @oskijaba3259 Год назад +20

    Bóg Honor Ojczyzna

    • @l...3376
      @l...3376 Год назад

      Jaki z tego morał, przecież można było wtedy zniszczyć Polskę na Boga przecież to były czasy popierdolone, takich czasów już nie będzie a jednak, jaki z tego morał ? Polska istnieje

  • @halthammerzeit
    @halthammerzeit Год назад +5

    Fun fact. Roosevelt was more interested in Poland buying horses from US after the war than holocaust news.

  • @rymarkk
    @rymarkk Год назад +7

    It's not that easy to say I wasn't around then. It's not about you per se or your generation.
    It is about the whole nation, its history and historical memory. It is also about decisions made by this nation again and again in their eloquence the same.
    So it is with Germany. They always wanted to dominate and conquer Europe, especially the Slavic nations. Nothing has changed. Times change, perhaps methods change (now Germany conquers not militarily but economically, and when the economy fails, EU institutions in their pockets do the right job to serve German interests), but they still have the same contempt for others and misunderstanding of neighbors, their culture, needs, interests, which do not have to be identical with German ones.
    Saying "I wasn't there, it's not my fault" is therefore a gross simplification and infantilization of the discussion.
    Regards

  • @stefans.615
    @stefans.615 Год назад

    My grandfather, as an officer of the Polish army, was arrested by the NKVD and sentenced to enter Katyn, fortunately he managed to escape from the transport. That's why he survived. He hid for a long time, even after the war, from persecution by the communists.

  • @robertkukuczka9469
    @robertkukuczka9469 Год назад +13

    On the night of September 20/21, 1610, Żółkiewski's Polish troops entered Moscow and stayed there in varying numbers until October 26, 1612 of the new style. They occupied the Kremlin and two districts: Kitajgorod and Belgorad. On October 8, Hetman Żółkiewski personally entered the Kremlin, where the boyar pride awaited him.

    • @demolek22
      @demolek22 Год назад

      XVI and XVII century in our history was thd best. That is why Russians hate us, they have the national holliday remembering the end of polish invasion.

  • @pitraszek
    @pitraszek Год назад +3

    The politics hasn't changed, we are in NATO now, but russia is nuclear power - which makes things worse. If not for Ukrainian bravery and russians incompetence, we would have russian troops on polish border and ultimatum to the west "abandon Poland and there will be no nuclear war" - what do you think would happen in such scenerio?

    • @cherylk.2474
      @cherylk.2474 Год назад

      I think you and I know the answer, and it is not an answer we like. Poland and Ukriane can be very strong together, but the western corporate powers need to be prevented from taking over.

  • @pancebula8106
    @pancebula8106 Год назад +6

    I know what You saying about Poles lack of trust. It's not having grudge with rest of the word. It's more about values coded into country's cultures. Politics, money, power on one end, while Poles rather be fair than wealthy. Now, of course it's generalisation, but that trend is in fact visible in "bold" and "rude" politics of Poland... That's at least one man's take... Cheers!

  • @osolek3926
    @osolek3926 Год назад +10

    watching this makes me feel very grateful to our ancestors.

  • @kitsune13
    @kitsune13 Год назад +20

    We are proud of our ancestors for what they showed us the way. They are the true soul of our nation. A signpost to true humanity. HEROES

    • @Axis-Libris
      @Axis-Libris Год назад

      Geez, jaka propaganda xDDDD

    • @pep-qew
      @pep-qew Год назад

      ​@@Axis-Libris jaka propaganda?

    • @Axis-Libris
      @Axis-Libris Год назад

      @@pep-qew nacjonalistyczna polska.

    • @pep-qew
      @pep-qew Год назад

      @@Axis-Libris co? Możesz wyjaśnić?

    • @Axis-Libris
      @Axis-Libris Год назад

      @@pep-qew czego nie rozumiesz, co to jest nacjonalizm? Czy co to jest propaganda?

  • @johndomanski8983
    @johndomanski8983 Год назад

    Because we are nation of fighters freedom loves people. man with huge balls

  • @ukaszsmith6851
    @ukaszsmith6851 Год назад +5

    But it will happen again, friendship between countries is just words, and words are wind. Out government is too stupid to understand that.

  • @xirucio5724
    @xirucio5724 Год назад +6

    Ander's comeback...it's simply ... CRAZY!

  • @adambartkowiak2365
    @adambartkowiak2365 Год назад +3

    Record next time "IPN TV trying times". This video is about how Poland regained its lands after regaining independence.

  • @proosee
    @proosee Год назад +14

    This clip is so powerful: the story, the message, how well made it is - simply amazing. Of course, there are some shortcuts, there are few inaccuracies, but it doesn't matter much. Oh, and your commentary at the end: it shouldn't be about today's Germans vs today's Poles - if you look carefully one of the heroes of this movie, Pilecki, was actually killed by Poles, so it's not about nationality, it's about doing the right thing - if you believe it was wrong and unjust that Polish soldiers were not invited on the victory march, that it was evil that Americans done nothing about the Holocaust and that Poland should be independent country after the war then you've got the message of this video right.

