Monday, 20 June 2016

Incredible Nurse Cat From Poland Looks After Other Animals At Animal Shelter

Radamenes, an angelic little black cat in Bydgoszcz, Poland, has come through hell and high water to help the animals at the veterinary center there get better. After the veterinary center brought him back from death’s door, he’s returning the favor by cuddling with, massaging and sometimes even cleaning other animals convalescing from their wounds and operations.

Radamenes has become a local attraction, and people have begun visiting him at the center for good luck! Read on for more of his story.

Radamenes, who survived a respiratory infection, now helps other animals at this Polish shelter get better



He was so sick, the people who brought him thought he would have to be put down

But when the vets heard him purr, they decided to save him

When he miraculously got better, they were surprised to see him start hugging and cleaning other animals

He was especially friendly with animals that’d had serious operations


The vets at the shelter jokingly say he’s a full-time nurse

They call him their mascot



I guess cats aren’t so cold after all!


Friday, 17 June 2016

Warsaw City Hacks: Shortcuts to Making the Most of Poland's Capital

Want to get a nice cheap meal, visit a museum for free or avoid getting a parking ticket in the good city of Warsaw? In Warsaw, where there’s a will, there’s a way. Here are some quick-fix ideas to help you make the most of Poland's capital.

1. Find a free day


In the capital, many respected places of culture can be visited gratis on certain days. On Tuesdays for instance, you can visit the permanent exhibitions of the National Museum without having to pay. These exhibitions feature works of medieval, Nubian, and 19th century European art. On Thursdays you can go to Zachęta for free, the biggest contemporary art gallery in Poland. This gallery chiefly hosts exhibitions presenting the newest art from Poland and abroad. On Sundays you can check out the Royal Castle and its many spectacular rooms adorned with 16th century art. Some museums are always free of charge. The Xawery Dunikowski Museum of Sculpture is open from Sunday to Saturday. It is located in a very pleasant park where sculptures from its collection are on display. The exhibitions hosted by this museum show various works (not only sculptures) by contemporary Polish and foreign artists.

Here are a few other popular Warsaw highlights you can visit for free:


  • Wilanow Palace – Free on Thursdays
  • Warsaw Uprising Museum – Free on Sundays
  • The Fryderyk Chopin Museum – Free on Sundays
  • The Krolikarnia – Free on Thursdays
  • Museum of Modern Art – Free all week
  • POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews – Free all week

2. Know where to find your entertainment


Those who enjoy cultural entertainment will be happy to learn that it can be found for free in many forms. From May to September, on every Sunday two open-air concerts with music by Chopin can be enjoyed in the capital. Cinemas are also notably inexpensive. To start with, check out Iluzjon, a recently renovated cinema located in a pretty 1950s building. During the summer, Filmowa Stolica is an annual city-wide festival of free outdoor movie screenings across around ten Warsaw parks. There’s at least one screening every night for three months – perfect for Warsaw’s warm summer evenings.


If dancing is your thing, you might want to check out the Tango Café dance that is held every Tuesday. This weekly tango event is organized by a dance school named Steps4Salsa. Tango Café lasts from 22:00 until 24:00 and features an instructor who can show you some steps. In the winter, free ice skating rinks can be found all over Warsaw, and the one in the Old Town Market Place is especially enjoyable.

3. Look for Asian gems


It’s not hard to get cheap food in Warsaw. There are plenty of eateries with affordable prices. Like everywhere else, the challenge is about finding something tasty and healthy for a good price, and there are several Asian restaurants in Warsaw that fit this description. If you like Vietnamese cuisine you should definitely check out Co Tu, a legendary diner located in the back of Nowy Świat Street near Foksal Street. It has been operating for almost 20 years and has many faithful clients. Here you can get a lip-smacking Oriental main course for as little as 15 pln.

4. Try out milk bars

For typical Polish food go to Bambino, a milk bar in Krucza Street. You can’t get more Polish than a milk bar: these state-sponsored diners serve Polish dishes in truly traditional style. Many of their meals are based on dairy products, hence the name. In Bambino, you can order a proper meal for less than 15 pln, and choose from a wide range of vegetarian dishes such as crepes with white cheese or rice with cream and fruit.

5. Plan your eating issues ahead

A pizza from MammaMia's menu. Photo: promotional materials
The Warsaw restaurant scene offers enough variety to satisfy even the pickiest eaters, but since Warsaw’s such a large city, the type of food you’re looking for might not match the area you’re in. With a bit of planning though, you can make sure you’re in the right neighbourhood by the time you get hungry. Vegans should be happiest downtown, where the Krowarzywa joints specialize in vegan burgers starting from 12 pln (about 3 euros/dollars). If you tend to eat late at night Mamma Mia in 32 Świętokrzyska Street is the right spot to do that. This Italian restaurant is open 24/7 and currently has spaghetti for 15 pln and pizza for 18 pln.

6. Park smart


Covering 517 square kilometres, Warsaw is a big city. It covers nearly five times more space than Paris. Understandably, you may choose to drive in Warsaw, but this means risking finding a parking ticket behind your windscreen wiper if you miscalculate. A simple way to avoid getting those irritating tickets is to use the SkyCash smartphone application. The app enables you to start paying for your parking spot and it keeps buying you time until you tell it to stop. In order to start paying for parking with SkyCash, you need to create an account and put a special sticker on your windscreen.

7. Take a free ride


On European Car Free Day held on 22nd September, you can go on city buses, trams, tube trains etc. for free. From March to November, you can also ride a city bike without paying for it. During this part of the year Veturilo, the public bicycle system in Warsaw, rents out its two-wheelers. If you register with the system, which costs 10 pln, you can rent a city bike for 20 minutes free of charge. Once registered, you’re entitled to an unlimited amount of free 20-minute rides.

8. Ferry your way around town

If you feel like going on a ferry ride across the Vistula River in Warsaw, you can do so if your timing is right. From May to September four free ferries named Pliszka, Słonka, Wilga and Turkawka, sail across different parts of the Vistula and connecting the two banks of the river as it passes through Warsaw. The ferries travel as follows:

  • Pliszka – between Poniatowski Bridge and National Stadium
  • Słonka – between Czerniakowski Peninsula and the Saska Kępa district
  • Wilga – between the foot of the Royal Castle and Warsaw Zoo
  • ​Turkawka – between the Nowodwory district and the town of Łomianki


9. Ask around


There are simply too many good things to list here, and since Warsaw is a rapidly changing city, it’s always worth asking Varsovians what they recommend.

If you’re a Varsovian, let us know your Warsaw city hacks in the comments section.

