Bloody foreigners. Untold Battle of Britain. (polskie napisy)

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  • Опубліковано 30 вер 2024
  • Fabularyzowany dokument o Dywizjonie 303. WAŻNE!!! Wciśnij CC w prawym dolnym rogu, żeby pojawiły się napisy od 35 min. Ogromne podziękowania dla użytkownika DreamsMovieStudio, za pomoc przy napisach. / dreamsmoviesstudio
    All rights goes to Channel4
    www.channel4.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 7 тис.

  • @jimdecamp7204
    @jimdecamp7204 9 років тому +1253

    A Polish pilot sees a German airplane and a Russian airplane. Which one does he shoot down first? The German. Business before pleasure.

    • @ignazszlacheta5392
      @ignazszlacheta5392 9 років тому +66

      Kurczę balde
      You made my day :D

    • @jimdecamp7204
      @jimdecamp7204 9 років тому +45

      Alojzy Ptyś Let me compliment you on your subtle and insightful mastery of the English idiom! Just so you know, I'm American, not English.
      Cheers!

    • @mirekpilsudski
      @mirekpilsudski 9 років тому +10

      Always lmao

    • @DMSBrian24
      @DMSBrian24 9 років тому +15

      Alojzy Ptyś obvious troll is obvious, sorry for this guy...

    • @monsterinsideofme2952
      @monsterinsideofme2952 9 років тому +15

      Jim DeCamp The best joke ever! xD Dziękuję :D

  • @johnnolan2797
    @johnnolan2797 5 років тому +1397

    I am an 82 year old Brit brought up in Cranleigh, Surrey, underneath the sound of “dogfights”. I was only 4 to 9, then. As I grown older, my understanding of the Poles has grown year by year. I am ashamed of the way my country treated them, but they were not alone. UK should be a land fit for heroes, but sadly, it is not. For a time I lived at Ruislip, near Northolt. Today, whenever I meet Poles, I tell them how much we owe to them and, if possible, they should visit the Polish war memorial at Northolt. John Nolan

    • @jacekwaasiewicz716
      @jacekwaasiewicz716 4 роки тому +101

      respect to you sir

    • @adrianrokosz1054
      @adrianrokosz1054 4 роки тому +124

      Thank You. Simple"thank you'' from British citizen is more important for us than official thanks from UK as the state.

    • @vinyltapelover
      @vinyltapelover 4 роки тому +56

      Much respect to a man of great heart and great conscience.

    • @AmerginMacEccit
      @AmerginMacEccit 4 роки тому +47

      Thank you for your kind words John, I hope to visit it one day. I am Polish myself but I'm fascinated by Celtic and British culture.

    • @andrzejabramczyk3600
      @andrzejabramczyk3600 4 роки тому +51

      Lot of love from Poland ❤

  • @robertevans8010
    @robertevans8010 2 роки тому +360

    We must not forget the Czech pilots as well, all these people were extremely Brave and Heroic and I at 104 who served in WW2 in the SOE salute them.

    • @deabajo
      @deabajo 2 роки тому +13

      Josef Frantisek, mentioned few times in the documentary was actually Czech :). That is why he got that "guest" status to allow him free hunting...

    • @peterp5669
      @peterp5669 Рік тому +9

      We love Josef Frantisek.... the best RAF pilot !!!

    • @petersimek3623
      @petersimek3623 Рік тому +3

      Respect from Slovakia.

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now Рік тому +12

      If you mention the Czechs, you have to include the New Zealanders. Remember that a New Zealander was in charge of 303 Squadron. His name was Keith Park.

    • @bknight882
      @bknight882 Рік тому +4

      @@piecka2308 squadron leader Ronald Keller lead the brave poles of 303. Johnny Kent and Athol Forbes were the flight commanders, don't forget 302 polish squadron who drew first blood against the Luftwaffe. There are many of us younger Brits who are awhere of the debt we owe to the poles.

  • @ianwolves1
    @ianwolves1 5 років тому +804

    My father was Polish and fought at Monte Cassino With General Anders army, he lived in England longer than in Poland he refused British nationality, he said i was born a Pole i will die a Pole, God bless Ojciec. Long live Poland.

    • @aa-fh1bg
      @aa-fh1bg 4 роки тому +29

      Dobry Ojciec

    • @joolspirog
      @joolspirog 4 роки тому +27

      God bless him and tbe 2 Corps. My parents were both polish and dad was in the first Polish armoured division. Heroes, one and all

    • @ryansta
      @ryansta 3 роки тому +14

      Salutes to your fathers courage.

    • @DWGibek
      @DWGibek 3 роки тому +16

      My grandmother and my grandfather also fought at Monte Cassino with Anders and The Polish II Corps. Grandmother was a driver at 316 Transport Company and grandfather was at Machine Gun Company. Later grandfather was a shooter and meteorological observer at 318 squadrons. After the war, both returned to Poland, which with time turned out to be not the best decision in their life. And my grand uncle was a mechanic at 304 bomber squadron but he chose to live in Great Britain after the war.

    • @yakeosicki8965
      @yakeosicki8965 3 роки тому +9

      My great-grandfather was one of them. I'm the coat of arms of Lubicz

  • @MichaelThomas-be7gq
    @MichaelThomas-be7gq 5 років тому +298

    To my Polish warrior friends - thank you. I am British. What the 303 did was nothing less than heroic. We honour you and we will never forget you.

    • @adrianrokosz1054
      @adrianrokosz1054 4 роки тому +6

      Thank You for kind words for Poles.

    • @sswswswswsws4334
      @sswswswswsws4334 4 роки тому +10

      As a former soldier it touched me. God bless you

    • @peterp5669
      @peterp5669 Рік тому +7

      Thanks Brit...better later then never...

    • @joller805
      @joller805 Рік тому +3

      Thank you Sir.

    • @Evilroco
      @Evilroco Рік тому +1

      I've never heard anyone say anything but good things about the Free polish forces during WW2 they are not forgotten
      But I've never heard a Pole even acknowledge that Britain went to war over the invasion of Poland .........

  • @victoriacyunczyk
    @victoriacyunczyk 4 роки тому +178

    My grandfather was one of the Polish pilots in Britain, flying bombers for most of the war. 86 missions. If he was around today, I would tell him how proud I am to be his granddaughter.

    • @dougkos2574
      @dougkos2574 Рік тому +2

      💕💕

    • @peterj5083
      @peterj5083 Рік тому +3

      We are all proud of him!!!

    • @jesuschrist2284
      @jesuschrist2284 Рік тому +1

      86 missions. What an absolute hero.

    • @p.s.anders
      @p.s.anders Рік тому +3

      Most likely 304 squadron. Some were sub hunters along the coast as well.

    • @suecharnock9369
      @suecharnock9369 Місяць тому

      one of my teachers was married to a Polish Spitfire pilot. He was much older than her, and I briefly met him only a couple of times. Lovely, lovely man who gave up his family and country for mine. Never forget.

  • @nickbamber268
    @nickbamber268 2 роки тому +96

    My teacher at primary school was Mrs Olenski. She was married to Zbigniew Olenski, a Polish fighter pilot who flew with 234, 609 and 316 squadrons. After the war he was involved in aerodynamics research including work at Avro on the Vulcan bomber. I still have my school report from 1968 signed by Anne Olenski!

  • @Insperato62
    @Insperato62 5 років тому +124

    As my dad always used to say, "Mad bastards. Very brave. Bloody good shots." Dad was in RAF Bomber Command aircrew.

  • @VISHNUPSOFFICIAL
    @VISHNUPSOFFICIAL 8 років тому +218

    hats off polish pilots, may u rest in the squadron of heaven,

    • @maryc4732
      @maryc4732 8 років тому +12

      and to all "the few" as Churchill called them. they all did there part

  • @clivemainwaring
    @clivemainwaring 9 років тому +258

    For my part as a child during that dreadful period, I salute the Polish People and their flying ability to fight against the enemy, especially in the Battle of Britain.
    As a Welshman I am disgusted by the British Government attitude towards their bravery and courage, for not recognizing them as a major part of the destruction of the Luftwaffe .
    My thanks to Poland and the men that fought and flew in that holocaust.

    • @czciboridobromila5555
      @czciboridobromila5555 6 років тому +6

      Thank You.

    • @azong98
      @azong98 6 років тому +6

      A few good men

    • @radoslawkujawski3064
      @radoslawkujawski3064 6 років тому +2

      Thank You Sir !

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 6 років тому +3

      There were lots of pilots from all over the world. Poles did their bit. Look at the roll call at the end of the Battle of Britain film.

    • @TheSteve8rox
      @TheSteve8rox 6 років тому +2

      Clive, well said.

  • @TheRAFfc
    @TheRAFfc 8 років тому +613

    I AM ENGLISH ANGLO SAXON : MY WIFE WAS POLISH HER UNCLE A PILOT IN THE POLISH A.F HE AND HIS SON VANISHED DURING THE OCCUPATION IN POLAND . I MARRIED HER IN CANADA, I MISS HER, MY WIFE FOR 56 YEARS. I DID MY TIME FOR KING AND COUNTRY, MOSQUITO PILOT ' I HAVE NOTHING BUT ADMIRATION AND PRIDE FOR MY FELLOW AIRMAN AND FRIENDS IN THE POLISH AIR FORCE. MAY GOD REST THEIR BRAVE SOULS, AND MAY THEY BE FOREVER REMEMBERED.

    • @dwainemayovsky9050
      @dwainemayovsky9050 6 років тому +3

      TheRAFfc was g42d

    • @wc8689
      @wc8689 6 років тому +9

      Bravo Sir and thank you for your service.

    • @ther6989
      @ther6989 6 років тому +12

      Yes, but why the caps lock?

    • @andrewwatkins5133
      @andrewwatkins5133 6 років тому +9

      I salute you! RAF Regiment gunner!

    • @DieFlabbergast
      @DieFlabbergast 6 років тому +6

      You may be English, but you are no Anglo-Saxon, unless you are over 1,400 years old! The Angles and the Saxons (and the Jutes) had long ceased to think of themselves as either Angles or Saxons (nobody referred to themselves as Anglo-Saxons) centuries before the Norman Conquest. You are ENGLISH, which means you have not only Angle/Saxon/Jute DNA, but also Ancient British (i.e. Welsh), Danish, and Norman DNA. That mongrel mixture is what makes the English what they are.

  • @peterritchie2990
    @peterritchie2990 2 роки тому +89

    My father was a Canadian Spitfire pilot, a squadron leader, who fought in the Battle of Britain.
    He was reluctant to talk about it. I learned only a few things from him about the horrific experience.
    He talked about the camaraderie of his fellow pilots.
    He talked about how fast he pulled the rip cord on his parachute when he was shot down and then landed on the British beach.
    And he talked how much he liked and respected these Polish pilots.

  • @jbiju9336
    @jbiju9336 8 років тому +425

    Polish Air Force. I salute you.

