Englishman Reacts to... Warszawa, Poland 1939 in Colour

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  • Опубліковано 16 чер 2024
  • Let's look back at Warszawa in 1939 before the war and in colour!
    Original: • PRZEDWOJENNA WARSZAWA ...
    Website: www.charlieandrob.com
    Discord: / discord
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    If you would like to support me then 'Buy me a coffee': www.buymeacoffee.com/robreacts
    If you would like to send me anything, send me a message on robreacts @ hotmail . com
    #poland #warszawa #warsaw #incolour
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 141

  • @RobReacts1
    @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +9

    If you are enjoying my reactions to all things Poland, make sure you go and watch out trips to Poland on our vlog channel Charlie & Rob and subscribe! We have vlogs from Gdansk, Kraków, Warszawa and Wrocław.
    ua-cam.com/play/PLw4JaWCFm7FeHG7Ad5PtaZzoYd1Vq5EXW.html

    • @GluonToo
      @GluonToo Місяць тому +1

      Check it out! - A black Polish soldier from the Warsaw Uprising.
      ua-cam.com/video/s9ET2ybkA8g/v-deo.html

    • @GluonToo
      @GluonToo Місяць тому +2

      And here an Native American in the Polish National Army.
      ua-cam.com/video/7lzmh4iJpCw/v-deo.html

    • @adlervonschlesien4869
      @adlervonschlesien4869 5 днів тому

      ua-cam.com/video/kKhST3NgLm0/v-deo.htmlsi=DvcAbXgI-R0wb78O

    • @adlervonschlesien4869
      @adlervonschlesien4869 5 днів тому

      ua-cam.com/video/kKhST3NgLm0/v-deo.htmlsi=DvcAbXgI-R0wb78O

  • @ukaszjanowski2183
    @ukaszjanowski2183 Місяць тому +24

    Beautiful, not without reason that Warsaw was called the Paris of the north.

  • @yakeosicki8965
    @yakeosicki8965 Місяць тому +61

    August Agbola O'Brown was the only known black Warsaw insurgent. He was born in 1895 in Nigeria, then a British colony. He enlisted in the British Merchant Navy in his youth. In 1922 he came to Poland and spent over three decades of his life here. He was a jazz musician. He married a Polish woman and lived in Krakow. He moved to Warsaw(1932). He was a famous figure in the city. He took part in the city's defense battles in 1939, then worked in the structures of the Home Army and took part in the Warsaw Uprising. After the war, he managed to leave communist Poland for London, where he died. He has a commemorative plaque in the Wiech passage (Center of Warsaw). References to his character appear in Polish pop culture. August had a large Great Dane with which he walked around the city. You'll see references to this fact in the scenes of the cult crime comedy Vabank.

    • @antoniobanderas4103
      @antoniobanderas4103 Місяць тому +6

      thats a myth

    • @movemelody1
      @movemelody1 Місяць тому +10

      ​@@antoniobanderas4103
      Taki człowiek był, nigeryjski jazzman i nie ma żadnych dowodów na to, że nie brał udziału w Powstaniu. Przypuszcza się, że pracował dla powstańców na zapleczu. Widziano czarnoskórego mężczyznę w dowództwie batalionu "Iwo". Jakoś przecież przeżył w Warszawie.

    • @antoniobanderas4103
      @antoniobanderas4103 Місяць тому +2

      @@movemelody1 nie wykluczylem tego ze taki czlowiek byl, tylko, ze taki czlowiek bral udzial w PW bo nie ma na to zadnych dowodow

    • @FaronPL
      @FaronPL Місяць тому +1

      @@antoniobanderas4103 Chyba nawet ma gdzieś tablicę temu poświęconą ale nie dam sobie ręki uciąć.

    • @jankowalski6338
      @jankowalski6338 Місяць тому +1

      that's fake news

  • @Waciak1906
    @Waciak1906 Місяць тому +30

    Building that looks like a Palace of culture and science but it is the National theater.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +5

      Ah so yes I was right.

    • @supreme3376
      @supreme3376 Місяць тому +3

      @@RobReacts1 Well he was 1952 and open in 1956

    • @Waciak1906
      @Waciak1906 Місяць тому +5

      @@RobReacts1 Actually National Theater is the oldest theater still existing in Poland, founded in 1765 in Warsaw by King Stanisław August Poniatowski. Now it's look even more impressive. I forgot the word "but", sorry man. It's placed not far away from palace of culture, like 2 kilometers far.

