AMERICAN REACTS TO TOP PLACES TO VISIT IN POLAND!

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  • čas přidán 4. 01. 2022
  • #Favour #FavourReacts #reacts
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Komentáře • 168

  • @Favourreacts
    @Favourreacts  Před 2 lety +20

    WELCOME TO THE CULTURE SERIES! 💙🌏🛩 Where should we check out next?! Like the video!! 👍🏾✨

  • @juliakwiecien4924
    @juliakwiecien4924 Před 2 lety +157

    The point of visiting places like Auschwitz is to remember the history and to make sure it never repeats. I'm sure it's a traumatic experience for many, but still, many people think sth like that: "you should see it to understand". I was there on a school trip and I know that high schools in Israel organize trips to Poland to see Auschwitz as well.
    And we just have a continental climate here, which means four seasons and quite a big difference in temperature during the year (it can snow during the winter and it can be quite hot during the summer).

  • @kadz3597
    @kadz3597 Před 2 lety +159

    It's important to visit places like Auschwitz just to remember and make sure that this tragic history will never be repeated.

  • @chandhand6539
    @chandhand6539 Před 2 lety +129

    Bruh! European countries are extremely modern, You should visit Warsaw, the capital of poland it looks nothing less than a major american city... sky high buildings emerged with historical ancient architecture that has been renovated after the world war 2... polish cities are like modern meets ancient world. Also poland has the same climate as Northern United States, the temperature goes below -25 celsius sometimes in the winter.

    • @Ltforlife22
      @Ltforlife22 Před 2 lety +17

      One thing not to do.. Don’t compare poland with america 😂 the polish will not take that lightly

    • @mjm3091
      @mjm3091 Před 2 lety +3

      Actually with Warsaw most buildings were rebuilt. Germans basically grounded most of the city.
      Also it is one of uglier cities in Poland to be fully fair...

    • @mjm3091
      @mjm3091 Před 2 lety

      @@Ltforlife22 we won't? That's new. I mean we are literally on the same latitude as like New York state, so that's just stating facts that the climate is similar.

    • @itzpixu9911
      @itzpixu9911 Před 2 lety +2

      Hello i from poland Warsaw i wery modern city

    • @JakubW.
      @JakubW. Před 2 lety +3

      @@mjm3091 Poland isn't on the same latitude as New York state. Not even close. The northernmost point of New York state is located at 44° 55′ 49″ N, while Poland's southernmost point of Poland (Mount Opołonek) is 49° 0′ 7.28″ N. So more like latitude of Vancouver in Canada (49° 15′ 0″ N). Warsaw's latitude of 52° 13′ 56″ N is closer to that of James Bay in Canada (southernmost place where you can find polar bears in the wild).

  • @darksonlolo6039
    @darksonlolo6039 Před 2 lety +24

    Poland is the country where the most civilians were murdered during the war and was one of the most devastated countries.

    • @NoIdea210
      @NoIdea210 Před 2 lety +2

      And beacuse of USSR we couldnt accept Marshall plan, if Poland wasnt USSR marionette , maybe we would be as rich as italy

  • @ainalm9453
    @ainalm9453 Před 2 lety +38

    In my school, when you're on your last grade, you with your whole group (sometimes more than 50 people) and your history teacher go to Auschwitz to pay respects and learn something

    • @xavierharris6954
      @xavierharris6954 Před 2 lety +3

      That’d amazing. Here in America half the country will barely even recognize the bad things that has happened here.

    • @kamilt909
      @kamilt909 Před rokem

      And what did you learn?
      Heard about "Judenrat"? "Jewish kapo"? Probably not 😀

  • @polska7497
    @polska7497 Před 2 lety +11

    The Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp was the largest German extermination camp during the Nazi era. Other common names are Auschwitz-Birkenau and Auschwitz II concentration camps, and also K.L. Auschwitz-Birkenau. It was built in 1941 three kilometers away from the main camp Auschwitz I in the area of ​​the municipality of Brzezinka. It was located near the city of Oświęcim in the district of Bielitz, which was annexed by the German Empire after the occupation of Poland and established as an administrative unit.