    • @MegaBoilermaker
      @MegaBoilermaker 5 років тому +4

      As do most British people.

    • @wojtek5596
      @wojtek5596 5 років тому +6

      @@MegaBoilermaker Thank you guyz, but we only helped in the most critical part of Battle. Dowding made first modern air defense system that worked just perfect. Germans never have any chance to win this battle. But in 1940 nobody knew how efficient your air defense is, all numbers were secret and our pilots did really amazing things to help you win this battle. Their heroism, and maybe even more proffesionalism makes me proud, that we were important part of your victory
      Anyway BoB was the end of saying 'stupid things' about Polish resist in 1939 and RAF stayed our the best ally in ww2.
      Long live Poland, long live England. Don't forget we were allies in the the darkest time in history.

  • @thelongslowgoodbye
    @thelongslowgoodbye 9 років тому +787

    Bless you, sons of Poland. We will never forget.

    • @lanablaha2080
      @lanablaha2080 9 років тому +10

      +Jan Kowalski Actually true .__.

    • @wropet
      @wropet 9 років тому +2

      +thelongslowgoodby Ilove you...

    • @chorusetcantus5109
      @chorusetcantus5109 9 років тому +29

      +Jan Kowalski Actually, much earlier: in July 1941, a few weeks after Germans launched 'operation Barbarossa' - although the RAF witnessing the courage and commitment of the Poles finally did change their attitude toward them and at least acknowledged the injustice being done to them as the "strongest, the most loyal and faithful, and the most persistent European ally of all" (Air Ministry memo, Jan. 17, 1946, FO 371/115. PRO), which was after the British government decided at the end of the war that "everything should be done to ensure that as few Poles as possible remain in this country [Britain]" ("Forgotten Few", by Adam Zamoyski, p. 203). The British media helped to propagate this idea so well that Count Raczyński observed that "the common view is that the Poles have outlived their usefulness and deserve to be kicked from time to time, or at least given cold douches" ("In Allied London", Count E. Raczyński, p. 217). The Polish pilots who defended Britain after being made into celebrities and revered just a few short years back started hearing things like "Go home you dirty [?!] Pole!", yelled on a streetcar in Blackpool by several passengers to a Polish pilot and his wife ("Forgotten Few" A. Zamoyski, p. 193, similar situations described by many others).

    • @chorusetcantus5109
      @chorusetcantus5109 9 років тому +25

      +Chorus et Cantus This was also after the Poles who fought with the Allies
      were unceremoniously being sent (many back, as they had been survivors of the Katyn massacre or the Gulag) into the clutches of the communist regime that the Soviets, with full acceptance from the Western allies and against all the promises that had been made to the Poles when they were needed to help in the war effort against Germans, installed in post-war Poland. While Germans had been conducting what Labour MP Seymour Cocks described as follows, "We are witnessing in Poland a cold-blooded and deliberate murder of a nation." ("Poland in the British Parliament 1939-1945", Volume II, Wacław Jędrzejewicz, (ed.), p. 3), the Soviet rule over Poland since their treacherous invasion on Sept. 17, 1939 (today being its 76th anniversary), 17 days after Germans, was 'little short of genocide', as described by the American diplomat and historian George Kennan ("George F. Kennan and the Origin of Containment, 1944-1946", p. 28). The two (Germans and the Soviets) had a joint goal: "the Polish nation, as a nation, was to be destroyed once and for all [...] by the selective murder of all its potential leaders. [...] Poland, one of the great historic nation states of Europe, was to be so destroyed that it could never rise again", as noted by the British writer Louis FitzGibbon ("Katyń Massacre", 1977, p.14).

    • @esclarmonde1156
      @esclarmonde1156 9 років тому +18

      +Chorus et Cantus Yes, this is very true how English people treated this Polish Pilots.

  • @stevenhildebrandt7378
    @stevenhildebrandt7378 8 років тому +181

    Poland never dies.

  • @sintiyagorczyca177
    @sintiyagorczyca177 3 роки тому +120

    My Polish hubby is a patriotic man, how he’s always so proudly sharing about his country’s history to me and about his granddad who also fought in the war. Highly respect for Poland and all the Poles!❤️

  • @lupoxx4829
    @lupoxx4829 6 років тому +418

    "Because we (Poles) do not beg for freedom, we fight for it" - Gen. Witold Urbanowicz 303 squadron commander.

    • @gillesguillaumin6603
      @gillesguillaumin6603 2 роки тому +4

      It was the difference, Poles fought to kill, English made war. The goal was not the same, vengeance for Poles, survival for English.

    • @MrKopylowicz
      @MrKopylowicz 2 роки тому +2

      @@gillesguillaumin6603 wielokrotnie agentura i pieniądze z Anglii doprowadziły do krwawych przelewów krwi w Polsce, niestety Polaków uczciwość graniczyła z naiwnością ... dziś choć parę procent społeczeństwa już rozumie że głośno nawołujący "do broni" przywódcy to najczęściej obca agentura wpływu

    • @woodb51
      @woodb51 2 роки тому +18

      Another time when Poland helped to save Europe.

    • @zoobins3163
      @zoobins3163 2 роки тому +2

      @@woodb51 😂😂🤣

    • @zoobins3163
      @zoobins3163 2 роки тому +2

      @@woodb51 do you even believe such a BS?! Pols could save their own ass for even a month. Being small part of British air force and got couple of lucky shots makes you so fucking kucky? Why you pols are so rude and stupid. Germans and Russians didn’t give you enough lesson. I guess not.

  • @Dares9
    @Dares9 7 років тому +354

    ,,Everybody won, except us."

    • @VersusARCH
      @VersusARCH 5 років тому +5

      Poland lived on as people's republic. The Soviet-organized Polish People's Army fought just as hard as the Polish formations organized by the Brirish...

    • @PyzaBezFarszu
      @PyzaBezFarszu 4 роки тому +16

      @@VersusARCH Where they fighting ? Fighting for Russians ? They mordered too many Polish soldiers after World War II... 1945-1955. Russish propagand in Polish TV talking about "Terrorists in forests", that were soldiers from west frontline World War 2 !!!
      No mercy for communists SHITS.

    • @mymodels1317
      @mymodels1317 4 роки тому +12

      @@VersusARCH they invaded poland and took it for another 44 years

    • @supreme3376
      @supreme3376 4 роки тому

      @@mymodels1317 44

    • @danielnowakowski601
      @danielnowakowski601 3 роки тому

      We love freedom. Fighting against imperial

  • @czciboridobromila5555
    @czciboridobromila5555 6 років тому +123

    Frantisek was a Czech brother in Polish crew, hero and though crazy warrior.

    • @jamesbonde4470
      @jamesbonde4470 3 роки тому +8

      YES, I am Polish and recognize his valour and bravery with little recognition by "historians".

    • @es8428
      @es8428 2 роки тому +9

      When brothers fight together to face the enemy, nobody stands a chance.

    • @czciboridobromila5555
      @czciboridobromila5555 2 роки тому +9

      @@es8428 True. Slava. :)

    • @prezesfirmy9317
      @prezesfirmy9317 2 роки тому +9

      I think he was one of the greatest from the greatest!

  • @tomjustis7237
    @tomjustis7237 5 років тому +557

    I just finished reading "A Question of Honor". It not only covers 303 Squadron and all other Polish fighter and bomber squadrons flying for the RAF, but also the Polish ground, armored and airborne units that fought so gallantly and effectively for the allies throughout the war. (The II Polish Corps, for example, was described by General Patton as "The best turned out fighting formation I have ever seen" and successfully took Monte Casino in Italy when all other units had failed.) The book also deals with the politics of the time. As an American and Marine Corps veteran, I am ashamed to say that it wasn't just Britain that sold out the Poles but the United States as well. FDR, for all of his blustering about the Atlantic Charter and guaranteeing the rights of all nations to self determination after the war, still sold out Poland to Stalin just as Churchill did because they were afraid of offending "Uncle Joe". And despite what this film said about the Yalta Conference, the sell out had occurred at the Tehran Conference several months earlier when FDR and Churchill agreed to allow Stalin to take Poland. (Hypocritically, FDR asked the other two not to publicize that fact because he was running for reelection and was worried about losing the Polish-American vote.) Poland, by the way, was the ONLY country conquered by the Germans which did NOT have Quisling type collaborators to form a pro-Nazi government. Poland began the war in 1939 when they were invaded and didn't quit fighting until the defeat of the Third Reich in 1945. They deserved far better than the betrayal their British and American "allies" gave them.

    • @megantopolski6999
      @megantopolski6999 4 роки тому +4

      Is this in English?

    • @tomjustis7237
      @tomjustis7237 4 роки тому +29

      @@megantopolski6999 Yes it is, and more than worth reading.

    • @megantopolski6999
      @megantopolski6999 4 роки тому +6

      @@tomjustis7237 Thanks pal.

    • @supreme3376
      @supreme3376 4 роки тому +8

      One of the best forigner author about 303 squadron

    • @supreme3376
      @supreme3376 4 роки тому +6

      @@megantopolski6999 both Polish and English

  • @awuma
    @awuma 9 років тому +142

    Very well done film, and should be watched by all who are not thoroughly familiar with the history of WWII. The lessons of Poland's betrayal should not be forgotten.

  • @billyray7106
    @billyray7106 9 років тому +353

    Poles helped save Vienna in 1683 and Britain n 1940

    • @ricstone1292
      @ricstone1292 9 років тому +55

      +Billy Ray also the Polish - Soviet war 1920 Poland saved Europe

    • @overlord165
      @overlord165 8 років тому +32

      +Billy Ray Poles and Croats are fucking guardians of Europe. But what do we get in return?

    • @hubertwawrzyniak7710
      @hubertwawrzyniak7710 8 років тому +17

      +Filip Žižak Those who where fighting for freedom and peace are heroes. Nationality doesn't matter but we must remeber our heroes and history. Greetings from Poland, Croatia is beautiful country:)

    • @overlord165
      @overlord165 8 років тому +3

      hubert wawrzyniak Easy for you to say

    • @hubertwawrzyniak7710
      @hubertwawrzyniak7710 8 років тому +5

      blackzed of course

  • @funkydonkey11051989
    @funkydonkey11051989 9 років тому +49

    Dont know how other foreign pilots and their homelands. But former Czechoslovakia had to pay GreatBritain after war all expenses spent on czechoslovakian pilots - accomodation, uniforms, training and so on. Czechoslovakia had to pay in gold for letting their pilots fight for foreign country! It is a fucking disgrace and shame for Great Britain claiming this from somebody who bled for two countries at once!
    Not so many people know this. It has a good reason not to be mentioned.
    GB should have licked soles of Polish, Czechoslovakian or any foreign pilot for being in RAF action against Germany.
    It is some kind of betrayal from ally. Nobody even cared about Czechoslovakia or Poland. Where was France or GB in 1938-39?