  • @dariuszdarekdabrowski
    @dariuszdarekdabrowski Місяць тому +30

    The black gentleman in the film is Cameroonian-born Sam Sandi, an extraordinary figure, one could say he was a celebrity in pre-war Poland. He participated in the Greater Poland Uprising, took Polish citizenship and joined the Polish army, took part in the Polish-Soviet war, in civilian life he was a famous wrestler and earned the name "Iron Man" pl.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sam_Sandi

    • @michal6110
      @michal6110 Місяць тому

      On zmarł w 1937 roku. Na filmie podobno jest rok 1939

    • @dariuszdarekdabrowski
      @dariuszdarekdabrowski Місяць тому +4

      @@michal6110 na pewno nie wszystkie ujęcia w tym filmie są z 1939 . Na filmie widać Sobór św. Aleksandra Newskiego (7:03) który został zburzony na początku lat dwudziestych . Ktoś podpisał ten film Warszawa 1939 i być może niektóre ujęcia są z roku 39 ale na pewno nie wszystkie

  • @porterneon
    @porterneon Місяць тому +16

    in Poland we never had slaves. Poland always was open for all kind of peoples, and yes, there was a lot of different kind peoples leaving in Poland, even those with dark skin. Before WWII Warszawa was called Paris of the north. Unfortunately 90% of city has been completely destroyed by germans during WWII.

    • @MayaTheDecemberGirl
      @MayaTheDecemberGirl Місяць тому +8

      And it's worth to mention how Polish legionist sent by French (during Napoleon Bonaparte's rules) to Haiti, to suppress the Haitian slave rebellion, decided to support the Haitians, fighting for their freedom, not French.

  • @anaja2272
    @anaja2272 Місяць тому +26

    At 1:30 min- you're right, it's Saxon Palace (it is being rebuilt, which is why you saw a construction site next to the grave of the unknown soldier during your visit in Warsaw)
    2:30 Most Kierbedzia/ Kierbiedź's Bridge (it doesn't exist nowdays)
    2:45 Hala Mirowska/ Mirowska Hall ( market hall
    6:59 / 7:00 Church of St. Aleksander- a Roman Catholic church located on Trzech Krzyży Square

    • @jarekdutko6708
      @jarekdutko6708 Місяць тому +2

      Actually, the Kierbedz Bridge was the similar engeneering achievment as the Eiffel Tower in Paris. The bridge was built from iron and was a symbol of modern technology until it was destroyed during the second world war.

    • @Endefix
      @Endefix Місяць тому +2

      ​@@jarekdutko6708ciekawe czy wtedy mówili "po co nam most kiedy mają w Berlinie"?

  • @RISmu-_-06
    @RISmu-_-06 Місяць тому +20

    Hi, I'm Ksawery and I'm 12 years old, I love watching your videos with reactions to our country, Poland. On May 22, my class and I will go on a trip along the route Gdańsk, Gdynia, Sopot, where we will visit, among others, the pier in Sopot, Westerplatte and ride a Ferris wheel from where we will see the panorama of the entire city of Gdańsk.
    you make great films, that's why I admire you, greetings from the entire class 6A.
    Ps. I also once lived in England, specifically in the city of Bristol

  • @LucasCh.L.
    @LucasCh.L. Місяць тому +10

    Looking at these photos and videos makes me feel very sad. Warsaw was called the Paris of the East or the North. 84% of left-bank Warsaw (the oldest and historic part) was completely destroyed. Many outstanding people died, not only in Warsaw, but also throughout Poland. The losses in Warsaw were estimated at $45.3 billion, and this is in addition to museum losses - the entire archive of old records in Warsaw was burned, just like the library collections. It is worth noting that private property in apartments and houses was also destroyed, which significantly lengthens the list of losses. Moreover, after the war, communism and poverty awaited us. The communists also renounced reparations from the Germans...

    • @MayaTheDecemberGirl
      @MayaTheDecemberGirl Місяць тому +4

      Great comment. You wrote everything, in details, I wanted to write.