  • @tomaszm2202
    @tomaszm2202 Před 2 lety +8

    Not Nazi, but a German concentration camp ... It is important for us Poles, WWII was caused by the Germans, not by any Nazis

    • @lookicov8301
      @lookicov8301 Před 2 lety +2

      @L M but all nazis were Germans

    • @dominikdominik842
      @dominikdominik842 Před 2 lety +1

      @L M i'm pretty sure it was the Germans who elected the Nazis in elections, but you're right, not all, majority

    • @mjm3091
      @mjm3091 Před 2 lety +1

      @L M it's the difference between pushing the genocide from real nation to inhumanised military bad guys. Your argument is kinda like saying "All Lives Matter" and "Not Every Guy" - it misses the point.
      Sure most modern Germans had nothing to do with the atrocities and a lot of Germans back then were also victims or had nothing to do with it.
      Heck a lot probably helped fight the system and saved people from certain death. But ultimately that doesn't change the fact that the biggest atrocities back then were done by military and ruling forces of Germany, not just some Nazis.
      Its the awareness that is important (also major issue with what Russia/USRR and Japan did in Second War, as well - not telling the truth is pretty the same as denying the fault of the nation who created monsters, its such important historical tragedy that its improper to twist the facts - it is the least we can do for the victims - keep the facts straight).

  • @periaadoc
    @periaadoc Před 2 lety +4

    My kid went to Auschwitz in Highschool. (we're from Sweden) Every Year the select a number of students to go there. This is in order to Never Forget.

  • @maaarsss
    @maaarsss Před 2 lety +30

    I'm from Poland and I live in this beautiful country and it's so nice to see Americans saying good things about Poland ❤
    Also, I want to say that in Poland there's A LOT of castles and old buildings and it's beautiful

  • @piotrkomor1
    @piotrkomor1 Před 2 lety +17

    the climate in poland is the same as in germany in the summer it’s hot but during the winter it gets really cold

  • @nattblack_diamond7748
    @nattblack_diamond7748 Před 2 lety +5

    I'm from Poland and I think everyone should visit Auschwitz to see the scale of it all. It is a powerful experience that you will never forget. I can't imagine never seeing Auschwitz when you're in Poland

  • @flylikeanowl8667
    @flylikeanowl8667 Před 2 lety +6

    4:10 it’s not the „ppl wearing black“ goth but the „pointed gables and fancy buildings“ kinda goth, if you are wondering ;) like it’s about the period of time before the renaissance

  • @Radonatorr
    @Radonatorr Před 2 lety +4

    To be fair, almost every city in Poland is a place where hundreds and thousands were murdered, so as a Pole you kinda... get used to it. The best example of that is Warsaw, the capital of Poland, which before WW2 had 1.3 million inhabitants. The city was completely razed to the ground by the Germans and the population effectively exterminated or deported, especially during or right after the Warsaw Uprising. By 1945 less than 140,000 people remained in the city and about 90% of all buildings were completely (and purposfuly) destroyed. After the war everything had to rebiult from the ground up. Nowadays almost every city street has a small monument or a plaque marking a place where some important person was shot or where the Germans executed 100 random Polish civilians as a result of 1 German soldier or civilian being killed by Poles, which was a standard practise of subjugating conquered population and keeping them in line, used all the time by Nazi Germany all around Poland.

  • @miroslawobr3383
    @miroslawobr3383 Před rokem +2

    Yes pls. We want some more . Greetings from Poland

  • @zibizibi3030
    @zibizibi3030 Před 2 lety +6

    Do Auschwitz przyjeżdżają wycieczki z całego świata również Niemcy potomkowie narodu który założył ten obóz na terenie Polski i podpalił świat aby nie zapomnieć aby tego nie powtórzyć to trudne przeżycie ale gdy to zobaczysz nabierasz szacunku dla życia dla drugiego człowieka. Będąc młodą osobą mieszkającą tak daleko możesz tego nie zrozumieć tak łatwo. Pozdrawiam

  • @aditkun706
    @aditkun706 Před 2 lety +5

    im from indonesia but i like poland culture,country, people so lucky born in poland...