    • @pendrakhon
      @pendrakhon 9 років тому +6

      funkydonkey11051989 Poland had huge reserves of gold transported to Britain at the beggining of the war. This gold stayed there, since Polish had to pay for their Government in Exile expenses. Like drinks, cigars and shows. Fkin disgrace.

    • @KS-po9sx
      @KS-po9sx 9 років тому +21

      Poland had to pay 68 millions to British for maintance of Polish Forces

    • @01LadyAnna
      @01LadyAnna 3 роки тому

      @@pendrakhon gold was stolen, pozdrawiam

  • @vaterix4202
    @vaterix4202 2 роки тому +78

    R.I.P to Canadian Squadron Leader John Stewart Hart (1916-2019), the last surviving Canadian #BattleofBritain pilot who flew a Spitfire with the Royal Air Force. 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

    • @adamsteele6148
      @adamsteele6148 2 роки тому +1

      Aces in exile

    • @leslieshand4509
      @leslieshand4509 Рік тому +2

      My grandfather, who fought in the RAF in WW1 and fought with the RCAF in WW2. My Dad remembered stories about how many pilots came from all over. Men from invaded and occupied countries. My grandfather still remembered a little Spanish, Polish and French as he told stories. He didn’t talk about the actual brutality of war,or the death and destruction, but about the friendships and comrades. My father was “left behind”, as the baby of the family, he was only 5 in 1938. He lost his brother. Both aunts also enlisted and I can’t remember what their designation was. My father served our country for 32 years. I am immensely proud of them all.

    • @marcinpietrzak1824
      @marcinpietrzak1824 Рік тому +1

      @@leslieshand4509 woww impressive life of your grandfather. Tell him thank you from me. Best regards from Poland.

    • @leslieshand4509
      @leslieshand4509 Рік тому +1

      @@marcinpietrzak1824 my grandfather is long past, and it’s been 9 years since my Pops left me. I still miss him everyday. He was an amazing man, and I was blessed. And Polish pilots who fought in WW2 and died flying have never been properly remembered

  • @xXTheoLinuxXx
    @xXTheoLinuxXx 6 років тому +309

    Very impressive . I knew that the Polish were one those who liberate us (The Netherlands) during WWII. There are several places that will remind you and honoured the Polish people. In my neighbourhood there is a "General Maczek Square' or 'The Polish Liberatorlane'.

    • @radoslawderkus8925
      @radoslawderkus8925 6 років тому +25

      thank you for that Theo. General Maczek is our great hero; and after the war, he ended in England as a fucking bartender when everyone should bow to him.

    • @01LadyAnna
      @01LadyAnna 4 роки тому +7

      Thank you Theo. Arnhem, Breda... Yet I met people in my life who made fun of it 😔

    • @fenderek666
      @fenderek666 4 роки тому +14

      I have always been impressed by Dutch remembering General Maczek.

    • @xXTheoLinuxXx
      @xXTheoLinuxXx 4 роки тому +17

      @@01LadyAnna in Breda there is even a museum called after him. In my birthplace (Stadskanaal) there is a General Maczek Square and at the border of the square there is a war monument with the logo of the Polish 1st Panzer Division and contains sand from the birthplace of General Mazcek and sand from the Polish Fields of Honour (Breda). If some people make fun of it, well they don't know anything about history.

    • @01LadyAnna
      @01LadyAnna 4 роки тому +13

      @@xXTheoLinuxXx Thank You. Those heroes shall never be forgotten and knowing the history is the key to our future ❤

  • @Jerry8235
    @Jerry8235 8 років тому +614

    thank you brothers from Poland-Moravia -Czechoslovakia. Díky bratři Poláci-pozdrav z Moravy.

    • @maciejkwiatkowski7558
      @maciejkwiatkowski7558 7 років тому +18

      Diki bratře z Moravy....I was riding by KOLO across your beautiful Morava one week ago....great country, great people. Greetings from Poland.

    • @polak1982
      @polak1982 5 років тому +10

      Thanks brother! Greetings from Poland!

    • @SamanthaGuttesen
      @SamanthaGuttesen 4 роки тому +7

      Greetings from England. Moravian Slivovica is very nice 👌

    • @hellraiderpl559
      @hellraiderpl559 4 роки тому +10

      I'm reading a compulsory book by Arkady Fiedler about Squadron 303 and there's a chapter about your pilot Jozef František. He was a hero! Zdravím, čeští bratři! 🇨🇿🇵🇱

    • @tomaszpernak3131
      @tomaszpernak3131 3 роки тому +2

      @Piotr Stowski Moraviany ])

  • @pepecohetes492
    @pepecohetes492 9 років тому +229

    3 Polish mathematicians were also instrumental in setting the path for the breaking of the Enigma code; Turing may have improved on the theory and on building a more sophisticated "bomba" or calculating machine, but all of the Brit codebreakers stood on the Pole's shoulders.

    • @raymondj8768
      @raymondj8768 8 років тому

      +pepe cohetes i dont think so there were all nationalitys involved there buddy noone was above the rest many of them did not even speak to eachother they werent allowd to so it was nothing but a team effort thats what wins all wars !!!

    • @jamesrather7170
      @jamesrather7170 8 років тому +11

      +Raymond Jordan although it is true that all nationalities/ethnicities were involved in the intelligence sections of the Allie's war efforts. The Poles smuggled out to England their deciphered enigma messages and the keys to decoding them. The development of an English copy of the enigma machine was largely due to their efforts.

    • @raymondj8768
      @raymondj8768 8 років тому

      James Rather first of all they were not mostly polish most of them were british and a few americans and a few polish dude there were all kindsa people in there but they were all seperated buy them little huts and for the most part they couldent even speak with eachother unless it was important i seen a great doc. about it it was really good wish i could remember were i seen it maby history channel but it was a good one take care dude

    • @chrisgryckiewicz1664
      @chrisgryckiewicz1664 8 років тому +9

      +Raymond J educate yourself dude... "British codebreakers had enjoyed a few successes against early Enigma machines in the mid-1930s but as war approached they had hit a cul-de-sac. The Poles were far ahead thanks to some remarkable breakthroughs (successes that so infuriated Knox he threw a tantrum). Whereas Britain still used linguists to break codes, the Poles had understood that it was necessary to use mathematics to look for patterns.
      They had then taken a further step by building electro-mechanical machines to search for solutions (known as "bombas", perhaps because of the ticking noise they made)."
      www.bbc.com/news/magazine-28167071

    • @raymondj8768
      @raymondj8768 8 років тому +1

      Chris Gryckiewicz one tiny peice of help from the polocks and suddenly they won the war hahahahhahahahhahhahahhahah NOT

  • @tonygriffiths2485
    @tonygriffiths2485 2 роки тому +68

    This is 11 years old now. The film moved me, but I am easily impressed by the Polish. My Troop Sgt was a Pole who escaped from the nazis at the age of 15 in 1939, made his way to England, lied about his age and joined the 7th Armoured Brigade and fought right throughout the North African Campaign. Then Korea, and he was MY Troop Sgt ! Talk about luck !! Without doubt the best man I have ever known, am 73 now and feel that as passionately as when I decided he was, which was not long after I left the Army. Sgt Dick Stawicki of the Royal Tank Regiment. Ty Sarge ! :)

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому +8

      You might like the autobiography of Australian comedian, Magda Szubanski. She discovered her Polish dad was in the Resistance in Poland in his mid teens - and became the go to man for executing informers, etc. It was an extraordinary discovery for her.

    • @dareklenovo8883
      @dareklenovo8883 6 місяців тому

      Jesteś kurwa polski. Nie ścigali cię naziści tylko Niemcy.

  • @troops187
    @troops187 9 років тому +151

    Go Poland!!!! Respect!

  • @Racaandrew
    @Racaandrew 8 років тому +162

    Poland always have God, Honor and Country.
    God Bless Poland.

  • @nie_zdam_z_matmy3006
    @nie_zdam_z_matmy3006 8 років тому +149

    1939 Polqnd never forget. Thanks alies for not helping us.

    • @doomedeagle4622
      @doomedeagle4622 8 років тому +2

      +MrwerniX Strategically, it would have been nearly impossible for the Allies to help Poland at the outbreak of the war. The British would have had to land an invasion force into East Prussia to help the Poles and then move at a faster rate than the Germans. Even if they accomplished this and somehow lifted the siege of Warsaw, they still would have had to liberate and hold the rest of the country.
      Essentially, you can view the same situation as with the Baltic States of today. If Russia and NATO went to war, it would be nearly impossible for NATO to hold Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

    • @TrOLLKiLLeRs1
      @TrOLLKiLLeRs1 8 років тому +17

      +DoomedEagle The British and French could have made a statement against the Soviet Union by declaring War on them at the same time as they declared war on Germany, considering, the Soviets co-ordinated their invasion of Poland with the Third Reich and immediately set about executing 20,000 Poles being officers, politicians etc.

    • @doomedeagle4622
      @doomedeagle4622 8 років тому

      TrOLLKiLLeRs1 You do realize that the UK and France were extremely afraid of the power of Germany. They wouldn't have done anything as idiotic as declaring war on the USSR, which was another super power. If the UK and France had done that that would have probably lost WWII for the allies. Germany would have had a major ally to trade with for two years and would have had a secure border with the USSR.
      Not to mention that this still wouldn't have cleared up Poland getting invaded, as now the British would have had to fight off two armies instead of just one.
      TL;DR Declaring war on the USSR is one of the dumbest things I have ever heard.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 8 років тому

      +TrOLLKiLLeRs1
      You do realize that the Soviet Union did nothing for over two weeks and then came in to take the spoils.
      I guess you missed the number of Poles that were murdered by the German`s

    • @TrOLLKiLLeRs1
      @TrOLLKiLLeRs1 8 років тому +5

      Barrie Rodliffe
      You guess incorrectly. And what do you mean the Soviets did nothing? Their incursion into Poland 1939 split the Polish defenders hence the Poles were fighting on two fronts which wasn't sustainable. I guess you missed the point.

  • @shannon7002
    @shannon7002 2 роки тому +54

    I was a kid during the war and didn’t understand that Northolt airfield a mile down the road was home to 303 Polish sqdn.
    Watched them take off in groups and return singly and sometimes damaged.
    I’m a Brit and I owe them respect.

  • @Pulsonar
    @Pulsonar 5 років тому +55

    I knew about the Polish contribution to the Battle of Britain since the 70s, my Aunts neighbours were Polish WWII ex-pats and lived in Cheetham Hill, Manchester close to a small Ukrainian community. The old boy was ex-RAF, and never spoke about the horrors, but he had a stack of medals. He would sit there in his Polo neck sweater, patting the tobacco down in his pipe demanding to know how I was doing at school, and what was my batting average in cricket! His wife, a lovely lady, very humble and hard working. She'd be up at 6am to clean the steps of the terraced house, and my aunts steps, every day! For years my aunt didnt know she was doing that, and was moved when she found out. They were an impeccable calibre of people, from a bygone age and more English than the natives in my experience.