Thursday, 16 June 2016

A Hipster Guide To Warsaw

Forget the Old Town and the National Museum. Here are directions to the hotspots of counter-culture where you will encounter the laid-back yet edgy lifestyle and the rich underground scene that makes Warsaw the ultimate hipster destination.
The role of independent culture is becoming more and more important in Poland these days. And so, in recent years, Warsaw has become filled with a vast number of venues and clubs which, apart from selling coffee and a wide range of spirits, decided to form groups of their regulars by binding to a specific genre of art or group of art creators. Moreover, the popularity of ‘underground’ cultural institutions, presenting exhibitions, plays, music and performances which are out of the mainstream has never been so large or significant before.
Young Varsovians with intellectual aspirations are willing to identify themselves by becoming devoted followers of a certain genre of art. An in-depth knowledge of totally unknown, promising and uncompromising artists is key to being widely respected and regarded as an expert.
On one hand, such an attitude is marked with snobbery but on the other it can be also considered as an idealistic manifestation of firm opposition to the mediocre ‘mainstream’ (which is as bad in Poland as everywhere else). This pursuit of being ‘arty’, or ‘sophisticated’ in every aspect of life may seem to be to some point clownish, but it certainly does make Warsaw a city full of intriguing places and events. 

Starting point: central station area
Whether you arrived in Warsaw by plane, car, or train, sooner or later you will find yourself looking at the incomprehensible architecture of Central Station. Don’t get stuck there: it's better to leave this place as soon as possible and go to the nearby Café Kulturalna, located on the ground floor of the Palace of Culture and Science.

This venue's programme is very broad: concerts by remarkable bands from all around the world (just in recent years, amongst others: Konono no.1 (Democratic Republic of Congo), Balmorhea (Austin, US) and the Hypnotic Brass Ensemble (Chicago, US), parties with carefully selected DJs as well as discussions, workshops, and so on during the day.

On the other side of the palace's courtyard you will find Bar Studio – probably the best place for weekend parties, social debates and interesting, casual lectures and meetings. Teatr Studio (Studio Theatre) is located just above Bar Studio – a place you should definitely check out. Not only is it a very active and original theatre but hosts all other kinds of high-profile cultural events (such as a Flying Lotus show in 2015). 
The Palace itself, being the biggest souvenir of the so-called Polish–Soviet friendship, despite being rather ugly from outside, has quite an original interior, with strange columns, solid wooden floors, stuccoes and other accessories ‘made in the USSR’. Taking a walk inside might not be easy (some corridors are locked and under surveillance) but it is definitely worth the risk. Have you already heard legends of its five-level basement and rooms literally filled with mannequins or of its fallout shelter, hidden deep underground? You can never be sure if they are true or not until you check it out on your own…
If you’re done penetrating the mysterious interiors of the Palace or if you find that Kulturalna’s and Bar Studio’s offerings are not sufficiently avant-garde for you, direct your feet to Pardon, To Tu, home of Warsaw’s improvisational musicians, where nothing is too complicated or niche to be presented. Recently Mats Gustafsson (a world-famous Swedish tenor saxophonist and composer) said of it:

I have to say, it’s simply one of the best places in Europe, there is something absolutely unique about it. (…) Unlike in other clubs, people would stay in the club until late hours and discuss what they’ve just heard. The reception I got at Pardon, To Tu was simply stunning!

If you don’t dig jazz and would prefer a smaller café, try Café Próżna, located on the nearby beautifully renovated Próżna street, which has two cosy floors, a very intimate atmosphere, great coffee and friendly bar staff.
The next step: north of downtown
Even though avoiding well-known places is the main goal of this off-the-beaten-track guide, there's no shame in showing your face at the Zachęta National Gallery Of Art – it's just that good. As proof, here is a list of a few artists who have presented their works here in recent years: Tadeusz Kantor, Paweł Althamer, Wilhelm Sasnal, Zbigniew Libera, and Jan Lebenstein, as well as foreign artists like Daniel Liebeskind, Luca Tuymans, Anette Messager, Wolfgang Tillmans, and many more.
Visual art is not the only thing to see in Zachęta. The gallery offers a wide range of accompanying events, such as meetings with artists, film screenings, concerts, workshops, etc. 

Before you cross the river: Powiśle

Before it gets dark, a visit to Praga district – once almost deserted and treated as 'the wrong side of the tracks' – is definitely a good idea. However, just before you cross the river, you reach Powiśle, a beautiful district on the riverbank. If you happen to visit Warsaw in summer, don't hesitate to check out our summer edition of this guide for some more ideas of what to do in the area: 

By going downhill on the beautiful Tamka Street you’ll quickly reach Powiśle.  If you’re just passing by and can’t afford to check out more than one place at Powiśle, Solec 44 is a must-see. It offers a perfectly relaxed atmosphere, experimental cuisine and unique beverages, as well as the broadest variety of board games – a perfect place for late-night talks.
If you have an hour or two to spare, stay a bit longer and visit the area enclosed within Sowia, Radna, Browarna and Lipowa streets. 

This small area has some of the Powiśle's best spots. We strongly recommend SAM (fusion cuisine), Veg Deli (the best veggie restaurant in Warsaw?) and Dziurka od Klucza (great home-made pasta).  If you want to rest on a lounger, you can pop in Kafka located a few steps away, a nice and spacious café on the steep Oboźna street. During the summer they deploy blankets, loungers and little tables on the neighbouring lawn, making it a perfect place to chill out and get some sun.

Another venue in Powiśle that is worth popping into is a whiskey and cocktail bar –  Syreni Śpiew (Siren Song). The interior design is the best part of it. It is truly captivating, mixing aesthetics from the 1960s with sophisticated elegance. If you are craving a taste of Warsaw's high life you shouldn't miss it. If you want to spend time in a relaxed and casual atmosphere, it's probably not the place for you.

The right side of the river: Praga
Praga remains terra incognita for most people from the left part of the city. Even though the district is undergoing an intense process of revitalisation and is being willingly inhabited by artists and all kind of adventurers, its huge size and number of places to visit may seem quite overwhelming.
To start, go to Soho Factory. It is a resurrected post-industrial zone, now home to art galleries, boutique designers and stylists, restaurants, food and fashion markets, and lofts. The idea the founders of Soho Factory had was to create a space that would evoke the atmosphere of the New York SoHo and so far, it is working surprisingly well. There are a lot of things to explore, just like the one and only Neon Museum  (an absolute must-see, Warsaw has been long famous for its outstanding neons and now you can see almost all of them in one place), Warsaw Cut– one of a very few barber shops in the town or Warsaw Adventure – a company that gives time-travelling tours around Warsaw, showing you relics of Communist Poland.
In Praga, places where interesting things happen are usually grouped together – like islands of culture in a sea of dreary apartment blocks and scruffy streets. One of these oases can be found at 11 Listopada Street where, behind gate no. 22, you will find no less than three decent music clubs: Hydrozagadka (A title of a popular Polish movie), Skład Butelek (Bottle's Store), and Chmury (Clouds).

