There are some things, throughout time, living as an expat in Poland. I have many friends in the Romanian community here in Krakow, but also in Poland in general. Meeting other people, of other nationalities, living in Poland also broadened up my experience. I always wondered what are the things that do point out that we are Romanian, without even saying that out. Thus, this list was compiled. Do check it out! And I would love to know if you agree on all the points – or if you have an item of your own that you would add out!
I am Romanian because…
I know what “mici” are and I love them. Add some beer and life is perfect!
Coming back from grandma/home/The Motherland with a full bag of goodies.
Bread. Everyday! Every single meal, if possible! (Polish people have potatoes, we have bread!)
“Mamaliga” – kinda similar to the Italian “polenta”. It can subsitute the bread… or you can have both! 😉
Dairy products… Cheese! – this one of the very first things I have missed, since moving to Poland. Poland does not have a culture of Cheese… of dairy products… we have so many types and so many flavours… heavenly! Poland has nothing that would even slightly resemble to “cas”, “cascaval”, “urda” or “telemea”.
Pork is the best vegetable 😉 – kidding aside, we do take our pork seriously. Romanian people have developed hundreds and hundreds of dishes made from pork meat. If Polish people have as main dish at Christmas fish, we have pork products.
We speak (AT LEAST!) 2 languages – Romanian, English is a must but because Romanian is a latin language we are very good with understanding (and even speaking) similar languages: Italian, Spanish, French and even Portuguese.
We do love to talk loud – Italian style loud ;)))) – and we enjoy being right! Scratch that: we are always right!
Summer spritz done with wine and sparkiling water (Soda) – early memories of my childhood…
Calling a Romanian person a Gypsy: WE WILL KILL YOU!
Do YOU agree with all the above? I would love to hear your take on this 🙂
For the first time at Wawel, all the preserved royal tapestries will be made available to visitors. The exhibition “All tapestries of the king. Returns 2021-1961-1921” will be available until October 31st. – This exhibition is supposed to be a magnet attracting tourists to Wawel, allows you to experience something unusual – says Andrzej Betlej, director of the Wawel Royal Castle. The exhibition is accompanied by works by contemporary artists, a rich program of educational events and publications.
Hidden from the Swedes, robbed at the behest of Tsarina Katarzyna, taken by the Vistula galley three days before the Germans entered Krakow in 1939. During the war, valuable Wawel monuments found their way first to Romania, then to France and, via England, to Canada.
For the first time, all preserved Wawel tapestries will be presented to visitors in the interiors for which they were created. From March 18, at the Wawel Royal Castle, the exhibition “All the King’s tapestries. Returns 2021-1961-1921”.
This exhibition is not only works but also a story. This is the history of these tapestries, it is also the history of the great undertaking which is the conservation of tapestries, as well as a great educational story. All three themes are very much present at this exhibition.
Dr hab. Andrzej Betlej, director of the Wawel Royal Castle
The collection of Wawel tapestries was made in the years 1550-1560 in workshops in Brussels. The fabrics are made of wool and silk as well as silver and silver gilded threads. Among the exhibits presented at Wawel, you can see one of the tapestries after recent conservation, which to some extent has regained its original color.
This is a unique exhibition showing the entire stock of the most important 16th-century tapestry in Poland, one of the most important and interesting in Europe. For the first time, we show fabrics that viewers have never been able to see. We tried to show it in reverse chronology, we start with two contemporary works of art that were created especially for this exhibition, to go from 1961 to 1921, to end up in the Senator’s Hall in 1553.
Magdalena Ozga, curator of the exhibition
The contemporary context, which is an introduction to the exhibition, are the works of Mirosław Białka and Marcin Maciejowski, who commented on the contemporary aspect of receiving tapestries and the mapping that is the key to reading the reverse narrative of the exhibition.
After a 5-month exhibition, some tapestries will be returned to museum warehouses. It is possible that part of the collection will be presented at special shows in Europe.
The exhibition is to commemorate the return of the royal tapestries – on March 18, 1961, when the ceremonial display of tapestries took place after their return from Canada, and on March 18, 1921, when under the Riga Peace Treaty, a collection of tapestries and people stolen during the Third Partition of Poland was brought from Russia, thanks to which the tapestries survived.
I would like the exhibition to be remembered as a monument to the importance of the royal foundation, as a commemoration of those who created the collection and cared for it for centuries – emphasized Andrzej Betlej.