  • @samoht.p
    @samoht.p Місяць тому +9

    The grave of the unknown soldier is a fragment of the Saxon Palace. It was supposed to be rebuilt, but the government in Poland changed, with federalization rather than national views, hence the reconstruction project was suspended. In this square where the palace was also a religious building (not a synagogue, as you guessed). It was the Cathedral of St. Alexander Nevsky built by Tsarist Russia during the partitions (i.e. when, among others, Russia took Poland captive). Due to the symbol of enslavement, it was demolished in the years 1924-1926, so this fragment of the film comes from before 1939. Of course, before the demolition, all mosaics and works of art were dismantled. As for the reconstruction of Warsaw after the war, the communist authorities did not want it to be as it was before the war. At night, the communist occupation authorities tore off stucco from the walls, sculptures, decorations and threw them onto the street, which was an excuse to destroy everything under the pretext that these elements were thrown onto the pavement. Much of Warsaw has not survived from those years. And what remained of the stucco were smooth walls in many buildings. Many buildings were not rebuilt because Stalin built the Palace of Culture and Science on the ruins of beautiful Warsaw buildings.

  • @jankowalski3220
    @jankowalski3220 Місяць тому +5

    You already know how strong we got hit :) Pre-war Warsaw was called the Paris of the North. But we're alive! Warsaw has grown again. We're hard to fuck up.

  • @michamarkowski3002
    @michamarkowski3002 Місяць тому +19

    7:13 it is the Orthodox Cathedral of St. Alexander Nevsky, built by the Russians during the partitions, considered in Poland by many as a symbol of Russian rule and Russification, demolished between the First and Second World Wars. Think how great Warsaw would have been if the Germans had not destroyed it.

    • @sylwiatime
      @sylwiatime Місяць тому +3

      Which means that footage was taken several years earlier than 1939.

  • @agataryznar5675
    @agataryznar5675 Місяць тому +22

    4:45 it is Teatr Wielki Great Theater

    • @Andrusism
      @Andrusism Місяць тому

      www.google.com/maps/@52.2440238,21.0089585,3a,75y,62.16h,102.92t/data=!3m6!1e1!3m4!1ssloO5f7p6ZiwdkSRVqeGFg!2e0!7i16384!8i8192?authuser=0&entry=ttu

    • @bajkabajeczka560
      @bajkabajeczka560 Місяць тому +1

      And National Opera

  • @klau5z
    @klau5z Місяць тому +4

    6:13 August Agbola O'Browne (second name also spelled Agbala, Agboola, surname also spelled Brown or Browne; 1895-1976) was a Nigerian jazz musician who is believed to have been the only black participant of the 1944 Warsaw Uprising.
    August Agbola O'Browne was born on 22 July 1895 in Lagos, the largest city of modern-day Nigeria, to Nigerian parents, possibly from the Yoruba tribe.
    O'Browne immigrated to Britain[2] and then joined a travelling theatre group and ended up in Poland in 1922. He lived at Złota Street in Warsaw. He was a professional musician, a drummer who worked in clubs in Warsaw. His first album, recorded in 1928, made history, for he was the first West African jazzman to achieve this.[better source needed] He married a Polish woman, Zofia Pykowna; they had two children - Ryszard (Richard) in 1928 and Aleksander (Alexander) in 1929. Although this marriage ended, his family travelled to the UK when war broke out. His friends and neighbours remembered him as a very intelligent, courteous person, and a polyglot (he spoke six languages).
    In 1949, he joined the Society of Fighters for Freedom and Democracy. In the survey, he claimed that he fought in the Invasion of Poland in 1939, defending besieged Warsaw, and in the Warsaw Uprising in 1944. He stated that in the Uprising his code name was "Ali" and that he belonged to the unit led by Corporal Aleksander Marciński, code-name "Łabędź" ("Swan"). The unit fought in the Śródmieście district of Warsaw. Based on the name of the commander, historians confirmed that battalion "Iwo" fought in the district of Śródmieście Południowe (Southern Srodmiescie). Jan Radecki, code name "Czarny" ("Black"), another participant of the same uprising claimed that he saw a black man at the HQ of the battalion "Iwo" at ulica Marszałkowska 74 (74 Marszalkowska Street), possibly in the communication section. Radecki did not remember the exact personal data of the black insurgent. There are indications that before the uprising O'Browne was connected with the resistance and distributed illegal, underground newspapers (bibuła).
    There is little reliable information on his life after the war. Around 1949 he worked in the Department of Culture and Art of the City of Warsaw; later he continued his music career, playing in restaurants in Warsaw.
    O'Browne emigrated to Great Britain in 1958. "Of Browne's existence in the UK, Tatiana informed [...] her father continued to work as a percussionist in London, often at a studio in the Soho district, the home of London's jazz and swing music scene. The family resided in Camden Town, northwest London."
    "Londoner Ela Grabinska-Raubusch, an affiliate of the Sikorski Institute, recalls her late mother, Wanda Grabińska (née Radzikowska), a Warsaw insurgent, speaking about Browne. "My mother said that he was very famous in Warsaw before the war, since he was probably the only black person in the capital," she said.
    "As for his insurgent career, I only know what I've read online. Except, coincidentally, he was in Śródmieście Południe, and so was my mother. She was in the Ruczaj battalion. Mum came to London in 1957. I understand that Mr Browne came in 1958.
    "Mum did talk about how she met Mr Browne, and that he was with his daughter. Either at Shepherd's Bush Market or at the office of [a man named] Mehl, who dealt with transfers of money to Poland in the years 1950 to 1980. We lived in Shepherd's Bush for a while. In the 1960s, Shepherd's Bush Market was the hangout for the Caribbean community. The stalls were run by West Indians and various Polish Jews. My mother didn't speak English, so she could go ahead and buy from them in Polish.""
    There he lived anonymously for almost two decades and died in London in 1976.[6][3] He was buried in Hampstead Cemetery (as Augustine Agboola Browne).