Similarly, you can stroll along Ząbkowska and discover one of the following: Łysy Pingwin (Bald Penguin),  W Oparach Absurdu (In the Fumes of Absurdity),  Mucha Nie Siada  (the name goes beyond translation, it literally  means that ‘a fly wouldn’t sit on it’ and means that it is so good and elegant that a fly wouldn’t dare to sit on it) or the antique-furnished Caffee&Bistro Galeria Sztuki.

Back on the bright side: downtown
Back on the bright side: Downtown
After coming back to the left side of Warsaw, you will probably end up on Charles de Gaulle roundabout (that one with a palm tree in the middle). Nearby, you will find Zamieszanie and Cuda na Kiju, two of the most interesting cocktail bars in this part of Europe, located in the refurbished stairway of the former headquarters of the (now vanished) communist party. 
On the other side of the touristy Nowy Świat, you can (preferably late at night) lurk in Pawilony, where you will not find much culture but you can test some local beers and enjoy the darker side of the city. Whatever happens in Pawilony stays in Pawilony so if you wish to have an adventurous night full of unexpected events and acquaintances give it a chance, at your own risk.
Before you reach the final destination – the hipster Olympus (details are soon to be revealed) – seize the opportunity to fill up your stomach at Poznańska Street, which is in the very centre of city centre but still has a backstreet vibe. You’ll find a few great, affordably priced restaurants there. Our recommendations are: Leniviec, Tel Aviv (gluten-free Israeli dishes and more) and Kraken & Beirut. The latter comprises two separate restaurants, one offering delicious Middle Eastern food; the other is one of the best places for seafood and rum.

If you are in a hurry and are craving a takeaway, go straight to Krowarzywa – the best place to have a delicious eco-friendly vegan burger. Krowarzywa’s burgers are tasty, huge, healthy, and reasonably priced. Once you are full, look for Mokotowska Street to do some window-shopping on your way to…

Olympus!
So now, once you made a tour of Warsaw you are eligible for the honour of climbing the Hipster Mount Olympus – Plac Zbawiciela (Saviour Square). Here, on the edges of the roundabout where the famous and controversial rainbow stood until 2015, you will find the cornerstone of the hipster scene – Plan B. It is not clear why it all started here, and of course, many claim that it started elsewhere, but it is an undeniable fact that Plan B was a driving force behind big changes in Plac Zbawiciela, which was not a very attractive destination a few years ago. The New York Times confirmed the status of this place by shooting its reportage about Warsaw’s hipsters here.

Soon after Plan B’s success, several other venues sprung up here and Plac Zbawiciela got its nickname: Plac Hipstera (Hipster’s Square). What else do we have here? Next door to Plan B is a café/bakery, Bistro Charlotte, (with more of a posh ambiance). On the other side of the roundabout there are oriental restaurants – Que Huong and tuk tuk, along with the French Bastylia and many more places to discover.

So that is your hipster guide to Warsaw. Put on your vintage clothes, grab your iPhone, launch Instagram and explore the city. Or maybe listen to this song before you go…

The Daily Diet of Proto-Polish Slavic Tribes

Centuries ago, the typical daily menu of the Slavic tribes in the area of modern-day Poland consisted of herbs and mushrooms. They also consumed a lot of grain, modest quantities of meat and vegetables as well as the ancestor of the beetroot soup currently known as barszcz. It wasn't exactly a paleo diet, but it certainly was a Polish diet, and modern health-conscious foodies would do well to give it a look.
Historians postulate that Slavic tribes arrived in Central Europe around the 6th century CE. They began to be called Poles under the rule of 10th-century prince Mieszko I, who is widely considered to be the first Polish head of state. The early culinary practices described below date back from that era up until the 13th century, when the Polish and Lithuanian crowns were united. While some of these customs are long gone, some are still observable in contemporary Polish cuisine. For example, soups with greens (like sorrel or beetroot stems) are still very popular.


Mushrooms to survive



So what did the earliest Poles and their ancestors eat? Typically, a lot of herbs and mushrooms ‒ non-hallucinogenic varieties though. Herbs such as dill, garlic, mustard and coriander were used to season soups and to add flavour to other foods (no chilli, curry or even sugar back then). Wild mushrooms were an important addition to meals in those distant times when it was necessary to supplement agricultural food stock with foraging. Dried mushrooms were most probably stocked up for the long winters as well.


Precious treats

Grains were also a menu staple. Standard grain crops of the period included millet, barley, wheat and oats. They were used to make a popular meal called bryjka. This simple dish was made from bruised grains boiled into a mush. It could be served sweet, with fruit and sometimes even honey (a rare treat!) or savoury, with herbs, salt (also precious) and possibly lard or mushrooms. Cultivated fruits included apples, pears and peaches. Plums, cherries and berries were also consumed.


No chicken

They don’t eat chickens because they believe they cause a loss of strength and a red rash. They eat the meat of cows and geese, because that serves them well.’  These words by Abraham Ben Jacob, a Jewish traveller who visited Slavic territories in the 10th century, describe the meat-eating habits of the ancestors of Poles. Back then, proto-Poles also subsisted on pork, fish and game. Meat was often preserved by smoking.

Root vegetables and soup
Soups were commonly made from plants and vegetables like carrots, turnips and parsnips. A certain sour soup prepared with hogweed was called barszcz. The name (which nowadays refers to beetroot borscht) was also used to designate various other plant and vegetable soups. Barszcz is alive and well in Poland still, with many varieties available year-round: red barszcz, white barszcz or Ukrainian barszcz. Another strange soup with old roots is żurek, a broth made with fermented rye flour. It is believed that this dates back to several flour-based soups prepared by those Slavic tribes.

Birch tree

To wash down their meals, the first Poles and their ancestors drank birch sap harvested from trees during spring. Other non-alcoholic drinks included water and milk. If they wanted stronger stuff, they could turn to beer, mead and kwas, a low-proof beverage made from water, wholemeal bread, yeast and honey. If you want a sip of the past, look for birch sap, called birch juice these days, or kwas on the shelves of a Polish store near you – they’re still popular!
7 Confusing Polish Customs

Every country has customs that shock and confuse foreigners. Polish people going about their daily business or celebrating special occasions often do things that will make your jaw drop, but are considered perfectly normal here. Culture.pl has started a list of the most surprising Polish habits and invites you to share your culture shocks worthy of outer space. We will then update the list with our readers’ suggestions!
Poland’s most surprising customs usually stem from relics of pagan culture or folk traditions (sometimes combined with religious observances), therefore our own list starts with the pagan roots of Polish culture before moving on to odd eating habits, but feel free to send us anecdotes from any sphere of life.


1. Marzanna – Burning and drowning a straw effigy


Marzanna is the Polish name for a Slavic goddess associated with death, winter and nature. Even though pagan religion was theoretically eradicated from Poland in the early 11th century,  Marzanna is still alive thanks to a popular ritual. Every year, on the first day of spring, people would fabricate an effigy, set it on fire, and then drown it in a river. The aim of the ritual is to chase off winter and encourage nature to revive. 
The Marzanna doll is traditionally made of straw and white canvas and decorated with colourful ribbons. Her sacrifice is subject to several rules: you can’t touch her while she is in the water (your hand would wither), you can’t look back while coming back from the river (you’d bring illnesses upon you and your relatives). The Catholic church was fighting this ritual even until the early 20th century but never succeeded in stamping it out. The Marzanna tradition is still popular in some parts of Poland even though people no longer believe it really helps spring come sooner.


