Dziękuję za przepiękne pokazanie Kotliny Kłodzkiej. To moje ulubione miejsce na krótkie wypady turystyczne. Zrobiła to Pani fantastyczną robotę. ❤ Bardzo proszę o więcej takich filmów, bo Dolny Śląsk jest tego wart.
As a German you immediatelly realize that these regions and names are pretty familiar to us as many have heart stories from parents and grandparents who lived there. Yes, Germans have settled in those regions for centuries together with Poles and Jews and yes, after the war Germans were expelled and the land has been given to the country of poland which had not existed for several years. While Germans were expelled, Poles were brought from eastern polish regions which now belong to Russia to settle in the areas were Germans formerly lived. Germany and Poland accepted the new borders and build together a new and peacfull Europe from the ashes of ww2. We all should be very thankfull to our ancestors who made this possible so that we Germans today can visit those beautiful cities and perhaps some can say: "okay, this must be the house were grandma was born. It is much bigger than I thought."
Lower Silesia "Dolny Śląsk" region and Dolnośląskie Voivodeship is not the same. Kłodzko Land and Łużyce are separately regions. Part of Dolnośląskie but nor Dolny Śląsk. Especially: Lądek, Sarny and Kłodzko. I only remind you to respect history and culture
I just realised the emotional pain some Germans may feel when they see the vid and hear "Poland", "Polish", etc. In fact everything (correct me if I am wrong) what was shown in this vid was built by Germans. What Poles are doing is cherishing and reinventing the German heritage, giving their own thin layer to it. When will the south of Lower Silesia "become really Polish"? Will it ever happen? If yes, how?
Yes, you are rather right but in general I wouldn’t say Lower Silesia is German, but mainly German, as this land first belonged to Poland, then Czechia, Austria, etc. so influence of many cultures. As someone who was born here, I feel at home and never think that this is not “real” Poland even if people from outside might think differently. What I noticed among other people from Lower Silesia, we have a completely different attitude to German heritage from many other Poles living eastwards. We respect and admire mainly German heritage but at the same time we see it as our own cause we are born here, that’s our home and we love everything about it regardless of who built, invented or created this part of land.
@@szyszak9 so you mean you "embraced" the German heritage without it making you having an identity schisophrenia or feel uneasy? that is great. I was brought up in central Poland where everything was either "Polish" or jewish, but the synagogue disappeared, the jewish cemetery was only fragmentarily preserved so I had little to do with any "foreign" heritage. Now i live in Germany in a town with slavic name on lands that used to be slavic for some time but apart from the name everything and everyone here is German so I guess locals do not struggle with the topic. After all, maybe it's just a question of getting used to and not overthinking. At the same time I kind of understand why the German heritage was neglected just after the war. Apart from the feeling of hatred towards the enemies and occupants maybe they wanted to make it easy for Poles to make a new "Polish reality" of Lower Silesia, especially in its southern part where finding "Polishness" was difficult to impossible.
Well, the same thing happened further east where what have become Ukrainian territories were originally Polish! And how about Vlad’s big land grab in Ukriane? It’s not the little guy that does this, it’s the psychopathic leaders!
Dziękuję za przepiękne pokazanie Kotliny Kłodzkiej. To moje ulubione miejsce na krótkie wypady turystyczne. Zrobiła to Pani fantastyczną robotę. ❤ Bardzo proszę o więcej takich filmów, bo Dolny Śląsk jest tego wart.
Nice to see you again. We like your past travel series.
Eva on Euronews? Awesome!
As a German you immediatelly realize that these regions and names are pretty familiar to us as many have heart stories from parents and grandparents who lived there. Yes, Germans have settled in those regions for centuries together with Poles and Jews and yes, after the war Germans were expelled and the land has been given to the country of poland which had not existed for several years. While Germans were expelled, Poles were brought from eastern polish regions which now belong to Russia to settle in the areas were Germans formerly lived. Germany and Poland accepted the new borders and build together a new and peacfull Europe from the ashes of ww2. We all should be very thankfull to our ancestors who made this possible so that we Germans today can visit those beautiful cities and perhaps some can say: "okay, this must be the house were grandma was born. It is much bigger than I thought."
You are very gracious, the world needs more people like you.
What an awesome place to visit - definitely joined my list of places to go.
Gd job Eva. I see at euro news Tv this morning.
Wow, it‘s so beautiful!
I really enjoy this type of reporting from DW I'm dedicated follower 😊
Very beautiful!
home sweet home 😍😍😍
Beautiful place!
Ewka, musisz spróbować zostać aktorką. Będziesz miała fajną zabawę i duży sukces.
Nice video :)
hello i am from india
Well done
❤
Lower Silesia "Dolny Śląsk" region and Dolnośląskie Voivodeship is not the same. Kłodzko Land and Łużyce are separately regions. Part of Dolnośląskie but nor Dolny Śląsk. Especially: Lądek, Sarny and Kłodzko. I only remind you to respect history and culture
First view 💪
You're sporting a wedding ring?
I’m not trying to say …please read historical fact .Nothing less or more, only fact about what’s happened.
I just realised the emotional pain some Germans may feel when they see the vid and hear "Poland", "Polish", etc. In fact everything (correct me if I am wrong) what was shown in this vid was built by Germans. What Poles are doing is cherishing and reinventing the German heritage, giving their own thin layer to it. When will the south of Lower Silesia "become really Polish"? Will it ever happen? If yes, how?
Yes, you are rather right but in general I wouldn’t say Lower Silesia is German, but mainly German, as this land first belonged to Poland, then Czechia, Austria, etc. so influence of many cultures. As someone who was born here, I feel at home and never think that this is not “real” Poland even if people from outside might think differently. What I noticed among other people from Lower Silesia, we have a completely different attitude to German heritage from many other Poles living eastwards. We respect and admire mainly German heritage but at the same time we see it as our own cause we are born here, that’s our home and we love everything about it regardless of who built, invented or created this part of land.
@@szyszak9 so you mean you "embraced" the German heritage without it making you having an identity schisophrenia or feel uneasy? that is great. I was brought up in central Poland where everything was either "Polish" or jewish, but the synagogue disappeared, the jewish cemetery was only fragmentarily preserved so I had little to do with any "foreign" heritage. Now i live in Germany in a town with slavic name on lands that used to be slavic for some time but apart from the name everything and everyone here is German so I guess locals do not struggle with the topic. After all, maybe it's just a question of getting used to and not overthinking. At the same time I kind of understand why the German heritage was neglected just after the war. Apart from the feeling of hatred towards the enemies and occupants maybe they wanted to make it easy for Poles to make a new "Polish reality" of Lower Silesia, especially in its southern part where finding "Polishness" was difficult to impossible.
Well, the same thing happened further east where what have become Ukrainian territories were originally Polish! And how about Vlad’s big land grab in Ukriane? It’s not the little guy that does this, it’s the psychopathic leaders!
@@konradbanys2239 Dear Konrad, it seems that all of us had at least one Neanderthal uncle.
@@Marek-k1z I'm too stupid to understand the connection between Neanderthal uncles and Germans in Lower Silesia:O)
What What a fairytale! Nothing looks real here. You should show normal people how do they live, bad roads, unemployment and destroyed houses.
She's shown some ruins. The roads are not so bad and, I guess, unemployment is not so high either. Besides, it's for tourists....
So, you got a proper job now?