  • @monikarichardson2888
    @monikarichardson2888 Před rokem +2

    I live in Poland, I’m Polish-Canadian. I understand why you wouldn’t want to visit, but that being said - I had a school field trip to Auschwitz on the way to a recreational/integration trip with my class. I got light headed, felt like vomiting, and cried most of the time. I don’t regret it, it reminded me of terrible things evil people I power can do, and it reminds everyone that this should never happen again.

  • @eileentaylor1691
    @eileentaylor1691 Před 2 lety +3

    you need to show respect, the people that are there probably lost relatives and its not about you.

  • @ThomasKelly669
    @ThomasKelly669 Před 2 lety +9

    The Polish people amazing

    • @itzpixu9911
      @itzpixu9911 Před 2 lety

      Thanks i from poland

    • @arturjj8761
      @arturjj8761 Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you very much for your kind words to my people!

  • @EWAMILENAP
    @EWAMILENAP Před rokem +1

    You are so kind♡Your heart is so beautiful. It made me tear up when you said "I would be pissed if someone bombarded..." You are so clever.

  • @shiningpl
    @shiningpl Před rokem +2

    The funniest thing is that the Auchwitz was a german made camp (even the word Auchwitz is german word) but people think that some magic "nazis" did that. German camps made in Poland that was occupied by Germans.... end of story.

  • @luzak013d
    @luzak013d Před 2 lety +24

    Please react to the rest of the video
    Love from Poland ❤️

  • @agata.7452
    @agata.7452 Před 2 lety +2

    Nazis also used human skin, for book bindings, wallets. At least one lampshade was made as well.

  • @rrafalok
    @rrafalok Před 2 lety +3

    It’s not for doing just the tourism but for Remember! For young people that… that’s happened, that we don’t want to happen it again! It’s memorial, Hitler destroyed Poland because we didn’t stand with him, but against… Check out Polish History, in Poland then were more immigrants than in other countries in whole Europe we had many nation many cultures many believes….

  • @drzewowit
    @drzewowit Před 2 lety +5

    My grandfather survived Auschwitz. The list I could do for his memory is to visit that place and pay respect.

  • @falseflaag
    @falseflaag Před 2 lety +10

    German, not "nazi", don't forget it, please.
    Nazi = national socialismum and the "nation" were the Germans.
    Poland is the country where the largest number civilians were murdered and was the most devastated country during both I and II World Wars.

  • @mikazukiuneri3718
    @mikazukiuneri3718 Před 2 lety +6

    her: OMG they got Clouds Omg i would never thought that

    • @mikazukiuneri3718
      @mikazukiuneri3718 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Favourreacts yeah ikr 😅

    • @mikazukiuneri3718
      @mikazukiuneri3718 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Favourreacts I can teach you some polish but im not very good at it

    • @mikazukiuneri3718
      @mikazukiuneri3718 Před 2 lety +1

      Whe Bialowieza forest (tey forgot to add polish letters but nvm) Polish: Las Białowieża And you probounce it Bi-aah-wo / vi-eh-za

    • @mikazukiuneri3718
      @mikazukiuneri3718 Před 2 lety +1

      you can play it on google translate too

  • @sirthomas9622
    @sirthomas9622 Před 2 lety +3

    Verry nice and open minded reaction, thanks sis! peace love from Poland!

  • @AlexPoprawny
    @AlexPoprawny Před 2 lety +10

    You don't seem to understand. In Poland every child during education visits this German concentration camp. This changes the way of thinking, the history of such things should be known and respected, because only this history teaches us not to repeat it as humans. I remember as a child my surprise that I met many Germans there as descendants of the criminals and many Jews as descendants of the victims. I did not see any anger or hatred, only thoughtfulness.

    • @youlol7331
      @youlol7331 Před 2 lety

      That's a total lie. Who told you that every child in Poland visits Auschwitz? I don't think half of them do. There's no rule to that. School trip destinations are usually chosen depending on where kids want to go, or where parents want their kids to go.