    • @metanoian965
      @metanoian965 Місяць тому +1

      Warszawa - 1936
      -
      ua-cam.com/video/dkt_IebF0bw/v-deo.html

  • @marcinszrajber
    @marcinszrajber Місяць тому +11

    5:00 that’s not a bottom of PKIN but building near Piłsudski’s square and old town. I believe it is a theatre

  • @martakowalska5114
    @martakowalska5114 Місяць тому +4

    5:36 opera

  • @sylwiatime
    @sylwiatime Місяць тому +8

    4:53 The National Opera

    • @supreme3376
      @supreme3376 Місяць тому +2

      Still Existing

    • @sylwiatime
      @sylwiatime Місяць тому +2

      @@supreme3376 rebuilt twice after war

  • @tomaszszulc1818
    @tomaszszulc1818 Місяць тому +9

    Hi Rob , that was awesome ... i saw this vid first time!!! Wow indeed and funny thing to say but you just educated one polish guy whom living in UK for last 20yrs :D (me) for that im grateful . I like Your channel very much because you explore so many aspects of Poland that even i will never thing of. Greetings from Yorks :)

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +5

      Thanks buddy. Exploring Poland has taken me on a ride through youtube and real life!

    • @dorotabarbowska2184
      @dorotabarbowska2184 Місяць тому

      This is the best educational channel I subscribe. I've learnt so much bout or history! Much more that from my school education. And rob inspires me to search further.

  • @123voy321
    @123voy321 Місяць тому +4

    To wspaniała reakcja na przedwojenną Warszawę zwaną ówcześnie przez Polaków Paryżem wschodu..

  • @arris9447
    @arris9447 Місяць тому +17

    Oh awesome, was hoping you will watch it. First time I saw that it made me really sad to see how much history was lost after Germans razed the Warsaw.
    EDIT: Also, I strongly agree on idea that colorized footage helps to make history feel less distant. I remember as a kid in school, when we were shown black and white recordings or photos. They were giving false impression that all of it happened long long ago despite the fact that WW2 is still recent history. And seeing that in colour breaks that illusion.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +3

      Yep exactly!

    • @Demonetization_Symbol
      @Demonetization_Symbol Місяць тому +1

      But Poland rebuilt it all, and then some.

    • @arris9447
      @arris9447 Місяць тому +1

      @@Demonetization_Symbol Only part of it. The part know now as "Old Town" was rebuilt to some degree but it is not perfect. Some decorations were not restored, some churches rebuilt in their earlier, less "grand" version due to communists not allowing for that. But aside for that, rest of Warsaw wasn't rebuilt but rather was built over what that city used to be no longer keeping the old architecture, instead building depressing communist era buildings.
      The Saxon Palace - gone, only small part of gateway remains as "Tomb of the Unknown Soldier"
      The Great Synagogue of Warsaw - gone
      Kierbedź Bridge - gone
      The Staniewski Brothers Circus - gone
      Kronenberg Palace - gone
      "The Red" Branicki Palace - gone
      Brühl Palace - gone
      And that list can go on and on. Pre-war Warsaw is a city we will never get to experience. I would argue that to some degree it has lost its continuity.