    • @blurrpp314
      @blurrpp314 Год назад

      Not only "American".... American Jews ware silent too. There ware only few Jewish organizations (mostly very conservative... "TRADITION" as we remember from "fiddler on the roof" ) who made march to force America to help.

    • @cherylk.2474
      @cherylk.2474 Год назад +1

      I hope you realize these were communist Poles who danced to the tune of the Kremlin. Poland had a lot of diversity in their population at the beginning of the war, there were Poles of German heritage who supported Hitler and there were Poles who were socialists supporting the Soviets. When the war ended, the Soviet-sympathizing Poles were placed in charge, and this did not change until the 1990s. The Soviet-puppet Poles killed anyone who could be a leader, and war heroes were at the top of the list. Priests, too. You might have heard of Father Jerzy Popielsku (I'm not certain I have his name spelled correctly). The socialists did not like him, either.

    • @proosee
      @proosee Год назад

      @@cherylk.2474 I was just making a point that nationality doesn't say whether you are a good or bad person.

    • @viktoriaskorpion4184
      @viktoriaskorpion4184 Год назад

      ​@@cherylk.2474Popiełuszko. Delikatnie powiedziane, że go nie lubili. Skatowali go i zabili. I bardzo smutne jest że sprawcy i mocodawcy nie ponieśli , zasłużonej kary. Podobnie jak nie zostali ukarani komuniści prześladujący ,donoszący na innych moich rodaków.

  • @robertkukuczka9469
    @robertkukuczka9469 Год назад +8

    W nocy 20/21 września 1610 roku oddziały Żółkiewskiego weszły do Moskwy i przebywały tam w różnej liczebności do 26 października 1612 roku nowego stylu. Zajęły Kreml oraz dwie dzielnice: Kitajgorod i Biełgorad. Hetman Żółkiewski 8 października wkroczył osobiście na Kreml, gdzie oczekiwała go duma bojarska.

  • @sieWie091
    @sieWie091 Год назад +3

    Have you heard of Polish bear 🐻 soldier true story? 😜

  • @jankokomodo
    @jankokomodo Год назад +4

    poland should have phenix not an eagle as a symbol

  • @nevrom25
    @nevrom25 Год назад +2

    Our White and Red flag represent purity and goodness earned by blood.

  • @wchch
    @wchch Год назад +14

    Great commentary ! Than you for your job and support for Poland

  • @krzysztofd9164
    @krzysztofd9164 Год назад +8

    Thank you Rob...
    I have some questions for you:
    1. Do you know that the executioners of the SB still live a good life in Poland?
    2. Do you see a lack of understanding of Polish arguments among European Union politicians?
    3. Have you come across the term Polish dead Camp and the narrative of Israeli politicians about it?
    What do You think about it?
    Greetings from Poland.

  • @moritorixpl6518
    @moritorixpl6518 Год назад +3

    Hi. Thanks for your reaction and kind words. Did you know that for more than 75 years British claimed that they broke code of enigma. They claimed polish cryptologists were cheating. And only in 2014 they admitted that polish cryptologist broke enigma code, that before that British did not really understood how enigma really worked and without polish help they would not do anything with that. It is really shame that for a 75 they were so proud for not their accomplishments. You even recently made a movie about how Turing broke enigma code. I don't know smile or cry about it.

    • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684
      @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684 Год назад

      Since 1932 the Polish codebreakers Marian Rejewski, Henryk Zygalski & Jerzy Różycki worked within BS4 (the Polish general staff cipher Bureau focussed on German decryption & intelligence), and together with VITAL assistance given by the French intelligence officer Gustave Bertrand (who had cultivated a German informant codenamed "Asché" who had provided French Intelligence with tons of vital data including a full nazi procedural manual for use of the enigma encryption device), had by the purchase of a commercial version of the early enigma device and LOTS of analysis eventually broken into German army and air force 3 rotor encryption networks, this was a fantastic achievement, but it is true to say that they at no time did they crack German Kriegsmarine encryption due to the additional layers of security employed by the German navy.
      In December 1938 the nazis introduced a further 2 interchangeable encryption rotors to the enigma system, which immediately brought the vast majority of Polish decryption efforts to a grinding halt, which is where it remained up until the outbreak of WW2. In the weeks prior to the outbreak of WW2 the Polish research work was passed to the French, who in the six months they had it in their possession added little to the accumulated knowledge, and to the UK where the British government seized it with both hands, and made its study top priority. So was instigated the British "ULTRA" project.
      Jerzy Różycki elected to stay behind and work in Vichy France where, unknown to the Germans he worked on an a seperate secret encryption system, which bore no tangible fruit before his death in 1942.
      Marian Rejewski & Henryk Zygalski were, for security reasons, not included in the UK "ULTRA" project, and so took no further part in British decryption efforts.
      The British "ULTRA" project took the non working foundation research of the Polish decrypters and from there massively expanded that research to once again break into nazi 3 rotor enigma, this was followed in 1942 by the cracking of the improved kriegsmarine 4 rotor enigma network (SHARK), as well as simultaneously breaking into the FAR more complex "lorenz" cipher device used by the German army & navy high commands (TUNNY), before finally cracking the "Geheimschreiber" encryption device used by both the Luftwaffe high command as well as the top level of the nazi government (STURGEON), on top of these British achievements another product of the ULTRA program was the building of the world's first programmable electronic computer (COLOSSUS) to speed up the breaking of German codes. This was designed by a British telephone engineer (Tommy Flowers), which transformed British decryption from a process which often only gave results weeks after the message was eavesdropped on by the British, to a state of affairs where the British were reading top level communications at the same time as the intended German recipient.
      The early Polish codebreakers did indeed provide the "acorn" from which the British cultivated the "mighty oak" of ULTRA.