    • @biteme4322
      @biteme4322 Před 2 lety +1

      @@youlol7331 Every schools in my city in Poland organizes a trip to the camp.

  • @kml8732
    @kml8732 Před 2 lety +7

    Royalty is not about being god in Europe at least for sure not in Poland. Its more like a present Prime Minister or President. You respect the office not the person. Because of royal families and the way the political system evolved in Europe, we can all watch these architectural wonders. This was the way Europe took and by denying the royals, youre denying all the things they did, good and bad.

  • @gaelsomerville5163
    @gaelsomerville5163 Před 2 lety +10

    I think it is important that we visit sites like Auschwitz. We think we have learned about the atrocities the Nazis committed but it is only by visiting places like this that we really appreciate the details. It is a way of paying respects to those who were killed by learning their stories. Time inevitably dilutes the memory of what happened and we need to make sure future generations don't forget.

  • @qwertzxcvb7724
    @qwertzxcvb7724 Před 2 lety +4

    and why America is responsible for most of the conflicts in the world? Poland lies between Russia and the Nazis with Germans, and that is why it often fought to choose its borders. not like America to sell weapons!

  • @Devusiks
    @Devusiks Před 2 lety +3

    We have everything in POLAND

    • @Devusiks
      @Devusiks Před 2 lety

      But bad things we also have but not much these idk beacose i'm from Poland

  • @mjm3091
    @mjm3091 Před 2 lety +24

    2:25 I mean technology in most of the UE is on better level than in average US city (mostly because of how much has been put into urban spaces and general quality of life).
    Especially public transportation and bank-related stuff has been on highest level here (its always baffled me when US started using app and touch payments, when it was a thing here for over a decade).
    Poland is still somehow behind some of the European countries, but I mean... It is not a bad thing when you consider something like Scandinavian countries where prisons are better place to live than good amount of the average American households. Its 2022.
    2:45 To be fair this actually look somehow dated - some of those definitely have been built in early 2000s or before. Modern housing, even if alarmingly more and more expensive, is really good.
    6:35 Its actually you who are speaking differently with your "ae" sound. Good thing about Polish is that most letters and words have consistent pronouncation, so "A" is always just "ah", unless it's borrowed word. The "A" here is actually the short "A", as for most words in Polish. The narrator is just kinda messing the pronouncation.
    Cause it's actually Poznań. Poz-nah-ni. Where the last sound is very short with pretty much no audible separate "i" there: "ni" not "niii". "Ń" being different letter and sound from "N".
    7:05 To be fair I think the Italian city in Twilight is much older than this. But yeah, this is pretty much any European city that has any remotely traditional housing and city centres that originated in last two thousand years. Especially ones built post and during middle ages.
    7:15 Im team Jedward, cause even Jacob and Edward had less toxic relationships than Bella with any of the others.
    7:50 Not every queen. I mean Habsburgs for example are known for their disabilities due to marrying in family, having a lot of deformations. I would imagine some of the royals would bleed more or even die from hard enough punch in the nose.
    8:00 Money, power and heritage. Doesn't matter in Poland since before US was a country. We lost our monarchies centuries ago. Those roads and cities being some of the old relics of the past.
    8:20 I mean only in the outskirts and at the night cities are even remotely dangerous these days. I don't remember last time I even heard of someone getting mugged. More people I think die under wheels and drowning in rivers when drunk, when it comes to city centres. Aside pandemics - it is pretty safe. But I mean that's most of the western world.
    9:05 Białowieża. Bya-wo-vie-sha (to be fair it's hard to put in English how to pronounce "ż/rz" - cause it is like "sh" but with "r" in it).
    The White Tower.
    She actually didn't say the "L", cause in Polish "Ł" is kinda like "W" in English (we use "W" for "V" sound).
    Funnily enough Belarus - is similar word. In Polish it's Białoruś. The White Ruthenia.
    10:15 One of the few good things that came from Polish Monarchy - was the ban for killing bisons, unless you were royal family.
    10:40 It's wildlife.
    11:00 We are literally next to Germany and Russia (well the small part of Russia near Baltic Sea).
    11:20 It's not that you want to visit - you should visit. Remembering is the only thing we can do nowadays and the victims deserve to be remembered. It's one of the few things that - it makes you an a-hole, if you let your squirmishness and petty fear to control you. Especially, if you are an adult. It's scary, it's disgusting, but it's the monstrous reality we live in. They didn't have a choice - so us deflecting it would be disrespectful.