    • @Bapaume67
      @Bapaume67 3 місяці тому +1

      I’m also from Manchester (Wythenshawe) and I know that club.

  • @jacekplacek8274
    @jacekplacek8274 9 років тому +219

    From other hand :)
    Polish squadrons in Britain: (not only 303)
    300 Dywizjon Bombowy ("Ziemi Mazowieckiej")
    301 Dywizjon Bombowy ("Ziemi Pomorskiej")
    302 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Poznański")
    303 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Warszawski im. Tadeusza Kościuszki")
    304 Dywizjon Bombowy ("Ziemi Śląskiej im. Ks. Józefa Poniatowskiego")
    305 Dywizjon Bombowy ("Ziemi Wielkopolskiej im. Marszałka Józefa Piłsudskiego")
    306 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Toruński")
    307 Dywizjon Myśliwski Nocny ("Lwowskich Puchaczy")
    308 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Krakowski")
    309 Dywizjon Współpracy ("Ziemi Czerwieńskiej")
    315 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Dębliński")
    316 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Warszawski")
    317 Dywizjon Myśliwski ("Wileński")
    318 Dywizjon Myśliwsko-Rozpoznawczy ("Gdański")
    663 Dywizjon Samolotów Artylerii
    Polski Zespół Myśliwski (Polish Fighting Team)

    • @bbzzykkuu
      @bbzzykkuu 9 років тому +22

      *****
      Yes. There was more polish squadrons. Second thing is that only half of polish pilots fougt in polish squadrons. Second half was spread among english squadrons.

    • @jerzykowalczyk1966
      @jerzykowalczyk1966 9 років тому +12

      +Jacek Placek The 4th air power in allied countries after US, UK and USSR.

    • @barrierodliffe4155
      @barrierodliffe4155 8 років тому +7

      +Jacek Placek
      145 Polish pilots in the Battle of Britain out of around 3,000.

    • @birkensafttt
      @birkensafttt 8 років тому +11

      My uncle was a CO of No. 309 Polish Fighter-Reconnaissance Squadron from 3 April 1944 to 9 September 1944 :)

    • @jacekplacek8274
      @jacekplacek8274 7 років тому +4

      +Emil Wolf :)

  • @doppler3237
    @doppler3237 7 років тому +331

    as an american I can say that the poles were never given the respect they deserved, now that you have the freedom you deserve I hope we do not abandon you.

    • @mitchhamilton3291
      @mitchhamilton3291 6 років тому +6

      Im about to write this. after they risked their lives,

    • @zbigniewbiernacki3682
      @zbigniewbiernacki3682 5 років тому +19

      @@MrHoojaszczyk Even today, most Poles don't trust anyone to be an ally. Given the sorry performance of French (Promises not kept) and British ("Not One Grenadier for Danzig"). Despite this, Polish Soldiers, Airmen and Sailors died serving under overall British Command. Poles are loyal to a fault but are despised for it.

    • @wekapeka3493
      @wekapeka3493 4 роки тому +7

      Zbigniew Biernacki Some of my New Zealand relatives fought alongside Polish forces at Monte Cassino and had the highest respect for them. From 303 squadron to remnants of Polish naval and army forces I have only heard the most admirable comments and deep regret that more could not have been done for them. They were difficult times.

    • @danielnowakowski601
      @danielnowakowski601 2 роки тому +3

      our rules is ...Respect and Freedom

    • @captainhindsight8779
      @captainhindsight8779 2 роки тому +2

      We’ve sent troops to the polish border lately to support them as a NATO member state. What happened in 1939 will not happen easily again.

  • @ibrahimkalmati9379
    @ibrahimkalmati9379 2 роки тому +15

    respect and love from Pakistan to brave polish pilots.
    they not only help UK in war but After war some of them came Pakistan and Help us to build our Air force

  • @WizzRacing
    @WizzRacing 9 років тому +538

    They did more this. They helped Britain break the enigma code of the Germans as they were some of the best cryptographers. They understood the German mindset as well. They fleed with all this knowledge back to England. Without their help the war would have dragged on and cost more lives.
    They deserve to be treated with respect. They earned it!

    • @75YBA
      @75YBA 9 років тому +21

      Big ups! Never underestimate a people that have been invaded. The Polish were a great asset to the whole word during WW II!

    • @75YBA
      @75YBA 9 років тому +4

      Yes 27th, Poles did "brake" (break) the Enigma Cod. The caught it in the Baltic, cleaned it, put it in a frying pan w/ a little butter, and then broke bread with it. It was delicious. I love Cod. Great fish.

    • @th-uh2oo
      @th-uh2oo 9 років тому +53

      Poles didn't help, Poles did break the enigma code.

    • @THEfatGAMER1011
      @THEfatGAMER1011 9 років тому +32

      1973saoirse Arogant moron.Poles did break the Enigma cod in 1932

    • @zoc4786
      @zoc4786 9 років тому +5

      Jacob Jackiewicz code* Cod is a fish.

  • @matti25matti25
    @matti25matti25 8 років тому +535

    The end of the movie broke my heart. People who gave so much, who risked their lives were treated so badly and betrayed at the end. Shame on Britain ....

    • @depotcat1763
      @depotcat1763 6 років тому +15

      The USA made the decisions at the end of the war. The fact that Britain declared war on Germany because they refused to leave Poland was neither here nor there to them. That was not the reason they came into the war in Europe.

    • @supersmudge12
      @supersmudge12 6 років тому +48

      I'm English and the way we treated the polish pilot's and people incenses me

    • @burger5082
      @burger5082 6 років тому +20

      Robert Bryant The Socialists didn’t work for Stalin, Churchill worked with Stalin to preserve British influence. Don’t kid yourself, Britain wasn’t hijacked by a leftist ideology, it turned its back on Eastern Europe for its own gain.

    • @flybobbie1449
      @flybobbie1449 6 років тому +4

      Neutral but blockading Japan, no wonder a war started.

    • @tracybeme1597
      @tracybeme1597 6 років тому +10

      At the end of the war, all nations were impoverished from funding wwII. There was no money left to fight against communism. That's the facts, Jack.

  • @wrb4thc
    @wrb4thc 9 років тому +20

    THANK YOU POLAND

  • @georgiabalbin9530
    @georgiabalbin9530 3 роки тому +55

    When only a teenager, I read my father's copy of "I Saw Poland Betrayed: An American Ambassador Reports To The American People" by Ambassador Arthur Bliss Lane, describing the Katyn Forest Massacres and other horrors. This was written after WWII. So there were some people who tried to help the Poles. We sometimes had Polish refugees in our home after WWII. In order to to take over Poland, the Russians had to kill off a third of the population. They are a tough people with a remarkable history. The book is available for $.99 in the Kindle edition.

    • @Feargal011
      @Feargal011 Рік тому +4

      Hans Frank, the Nazi military governor of Poland once said "If I had to hang a poster for every 10 Poles I have had killed, there would not be enough forests in Poland to supply the paper."
      Between two warring powers run by two despotic dictators. The Poles would suffer again and again.

    • @azazeldemon7779
      @azazeldemon7779 4 місяці тому

      A little-known fact - the Russians were murdering us before the war. Many Poles lived in the areas of today's Belarus and Ukraine due to the fact that these were the lands of the former Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. Those Poles who stayed on the Soviet side after the Treaty of Riga were mostly murdered. the so-called Polish NKVD operation

  • @SuperStig23
    @SuperStig23 9 років тому +114

    I would like to thank all the Polish flyers,soldiers and sailors who helped fight the Nazis
    from exile in England, although small in number your contribution to help the allies win the war was essential.
    I would mostly like apologize to the way Britain treated you after the war ended , Poland was still not free and that Lunatic Stalin was an even bigger mass murderer than Hitler, how did we thank you ?? by sending you back to an enslaved Poland !! what the h*ll were we thinking ?? Not Britain's Finest Hour, could someone who speaks Polish please translate this apology so the families of those brave men can know this Anglo baby boomer will NEVER forget their sacrifice.

    • @neilmachado3820
      @neilmachado3820 6 років тому +4

      Well said!

    • @psk1w1
      @psk1w1 5 років тому +14

      My uncle was a Polish serviceman in the British Army during WW2. He was sentenced to death for being a trainee officer in the Polish Army, then sent to a slave labour (death) camp in Siberia. Having been released, he walked to the Arabian Gulf and took a ship to the UK, and joined the British Army on arrival. After the war, he wondered about going back to Poland, so he visited the Polish Embassy in London to ask for advice. The officer carefully checked to see if she could be overheard, closed the door, and simply and very quietly advised him not to. He later found out that ex-servicemen returning to Poland (and other countries under Soviet control) were routinely sent to prison camps and most died there. After 15 very lean years in England he met and married my aunt, and became an Englishman - sort of......

    • @Caleb-gb9ym
      @Caleb-gb9ym 5 років тому +1

      @ii Clan If you mean that you don't know how to get a polish keyboard you can download one from iTunes/Play Store for a phone or change settings in control panel for a computer. If you commented just to say that you can speak polish but can't read/write in polish then I would like to thank you for making such a groundbreaking and important announcement to all of UA-cam.

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому +2

      who was invaded by the germans? which country lost 500 thousand people because of that?

    • @philiphawley2915
      @philiphawley2915 2 роки тому +1

      @@psk1w1 Good man

  • @christopherscott3120
    @christopherscott3120 10 років тому +233

    I grew up during the Cold War, in an area of the State of New York with a very large ethnic Polish population. Many of my friends had last names ending in "ski" or "czyk". In all the 20th century, I can't think of another country that got such a raw deal as Poland, without the Polish people doing anything to deserve it. They were cursed by geography. Those Poles and their descendants that came to the United States were fine friends, neighbors, and fellow citizens. The volunteer fire department in my town was dominated by men of Polish extraction. Perhaps it served as an outlet for the natural bravery represented in this video.

    • @chuckabbate5924
      @chuckabbate5924 5 років тому +7

      Fucked from the east and the west.

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 2 роки тому +2

      "n all the 20th century, I can't think of another country that got such a raw deal as Poland, without the Polish people doing anything to deserve it.
      ...except...be Polish..
      "They were cursed by geography."
      ...you dumb fuck, by that logic so was every country in Europe.
      How stupid can you fucking be to not understand that if you have a list of 50 countries that have a long history of taking part in wars against each other, forming various alliances for mutual defense and then getting into wars anyway, that some of these countries are going to benefit from this and some are going to hate life really badly?
      That is what they get for being Polish and being proud of being Polish and refusing to consider themselves German or Austrian and being proud Germans or Austrians, or even Swiss. Seriously do you not understand that in life you don't have to be extremely stupid to be extremely unhappy? Just stupid enough!
      Germany overwhelmingly dominated Europe in the first stage of WW2. Most sensible non-German Europeans accepted this and to a degree they collaborated with the Nazis. Most, who did not, were either shot or sent to the death camps or enslaved by the Nazis. The ones who decided to actively take-up arms against the Nazis, well after the Nazis had overrun their own countries? Tell me this: how were they ever going to be seen by the British as anything other than charity-cases with the British suffering to protect, house and feed them?
      The mistake the foreigners make when they move to a foreign country is to mistake the charity of some as charity from the whole. For every "good person" that you meet who is happy to help you? There are 20 people who would be even more happy if you'd leave their fucking country and get the hell back to your own country.