  • @tomecki9392
    @tomecki9392 Місяць тому +10

    If you're interested in learning more about Black people in mid-war Poland, check out for example who August Agbola O'Brown, or Józef Sam Sandi was 😊

  • @danielchudini77
    @danielchudini77 Місяць тому +8

    Warszawa 1939 in color. Amazing film !

  • @cicimk2603
    @cicimk2603 Місяць тому +2

    I started to believe recently that trauma can be passed from generation to generation because somehow seeing Warsaw in 1939 (so beautiful) made me cry :( I didn't see this compilation yet, thanks for sharing! It was truly Paris of the east!

  • @zubi9995
    @zubi9995 Місяць тому +4

    6:10 Poland (before communists created "poland" in place of Poland) was one of the most tolerant countries in the world, if you would want to meet someone from some ethnic group it would be probably the best place to start looking, not counting the place where this group is from. There was even at least one black person fighting in Warsaw uprising

  • @thepolishbear
    @thepolishbear Місяць тому +4

    I am so glad to see this. After about 6 minutes in, you mentioned the idea of how there maybe shouldn't have been black people in Poland. Tadeusz Kosciuszko was an advocate of freedom even when he came to America to fight for freedom, that he wanted America's 3rd President Thomas Jefferson (who signed America's Declaration of Independence in 1776) to free his African American slaves. After Kosciuszko was given American citizenship in the early days of the nation's Independence victory, Kosciuszko wanted to leave his estate and money for Thomas Jefferson's slaves' education and freedom in his will and testament. Unfortunately, Thomas Jefferson claimed he wasn't sound in mind to carry out Kosciuszko's will. However, Thomas Jefferson called Kosciuszko one of the "foremost sons of liberty" that idealized the US Independence War of 1776.
    After an edit: My father was from Nowy Targ, Poland (south of Kraków but north of Zakopane in Malopolskie voivodship) and my grandmother from around the same area. I wanted to say this originally, but the first comment took hold because of what Kosciuszko fought for here in America. Seeing you react to these images helps me as a Polish American to appreciate more where my father's family comes from. Thanks a lot.

  • @aczka212
    @aczka212 Місяць тому +10

    5:57 ohhhhh mylisz się Polska była centrum przeróżnych narodowości za nim wylało się na świat rasistowskie ''gówno'' oraz wymysły ludzie po prostu prowadzili swoje biznesy byli tu z całego świata.....

  • @MayaTheDecemberGirl
    @MayaTheDecemberGirl Місяць тому +3

    Great video. Warsaw before the war was really beautiful, full of life. Watching this is so hard to think that all was suddenly destroyed, completely, from day to day, just like that. Anyway, I like to watch old films or pictures, showing how different places looked many years ago.

  • @krsakil
    @krsakil Місяць тому +9

    Poland before WWII was very diverse place. 10% were polish jews. Poland was very important place for people to came over. It's in center of the Europe (part of Russia is in Europe. Europe is not ending on Russia border as you all think).

    • @janhusar9105
      @janhusar9105 Місяць тому

      @krasakil
      What does Russia have to do with it?

    • @krsakil
      @krsakil Місяць тому

      @@janhusar9105 LOL. Learn to read.

    • @janhusar9105
      @janhusar9105 Місяць тому

      ​Coś ty pier....isz chłopcze. Chcesz uczyć ludzi geografii ?
      ​@@krsakil

    • @MayaTheDecemberGirl
      @MayaTheDecemberGirl Місяць тому +2

      ​@@janhusar9105He just wanted to emphasize that Poland is in the geographical center of Europe. Because many foreigners think that everything further than Germany is just some "East Europe".

    • @janhusar9105
      @janhusar9105 Місяць тому

      ​@@MayaTheDecemberGirl
      Macie jakieś kompleksy. Europa ze względu na " żelazną kurtynę " była podzielona na tak zwaną " Europę Zachodnią" i " Europę Wschodnią " . Nie ma tu mowy o konkretnym miejscu geograficznym.
      Czy Włochy , Hiszpania Wielka Brytania leżą geograficznie na Zachodzie Europy ? Matoły.

