Archive for the 'Polish Emigration' Category Page 4 of 8



Speak English or bye! Part2

More than 1 year ago I devoted one entry to a problem of language barrier and absolutely enormous majority of Polish emigrants who couldn’t speak English at the comprehensive level. For more than 1 or 2 years Irish employers were mostly tolerant to that lack of easy communication between them and their employees, or even between their employees and their customers, but now it seems to change.

For the last couple of weeks I have been getting some news about groups of Polish employees who were banned to speak Polish at work. Usually those people are shocked and they can’t understand decision of their employers, but I since my arriving in Ireland I have been underscoring the language issue, and I have been warning my compatriots against the devastating language barrier.

I have always been of the opinion that while our staying in Ireland or UK, we should speak English at work, or always when there is a non-Polish person in our company. It is a matter of good manners, a mater of respect our friends, colleagues, and which is most important - the natives. I think it is very bad when Irish, English, Scottish or Welsh (whatever) can’t communicate with the shop assistants, bar tenders or whatever, beeing in their own homeland. I know we would be very pissed off if we couldn’t communicate in Polish, being in Poland, or when the majority of the staff was non-Polish (Ukrainian, Belarussian etc.).

Unfortunately the problem is still unsolved. Polish community is cut off from Irish, and spending most of the time between compatriots is not good opportunity to learn English at all. Many of us can’t see the point in learning English, since they can communicate in Polish mostly, and they regard their stay in Ireland as a temporary. In fact, a couple of years, or even more is not a temporary. The situation leads straight into a creation of Polish ghettos in Ireland.

Being involved in the attempts to activate and integrate Polish community (using my service - Carlow.pl) I am now thinking how to connect and integrate both communities of Carlow (Irish and Polish). Apart of persuading people to learn and to speak English, I think there is a need of some efforts from the Irish society. Unfortunately a great and very good tolerance of Irish people is also an effect of keeping out of the Poles. I mean - apart of some exceptions - there is no real socialisation attempts. Irish people are going their own way, and Polish people are going their own way, and don’t want to learn and to speak English.

The situation won’t be good nor for Poles nor Irish.

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Tinky Winky, Mengele and censorship - Poland in the lake of absurd.

I predict Polish emigration to the Western Europe is going to intensify. This time it won’t be mostly economical emigration, but also political one. Poland is changing into sea of absurd and totalitarian state.

Polish far right - only true patriots - parties in rule wasting our time and money for hunting communist, finding scapegoats like one of the best Polish cardiologist, who successfully did many transplantations of heart. He was accused of killing patients and corruption. He was instantly arrested and accused by Minister of Justice - Ziobro - of being murderer. The secret investigation case got a codename “Mengele” (after Joseph Mengele - German SS doctor who was in charge of brutal experiments and killing thousands of prisoners of death camp Auschwitz). Fortunately judge didn’t agree with murder accusations and doctor was released from jail.

Couple of days ago Polish media was electrified by the statement of Childrights ombudsman - Ewa SowiÒ¡ska, who accused UK’s children program Teletubies of promoting homosexual behaviour. She pointed that Tinky Winky has a woman handbag, and it can indicate his homosexual orientation. To be honest, I would ban Teletubies due to the fact that it is the most stupid TV program I have ever seen, but I would never took it as a secret promotion of homosexual behaviour, though I am rather a little homophobic person. I have long hair and it can be also regarded by some bigots as a promotion of homosexual style of life (since long hair should be a hairstyle of women, and shorthair of men).

Yesterday, Polish Ministry of Education announced the obligatory reading list for primary and high schools. They baned many of the classics both Polish and non-national writers, e.g. Gombrowicz, Witkacy, Johan Wolfgang Goethe, Franz Kafka, Joseph Conrad or Gustaw Herling-Grudzinski (World Apart - an excellent book describing life in Soviet gulag) and Dostoevsky.

So… prepare for another wave of emigration. This time it is going to be a migration of Polish cultural elite, or at least open minded people with wide horizons.

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Another 3 millions are going to leave Poland

One of the leading Polish newspapers - Rzeczpospolita - in its latest opinion poll asked people a question “are you going to go abroad for work in the forthcoming year?” The answer “yes” was given by 12% of questioned. 12% of whole population is about 3,2 millions of citizens. Most popular countries of migration are still Germany, UK, and Ireland.

According to Rzeczpospolita and Gazeta Wyborcza, in the last year - 2006 - about 360.000 Poles went abroad for work. That estimate doesn’t include number of illegal workers (not registered).

We will see what is going to happen.

kick it on kick.ie

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Destination change?

Today The Netherlands - country commonly known as Holland, opened its labour market for Poles. Will it change the destination of immigration? Yes, for sure, but we don’t know how much, and The Netherlands are much smaller than Ireland. After Gazeta Wyborcza: there is 225.000 vacancies in constructing, farming, food producing and shipyards.
Germany keeps its labour market closed for us for next 3 years.

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Avoiding Irish Healthcare and dental service - Mentioned in Sunday Times

Today, Sunday Times devoted its attention to the problem of avoiding Irish health care and dental service by Eastern Europeans. I am quoted in that article.

There is couple of reasons why Poles and other Eastern Europeans avoid it and prefer to cure themselves while visiting the homeland:

1. Price: Total cost of a dental treatment in Poland varies from 20 (simple treatment) to 50 Euro (cleaning channels etc.). It is not expensive, especially when we are in Poland visiting our families. Then we are going to dentist. So usually we don’t go to Poland only for dental treatment. Even if we have to go only for dental treatment: plane tickets cost now even less than 20 Euro one way. (I paid 17,50 one way)
2. Lingo: Most of the Eastern Europeans don’t speak proper English enough to explain what is going wrong or what pains.

3. Confidence: We trust our doctors and dentists in Poland. They are usually like a family ones. We usually have used their services for years and we don’t want to change it. I have just found out that some Poles don’t trust Irish health system and dental service. There are a couple of examples, when my friends had to wait 3 or 4 hours to visit a doctor of the first contact - as we call it.
4. Attitude to the living in Ireland: most of emigrants mentally still live in Poland. I mean they are working here, earning money, but they eat Polish food (which is available here), watch Polish TV (Satelite receivers - kind of SKY - brought from Poland), reading Polish press (issued in Ireland and brought from Poland), and living virtual live in Poland (via Internet). The only thing we can’t bring is a health care and dental service. But we can go and use it while we are in Poland (see point 1).

kick it on kick.ie

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