    Also - the museum itself isn't actually scary. It's horrifying when you see the scale and the pictures and living conditions and the reality behind whole thing. But aside few places (like there is a mountain of woman shoes) - it's just a building like any other. Looks like 1900s prison/animal enclosures. Bricks, houses and perfectly normal meadows. But there are also furnaces and "bathhouses", they all look normal, but they were used for the most hideous crimes.
    11:40 I mean Oświęcim (Auschwitz) is a cute city. The camp itself is the place you can visit. Most people who can - do. In Poland and neighbouring countries it is sometimes custom to go there at the last years of the high school. You don't visit or tour there for presents, gifts and memories. You visit to learn, to witness (I mean you probably have similar events in some areas of your country with the historical treatment of African Americans - kids visiting the plantations and stuff, seeing the conditions and reality of people who lived back then).
    12:10 Germans. Real people. Not villains, monsters - but also humans like you and me. Second War was the most gross part of the human history, the stuff Germans, Japanese and Russian did to people pushed the boundaries and scale of war brutality.
    When you visit A-B, you can actually see the house of the military people, they lived there, nearby - with their families, including children. That's probably one of the scariest parts of it. Not the murders, but the normalisation of it. The dehumanisation of the prisoners.
    13:10 Those were all around the Europe, but the most prominent Death Camps were built on the lands of modern Poland. They invaded us and built death factories here. I suppose you could say its very much the resource saving, I mean Germans are known for their productiveness (in this context its more of a morbid stereotype turned into reality).
    13:20 Not funny fact here - the metal sign "Work will free you" was actually stolen few years ago, being cut down and almost melted down by some foreign thief, who didn't understand the level of importance the sign had hold. It was huge investigation. Nowadays the retrieved sign is shown inside museum (or is hidden for conservation) and this one in video is actually replica.
    13:30 If I remember correctly that's just bedrooms for prisoners (or bathrooms, if you could even call those that). This has too many holes to be used for chamber and too wooden for being the furnace place. You mentioned no baths and electricity - this is just that. Animal enclosure.
    14:00 In fact - the "showers" were inside some of those brick buildings. I mean people who were sent for death did not fully know what to expect, so an ok looking public/group shower room inside brick house, didn't cause as much panic as the wooden shack would. Those were for prisoners who worked in local areas as slaves (like stone mines). Also the issue here is also that the camp has been built through years by the prisoners, so some of those shacks can be earlier on shelters).
    14:20 I mean you do live in a country that is just giant Indian Burial ground. Walking there is ok, seeing it is ok. What I don't understand myself - is how the city that is nearby still has citizens. That would be too much for me, but then again those are people who lived there even through the wars and have seen the smoke.
    15:00 To be fair I wonder why they are showing so much in this video. I mean it is educational, but I feel like it's not appropriate to have this in the "top 10 places to visit in Poland" and not part of separate video. I agree for it to be on the list, but then again showing the items left behind doesn't feel right to me, especially as they put it in number 6. Especially if they are about to jump to some party place city.
    15:30 Also those people were robbed - their stuff sold away. There were kids who got toys after kids who died. Not to mention the more horrendous places like the soap factories. Hair blanket is one thing a human soap is next level evil.

  • @akemiflameborg
    @akemiflameborg Před 2 lety +6

    I live in one of the cities where Germans built concentration camps, but I've only visited once. Currently, there are exhibitions of photos and information panels about what had happened so people could learn from it. You pretty much only go there to learn and pay respect to the fallen. On the other hand, I had a great-grandfather killed by Russians during the Katyń massacre (an event during which Russians killed a lot of Polish officers) and I would actually go there to pay my respects to him. Anyway, you should react to the rest of the video, as well as the Geography Now video about Poland (although the "pope tv channel" part is fake, we don't have that) and you could also watch about Miś Wojtek (Wojtek the Bear).