    • @philiphawley2915
      @philiphawley2915 2 роки тому +6

      @@touristguy87 Stuck for all it’s history between Fritz and Ivan. Poles are great people but victims of geography.

    • @paulpski9855
      @paulpski9855 2 роки тому

      Are you from Riverhead, by chance?

    • @philiphawley2915
      @philiphawley2915 2 роки тому

      @@paulpski9855 Sorry, I’ve never heard of Riverhead.

  • @jacek4276
    @jacek4276 8 років тому +470

    I remind you that Enigma had been broken by three Polish mathematicians

    • @seumasnatuaighe
      @seumasnatuaighe 6 років тому +20

      Thank you my friend. The Poles weren't too bad at parachuting or killing panzers either.

    • @silverpairaducks
      @silverpairaducks 6 років тому +1

      Yup

    • @ZygimantasA
      @ZygimantasA 6 років тому +8

      Hmm, wasn't it Alan Turing who broke it? There is a monument of him at my Uni.

    • @avelizosorio
      @avelizosorio 6 років тому +6

      Zygimantas Adomavicius Both Rejewski's team and Turing's broke the code ;)

    • @annawarner1078
      @annawarner1078 6 років тому +33

      Yes and Poland gave the translation machine to first French, and then after fall of France to Britain. yet British are giving credit to Turing, even though they were using Polish machines to conduct translation.

  • @blueshound9036
    @blueshound9036 Рік тому +42

    We should never forget the bravery of our Polish brothers. Heroes all.

  • @mirimar69
    @mirimar69 8 років тому +201

    I had the honour of caring for one of the polish fighter pilots in his later years as he succumbed to dementia. He had settled in Australia post war years and led a good life here before illness set in.

    • @m4rt1nDRK
      @m4rt1nDRK 8 років тому +25

      +mirimar69 Thank you very much for taking care of our countrymen, our heroes.

    • @mirimar69
      @mirimar69 8 років тому +14

      My pleasure

    • @krzysztofnalepa2425
      @krzysztofnalepa2425 5 років тому +13

      God bless you

    • @piotrd.4850
      @piotrd.4850 5 років тому +12

      Thank you for your work!

    • @RyszardSaktura
      @RyszardSaktura 4 роки тому +9

      Yes, You are right, You had the honor. God bless You

  • @tisoy909
    @tisoy909 10 років тому +73

    These Bloody foreigners, are my Polish brothers!!! Because I am a Hungarian American.

    • @BlueWhiteKnight
      @BlueWhiteKnight 2 роки тому +3

      Greetings from Poland hungarian brother!!

  • @NisWeihrauch
    @NisWeihrauch 6 років тому +57

    Polish pilots were excellent. Not only in the RAF squadron 303 but also in other parts of the RAF. Polish pilots carried out very many difficult and dangerous transport flights where resistance fighters in the occupied countries received weapons and other supplies, delivered by air drop from RAF aircrafts piloted by polish airmen.
    According to statements from Danish resistance fighters, the Polish pilots were very good at finding the drop points, thereby considerably reducing the risk of being detected by the Germans. - Also to be remembered are the Polish contributions to breaking the German Enigma code.

    • @tomaszser470
      @tomaszser470 Рік тому +3

      "Polish contributions to breaking the German Enigma code."-> en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polish_contribution_to_World_War_II and in between mine detector, which help to win in El Alamain/ Africa/ and remove millions of mines after the war or find some silver, gold coins also

  • @carlfisherjr.8203
    @carlfisherjr.8203 5 років тому +74

    My father volunteered for service into the RAF from America (USAAF) prior to the US entering the war. In 1942 he was assigned to Colern RAF Station in Wiltshire, England (the Polish Air Field) near Bath England with the Polish Night Fighters. He told me they were the bravest pilots he ever flew with and they knew no fear. I'm writing this on June 5th, 2019 on the eve of the 75th D-Day anniversary and thinking about all of the brave men that stood up and defeated the Nazi regime. Someday soon I wish to visit Poland on a trip to Europe.

    • @ghua
      @ghua 5 років тому +9

      thanks for you testimony, come visit us in Poland :)

    • @tadeuszbrt
      @tadeuszbrt 5 років тому +3

      come visit us

    • @77mako77ful
      @77mako77ful 5 років тому +3

      come visit poland, you see for what we fight !!!

    • @samrodian919
      @samrodian919 Рік тому +5

      I think you might find that's Calne, Wiltshire near where the RAF station was. There was another RAF base at Yatesbury also, there was a hospital there and my father who was a trained Nurse in the RAF medical branch was stationed there for some time before he was transferred to number 50 MFH RAF (mobile field hospital) that unit was the first RAF field hospital in France after D-Day ( D+7 ) dad took us to around Yatesbury, Calne and Devizes on the way back from our Devon holidays several times, and he took us to a small churchyard where there were a lot of graves of Polish aircrew. My dad said they were very brave people. I was only nine or ten then. I think the churchyard was at Yatesbury but I can't be sure. I've now looked it up, and yes it was in the churchyard of All Saints Yatesbury. There are 19 WW2 graves, plus 3 polish airmen buried there.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому +2

      @@samrodian919 great info to share. The things your dad must have seen!

  • @rickwhosit7725
    @rickwhosit7725 10 років тому +31

    All I know, is I grew up in a Polish neighborhood and I wouldn't trade ANY of my Polish friends or their families for ANYTHING OR ANYBODY IN THE WORLD!
    I had no idea how Britain treated the Pols in their country after the war had ended. It just gives me just another reason to say SCREW THE CROWN!

    • @henrikknudsen8125
      @henrikknudsen8125 9 років тому +1

      Google "Operation Unthinkable" and say "Screw the United States of America" instead :)

    • @tommystone4563
      @tommystone4563 9 років тому

      Henrik Knudsen
      we love you too...

  • @PeterJ-cb3vk
    @PeterJ-cb3vk 9 років тому +36

    Excellent British film on the 303 squadron........finally.

  • @chuckabutty888
    @chuckabutty888 2 роки тому +22

    An excellent educational documentary. many thanks for sharing it. My Aunty married a Polish soldier who was badly wounded and somehow made it to England. He like the others of his generation was a polite hard working gentleman who made his life over here after the war. The people did not let the Poles down it was the damn politicians as usual playing their stupid games. To this day I have great respect for the Polish people and their sad history of that time. My hope and I and I am sure, that this and other documentaries will educate our nation and give them gratitude as to the great contribution of courage and sacrifice that these brave men gave to our country. "We will remember them".

  • @ianwoods8593
    @ianwoods8593 Рік тому +24

    I have read both For Your Freedom and Ours, and A Question of Honor. These men were heroes! The way they were treated at the end of the war was disgusting! I live in Paphos, Cyprus now and have had the pleasure to meet one of the pilots grandsons!

  • @DeliBasAli
    @DeliBasAli 10 років тому +40

    to Polish sisters&brothers any soldiers alive from this squadron if you know them please tell my respects from Turkish Republic too.

  • @reddevilparatrooper
    @reddevilparatrooper 9 років тому +81

    The Poles have been soldiers all over Europe.The Germans,Austro-Hungarian Empire,Russians,etc have served in their armies for centuries.They are a martial race like many in the history of the world.Luckily for us Americans we had a Polish General named Pulaski and a few others fight in our army during the Revolution.WWI and WWII thank god we had thousands of Poles and Polish Americans fighting for America.They are indeed fine warriors!!

    • @skippy5712
      @skippy5712 6 років тому +11

      reddevilparatrooper You just explained something for me. I am Australian but our surname was originally Polish. There has been something military about the entire family for Generations. My Grandfather was an Australian Champion rifle shooter. Now I know where it comes from. The Polish culture coming down the male line. When I remember my Grandfather I could see him in the manner of those few old Polish pilots. The look also. Pity but it is very close to the Russian Cossack tradition. Men's men, fierce honorable warriors when necessary. Charrming as the British ladies said. I am 68 but it brings memories of my Grandfather back.

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 2 роки тому

      Kościuszko!

    • @swetoniuszkorda5737
      @swetoniuszkorda5737 2 роки тому

      For centuries? How many? 😂

  • @moholinagy
    @moholinagy 8 років тому +86

    great Polish heroes!

  • @imyourdad2458
    @imyourdad2458 2 роки тому +17

    At the end it broke my heart to learn that all other allies including Chinese and the Iranians took part in the marching pass celebration except the polish,who were integral part of the allies forces.

  • @archangele1
    @archangele1 8 років тому +54

    Poland is one of the unsung heroes of Europe. But, my grandparents and mother, like most Poles, rarely 'toot their horns' over accomplishments. They just do what needs to be done. No complaining. It is a cultural thing. A true 'can do' attitude. It is the way I was brought up. I can not help but be very proud of my Polish heritage when I see things like this video. The USA's top Fighter Ace Francis Gabreski was of Polish heritage.

    • @jakubtrelinski8109
      @jakubtrelinski8109 Рік тому +2

      he was trained by polish pilots in britan, he learned polish tactics there.

  • @Don9107
    @Don9107 7 років тому +146

    Poland - Great nation of warrior's, and maybe last hope for europe...

    • @lm157
      @lm157 2 роки тому +3

      Last hope of Europe again.

    • @Leon.Sawicki
      @Leon.Sawicki 2 роки тому

      Not anymore. Europe is no longer worth it... And the West obsession castrated us.

  • @Simi822
    @Simi822 9 років тому +140

    BTW Josef Frantisek was Czech, he joined the Polish military when you (the west) sacrificed his country to Hitler.

    • @damiannowak9483
      @damiannowak9483 5 років тому +10

      weird that we are neighbours and dont realy like ourselves but if anyone wants to invade/rule us we cooperate like badasses. 😈
      freedom over all!!

    • @jerzygarstka9186
      @jerzygarstka9186 4 роки тому +5

      it's too bad i have gotten to your msg so late..i used to be a pilot myself...and i know the history...Josef Frantisek ..."dzielny czech" in english"A BRAVE CHECH" was the 303 SQUADRNON PILOT..as per "dywisjon 303"book written by Arkady Fiedler.i will never forget HIS name.back in Poland we used to have an exam for a pilot licence starting from a glider pilot licence and up.A part of the exam was the aviation history.i could not forget his name AND I NEVER WILL..there were a very few....winston churchill story is a fake..what he said; was not about polish;,czech,canadians,us,french..and many more..pilots (don't ever forget all OTHER PERSONELL ,LIKE: NAV.,MECHANICS,RADAR,METEO ETC).his statement was about aviators,that save his own ass and BRITAN....i believe hi had sold IN JALTA,WITH JOSEFH S...MY COUNTRY..FOREVER!!!!