  • @karlovacko2036
    @karlovacko2036 Місяць тому +4

    You should made a reaction on 1944 - Warsaw uprising movie. Miasto 44 - city 44

  • @tomaszkalicki4818
    @tomaszkalicki4818 Місяць тому +4

    People calling Warsaw in those time"Paris of the East". 😥

  • @alh6255
    @alh6255 Місяць тому +1

    This is not the Palace of Culture and Science, but the national theater (Great Theatre - Teatr Wielki) building, built (actually as a state theater) in the second half of the 18th century, during the times of the last king of independent Poland (in the style of classicism that followed the Baroque period). The theater was destroyed by the Germans and rebuilt after the war. It is located near the Old Town and the Monument to the Unknown Soldier.

  • @WalkingandTalkingAussieGirl
    @WalkingandTalkingAussieGirl Місяць тому +3

    Poland has always been a beauty

  • @karolinalatko1802
    @karolinalatko1802 Місяць тому +3

    4:35 The Palace of Culture and Science was built after the WW2, so it can't be it.
    7:06 Yes, those buildings were beautiful. It's a shame they were destroyed by Nazis...
    I like going on long walks in the centre of Warsaw, and I often try to imagine what Warsaw would look like if the city hasn't been so destructed.
    As for the Saxon Palace: as someone already mentioned in one of comments, the Palace will be rebuilt.

  • @chanell59
    @chanell59 Місяць тому +1

    Rob, in the video you are commenting on, an unidentified aerial vehicle appears. It is visible in the sky at 5.36 sec to 5.40 sec. It's probably a plane, although it's moving quite fast. At 5.31 seconds there is also something in the sky, but it's probably a lantern hanging above the street because it is stationary. Sorry for such a reaction, but looking through photos and old films in the context of unidentified aerial phenomena is my passion.

  • @czapa258
    @czapa258 Місяць тому +3

    Before the war, Warsaw was called the second Paris precisely because of its architecture

  • @dorotakwasniewska4615
    @dorotakwasniewska4615 Місяць тому +3

    5:00 Teatr Wielki/Opera Narodowa

  • @Szifo1990
    @Szifo1990 Місяць тому +3

    The constitution of the first and second Polish Republic guaranteed freedom and the right to life to everyone who crossed the borders of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. This was one of the reasons for the subsequent partitions.

  • @janeq6146
    @janeq6146 Місяць тому +3

    Before WW2 Warszawa had nickname "Paris of east"

  • @shadowgno87
    @shadowgno87 Місяць тому +5

    the last scene from the movie The Pianist shows how much destroyed was ....

  • @DominikWielgosz
    @DominikWielgosz Місяць тому +3

    4:33 It's Grand Theatre

  • @Cloud.1522
    @Cloud.1522 Місяць тому +2

    This is National Theatre and Opera and looks the same today :)

  • @rosyjsko-ukrainskitroll87
    @rosyjsko-ukrainskitroll87 Місяць тому +4

    9:29 Nah, most of the city wasn't rebuilt to the form it looked before the war. The most clear and brutal example is Palace of Culture and Science and the large space around it - before the war there were quarters of tenement houses... You focus too much on the Old Town. The Old Town was just a small part of the pre-war Warsaw.

  • @aleksandra7696
    @aleksandra7696 Місяць тому +4

    Poland wasn't always homogeneous by culture or "white" (It's not good phrasing but idk how to call it), we had and still have a lot of black, arabic students (even in '50 we had actors from Middle East who speak polish).
    I actually watch a lot of black and white movies and I think it's just that some ppl just don't want to watch it because it's too old, regardless of it's colour (and it's just bad quality). Maybe it's from ignorance and I don't think that colour can change this. I recommend watch some polish movies (for ex. movies with Eugeniusz Bodo, it's little goofy but I like them)

  • @jblarmy4738
    @jblarmy4738 Місяць тому +2

    Before the war, Warsaw was called "Paris of the north".
    After the complete destruction of course it was rebuilt, but there were no beautiful townhouses and monuments, there were cold gray blocks of flats. See how this city looked in the 1980s under communism, as if it had regressed.
    The communists knew that Warsaw was a monument of Polish culture and a symbol of our former power, therefore
    in the middle of the city stood a huge building, on the model of the one in Moscow that towered over the city skyline.
    It was surrounded by identical gray blocks of flats. Even today's Warsaw looks like a mix of New York Manhattan with Communist style flats.