  • @pawwrob4843
    @pawwrob4843 Před 2 lety +3

    Exactly the middle of Europe

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 Před rokem +1

    The high sharp arches are actually the feature of Gothic style :)

  • @kml8732
    @kml8732 Před 2 lety +3

    Poland has true 4 seasons.

  • @Trutka91
    @Trutka91 Před 3 měsíci

    I understand You completely. Visiting Auschwitz is hard. It's not something You can just visit quickly and go to the next thing. Sometimes it will take days to process. I would like to go there some day, because I'm Polish and my grandfather was in a concentration camp. The one he was in, was a smaller one and is not existing now. You are a wonderfull, empathetic person. I wish You all the best.

  • @polishnorwegianandspanish9145

    You are such a nice amd energetic person. Thank you for reacting to Polish videos.

  • @Favourreacts
    @Favourreacts  Před 2 lety +3

    Thoughts?! 👀

  • @melaniespencil
    @melaniespencil Před rokem +1

    poland this is my contry !! OMG

  • @humiliatedpie2489
    @humiliatedpie2489 Před 2 lety +2

    What do I feel about people visiting places like Auschwitz ?
    We all have to remember what happened there.
    Unfortunately, history likes to repeat itself.
    If we remember, we can avoid it in the future.

  • @Pottedcrafter
    @Pottedcrafter Před 2 lety +2

    “california roofs”

  • @itzpixu9911
    @itzpixu9911 Před 2 lety +3

    I from poland

  • @petrisilia409
    @petrisilia409 Před 2 lety +14

    Thanks for even trying to react to places worth visiting in Poland. I recommend the series Geography Now about Poland;) I live in Poland myself. And apart from bad government and law, it's a beautiful country. Don't be surprised by the snow; we have four seasons in Poland. Germany is our neighbors, as are the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Belarus, Lithuania, Ukraine and part of Russia. We have sea, lowlands and mountains, but this is not the most important thing;) In Poland, we have great cuisine, music and art. Even if Poles do not have the best opinion in the world, they are wonderful, open and friendly people :)

    • @pawlo79pl
      @pawlo79pl Před 2 lety +3

      Polish government and the law are good and this government was elected in democratic elections even though some people do not like it.

    • @klaudia658491
      @klaudia658491 Před 2 lety +2

      @@pawlo79pl Nie żartuj

    • @pawlo79pl
      @pawlo79pl Před 2 lety +2

      @@klaudia658491 No nie żartuję ,to co napisałem jest prawdą.

    • @itzpixu9911
      @itzpixu9911 Před 2 lety

      Ja też

  • @DannyPotato
    @DannyPotato Před 2 lety +1

    The pronunciation of the places in that video 😆

  • @magdalenatyraa813
    @magdalenatyraa813 Před 2 lety +4

    I hope you will watch rest od this video.

  • @acidmuncher
    @acidmuncher Před rokem +1

    Im in poland right now 💕😂

  • @NanuqEditzS
    @NanuqEditzS Před 2 lety +6

    Pls finish this video, there's a lot more cool places to visit in Poland

  • @alexandernordahl5896
    @alexandernordahl5896 Před rokem +1

    Yeah we have snow in Europe 💁🏻‍♂️

  • @VladyslavBurmaka
    @VladyslavBurmaka Před 2 lety +3

    The European Broadcasting Union froze the participation of Belarus in the Eurovision Song Contest, as the situation there is now very unstable. It happened in the spring of 2021 at a time when all countries published their songs to participate in the competition. The song of Belarus contained a political context. The group actively supported the dictatorial regime of President Lukashenko. Therefore, we will not see Belarus at the competition until the moment when the power in the country changes. ))

  • @Misterjingle
    @Misterjingle Před 2 lety +2

    « California roof »
    No. No. No. It’s California which have Mediterranean roof. Not the opposite. Gosh.