2. Oczepiny – Racy wedding games


If you ever happen to be at a Polish wedding party and you hear the word oczepiny you can run or stay put, but if you stay, you’ll most probably find yourself involved in a wedding game far outside your comfort zone.
Oczepiny is a common Slavic rite which symbolises the transition of the bride from being a maiden to being a married women. Traditionally the bride had her hair cut or shortened and a cap put on. This is also where the name comes from, as czepiec is Polish for a cap.
From that point, oczepiny has taken a circuitous route to become, nowadays, the moment when the most insane wedding games are organised. It usually starts with the popular throwing of the bride’s bouquet and then… anything can happen. If “carnival” in anthropology means moving the borders of what is socially acceptable and what is not, then oczepiny are a carnival par excellence. You may be asked to pass an orange to the auntie you don’t know without using your hands (imagine the embarrassment), you could be asked to change your gender for a while and dance the rumba or the tango with a person of the same sex, you could be asked to down far too much booze in a very short time, and so on.
Remember: run, or stay at your own peril.


3. Poprawiny – Having a second wedding party after the first


The dictionary says it is a continuation of a wedding party the day after the main event. It is also referred to as a champagne brunch, which couldn’t be more misleading. Rarely is there champagne at a poprawiny and if there is a word in French that describes poprawiny it is déjà vu.

Poprawiny basically means starting the wedding party all over again, in the middle of the day after the wedding party, and sometimes it is even carried on to the third day. There are even legends of week-long wedding parties organised by Gorals – the inhabitants of the Polish Tatra mountains.

4. Christmas – straw under the tablecloth, and an extra plate for an unexpected guest


Celebrating both Christmas and Easter is very important to Poles, and there are a plethora of little habits and traditions to obey. For example, at Christmas you have to put a little bit of straw under the tablecloth and set one extra plate for an unexpected guest. The explanation?
Putting a few blades of straw is what remains of a tradition of decorating the whole table with straw and grains and even putting a sheaf in the corner (which was even practised by noble families living in demesnes). The reason behind it was that Jesus Christ was born in a manger, in a little stable in Bethlehem, and the straw is to symbolise the paucity of the circumstances of his coming to Earth.

An old Polish proverb says ‘Gość w dom, Bóg w dom’, which means that the presence of a guest is God’s blessing. Hospitality is a part of the Polish identity and Poles are determined not to leave anybody alone or hungry on Christmas – this is why they traditionally put an extra plate on the Christmas table. In fact, rarely does any unexpected guest come but if you ever happen to be in Poland and your friends know that you have nobody to spend Christmas evening with, expect several invitations!

5. Śmigus Dyngus – Pouring buckets of water on strangers

Among the Easter code of rituals Śmigus Dyngus may be the most unexpected. What it is nowadays is a free-for-all, all-day water battle played out with water pistols, bottles, water balloons thrown from windows, plastic bags or whatever means are on hand – in some rare instances even fire trucks have been known to join in.

The provenance of this custom is linked with both Christianity, where splashing with water is evocative of the baptism or blessing, and with a traditional folk game between young boys and girls, who celebrated the arrival of spring, the revival of nature’s fertility and, when the opportunity arose, looked into possibility of future bonding.

6. Kanapki – Sliced bread instead of sandwiches


The fundamental question that arises after a few days in Poland is: what is the kanapka everybody is eating and talking about? Be aware that if your Polish friends offer you a sandwich, you might only receive one slice of bread.
Kanapka is the Polish word for most types of snacks that have a slice (or slices) of bread as a base component. It refers to all types of sandwiches but, above all else, to the Poles, it means the beloved open sandwich. And among the surprising eating habits of Poland, the ultra-dominance of the open sandwich on every Poles’ working-day menu is the one that puzzles foreigners the most. Kanapka is the first choice for breakfast, lunch and supper, and doesn’t really differ depending on time of the day.


Is the open sandwich a Polish invention? Not really, and it is much older than it might seem. It derives from a Medieval habit of using a thick slice of bread as a plate. At the end of the meal, the bread-plate was eaten, or given to a servant or a dog. Guess what happens with the uneaten sandwiches nowadays…

7. Foraging – Picking (and eating) mushrooms in the forest

While most foreigners would never dream of risking a possibly lethal case of poisoning by eating something they found in a forest, mushroom picking is a Polish holiday craze. People love it, and because approximately 30% of Poland is covered with beautiful woodland it is one of the most common ways of spending free time outdoors. Poles are eager to wake up in the early morning to pick mushrooms before others, and they teach children the names of all the species of mushrooms as well as acquaint them with techniques of recognising if the mushroom is edible or lethally poisonous. Picking mushrooms is a serious thing in Poland and Polish mushroom dishes are usually world-class delights.
Poland Guide

A Guide to Polish Language, Culture, Customs and Etiquette

Facts and Statistics

Location: Central Europe

Capital: Warsaw

Climate: Temperate with cold, cloudy, moderately severe winters with frequent precipitation; mild summers with frequent showers and thundershowers

Population: 38,518,241 (July 2007 est.)

Ethnic Make-up: Polish 96.7%, German 0.4%, Belarusian 0.1%, Ukrainian 0.1%, other and unspecified 2.7% (2002 census)

Population: 159,196,336 (July 2004 est.)

Religions: Roman Catholic 89.8% (about 75% practicing), Eastern Orthodox 1.3%, Protestant 0.3%, other 0.3%, unspecified 8.3% (2002)

Government: Republic

Language(s) of Poland

Polish is the official language of Poland. It is spoken by most of the 38 million inhabitants of Poland (census 2002). There are also some native speakers of Polish in western Belarus and Ukraine, as well as in eastern Lithuania.

Polish has the second largest number of speakers among Slavic languages after Russian. It is the main representative of the Lechitic branch of the West Slavic languages. The Polish language originated in the areas of present-day Poland from several local Western Slavic dialects, most notably those spoken in Greater Poland and Lesser Poland. It shares some vocabulary with the languages of the neighboring Slavic nations, most notably with Slovak, Czech, Ukrainian, and Belarusian.

Polish Culture and Society

The Polish People - Poles

Poland is pretty much ethnically homogeneous. Ukrainian, Belorussian, Slovakian, and Lithuanian minorities reside along the borders. A German minority is concentrated near the southwest city of Opole. The capital and other cities are experiencing some inward migration from foreigners.