Andrzej Betlej
The exhibition is accompanied by numerous publications, incl. richly illustrated album “Arrasa Zygmunt August”, “Essays on the tapestries of King Zygmunt August” by Magdalena Piwocka and a program of educational events, including the first match of a jerk at Wawel (June 19), culinary reconstruction of the wedding of Zygmunt August and Katarzyna Habsburgian Women (19 July), or monthly meetings with conservators who will introduce the backstage of their work on the renovation of tapestries (March 31, April 21, May 26, June 23, July 21, August 25, September 22, October 13). , noon)
The exhibition “All the King’s Tapestries. Returns 2021-1961-1921” will be available from March 18 to October 31.
I, for one, look forward to visiting this expo, once the exhibition and Wawel Museum will open!
Excuse me?! Indeed we live in 2020, but truth be told the world has gone haywire and nothing is as it used to be. We will never get back to that kind of “normal” and we will have to learn this. There is a need to change our mentalities, the way we think, and the way we work. We have to unlearn and teach ourselves the new “normal”.
What does IPS Teodosie think?!
On that thought, I’ve recently read an article in a Romanian news site about the IPS Teodosie who said (and you can see the video here – in RO language) that going to a Catholic Church, if no Orthodox Church is around, is wrong. It’s a sin!
What did the Roman Catholics back home say?
The Archbishop of the Roman Catholics in Bucharest replied that they were unpleasantly surprised by what IPS Teodosie said. Well… you and me both, brother… and we are not the only ones surprised and mortified about this public opinion.
Where do I stand? Romania & Poland
Let’s set the facts straight for my particular case, so you don’t think I am biased or… something…
1. According to the 2002 census, 86.7 percent of Romania‘s total population was Orthodox, 4.7 percent Roman Catholic, 3.2 percent Reformed, 1.5 percent Pentecostal, 0.9 percent Greek Catholic, and 0.6 percent Baptist.
2. According to 2015 demographics, 92.9% of Poland‘s population is Roman Catholic.
I was born in Romania, in Iasi (the equivalent of cultural Krakow). The region is called Moldova and not once have I been confused by fellows from abroad, asking me if I speak Russian – confusing the region in Romania called Moldova with the country Moldova, once part of Romania.
Ștefan cel Mare and the churches
Well, Romania had once a fantastic one of a kind ruler called: Stefan cel Mare (aka Stephen the Great). He also fought the Polish people 😉 Fun fact: The Battle of the Cosmin Forest (1497) (Romanian: bătălia de la Codrii Cosminului; Polish: bitwa pod Koźminem) was fought between the Moldavian Prince, Ștefan cel Mare (Stephen the Great), and King John I of Poland (John I Albert) of the Kingdom of Poland. Guess what? It was a huge victory for Moldova!
Romanian people and Sobieski
Besides that, one of my favorite citadels back home is the Neamt Citadel. Rumored to have been built in the 13th century by Teutonic Knights, Jan 3rd Sobieski tried to take it over. 25,000 men-strong army of Polish king John III Sobieski came across Cetatea Neamţului (Neamt Citadel), defended by less than 20 men. The Poles attacked the stronghold, believing that it contained necessary provisions. After over a week of siege, the small Moldavian garrison surrendered. Legend has it that, moved by the determined opposition from such a minuscule force, the Polish monarch granted life and free passage to the Moldavians in the garrison and gave them ranks in the Polish army.
Making it up to the Motherland
Anyway…back to my main story: Stephen the Great was a small person but strong essences do come in small bottles… he loved to fight for his country and he liked women. So he had a beautiful lady waiting for him always, besides his dutiful wife.
How did he make it up in front of God and Motherland? By fighting the Turks, the infidels, and by building churches. For each battle, he took part in, even if he won – lost – or if there was a draw, he would raise a Church nearby. This was a way to show the common folk his connection to God, which invested him to take care of Moldova.
The Church and its clean hands
Church has always run hand in hand with the political issues, no matter how much they deny it or try to disguise that. And that happened (and still happens) inside both the Orthodox and Catholic Church. They always try and have the upper hand, they always try and reach for the supremacy.
Which Church do I belong to?!
I’ve been raised in an Orthodox environment. Went often to Church and I’ve always liked that. The feeling of peace and quiet and… joy when you enter a church. Of the odd feeling of your skin getting goosebumps when one listens to the choir. The separation of women on one side and men on the other. It was boring/tedious to do it all standing… as the ceremony tends to be quite long. But you get to observe the people, focus on the icons, catch the Sundays slowly entering the church… sometimes it is magical!