  • @qwertzxcvb7724
    @qwertzxcvb7724 Před 2 lety

    interesting and cool movie. good job

  • @coreck2
    @coreck2 Před rokem +1

    Białowieża forest = white tower forest

  • @michawierzbinski7758
    @michawierzbinski7758 Před 3 měsíci

    i feel the same

  • @Anonymous-iv9cz
    @Anonymous-iv9cz Před 2 lety

    3:02 yeah because when you go from USA to europe you time travel to the 1800s 😂

  • @GM2LBW94
    @GM2LBW94 Před 2 lety

    ❤❤

  • @rain-cy6ve
    @rain-cy6ve Před 2 lety +1

    You got a new subscriber for the cultural reactions. It s a really interesting idea. It makes me happy you re willing to learn about our cultures and ask us about it. And to answer your question, yes, it is more than ok to visit the concentration camp. It s free to visit and it s so important to visit it. We have to know the attrocities of the past so we are less inclined to let them repeat. A lot people, me included, feel it s a human duty to visit the concentration camp if you have the possibility. It s a shattering experience but it couldn t be anyhow else. You dont go there to have fun after all. People that take selfies in that place are just disgusting in my opinion. And the other question on who built the castles, usually payed workers.

  • @alexanderibsen6299
    @alexanderibsen6299 Před 2 lety +1

    You should make a reaction video of “Denmark’s history” If you are interrested 🇩🇰

  • @LaloSillymanca
    @LaloSillymanca Před 2 lety +3

    I mean Europe is more modern than America.... We literally invented cars and roads why would we not use them

  • @rrafalok
    @rrafalok Před 2 lety +1

    @Favour please do reaction for History in Poland on You Tube ❗️ U will get more about our culture.

  • @robiniswormfood
    @robiniswormfood Před rokem

    im from poland!!

  • @soloms11
    @soloms11 Před 2 lety +1

    Please do Portugal and Ireland 😁

  • @floriiii8548
    @floriiii8548 Před 2 lety +1

    I recommend u the channel “geography now” on youtube.Its superbe

  • @KBPT-wo3xs
    @KBPT-wo3xs Před 8 měsíci

    It's a shame that you have never finished watching this video.

  • @agnieszkaprzybylek4804

    Heads up we polish citezens (me being one) we pronounce our w's like v's and our v's like w's so woda would be said voda

  • @mikaaaxxx4316
    @mikaaaxxx4316 Před 2 lety +2

    omfg the way i laughed at your reaction to snow😭😭😭

  • @marcinde1757
    @marcinde1757 Před 2 lety

    :) Zamek krzyżacki ładny? Oblegany w 1410 przez Polish King Władysław Jagiełło, ale przejęty dopiero w 1457 przez King Kazimierza Jagiellonczyka. Auschwitz camp też krzyżacy germany budowali

  • @holaphil_0549
    @holaphil_0549 Před 2 lety +1

    Next Germany please 🙏🏽

  • @michel6587
    @michel6587 Před 2 lety +4

    The Right name of Malbork is Marienburg, the Teutonic Knights Build it. It was a Part of Prussia a kingdom that was dissolved by the americans and the allies in 1945. The country of Poland lost her territory in the east and got East Germany, Pomerania, East Brandenburg and Silesia and the southern part of East Prussia. Poland was thus shifted to the west...
    4:52 At that time there were other borders and Germans lived there, it was destroyed by the Russians...

    • @DannyPotato
      @DannyPotato Před 2 lety

      All true but gotta say, ‘the German* name’

    • @maksimwiszniow9
      @maksimwiszniow9 Před rokem +2

      @@DannyPotato East Prussia, Pomerania and Silesia are the historical lands of Poland up to XV century. Thus it is more correct to say that Poland got its territories back in 1945

    • @maksimwiszniow9
      @maksimwiszniow9 Před rokem +1

      East Prussia, Pomerania and Silesia are the historical lands of Poland up to XV century. Thus it is more correct to say that Poland got its territories back in 1945

  • @tomaszm2202
    @tomaszm2202 Před 2 lety

    And the Austrians, Danes, Dutch and French helped them a lot. Of course, I am talking about SS units from these countries. But they were made up of volunteers.