Religion

Religion plays an important role in the Polish society and is deeply intertwined with Polish culture.
Religious holidays are considered national holidays when most businesses are closed. The most important holiday is Christmas and celebrations last two and a half days. Poles practice "dzielenie oplatkiem" which is the breaking and sharing of a thin white wafer (oplatek) with all family members. While sharing the wafer, individuals express wishes of good heath and prosperity for the coming year. This is also commonly practised at work Christmas parties and is very much a part of Polish culture.
Another religious holiday of note is All Saints’ Day which takes place on November 1st. On this day Poles visit cemeteries to honour their loved ones who have passed away.
Catholicism is the most widely practiced religion. Life’s milestones such as weddings, baptisms, funerals, first communion and confirmation are influenced by the religion.
The Importance of Family

The family is the centre of the social structure. One’s obligation is to the family first and foremost. Extended families are still the norm and really form an individual’s social network.
Poles draw a line between their inner circle and outsiders. Family members are naturally part of the inner circle along with close friends, usually “family friends”. Poles will interact differently with their inner circle and outsiders. The inner circle forms the basis of a person's social and business network. The people from the inner circle can be relied upon to: offer advice, help find a job, cut through bureaucracy, or even rent an apartment. There is an elaborate etiquette of extending favours and using contacts to get things done.

Social Etiquette, Customs and Protocol

Meeting and Greeting

Greetings are generally reserved yet courteous.

  • When greeting someone a good handshake, direct eye contact, a smile and the appropriate greeting for that time of day will suffice.
  • Good morning/afternoon is "dzien dobry" and good evening is "dobry wieczor".
  • Address people by their honorific title, “Pan” for a man and “Pani” for a woman, and their surname.
  • Do not use first names until invited to. Moving from the use of formal to the informal names is such an important step that there is a ritual to acknowledge the changed status and your inclusion in their ‘inner circle’.
  • At parties or other social gatherings, your hosts will introduce you, usually starting with the women and then moving on to the men.

Gift Giving Etiquette

The usual times for present giving are birthdays, name days (birth date of the saint after whom they are named), and Christmas.
Here are some general gift giving guidelines:

  • Do not give gifts that are overly expensive; this may embarrass the recipient.
  • Employees bring cake and champagne to the office to celebrate their name day.
  • At Christmas, it is common to give small gifts to service workers such as postal workers, refuse collectors, etc.
  • If invited to a Pole's home for dinner, bring wine, flowers, pastries or sweets for the hostess.
  • Give an odd numbers of flowers.
  • Do not give yellow chrysanthemums as they are used for funerals. Do not give red or white flowers, especially carnations and lilies.
  • Gifts are generally opened when received.
  • Dining Etiquette


If you are invited to a Pole's house:
Be punctual.

  • You may be expected to take off your shoes. (Check to see if your host is wearing slippers)
  • Dress conservatively.
  • Offer to help the hostess with the preparation or clearing up after a meal is served. This is good manners. This will more often that not be turned down out of politeness.
  • Do not ask for a tour of the house.
  • Table manners are Continental, i.e. hold the fork in the left hand and the knife in the right while eating.
  • Wait for the hostess to invite you to start eating.
  • Most meals are served family-style.
  • Take small amounts of food initially so you can accept second helpings.
  • Try a bit of everything.
  • Toasts are only made with hard liquor (generally vodka).
  • You should reciprocate with your own toast later in the meal.
  • Alcohol is served in small glasses so you can swallow in one gulp.


Business Etiquette and Protocol

Meeting & Greeting

Polish businesspeople initially take a formal approach to business. This may come across as quite distanced but is not the intention. You may also notice differences in style between government officials who maintain formality and entrepreneurs who willingly dispense with formality. It is best to let your colleagues determine the level of formality used. General tips include:


  • Shake hands with everyone upon arriving and leaving.
  • Handshakes are quite firm and eye contact is valued.
  • Wait for a woman to extend her hand.
  • Some older businessmen may kiss a woman's hand upon meeting. Do not imitate this behaviour as it may be seen as you poking fun.
  • Titles are considered prestigious. Academic or professional titles are used with the honorific titles with or without the surname.
  • Wait to be invited before moving to first names. You may do business with people for years and not be on a first name basis.
  • Business cards are exchanged without formal rituals.
  • Try and have one side of your card translated into Polish.
  • Include advanced university degrees and titles on your business card; qualifications are impressive.

Communication Styles


  • Generally speaking, Poles judge others by their personal qualities. They therefore like to spend time getting to know people as individuals. This allows them to size people up.
  • Honesty is highly valued in Poland since trust is the cornerstone of business relationships. Building personal relationships is essential for successful business dealings, especially if you are looking for a long-term business relationship.
  • Poles are known for being direct communicators, i.e. they say what they are thinking. However they are also very sensitive to other’s feelings and let that determine how and
  • what they say.
  • While direct communication is valued in Poland, there is also emphasis on finessing what is said in order to deliver information in a diplomatic way.
  • The level of the relationship mostly determines how direct someone can be.
  • For newly established and more formal relationships, a great deal of emphasis is placed on diplomacy. Once a relationship has passed through the initial phases, people feel more comfortable speaking frankly with each other and animated exchanges become more common.

Business Meetings

  • The most senior Pole generally opens the meeting and sets the groundwork for what is to be discussed.
  • He may also verbally offer a recommended agenda for the discussions.
  • Small talk is the norm at the start of meetings; do not rush proceedings as this is part of the relationship building process.
  • The first few meetings may in fact seem to be more small talk than business discussions. If this is the case it means that your Polish colleagues are still sizing you up and have not yet made up their minds.

  • You may want to consider this as an opportunity to get more personal and try and form that relationship.
  • Lunch and dinner meetings are often used to further the personal relationship.
  • Meetings tend to be relatively relaxed once the personal relationship has been established.
  • Hard facts are important so participants come well-prepared with facts and figures to back up their statements. Foreigners would be expected to do the same.
  • Business decision-making processes tend to have a hierarchical basis, and therefore many decisions will be taken at the top echelons of the company.
  • Final decisions are translated into rigorous, comprehensive action steps that you can expect will be carried out to the letter
A SHORT HISTORY OF POLAND

Poland in the Middle Ages


The written history of Poland began in the 10th century. At that time Poland was ruled by a dynasty called the Piasts. A Piast named Mieszko I reigned from about 960 to 992. In 966 he became a Christian and his people followed.

However a king named Boleslaw the Wrymouth (reigned 1102-1138) decided that after his death the kingdom should be divided between his sons. (Although the eldest son was to have overall control). This decision weakened Poland.

Nevertheless in the 12th and 13th centuries Poland prospered and town life flourished. A king named Henry the Bearded reigned from 1201 to 1238. His wife Jadwiga encouraged German merchants and craftsmen to come and live in Poland. They founded towns with German laws. Some Germans also came to farm uncultivated land in Poland.

However in 1241-42 the Mongols invaded Poland. The Poles were defeated at the battle of Legnica in April 1241 but the Mongols soon withdrew.