    • @jerzygarstka9186
      @jerzygarstka9186 4 роки тому +5

      CZESC I CHWALA WAM WSZYSTKIM ZA TO CO PRZEZYLISCIE WTEDY... I PO BITWIE O WIELKA BRYTANIE..

    • @jerzygarstka9186
      @jerzygarstka9186 4 роки тому +2

      HOW DO I SPELL BRITAIN? is it britan or what?or may be brutus? go fig..!

    • @hellraiderpl559
      @hellraiderpl559 4 роки тому +5

      Yes, he was from Czechoslovakia

  • @chaosbynature
    @chaosbynature 5 років тому +42

    i've got johnny kentowski's autobiography; he was not a great writer, but his testimony to the poles is sincere and remarkable.
    so many people live their lives today unknowingly owing thanks to those fighters.

  • @agaplemon
    @agaplemon 8 років тому +259

    I'm so proud that I'm Polish.

    • @JJ-te2pi
      @JJ-te2pi 5 років тому +8

      Me too, half Polish, great grandfather fought in the Polish underground army (or something like that!)

    • @MegaBoilermaker
      @MegaBoilermaker 5 років тому +5

      So you should be Sir.

    • @gameplaycentral6783
      @gameplaycentral6783 5 років тому +2

      J J ahhh the polish resistance or Warsaw up rising same with my granddad

    • @gugulinka112
      @gugulinka112 5 років тому +1

      Yup

    • @dagothur7586
      @dagothur7586 5 років тому +1

      Same

  • @COLDCATZZ
    @COLDCATZZ 6 років тому +48

    Kozacki dokument, świetnie zrobiony. Zważając, iż jest to brytyjska produkcja szacunek za nie zatajoną końcówkę.

  • @smithy2389
    @smithy2389 5 років тому +38

    I’m ashamed of that period. My wife is polish and I’m so glad she is young enough not to have seen communism. 303 your awesome

  • @jasonalt7110
    @jasonalt7110 8 років тому +85

    In memory of of the forgotten pilots who helped win a War & then forgotten by the ones they helped to achieve the task of winning.

  • @egnbigdave
    @egnbigdave 9 років тому +318

    As the Grandson of a British airman (LAC Joseph Gilman)who served as ground crew for 300/301 at RAF Bramcote and briefly 303 I salute the polish airmen. My grandad said they were the bravest and best the RAF had, and he went on to serve with 229 in North Africa.

    • @gubaification
      @gubaification 9 років тому +18

      +Dave The Bass And I salute you, Sir! Thank you for your account.

    • @quintquint5946
      @quintquint5946 7 років тому +2

      As ground crew did grandpappy use lots of polish? #ChromeBits
      Salutes are not hereditary. You have no authority.

    • @forest751027
      @forest751027 7 років тому +10

      i salute you. My grandfather he fought in a squad 305 as a navigator. He died in battle.

    • @plsniper
      @plsniper 5 років тому +2

      Thank You Sir!

    • @adrianrokosz1054
      @adrianrokosz1054 3 роки тому +2

      Thank You very much. We remember Polish fighters as well as Your granddad.

  • @R768WJHBSA
    @R768WJHBSA 8 років тому +76

    what a splendid real story and what a sad ending for the pols

    • @Haechi-v6y
      @Haechi-v6y 6 років тому +1

      Roland Sturbelle _ who are "pols" ?

    • @Haechi-v6y
      @Haechi-v6y 5 років тому

      @Columbo Bumbo to nie wiedziałeś, że super heroes never die?

    • @RealFishGames
      @RealFishGames 5 років тому

      @@Haechi-v6y Jeśli kasa się zgadza.

    • @RyszardSaktura
      @RyszardSaktura 4 роки тому

      as usal :( ...such is our history from the times of departition of our country

  • @DIYSolutios
    @DIYSolutios 5 років тому +49

    Before watching this film i had no idea of the great talent and sacrifice that the polish airmen have to the British people. I am a British national and think that it is disgraceful that we were never taught about this in history lessons at school. There is a Polish memorial to a fighter plane that crashed not to far from where I live and I have often wondered about the part the Polish player in the great war. I will think about what I have learned from watching this film whenever I visit there in the future. Thanks to all the Polish who helped us Brits in the war effort, you certainly deserve to be remembered better that you have in the past.

  • @72Yonatan
    @72Yonatan 7 років тому +42

    The Polish pilots and soldiers fought Hitler and defended Britain in her darkest hour only to be betrayed by Churchill. And the cold English showed them the door after the war. Hypocrites until today.

    • @richardellice5797
      @richardellice5797 6 років тому +1

      This is a absolutely disgraceful, why we went to war to try and save Poland British losses were over 331000 killed Polish 65000 a lot of thanks. Pity they gave up so quick but made very good Concentrate Camp guards

    • @paulanthony4534
      @paulanthony4534 5 років тому

      Cheeky bastard.The poles are welcome here, they work and live here happily even today with us.Its you warmongering bastards who we don't want here.

    • @mavockm7711
      @mavockm7711 5 років тому

      Richard Ellice shut your mouth you dirty racist. you wont have half the heart the polish have

    • @uceee1
      @uceee1 4 роки тому

      @@richardellice5797 Brits did fuk all (literally )until the first German strike hit their land....
      So bitch pls...

    • @p3dofil754
      @p3dofil754 4 роки тому

      @@richardellice5797 In Poland lost 6 000 000 , no 65000

  • @mfrsmphjd52
    @mfrsmphjd52 5 років тому +49

    Pragnę podziękować moim polskim i słowackim braciom za ich odwagę thank you

    • @Eggmanjames
      @Eggmanjames Рік тому

      This translates to: I want to thank my Polish and Slovak brothers for their courage

  • @Tom3kPL
    @Tom3kPL 8 років тому +37

    jak widać, zachodnia Europa uczy nas "europejskiej solidarności" już od 1945...

  • @robju6054
    @robju6054 Рік тому +48

    This is an amazing story. It should be mandatory for all British school children to see.

    • @anthonyrmay1502
      @anthonyrmay1502 Рік тому

      It should be mandatory for all those so-called leaders in London to take to heart what happened at the end with the apeasement to that Russia. Nothing changes, does it? And where does it leave us? With weak leaders from Attlee onwards.

  • @markwawrzyniak109
    @markwawrzyniak109 6 років тому +28

    Poles were betrayed by England not ones, but twice. At the beginning of the war and at the end by handing Poland to the Russians in Yalta. Brits even did not invite their Polish heroes for the Victory Parade. Shame....

    • @peterkupisz9602
      @peterkupisz9602 2 роки тому

      That is true.

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому

      before the war, poland was conspiring to take russia with hitlers help, hitler in turn would attack the west... but poland fell in 2 weeks...

    • @markwawrzyniak109
      @markwawrzyniak109 2 роки тому +1

      @@enochpowel4580 Hello russian troll. How much do they pay you write those idiotic comments. rusian rubl or dollars?

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому

      @@markwawrzyniak109 also czechoslovakia.. poland wanted to invade it...

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому +1

      @@markwawrzyniak109 irl bet your one of these that thinks england owes poland, irl bet you also think that the battle of britain wouldnt have been won by the allies if it hadnt of been for polish pilots...am i right?

  • @1Passingthrew1
    @1Passingthrew1 9 років тому +39

    Well done the Polish Air Force Fighter Squadrons that fought in the BAttle of Britain. I saw that had the record for kills. However they weren't honoured in the Victory Parade as Churchill didn't want to cause offence to the Russians. WEAK in the extreme.
    The Poles were also the first to crack the Enigma code. Very Clever people. I worked with a man who had been a German POW in WWII in Poland and the things he learned to do made it easy to follw him in the work. Sadly we often do not honour our friends with the rewards and praise they deserve.

    • @radoslawderkus8925
      @radoslawderkus8925 6 років тому +1

      our grandfathers thank you for your words

    • @britnic5394
      @britnic5394 2 роки тому

      no it was alan turing who was english, the first enigma was useless and outdated. as for friends, this was polands war not englands war.

  • @999pajak
    @999pajak 8 років тому +132

    And in the end we (Poles) had to pay to use the planes to defend your homeland, for the training of pilots, for every fired bullet, for fuel...

    • @aresxx8228
      @aresxx8228 7 років тому +5

      and masons

    • @eurasiandynasty9824
      @eurasiandynasty9824 7 років тому +17

      MoeSzyslak2001 you are absolutely right, but well what we can expect from nation that "has no allies, only interests"

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 7 років тому +5

      As like the USA (arsenal of the free world) made everyone pay. Economies were stretched to the very limit during the world war. It's the way it is regardless of contemporary views. Nobody questions that these pilots weren't highly motivated brave ppl.

    • @scottyfox6376
      @scottyfox6376 7 років тому +4

      999pajak considering the words of the Polish fighter pilot "We fight for our own country not France or the British" it's about their country is still in the fight ! If another country supply's the materials that's the expediancey of the situation. Be proud of what these ppl did.

    • @brandy2005
      @brandy2005 7 років тому +9

      ScottyFox, ok, however it is difficult to understand and accept one thing: Churchill after the pressure of Stalin even not invited Poles to victory parade after the war, disgrace:
      "The parade caused political controversy in the UK and has continued to be criticised because of the lack of representation of Polish forces. During the war, more than 200,000 members of the Polish Armed Forces in the West had fought under British High Command. These were loyal to the Polish government-in-exile, were opposed to the Soviet Union since the time of the Nazi-Soviet pact and hoped to return to a democratic, non-communist Poland after the war. However, by 1946, the British government changed its diplomatic recognition from the pro-democracy Poles in exile to the new communist-dominated Provisional Government of National Unity in Poland, where, according to Winston Churchill and others, totalitarian control was being established "
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Victory_Celebrations_of_1946

  • @allanchurm
    @allanchurm 2 роки тому +6

    polish paratroopers saved my fathers life when they got in between a ambulance with a red cross on it being machine gunned by drunk Russian troops. would not be here today if it was not for polish soldiers...( bless them all )

  • @MrRidgedog
    @MrRidgedog 8 років тому +87

    Czapki z głów dla bohaterów Polski

  • @nicholas1130
    @nicholas1130 8 років тому +48

    If it weren't for the Poles, Britain would of lost the Battle of Britain and soon surrender. So, then the Germans would focus of Russia, and who knows, they would be able to win against them.
    Furthermore, the Poles cracked code o the Nazis' Enigma machine, and the British took ALL the credit. - If it weren't for the Poles, the war would of been 3-5 years longer!