  • @tyraelpl
    @tyraelpl Год назад +2

    5:15 this P with like two anchor things, if anyone's curious is PW Polska Walcząca meaning Poland Fighting. Probably most poles know that and probably very few foreigners do.
    6:20 all true. sadly. Both the US Roosevelt and the UK Churchill handed us over on a silver platter out of fear of upsetting "uncle" stalin. It was called Jalta Triumvirate. To this day in polish language Jałta (city name) is basically an equivalent for treason of the ugliest kind. Not used often nowadays but still there.

  • @BlackDragon95912
    @BlackDragon95912 Год назад +4

    and this short movie shows why we Poles want as more guns as possible now , When the neighbors have already penetrated our land from both sides before, and the allies came too late, it is hard to believe that the allies will come on time this time , so allies yes , but not only allies , so we want so many guns as possible to not repeat history because we do not want to be dependent only on allies, because history has already shown once that, well, before they move it will be after Poland, "prevention is better than cure "

  • @herkulespoirot2697
    @herkulespoirot2697 Год назад +2

    6:17 If you want to know the truth, I recommend a wonderful book by Stanley Cloud, Lynne Olson - A Question of Honor.
    In Poland it is said that there are three truths: the truth, the holy truth and shit the truth. What France, Great Britain and the United States did to Poland and
    Poles at that time was not a matter of upsetting Stalin, it was a matter of loss of honor, trust and betrayal of an ally from the very beginning, from the Abbeville Conference of September 12, 1939, to violations of the provisions of the Atlantic Charter at the "big three" conferences in Tehran, Yalta.
    9:24 We Poles are eager to remember history, because as one of the few nations we have felt on our skin that it likes to repeat itself more often than others think.

  • @blazej799
    @blazej799 Год назад +3

    The parallels of current war to what happaned with Poland in WWII are disturbingly accurate.
    Macron called to not humiliate Russia, even though it was alredy after Butcha masacre.
    Poland collapsed after a month of fighting and backstab from USSR.
    Ukraine finally got the support, only because it survived long enough.
    If it would collapsed, there would still be a gaspipe to Germany and Macron calling everyday to ensure that war criminal feels fine.

    • @viktoriaskorpion4184
      @viktoriaskorpion4184 Год назад

      Zgadzam się w 100% Gdy na Ukrainie przeprowadzano wszystkie możliwe zbrodnie znane z II wojny , towarzystwo zastanawiało się czy wprowadzić sankcje , lub je opóźniano .Gdy słyszę o tych wszystkich zbrodniach czuje jakby przeniesiono mnie do II Wojny Światowej. I mam wrażenie że komunistyczne śmiecie postanowiły przypomnieć obecnemu młodemu pokoleniu czym jest wojna i co człowiek potrafi wyrządzić drugiemu

  • @Terentir
    @Terentir Год назад

    Funniest hypocrisy is, that Churchill said to Chamberlain in regards to his appeasement attitude "You were given choice between war and dishonour. You chose dishonour, and you will have war". Then he did the same shit as Neville literally 7 years later...

  • @magorzatakurzyp-mt7zn
    @magorzatakurzyp-mt7zn Год назад +4

    Taka prawda my nie błagamy o wolność my o nią walczymy ❤

  • @meezer2504
    @meezer2504 Год назад

    "We do not beg for freedom. We fight for it!"

  • @sushiinmotion
    @sushiinmotion Год назад +3

    DNA memory is a real thing. I'll never trust people that hurt us or left us when we asked for help.

  • @krzysztoflewandowski1875
    @krzysztoflewandowski1875 Год назад +4

    Polish history is one of the most fascinating things in human history. People have to understand we’re between russia and germany!!!

  • @Pawel.K86
    @Pawel.K86 Год назад +13

    Too many nice words about Poland here. We will fall into self-admiration yet, and unfortunately we cannot enjoy and appreciate ourselves as a nation, because we are Poles.