Another threat to Poland came from the Teutonic Knights. They were an order of fighting monks. They set out to conquer the Pagan peoples of eastern Europe and convert them by force. In 1235 they began conquering the pagan Prussians (who lived northeast of Poland). By 1283 Teutonic the Knights had conquered the Prussians. However in 1308 they turned on Poland. They took eastern Pomerania including the town of Gdansk, which they renamed Danzig.

Yet in the early 14th century Poland became a strong and unified state. Kazimierz III, known as Kazimierz the Great (reigned 1333-1370) expanded east into Russia. He also reformed the law and administration. Furthermore during his reign the first university in Poland, Krakow, was founded.

Kazimierz also protected and supported the Jews. It was partly due to him that Poland came to have a large Jewish community.

The era from the 14th century to the 16th century was one of greatness for Poland. Nevertheless the power of the king gradually weakened. The Polish nobility became more and more powerful.

Kazimierz was succeeded by his nephew Louis, the king of Hungary. Louis wanted his daughter to succeed as ruler of Poland him but in order to obtain the agreement of the Polish nobles he was forced to grant them concessions. The Privilege of Koszyce (1374) made the nobles exempt from most kinds of tax. It also gave them an important role in government. In future no important decision could be made without their consent.

The Jagiellonians Rule Poland


In 1384 the Polish nobles finally accepted Louis' daughter Jadwiga as Queen of Poland. They also arranged for her to marry Jagiello, Grand Duke of Lithuania and the two countries became allies. Jagiello became Wladyslaw II of Poland (reigned 1386-1434). Wladyslaw joined the Catholic church and his people followed.

In 1410 Poland and Lithuania utterly defeated the Teutonic Knights at the battle of Grundwald.

Then, in 1453 the people of Pomerania rebelled against the Teutonic Knights and appealed to the Poles for help. After 13 years of fighting the Poles took Pomerania and Gdansk.

However in the late 15th century the Polish nobles became increasingly powerful and the monarchy grew weaker. In 1505 the king agreed that no political changes would be made without the consent of the nobles.

The 16th century was an age of economic prosperity for Poland. Furthermore learning flourished in Poland. The greatest Polish scholar was Nicolaus Copernicus (1473-1543). In his day people believed that the Sun and the planets orbited the earth. In 1543 Copernicus published a theory that the Earth and the other planets orbit the Sun. At the time it was a revolutionary teaching.

However like the rest of Europe Poland was rocked by the reformation. Polish Protestants were divided into Lutherans and Calvinists.

However in the 1560s the Jesuits arrived in Poland. They created a network of schools and colleges across Poland and they managed to defeat the Protestants. Nevertheless the Compact of Warsaw, 1573 allowed freedom of worship in Poland.

Meanwhile in 1569 by the Union of Lublin Poland and Lithuania formed a federation with the same king and parliament but separate armies and legal codes.

When the last Jagiellonian king died in 1572 without leaving an heir the Polish monarchy became elective. The king was elected by an assembly of all the Polish nobles. Then in 1596 Warsaw became the capital of Poland instead of Krakow.

Poland in the 17th Century

The 17th century was a troubled one for Poland. At that time the Poles controlled the Ukrainian Cossacks. However in 1648 they rebelled and in 1654 the Russians joined them in a war against the Poles. In 1655 the Swedes invaded Poland and overran most of it. However the Poles rallied and the war with Sweden ended in 1660. The war with Russian ended in 1667. However the wars left Poland devastated. Apart from the material damage a large part of the Polish population was killed.

In the late 17th century Poland scored some great military successes. At that time the Turks ruled Southeast Europe and they tried to drive further into the continent. However in 1673 a Pole named Jan Sobieski was elected king. In 1683 the Turks laid siege to Vienna but Sobieski defeated them and drove them back.

However in the late 17th century Poland was severely weakened by the lack of an effective central government. A single member of the Sejm could veto any measure. Furthermore a single member could dissolve the Sejm. That meant all measures already passed by that Sejm were cancelled and they had to be re-submitted to a new Sejm. As a result government was paralyzed.

Poland in the 18th Century


In the 18th century Poland continued its political and military decline. Prussia and Russia took advantage of the lack of strong central government to interfere in Poland. In 1697 Frederick Augustus of Saxony became king of Poland. When he died in 1733 a Russian army marched into Poland and compelled the Sejm to elect his son king. Increasingly Poland was the plaything of the great powers.

In 1764, after the Polish king died Catherine the Great, Empress of Russia, intervened to have her former lover Stanislaw Poniatowski elected the new king of Poland. However Poniatowski refused to be a Russian pawn. He and a number of other prominent Poles wanted reforms to strengthen the monarchy. However the Russians would not allow it. It was in Russia's interests to keep Poland weak and divided. There were also many conservative Polish nobles who were unwilling to surrender their privileges.

In 1767 the Russians forced Poland to accept a treaty. The treaty guaranteed the borders of Poland. It also guaranteed the rights of Orthodox Christians. (Although most Poles were Roman Catholics a small minority belonged to the Eastern Orthodox Church). It also guaranteed the rights of Polish nobles. Russia would intervene if their rights were threatened. (The noble's rights kept Poland weak and without a strong central government so it was in Russia's interests to protect them).

Anger at Russian interference led to a Polish uprising called the Confederacy of Bar between 1768 and 1772. However the Russians eventually crushed the rebellion.

The great powers, Russia, Prussia and Austria then decided to help themselves to Polish territory. Prussia took Pomerania (northern Poland) cutting Poland off from the sea. Austria took Galicia. Russia took what is now eastern Belarus.

The shock of losing much of their territory galvanized the Poles into action. They reformed education and the army. They also reformed their government. The Four Years Sejm (1788-1792) created a new constitution for Poland in 1791.

However in 1793 there was a second partition. Russia and Prussia took more Polish territory. The 1791 constitution was annulled. In 1794 the Poles rebelled but they were crushed by the Prussians and Russians. Finally in 1795 Prussia, Russia and Austria divided the last part of Poland between them. The Polish king abdicated and the Polish state ceased to exist.

In 1807 Napoleon turned some of the Polish territories into the Duchy of Warsaw, a French satellite state. In 1812 almost 100,000 Poles fought with Napoleon against Russia.

19th Century Poland


At the Congress of Vienna in 1815 the great European powers divided up the continent. Poland was divided between Prussia, Russia and Austria. Prussia took the western and northern part of Poland while Russia took the centre and east. Austria kept Galicia.

The great powers were not willing to restore Polish independence. Instead they created a semi-independent Poland. The Russian part of Poland was made into the Kingdom of Poland. The Tsar was the monarch but his powers were limited and the kingdom had its own government and army.

However the Poles were dissatisfied and in 1830 rebellion broke out. Some Polish soldiers attempted to assassinate the Tsar's brother and the Polish Diet (parliament) declared the Tsar deposed. However the Russian army invaded and by September 1831 the Polish army was defeated.