  • @rafalkaminski6389
    @rafalkaminski6389 Před rokem

    Poland is between germany and russia :P

  • @saxina1111
    @saxina1111 Před 2 lety +1

    make a reaction to Azerbaijan 🇦🇿💕

  • @michakosinski1803
    @michakosinski1803 Před rokem

    Zakopane is bhear is snow

  • @igkl
    @igkl Před 10 měsíci

    1. Warsaw

  • @Pottedcrafter
    @Pottedcrafter Před 2 lety

    in polish-english

  • @matyy_.
    @matyy_. Před 2 lety +2

    From as long as i remember when we were in 7th/8grade depends on time our school always was doing trip to that and trust me i've never experienced the same feeling in my life like this when i was there it was so educational not for me but for future of us as humans and even people who had ancestors who were in wermacht are going to see that in Europe there is nothing like this to remind you that this what we have now even with this shitty covid time are nothing comparing to the times of those people who lived almost 80 years ago

  • @EWAMILENAP
    @EWAMILENAP Před rokem

    P♡LAND

  • @davidcole2865
    @davidcole2865 Před 2 lety

    Check
    POLAND -ROBOCOPTED PROMO

  • @marcinszrajber
    @marcinszrajber Před 2 lety +1

    L ist't J in polish

  • @escferro6200
    @escferro6200 Před 2 lety +1

    Can u react to Azerbaijan? We would like to see your video for Azerbaijan ❤🇦🇿

  • @qwertzxcvb7724
    @qwertzxcvb7724 Před 2 lety

    for many years it was said that the occurrence was
    (stories lie) that the camps in Poland were Polish and there were German. and this is one of the reasons why tourists who eat there find out the truth, so you have to remember about it so that nothing like this would ever happen.

  • @Trickerlon
    @Trickerlon Před 2 lety +4

    5:46 that most of this reminds you of germany or some western european countries, is because Malbork, Poznan and most of western poland was former germany territory, given to the polish after WW1 and WW2(where the russians chased off the germans and in the polish). The teutonic order was a german "kingdom" in the north of poland, which (I think) contributed to the unification of Germany in the first place.

    • @katarzynafiakowska2054
      @katarzynafiakowska2054 Před 2 lety +6

      co ty za pierdoły opowiadasz, Poznań był niemieckii?, Mabork? - ja na prawdę jestem pod wrażeniem twojej znajomości historii. Proszę weź się w garść i nie pisz głupot.

    • @dominikdominik842
      @dominikdominik842 Před 2 lety +5

      poznan and western territories were polish, but after partitions under german occupation

    • @kacperabramczyk4257
      @kacperabramczyk4257 Před 2 lety +1

      Not true.

    • @harrypotterisded4522
      @harrypotterisded4522 Před 2 lety +2

      Poznań is actually one of the oldest polish cities and in the region of this city (Wielkopolska) Poland was born

  • @corneliusantonius3108
    @corneliusantonius3108 Před 2 lety +18

    LGBHT rights and womens right to abortion are non-existant in Poland under yheir current governement. Hope it changes in 2023 after elections.

    • @maurycyzych3129
      @maurycyzych3129 Před 2 lety +4

      They have equal rights as other citizens. Nothing more nothing less.

    • @corneliusantonius3108
      @corneliusantonius3108 Před 2 lety

      @@maurycyzych3129 You are joking. Nazi Poland is under the Yoke of the suppressing chilmolesting Chatolic Church

    • @dominikdominik842
      @dominikdominik842 Před 2 lety +2

      @@corneliusantonius3108 WTF men everything ok? you're kidding, right?

    • @corneliusantonius3108
      @corneliusantonius3108 Před 2 lety +2

      @@dominikdominik842 If you had followed politics in Poland you would have known that these issues are causing tensions in Poland itself and in the European Union,

    • @kajzerk1290
      @kajzerk1290 Před 2 lety +2

      @@corneliusantonius3108 don't use term n*zi next to Poland it's disrespect

  • @Favourreacts
    @Favourreacts  Před 2 lety +2

    DM video requests on Instagram @favour_abara 💕