  • @Natka505
    @Natka505 Місяць тому +2

    I also enjoy this kind of videos. Maybe Kraków next?

  • @annapluskota3247
    @annapluskota3247 Місяць тому +2

    We were a wise and happy nation.

  • @piotrwismont2345
    @piotrwismont2345 Місяць тому +2

    Look at that, not a Zabka in sight, just people enjoying their lives.

  • @user-qq7rf8hf5z
    @user-qq7rf8hf5z Місяць тому +1

    Hi Rob, I enjoyed watching your video. Well done. Warsaw is a beautiful city now. It used to be more beautiful before it was destroyed by Germans during WW II.

  • @user-nv4on3ol2e
    @user-nv4on3ol2e Місяць тому +1

    thank you rob 💗

  • @Cloud.1522
    @Cloud.1522 Місяць тому +2

    In Poland diffrent skin tone or faith was no problem. I rode old (1920' or 1930' maybe 1940') arctitles in old newspapers about absurd of racismcin in other countries.

  • @KM769
    @KM769 Місяць тому +1

    See remastered movies - warszawa w kolorze / warsaw in colour.

  • @pawellewap9179
    @pawellewap9179 Місяць тому +1

    Rob, that first statue it's unfortunatelly not Mikołaj Kopernik, or as you wish Nicolai Copernicus - that's another "Christ" monument in Warsaw, near to Warsaw church of the saint cros... Sorry ;) And I'm writing that as a Warsaw sceptic from Cracow ;)

  • @marko1clw
    @marko1clw 2 дні тому

    Proudly Made in Republic of Poland!

  • @grzegorzbrzeszcz6698
    @grzegorzbrzeszcz6698 Місяць тому

    Rob, on 7:15 onwards you what have In view of the street is the Orthodox Cathedral of St Alexander on the square in front of the Saxon Palace. Built by the Russians 1894-1912 as a symbol of Russian domination before . Demolished to the ground in the 1920s. look: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Nevsky_Cathedral,_Warsaw

  • @RISmu-_-06
    @RISmu-_-06 Місяць тому +1

    Superrrr❤

  • @dawiddudka777
    @dawiddudka777 Місяць тому +3

    🤍❤️

  • @wiktoriaadamczyk886
    @wiktoriaadamczyk886 Місяць тому +1

    ❤❤❤

  • @JanKowalski-bm9rv
    @JanKowalski-bm9rv Місяць тому +3

    Żabka started in 1998

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +1

      And has dominated Poland since! 😂

  • @zubi9995
    @zubi9995 Місяць тому

    4:40 palace of culture was build after world war 2 by russians, as a sign of Polish-russian friendship or some shit like this, but it's possible that it was built in the same place, I don't remember what was there before

    • @alh6255
      @alh6255 Місяць тому

      Pole, what were you doing at school? This is the building of the national theater, built by King Stanislaus Augustus in the 18th century. The Grand Theater - this was its name starting from the 18th century. It was, after all, the first public, not private, theater in Poland, built to show and promote Polish operas and plays. Something like the Comédie-Française in Paris (for French ppl). It still stands in Warsaw and is one of the most famous buildings in Poland with a long history (after the war it was rebuilt in the late 1940s). In turn, on the site of the current Palace of Culture there was once a most impressive part of Chmielna str. with beautiful tenement houses in the Art Nouveau style, which survived the war, but the Russians demolished them to build the Palace of Culture. Apart from the beautiful street Chmielna there was also a huge, modern Warszawa Główna (Warsaw Main) railway station, built before the outbreak of the war. A pearl of art deco architecture, partially saved from the war, but also razed to the ground by the Russians.

    • @zubi9995
      @zubi9995 Місяць тому

      @@alh6255 that's what I said plus some history, where is the problem? I'm writing a comment on youtube not history exam

  • @magorzataschulz6591
    @magorzataschulz6591 Місяць тому

    4:05 mój dziadek, który urodził się w 1909, odgrażał się, że: "Jak oni mnie przejadą to ja im pokarze!" 💪💪💪

  • @MichaelSkweres
    @MichaelSkweres Місяць тому

    Sad thing is that it's from 1939 so literally days before war :/

  • @pawemazurkiewicz8641
    @pawemazurkiewicz8641 Місяць тому

    Rob Palace of Culture was built in the PRL times so it didn't exist in those times

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому

      I was mistaken because it looks like the bottom part of it. Without the tower.