Afterwards the Tsar suspended the Polish constitution and ruled by decree. The Polish army was disbanded. As a result of the repression many Poles emigrated to France or North America.

The Poles rebelled again in 1863. The rebellion lasted for 18 months but it was eventually crushed. Afterwards the Kingdom of Poland was dissolved and the area was renamed the 'Vistula Provinces'. Russian was made the official language of government and the Poles were forced to use it in schools - part of a policy to suppress Polish culture. On the other hand the Tsar abolished serfdom.

Meanwhile the Prussians tried to suppress Polish culture in the western part of the country but they could not. Polish culture flourished in the late 19th century and the Poles formed political movements including the Nationalist League, the Christian Democrats and the Polish Socialist Party.

20th Century Poland


Poland eventually regained its freedom after the First World War. In 1916 the Germans conquered the Russian held parts of Poland. To curry favor with the Poles the Germans promised to form a Polish kingdom after the war.

Meanwhile polish General Jozef Pilsudski (1867-1935) led a Polish force in the war against the Russians. However Pilsudski fell out with the Germans and in 1917 was interned. He was released just before the Germans surrendered on 11 November 1918. Meanwhile in January 1918 US President Wilson made clear his support for an independent Poland after the war.

On 11 November 1918, the day of the German surrender the Poles took charge of their country and the German troops were expelled. On 14 November 1918 Pilsudski became provisional head of state. In January 1919 a constitutional assembly was elected in Poland. A new constitution was published in 1921.

After the war the allies decided that Poland should have access to the sea. They gave Poland a strip of land called the Polish corridor, which cut through Germany. It meant that East Prussia was cut off from the rest of Germany. Danzig (Gdansk) was made an independent city state.

In its early years Poland fought border wars. In 1919 it fought a brief war with Czechoslovakia. However a much longer war was fought against Russia in 1919-1921.

As well as wars the Polish republic faced other problems. In 1922 the President, Gabriel Narutowicz was assassinated. Then in May 1926 Pilsudski led a military coup and became dictator. Pilsudski kept the outward forms of democracy. The Sejm continued to meet and political parties were allowed to continue. However Pilsudski held real power until his death in 1935.

Meanwhile in the 1930s Poland was threatened by both Nazi Germany and Communist Russia. In 1939 the two signed a secret agreement to divide Poland between them.

Poland in the Second World War


Germany invaded Poland on 1 September 1939. The Poles fought valiantly but on 17 September the Russians invaded from the east. (The Russians and the Germans had already secretly agreed to divide Poland between them). The Polish position was hopeless but the Poles continued to fight both the Germans and the Russians. Warsaw fell on 27 September 1939 and all resistance ceased by 5 October.

Some Polish soldiers and airman escaped through Hungary and Romania to France and some Polish warships escaped to join the British navy. A Polish army was reformed in France and by the Spring of 1940 it had almost 200,000 men. (The Poles also fought in the Norwegian campaign in May 1940). After the fall of France in June 1940 Polish airmen played a major role in the Battle of Britain.

Meanwhile parts of Poland were absorbed into Germany. The rest of German occupied Poland was organised under a General Government. The Russian occupied parts of Poland were absorbed into the Soviet Union.

The German-Soviet occupation of Russia meant terrible suffering for the Polish people. Polish Jews were exterminated. Altogether about 3 million Polish Jews were murdered. About 3 million other Poles were killed.

Hitler hated Slavs and he claimed they were sub-human. The Nazis planned to turn the Poles into a nation of slaves who would do menial work for their German masters. Poles would be given as little education as possible. Therefore vast numbers of highly educated Poles were murdered. All Polish universities and secondary schools were closed. Furthermore Polish industry and estates were confiscated by the Germans.

Any act of resistance, however slight, was punished by execution of by deportation to a concentration camp. Despite the tyranny the Poles formed a powerful resistance movement. By 1943 partisans were fighting in the forests of Poland.

The Russians imposed their own tyranny in eastern Poland. Thousands of Polish officers were murdered.

When Germany invaded Russia in June 1941 the Polish government in exile in Britain, which was led by Prime Minister Sikorski, made an agreement with the Russians. On 30 June 1941 they signed a treaty in London, which ended the war between them.

Stalin promised to release Polish prisoners of war and the huge number of Poles who had been deported to Siberia. In Russia there were almost 200,000 Polish prisoners-of-war. They were released and allowed to form a Polish army in Russia. However in 1942 Stalin cut supplies to the Polish army fighting in Russia and they were evacuated to the Middle East.

Furthermore relations between Stalin and the Polish government in exile deteriorated over disagreements over the border between Poland and Russia. Stalin insisted that Poland's eastern provinces should be absorbed into the Soviet Union after the war.

Matters came to a head in April 1943 after the Germans discovered the Katyn massacre. When the Russians conquered eastern Poland they murdered 4,500 Polish officers and buried them in Katyn Forest. The Russians claimed the Germans committed the massacre after they invaded eastern Poland (and Russia) in 1941. The Polish government in exile wanted the International Red Cross to investigate but Stalin refused and broke of diplomatic relations. Prime Minister Sikorski was killed on 4 July 1943 and was replaced by Stanislaw Mikolajczyk.

However Stalin was determined to impose a communist government on Poland and Polish communists were willing to co-operate with him. The Poles realized that if the Russians occupied Poland they would simply impose their will on the country. The only hope of preserving Polish independence was to stage an uprising in Warsaw before the Russians arrived. The Warsaw rising began on 1 August 1944. The Poles fought bravely but they could not win. They were forced to surrender on 2 October 1944. Warsaw was left in ruins. Stalin, of course, did nothing to help the uprising. All he had to do was stand by and wait for the Germans to win.

Meanwhile in July 1944 Polish Communists formed the Committee of National Liberation, known as the Lublin Committee. It was led by Boleslaw Beirut. On 1 January 1945 the Lublin Committee declared itself the provisional government of Poland. In February 1945 Stalin met Churchill and Roosevelt at Yalta. He promised to allow free elections in Poland. As usual Stalin had no intention of keeping his promise. The tragedy is that Poland was not liberated after the Second World War. Instead one type of tyranny, Nazism was replaced by another type of tyranny, Communism.

The provisional government was, of course, a puppet government controlled by Stalin. At the Potsdam Conference in July 1945 the provisional government agreed to the redrawing of Poland's borders. The western border was moved further west and most of the Germans who lived there were expelled. The eastern border was also moved west and some territory was taken by Russia.

Communist Poland


After World War II Poland was left devastated. As well as the material damage nearly 25% of the population was killed. Furthermore Communism was imposed on the Poles. The Communists took power in stages between 1945 and 1947. At first a provisional government was formed with Communists in key positions - backed by the Soviet army. Elections were finally held in January 1947 but they were carefully rigged. As a result the Communists and Socialists won a landslide victory as the So-called Democratic Bloc.