    • @nicholas1130
      @nicholas1130 8 років тому +7

      John Cornell What are you talking about.. the RAF were losing pilots very quickly, many didn't return from their first flight. And yes, they were very close to losing the battle of Britain, it's all thanks to the Czechs, Poles, Canadians, New Zealanders, etc since they helped them A LOT.
      And what are you talking about 95% were British in the RAF.. about 75%-76% were British, to be exact.
      The Poles built the machine to crack the Enigma codes and used it from 1933-1938 and in 1939 it was sent to the French then British. As the Germans changed their code, the British, using the the Enigma code breaker built by the Poles, had to adjust it every once in a while (since the German coding always changed)

    • @bbzzykkuu
      @bbzzykkuu 8 років тому +5

      +John Cornell
      Yes of course polish pilots were only few percent of all allied pilots. Even so you should know that all together polish squadrons shut down 12% of all german planes in this battle and only half of polish pilots were flying in polish squadrons (secon half was flying in british squadrons where they were shutting down german planes too). So their contribution was even more significent comparing to their number.

    • @dariuszpl4892
      @dariuszpl4892 8 років тому +7

      +John Cornell
      "15 September 1940 was a climactic moment, when to the mass coating 500 planes sought the Luftwaffe. In the course of the air battle for England during the World War II Polish pilots shot down about 170 German planes, and 36 damaged."
      This number is only from this one day

    • @Ana_crusis
      @Ana_crusis 8 років тому

      "would have" not "would of" :)

    • @agnieszkajanczura8813
      @agnieszkajanczura8813 8 років тому +6

      ,,would of,,- he has learnt it from english people :D i know some BRITISH using this form :D :D :D shame on them So how the UK helped Poland after second war?

  • @skippy5712
    @skippy5712 6 років тому +57

    Watching this moves me as an Australian. Officially we are of German Heritage but our surname is of Polish origin. Looking at some of those now very old Poles brings back memories of my Grandfather. It makes me realise he still carried a lot of his Polish heritage. Honorable. Cheeky. Arrogant if necessary. Humble when it was necessary. Never backed away from a worthwhile fight and most of all the dignity and character and the physical characteristics. A man's man but very charming with the ladies. That really got at Grandma sometimes. Yes he was just like them. That is culture.

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 2 роки тому

      sounds like the kind of man who would start a war and then lose it

    • @bertperello5454
      @bertperello5454 2 роки тому +2

      I had no idea about the snub given the Polish veterans at the end of the war, scandalous to say the least .

    • @saintsone7877
      @saintsone7877 2 роки тому +5

      @@touristguy87 Reading your comments reminded me of a famous quote that applies to you. "I judged the Poles by their enemies. And I found it was an almost unfailing truth that their enemies were the enemies of magnanimity and manhood. If a man loved slavery, if he loved usury, if he loved terrorism and all the trampled mire of materialistic politics, I have always found that he added to these affections the passion of a hatred of Poland. She could be judged in the light of that hatred; and the judgment has proved to be right." - Gilbert Keith Chesterton

    • @touristguy87
      @touristguy87 2 роки тому +1

      @@saintsone7877 well, I'm sure that their enemies were, um, their enemies.
      what you think of the Poles is another thing entirely

  • @arthursadlovsky6313
    @arthursadlovsky6313 5 років тому +8

    You may also find on YT first ever spitfire flying in Poland in this or in 2017 year. It was borrowed from english gent ,owner of that spitfire ,to the son of the one of that polish pilots from the Battle of Britain. There was interview with that guy who brought that first ever spitfire to Poland. And he said something shocking at least for me, that every spitfire and hurricane planes used by those polish squadrons fighters in Britain was actually bought and paid off in gold evacuated just before WWII to Britain , by polish government in exile. So they not only fought and died for Her Majesty but also used equipment and airplanes officially belonging to Poland and polish forces in exile. Btw no one of spits or hurricanes ever come back to Poland after the war.

  • @williamdean4101
    @williamdean4101 8 років тому +131

    The British did the same thing to the Polish paratroops who took part in "Operation Market Garden." In fact they treated all of the Polish heroes the same way.

    • @chrisgryckiewicz1664
      @chrisgryckiewicz1664 8 років тому +29

      Polish paratroopers were used as scapegoats even thought they alone held off escape line- without them no one would came out of this alive. After that Gen. Sosabowski was dismissed and he also lost his rank in the army. He never came back to Poland as he would be for sure sent to prison by communist gov.

    • @Lupinthe3rd.
      @Lupinthe3rd. 8 років тому +14

      after the war he worked on an assembly line at an electronics company in London. when he died most of his friends from the factory did bot know he was a decorated general till his honors where red out loud at his funeral

    • @daleburrell6273
      @daleburrell6273 8 років тому +12

      +KingDT2007 It's too bad he didn't make his way to America after the war- if I had been in his place, I would have had a hard time stomaching even the SIGHT of the British-! But as an American, I'm embarrassed to say that the U.S. has done more than its share of treachery and back-stabbing, too.

    • @MichalBreslau
      @MichalBreslau 8 років тому +7

      And how they threat retired Gurkha soldiers?

    • @skippy5712
      @skippy5712 6 років тому +4

      William Dean As an Australian we also remember WW1 and British attitudes.
      As Australians we also remember WW2 and the USA attitude.
      Never seen a Hollywood movie yet with Australian pilots and aircraft yet at the end of WW2 Australia had the 4th biggest Airforce in the world. About 6,000 up to date aircraft.
      The only Hollywood movies are the USA trying to claim a big part of Australian troops pushing back 30,000 experienced Japanese in New Guinea over the Kakoda Trail. Before the USA arrived. The first time the Japanese had been stopped except by the USSR in 1937.
      At least given time the British do give others credit.
      A quality the USA has yet to develop.
      It must be something to do with a deep down insecurity in the USA.

  • @expatbob
    @expatbob 10 років тому +22

    My thanks and sorry for our betrayal Polski. UK soldier.

    • @bredathc
      @bredathc 7 років тому +7

      Jerry Can you can do nothing about it. Just dont repeat mistakes of your coward elders.

  • @PhantomTD
    @PhantomTD 8 років тому +126

    Thanks Poland, and we will not forget the help we got from Poles in Norway when the Germans came. Poles, Brits, French and Norwegians fighting together on the mountain tops, that must have been some sight!

    • @juliadziuba9836
      @juliadziuba9836 6 років тому +1

      PhantomTD Yeah but nobody helped Poland when they were supposed to be working together

    • @imedi
      @imedi 6 років тому

      you did forget them when you voted brexit

    • @twardowsky196
      @twardowsky196 5 років тому +2

      @@imedi why you mix brexit for this. I am Polish and to me is disgusting, how the left discovered and began to use Poles after the referendum. To the referendum, the media demonized Poles, as was the problem with emigrants, it was always pointed out to the Poles. A mass of hate, lies and blunt propaganda. Political correctness did not allow pointing to other minorities, that's why Poles were blamed. For me, brexit is an obstacle, I would prefer him not to be, but it is the British decision that I am a guest here. For this I am impatient with those socialist parasites who have such an influence on Politics in the UK and EU. You do not understand, the Poles were betrayed by the Allies - because they let Poland be taken over by these Soviet socialist bandits. Poles are in the UK, because these idiots ruled in Poland for 50 years, the war and communist governments caused a huge crisis in Poland. THESE SOCIETICS caused mass emigration of Poles. So now how socialists pretend to be friends and take care of brexit is just rude. It was socialists who caused mass emigration of Poles. So now the socialists pretend to be friends and are concerned about brexit is the meanness, that is ridiculous.

    • @MrStanislav
      @MrStanislav 5 років тому +1

      ...at the same time a polish submarine ORP Orzeł sank german vessel with 400 soldiers onboard aiming towards Norway

    • @MichalkemarSpanboob-sx9rz
      @MichalkemarSpanboob-sx9rz 5 років тому

      Podziękowali nam w jałcie

  • @tonyroberts6500
    @tonyroberts6500 4 роки тому +6

    Hitler then Stalin .... long live a free Poland

    • @miger38
      @miger38 4 роки тому

      the prime minister Churchill ment spoke(n?) the same wishes, I'm afraid, hehehe... I know what You're planning, hehe...

  • @moravianmargrave6509
    @moravianmargrave6509 7 років тому +66

    I'm glad Polish fighters fought with our Czechoslovak fighters. In one battle. In one big battle about the future of the world.

  • @catchaser52
    @catchaser52 6 років тому +39

    I am a 62 year old American, I have read and watched many stories about WW2, first I have heard of these Great Polish Fighters. Thank You ! And I had a Polish Step Father from 1970 to 1973, Ed Orkowski, He never talked about War.

    • @georgielancaster1356
      @georgielancaster1356 Рік тому

      You should see if he has war record with Americans, Australians, Canadians or Brits. Did he say A, N, AF?
      Was he Resistance? Check their records?

  • @amethystdreamarian4076
    @amethystdreamarian4076 6 років тому +22

    Wow!! Brings tears to my eyes... Im very humbled... Bless you sons of Poland... And May you all RIP.

  • @jamesportrais3946
    @jamesportrais3946 2 роки тому +10

    I am reminded of the comments of a WWI pilot who said that (to paraphrase) it was the hunters who lived; those checking their armourments, whereas those who were concerned with their safety never lasted.
    The Poles clearly had the grim determination of vengeance in their hearts that perhaps surpassed our comparatively shallow aspirations of valour.
    On January 25th 2022, I raise a glass to those who fought for me, an unknown boy who would be born some 25-30 years following their sacrifices that allowed me to become the 50 year old man that I am today. I hope that my life, those of my parents and those who follow can do justice to these incredibly gifted and amazing men.

  • @henoch44
    @henoch44 10 років тому +112

    Seriously, we (Poles) need to stick to our equals in the area: Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks, Romanians, Lithuanians, Estonians, Latvians, maybe Bulgarians and southern Slavic countries. If we could find a common language and understanding, we don't need western allies or Russians.

    • @Eagle027
      @Eagle027 10 років тому +4

      The truth be told, considering what Putin is doing in the Ukraine, Eastern Europe needs as many friends as she can find. Point is will the West be only sunshine friends?

    • @Grobr666
      @Grobr666 10 років тому +4

      Very wise words. The Westerners don't want us on their land anyway. And besides, the West has all ready shown to us that they don't give a shit about our alliances and treaties in the past.

    • @mountainhobo
      @mountainhobo 10 років тому +8

      ***** Despite their neutrality, Romanian government offered safe heaven to Polish government and military in 1939. That was despite the fact that Poland was beaten and Germany victorious. Does not look to me like changing sides in case of trouble.