  • @Endefix
    @Endefix Місяць тому

    Piękna była ta nasza Warszawa, co nie Niemcy ale wam marzyła sie dominacja nad Europą... ups chyba podobnie jak teraz tylko że bez czołgów, poechoty...itp tylko zielony ład, praworządność.

  • @Wojciech_Zielinski
    @Wojciech_Zielinski Місяць тому +2

    What a journey 🤩

  • @januszrogowski3771
    @januszrogowski3771 Місяць тому +8

    Warszawa zwana wtedy Paryż em wschodu 😊.

  • @piotrzakrzewski2081
    @piotrzakrzewski2081 Місяць тому

    Budynek w oddali to prawosławna cerkiew

  • @user-ww1hp5qv2b
    @user-ww1hp5qv2b Місяць тому +2

    W tamtych czasach Warszawa była piękna a nie

  • @lowcaglow-ij9ir
    @lowcaglow-ij9ir Місяць тому +2

    You are 1999? Lol, you Look much more older.

    • @laggyluke5700
      @laggyluke5700 Місяць тому +1

      1990, not 1999.

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +1

      yes I am 34. I would hope I dont look older

  • @aleksanderdomanski222
    @aleksanderdomanski222 Місяць тому +1

    There were some black people even in 17th century living in Poland. Usually they escaped from Turkey or were bought by visiting nobles at turkish slave markets to became kinda fancy serwants. Then they might had some intercourse with locals (sometimes even higher class) so, from time to time it happened that there were even Poles (born and fully within our culture) that were black. I have heard about a polish black general in 17 century. Cos they were so rare there was no prejudice aganist them. They were looked upon etc as some kind of attraction but not in any bad or nasty way. Just as something... unusual, peculiar . So in Poland never was any racism aganist black people, at least not untill lately (1990's?).
    Instead we "had" a lot of Jews and they were hated by many. Unfortunately.

  • @gajazyto4291
    @gajazyto4291 Місяць тому +1

    Teatr Wielki pomylić z gównem od Stalina. Żałosne.

  • @sawomirmarnotrawny1694
    @sawomirmarnotrawny1694 Місяць тому

    Panie robercie jak słucham jak sie pan męczy w języku polkim to sie dotykam. jednak moje osobiste odczucia nie są ważne. prasze sie nie przejmować ja rozumiałem angielski ale bałem sie mówić przez lek przef wyśmianiem.

  • @jackzweifler5696
    @jackzweifler5696 Місяць тому +1

    it's not that people wearing black - it's just colorization program did black all dark shades

  • @arturkranz-dobrowolski2959
    @arturkranz-dobrowolski2959 Місяць тому +2

    I suppose you don't know that one of the generals who commanded the Polish army during the Kosciuszko uprising was black. This was General Władysław Jablonowski, nicknamed Murzynek (Negro)/*/, the son of a black man and a Polish woman.
    /*/ "Murzynek" is diminutive of "Murzyn" (Negro). In Polish, diminutives usually signal positive feelings.
    More on Władysław Jabłonowski (in EN)
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W%C5%82adys%C5%82aw_Franciszek_Jab%C5%82onowski

  • @jackzweifler5696
    @jackzweifler5696 Місяць тому

    7:25 synagogue doesn"t look like that , synagogue is relativ simple and not decorated like this temple - this is example of east european orthodox temple

    • @alh6255
      @alh6255 Місяць тому

      Russian style temple (from the 19th century, a remnant of the times when Warsaw was under Russian occupation)

    • @irydka22
      @irydka22 Місяць тому

      To cerkwia (ruski sobór) rozebrana przez Polaków po odzyskaniu niepodległości.

  • @user-ud4vo2zr3z
    @user-ud4vo2zr3z Місяць тому +2

    Głupoty piszecie do gościa i on w to wierzy.On nie zna historii nawet Anglii,a tym bardziej Polski.

  • @shadowgno87
    @shadowgno87 Місяць тому

    sometimes i give you link ... alll delete why ? you delete this?

    • @RobReacts1
      @RobReacts1  Місяць тому +5

      Not me. Must be youtube