Then in December 1948 the Socialist Party was purged of its right wing members and the rest were forced to merge with the Communists to form the Polish United Workers Party. A new constitution was introduced in 1952 and Poland became an entirely Communist country.

The Communists nationalized industry but they failed to collectivize Polish agriculture. They also failed to break the power of the Catholic Church.

In June 1956 dissatisfaction with the Communists regime in Poland led to riots in the city of Poznan. The government crushed the riots by force. However the government realized some reform was necessary.

Meanwhile in 1951 Wladyslaw Gomulka the First Secretary of the Party was deposed and imprisoned. In October 1956 he was released and the Polish Communists made him their leader - without consulting Moscow. The Russians were enraged that the Poles had dared to take independent action and they came close to invading Poland. Nevertheless Gomulka failed to carry out any fundamental reforms and Poland stagnated under his rule.

Then on 12 December 1970 the government announced massive food prices. The result was demonstrations and strikes in northern Poland especially in Gdansk. Troops shot and killed many demonstrators, which only made things worse. The demonstrations spread.

On 20 December 1970 Gomulka was forced to resign. He was replaced by Edward Gierek. He froze prices and introduced a new economic plan. Peace returned. Gierek borrowed heavily from the west. As a result living standards in Poland rose. In the early 1970s food became cheaper and consumer goods became common.

However a rise in oil prices ended the economic boom and by 1976 it was clear the loans had been squandered. Polish industry was unable to buy enough hard currency to pay back the loans.

The government introduced huge increases in the price of food. The result was more strikes. This time the government ended the strikes by force. Many strikers were imprisoned. However the Poles began to organize themselves.

In July 1980 the government announced 100% rises in the price of some foods. The result was strikes across Poland. In August 1980 the Lenin shipyards in Gdansk went on strike. Led by an electrician named Lech Walesa the workers occupied the yards. They drew up a list of demands including freedom of the press, the release of political prisoners and the right to form independent trade unions. On 31 August the Communists surrendered. They made the Gdansk agreement and accepted the workers demands.

The workers formed the Solidarity Trade Union, which soon became a mass movement. However the Communists fought back. In December 1981 General Wojciech Jaruzelski imposed martial law on Poland. Solidarity was banned and its leaders were arrested.

Jaruzelski declared a 'state of war'. However the war between the workers and the Communists continued. The economic crisis continued. Poland's debts grew larger and larger. Wages did not keep up with price rises. Meanwhile the workers continued to hold strikes and Solidarity went underground.

Eventually, in 1988 the Communists gave in and Jaruzelski called for a 'courageous turnaround'. In 1989 the Communists and Solidarity held talks. The government agreed to legalize Solidarity and allow freedom of the press. The Communists also agreed that the Sejm (Polish parliament) should be partly democratically elected. The Communists would keep at least 65% of the seats in the lower house but the other 35% would be freely elected. All the seats in the upper house would be freely elected.

The elections were held on 4 June 1989. Solidarity won 35% of the seats of the lower house and 99% of the seats in the upper house. It was a humiliating defeat for the Communists. In August 1989 Tadeusz Mazowiecki became Prime Minister of Poland. The Communist tyranny was over.

A view of Torun in Poland

Modern Poland


In 1990 Lech Walesa was elected President. In October 1991 completely free elections for the Sejm were held. However the new democratic Poland inherited severe economic problems from the Communists. Nevertheless Poland underwent transition from Communism to Capitalism. Industry was privatized and today the Polish economy is growing strongly and unemployment although high is falling.

In 1997 Poland gained a new constitution. Lech Kaczynski became President of Poland in 2005. Meanwhile Poland joined NATO in 1999 and the EU in 2004.

Poland launched its first satellite, PW-Sat in 2012. Today the population of Poland is 38 million.

Wednesday, 15 June 2016

Poland GDP Q1 2016


Growth slows to over-two-year low in Q1
June 1, 2016

Poland’s economy started the year on a soft note according to recent data released by the Central Statistical Office of Poland. The economy grew 3.0% over the same period last year in Q1, which was notably below the 4.3% expansion tallied in Q4 2015. The result marked the slowest growth rate since Q4 2013 and came amid an almost-broad-based decline in the economy.

On the domestic side of the economy, a sharp slowdown in public investment on the back of reduced EU development funds hampered growth in Poland. Fixed investment swung from a 4.4% increase in Q4 to a 1.8% contraction in Q1, which marked the worst result since Q2 2013. Government spending also deteriorated, slowing from an 8.7% expansion in Q4 to a 4.4% increase in Q1. However, private consumption improved slightly and grew 3.0% (Q4: +3.0% year-on-year). Private consumption has been the driver of Poland’s solid growth in recent quarters and is expected to pick up going forward amid improving labor market conditions, tax breaks and the government’s new child benefit program. In addition, inventories contributed positively to GDP.

Surging import growth, which expanded at the fastest pace in over one year, led to a larger drag from the external sector in Q1. Import growth rose from Q4’s 8.6% to 9.3% in Q1, as strong household demand translates into increased demand for foreign goods. Exports, however, decelerated in Q1, growing 6.9% (Q4: +8.2% yoy).

Despite the weak reading in the first quarter, Poland’s economy is expected to grow robustly this year driven by strong fundamentals. Jakub Rybacki, Economist at ING, points out:

“We remain optimistic about the second half of the year. Consumption should accelerate strongly in 3Q16 as the child benefit programme would fully impact the economy. Moreover, we expect increased tourist inflow due to the World Youth Day (Jul-16 in Cracow). Thus we see GDP growth around 3.7% YoY in 2H16.”

FocusEconomics Consensus Forecast panelists expect that the economy will expand 3.6% in 2016, which is unchanged from last month’s forecast. For 2017, panelists foresee the economy growing 3.5%.

Poland GDP Chart



Note: Year-on-year changes of GDP in %.
Source: Central Statistical Office (GUS) and FocusEconomics Consensus Forecast. 
Poland Inflation May 2016


Fall in annual consumer prices moderates slightly in May
May 31, 2016

According to a preliminary estimate released by the Central Statistical Office (GUS) on 31 May, consumer prices in May increased 0.1% over the previous month, which was below the 0.3% increase recorded in April and expected by market analysts.

In annual terms, consumer prices dropped 1.0% in May, which followed the 1.1% fall recorded in April. However, inflation remains well below the Central Bank’s target of 2.5% with a tolerance margin of plus/minus 1.0 percentage point. Meanwhile, annual average inflation stabilized at April’s minus 0.8%. More detailed data concerning consumer prices will be published on 13 June.

FocusEconomics Consensus Forecast panelists expect consumer prices to fall 0.3% in 2016, which is unchanged from last month’s projection. In 2017, the panel expects inflation to average 1.5%.


Poland Inflation Chart



Note: Annual and monthly variation of consumer price index in %.
Source: Central Statistical Office (GUS).