    • @someonewhosupportukraine
      @someonewhosupportukraine 10 років тому +10

      support, I am Lithuanian, it is time to forget past differences. It is the Lithuanian city of Vilnius, as it is the Polish minority. And I hope to disconnect divide boundaries. Leave Vilnius peace. let's leave the Poles and Lithuanians in peace. Time to spit on what happened 80 years ago. Now is the time to unite Lithuanians and Poles lived together for a long time from the Grand Duchy of Lithuania to the Republic of Both Nations. Then the Russians came to us at variance with one another. Forget war and shake hands. The day will come when the Lithuanians and Poles support each other in battle. Return the peace between our peoples. A big storm is approaching from the east (aggressive Russian fascism) west of the terrible storm is approaching another (radical Islam) is time to unite and defend our families from the enemy, but if you have to fight each other, we already doomed. Soon will unite the whole of Europe to the East and the West. Lithuanians and Poles, French and German. Let's keep our tradition of separate nations, but keep the friendship between nations. It is time to come together and share experiences and even water on the battlefield. From Vilnius to Warsaw Our friendship is unbreakable

    • @henoch44
      @henoch44 10 років тому +7

      someone
      Despite of what you might hear on news, if you come forward, we would jump forward as well.Most Poles would love to have friendly Lithuanian nation to the north and put all the differences aside.

  • @2011littlejohn1
    @2011littlejohn1 8 років тому +101

    My father was Polish and here as a member of the air force in WWII. I never fail to be amazed at the hypocrisy of the allies supposedly winning the war when a lot of Europe including Poland whose invasion by Germany was the reason for declaring war on Germany were still invaded after the war. In other words a lot of them were worse off than before the war began. Yet everybody just sat back and let those 3 old men divide up Europe nobody else had a say except the U.S., the U.K. and Russia. The whole war seemed to have been for nothing ending in a collusion in swopping of one tyrannical regime for another? All that slaughter for what ? There were an awful lot of suspicious goings on to allow the Russians the control they got. For want of a better word I'm British.

    • @bartb2026
      @bartb2026 8 років тому +5

      +jack freeman I'm sorry but you dont' understand a bit of WWII history. Hitler planned to strike Soviets with Poland as an ally. Then, he planned to strike France and Britain leaving Poland controling the situation on East. It was obvious for British politics so they cheated Poland giving false guarantees, which converted Beck (Polish PM) to reject Hitler's offer.
      That unleached his furry on Poland, because it destroyed his plan.
      When Hitler turned his death machinerry to Polish soil Britain was doing everything which was possible to postpone Britains engagement.
      Polish nation was bleeding to death while Churhil was drinking his whisky. Britain didn't give a shit to fulfill guarantees given to Poland, that thrown Poland to battle vs Hitler.
      Hitler never ment to attack Poland. He needed Poland to realise his plan. It was you as a target. It was France, it was Soviets.
      I'm god damn sorry that history turned so awfull for us Poles. I'd rather se Britain to suffer and us drinking whisky.

    • @2011littlejohn1
      @2011littlejohn1 8 років тому +6

      +Bart B No disrespect but I was aware of this beginning which led to the so called phoney war whilst the allies did nothing but wait in France. My main point was pointing out the compounded hypocrisy at the end of the war when not just Poland got sold out but a huge part of Europe too. Also the strange very questionable death of Sikorsky who wouldn't have just accepted the division of Europe had he still been alive. No doubt other nasty things went on related to other countries ending up behind the iron curtain.

    • @ddoumeche
      @ddoumeche 8 років тому +1

      +jack freeman did we need another 5 millions deads to have the soviets at the Manche, just to prove your point ?
      Read about General Plan Ost and operation unthinkable. Then you'll understand than those old men weren't that idiots.

    • @2011littlejohn1
      @2011littlejohn1 8 років тому +1

      Millions died because of Stalin anyway and the Russians would have backed down if the allies had been united. I feel your statement is an exaggeration.

    • @ddoumeche
      @ddoumeche 8 років тому +1

      Exaggeration ??? the soviets destroyed 80 german divisions and had ten of thousands of tanks, artillery and mecanized trucks, the westerners had get rid of 20 of those divisions only.
      They were never a threat for the Red Army and everyone knew that.
      Did you never heard of operation unthinkable ?
      And nobody was going to have a sequel of ww2 for the polish.

  • @militarymarchesclassicalmu7521
    @militarymarchesclassicalmu7521 5 років тому +11

    Poles the defenders of Europe🇵🇱🌍

  • @Al1en_Boy_The_5th_Kind
    @Al1en_Boy_The_5th_Kind 4 роки тому +22

    I am so proud to be Polish living in USA!!!!

  • @chereadnine
    @chereadnine 8 років тому +38

    Back in 1995 i studied ww2 as part of my uk GCSE`s
    We learnt about the battle of Britain and about the brave actions of the poles..My history teacher was friends with a ex fighter pilot so we had some first hand accounts of their proficiency.
    Much respect

  • @tomasneumajer5193
    @tomasneumajer5193 8 років тому +181

    Josef František was a Czech pilot.
    I bless Polish co-fighters, but there was also 4 Czech Squadrons 310, 311, 312 and 313 :-)

    • @adan2336
      @adan2336 8 років тому +18

      Nobody said he didn't

    • @Touma1985
      @Touma1985 8 років тому +15

      Josef František was a Czech pilot.you're right

    • @MoeSzyslak2001
      @MoeSzyslak2001 7 років тому +1

      +Adam Potoczny Když jsme tedy takoví, jak nás popisuješ, proč jsme vůbec šli bojovat za Británii, když jsme takoví zbabělci? Mohli jsme zůstat sedět doma a nic nedělat. Měl bys vystrčit hlavu z písku a něco si přečíst, než vypustíš takovou lež.

    • @szymonbergelson5547
      @szymonbergelson5547 7 років тому +1

      MoeSzyslak2001
      W 1938 jak broniliście Pragi?, i jak długo sie broniliście?

    • @szymonbergelson5547
      @szymonbergelson5547 7 років тому +9

      Niemcy wjechali czołgami do Pragi bez walki, do Warszawy nie wjechali wcale, Warszawy nigdy nie zdobyli militarnymi działaniami, tylko zbrodniczymi bombardowaniami, dlatego poddano Warszawe, bo cierpiała ludnośc cywilna.

  • @BliskoPolski
    @BliskoPolski 10 років тому +40

    Najdzielniejsi z dzielnych, a na londyńskiej paradzie zwycięstwa ich zabrakło...

    • @avangardparise8469
      @avangardparise8469 6 років тому +3

      churchill nas sprzedal sowietą i olał dywizjon kosciuszkowski 303 bo stalin by byl zly gdyby churchill pokazal im honor

    • @TheSteve8rox
      @TheSteve8rox 6 років тому

      ChannelLocked. Thank you for teaching us the factual truth. I used Google Translator to get English translation. A Canadian of Polish descent.

    • @TheSteve8rox
      @TheSteve8rox 6 років тому

      avangarD, so true !

  • @Luke3Bsea
    @Luke3Bsea 5 років тому +60

    The Poles are rarely given the respect they deserve but I respect them and give huge thanks for what they did for my country.

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому +1

      which was.....?

    • @ihs51
      @ihs51 2 роки тому +1

      When we had a month stay at Chelsea service apartment near Kensington ,there were some Polish ladies working in house keeping and I noticed that they are hard working people.

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому

      @@ihs51 so are many others.

  • @KS-po9sx
    @KS-po9sx 9 років тому +41

    Some quotes about 303 from Americans:
    Later on, the 303 received a copy of Collier's from the United States, where Capt. Newell O. Roberts recalled: "They sent us to train with the hottest combat squadron in Britain, the 303rd Polish Pursuit Group. They were flying Spitfires. Those Polish kids taught us everything they had learned in combat over Europe. Then we went along on seven combat operations over France. On none of these were we jumped by the Jerries. By the time we reached Africa, we knew how to sweep the sky of Jerries and Eyties. The Poles are the best sky fighters I saw anywhere."
    August 1943 was even busier. Many "Ramrod" missions were flown. On several occasions, Poles also escorted American B-17s. On August 17, while escorting some 60 B-17s, the 303 led by F/Lt Arct surprised a group of FW190s sending down four of them without losses, with F/Sgt Chudek scoring twice.
    Escorting the Fortresses sometimes meant air-sea rescue. John Keema recalls: "On August 24, 1943 a flight of fighters from the 303 and 316 squadrons came to our assistance as we were trying to return to base from a bombing mission over France. Our B-17 had a couple of engines shot out and as we headed home alone, we were attacked by German fighters. S/Ldr Falkowski 303 CO (leading the Wing. WR) ordered some pilots to escort us back. We were attacked by FW-190's, and one of them was shot down by F/Lt Longin Majewski and F/Sgt Tadeusz Szymkowiak. We ditched in the English Channel and the Polish pilots radioed our position to Air-Sea Rescue. They stayed with us until we were rescued. A few days later we were to visit the 303 but weather prevented our doing so."

    • @TheSteve8rox
      @TheSteve8rox 6 років тому +5

      Katarzyna, thank you for your factual teaching. God bless America and President Trump and Trump family.

  • @babygorillaz
    @babygorillaz 8 років тому +165

    God bless Poland may the motherland live forever. Polish people have always fought for freedom.

    • @juliadziuba9836
      @juliadziuba9836 6 років тому +2

      babygorillaz They’ll never lose that

    • @billythedog-309
      @billythedog-309 6 років тому +1

      babygorillaz - and prosecute anyone who says otherwise.

    • @JimWalsh-rl5dj
      @JimWalsh-rl5dj 6 років тому

      Er no they have not you tosser

    • @daevid6016
      @daevid6016 4 роки тому +4

      “We don’t beg for freedom, we fight for it”

    • @enochpowel4580
      @enochpowel4580 2 роки тому +1

      @@daevid6016 that why poland fell in a few weeks?

  • @azclaimjumper
    @azclaimjumper 6 років тому +116

    I'm a 73-year-old​ American I never realized the contributions the Poles made to the Battle of Britian. Thank you for enlightening MEeee. Such a sad ending.

    • @ru.kiddingme
      @ru.kiddingme 3 роки тому +8

      Poland was betrayed by the WW II allies multiple times.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_betrayal
      It is shameful that Poland and other freedom loving eastern European countries were treated as bargaining chips to avoid aggravating Stalin at Yalta.

    • @azclaimjumper
      @azclaimjumper 3 роки тому +2

      @@ru.kiddingme Thank you, I read that Wikipedia link you included in your reply.

    • @peter2346
      @peter2346 3 роки тому +2

      Franciszek Gabryszewski (Francis Gabreski) born in the USA from Polish family... ace in WW2 and Korean War

    • @azclaimjumper
      @azclaimjumper 3 роки тому

      @@peter2346 Thank you.

    • @philiphawley2915
      @philiphawley2915 2 роки тому

      @@ru.kiddingme Britain and USA for geographical and tactical reasons had no chance against USSR . The Western alliance had no perfected the atom bomb by then.

  • @mackjsm
    @mackjsm 10 років тому +25

    FINALLY!!! thank you for giving us (Poles) the credit..

  • @yea0276
    @yea0276 8 років тому +28

    We should be brothers after fights against same enemy...but all I see is trying to send polish people from england back home. Just watched a news

    • @lunaticatiga
      @lunaticatiga 8 років тому +26

      you should know that most of Brits dont have a clue about the history.