In my second year of University I’ve been baptised again to the Protestant branch – the names are not important… denominations as well… at the time I did not see the point of having old priests mumbling about sermons and not understanding a word. Or worse, listening to the priest from the Orthodox parish we were under, constantly asking for money each Sunday instead of saying words of wisdom for the next week…
I believed (and still believe) that there is no need for a middleman – the priest in this case. You can pray directly to God, rather than asking the Saints (like Saint Paraschiva) to pray for you. Talk to Him directly! He listens, he takes note – he just answers in different ways.
Orthodox & Catholics in Krakow
I moved to Poland, to Krakow, in the summer of 2011. Poland is very similar to Romania – a country filled with believers ( even if only by name). There are as many churches in Krakow as there are in Iasi – possibly even more… they sprout at each corner and they are all very old and very Catholic. But guess what? They have open doors for everyone to come and join in the Mass.
There is one “prawosławny” Church in Krakow – that’s Greek Catholic, the closest branch one would have to the Orthodox Church. The service is held in the Polish language and in Russian. The church is quite small but I’ve never stayed during a service there… yet people tell me it gets packed.
Inside the parish of St. Mary’s Church (PL: Kosciol Mariacki) we have a Romanian priest, that does every 2 weeks the Mass for us in the Romanian language. It is a blessing and I find this comforting. I’m married to a Polish lad, that studied to be a Catholic priest. I’m married to a Catholic family, so I get to experience double Easters, for example.
Do we not believe in the same God?!
The video of IPS Teodosie got me baffled completely… we are in the age and time where we should have more compassion and be more open minded than that. How could he say that if a man, during his stay in London, cannot find an Orthodox Church, he should not go to the Catholic one, as this is a sin?! Are we not all reading the same Bible? Do we not believe in the same God and the Holy Trinity? Do we not all ( Orthodox, Protestant, Catholic) preach that LOVE is the most important of all???
When I saw the video in question I felt as if someone threw a rock at my head… Does the Bible not say:
Romans 5:8but God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
1 John 3:1See what kind of love the Father has given to us, that we should be called children of God; and so we are. The reason why the world does not know us is that it did not know him.
1 Peter 1:22Having purified your souls by your obedience to the truth for a sincere brotherly love, love one another earnestly from a pure heart,
1 John 4:7 Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God, and whoever loves has been born of God and knows God.
And last but not least… Mark 12:28-30 And one of the scribes came up and heard them disputing with one another, and seeing that he answered them well, asked him, “Which commandment is the most important of all?” Jesus answered, “The most important is, ‘Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. And you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and with all your strength.’
Romania is a wonderful country to visit, but like any country in the world, it has its ups and down – its pluses and minuses. This is why today, I thought I would break-away a bit from the #DiscoverPoland posts and rather focus on #DiscoverRomania instead 🙂 so without any further ado, my dears, here is a list of things you should not do while in my homeland.
Do not take a cab from the airport!
NEVER GET A CAB FROM THE AIRPORT – ANY AIRPORT!!! – Use public transport or the shuttle buses that take you back to the city. The taxi drivers love to scam the newbies that have no clue where they are heading and they always take the longest route or spin you around the city, to get the bill bigger.
On the other hand… The prices for driving in a taxi are probably the lowest in Europe, so you will not be spending a fortune 😉 and some of the taxi drivers are actually nice and very talkative. Also, it is best, if you think the bill was too large, if you will haggle.
Traveling by train – unreliable
When visiting Romania, it is best if you would rent a car or you would go by bus (buses also usually have WIFI). The trains are rather unreliable in their schedule and … each time I went by train I always bumped into rather weird individuals.
Public transport – buses and trams
No AC for the buses and trams! Most of them are rather old-school or second hand. In summertime you should definitely avoid them as they tend to be very packed and you end up feeling like sardines… they do open up the windows for more air… but it is equal to going to the sauna!
The Metro is reliable, fast and cheap. In Bucharest you should use it, rather than buses as you might get stuck in traffic.
Pickpocketing
Pickpocketing in Romania is real! You have to be careful of your goods while in town as there are loads of gypsies ready for you! They hide in the shadows or in plain sight and they wait for any wrong move! Do not show off with your possessions and always keep an eye on them.
Do not keep your phone and or wallet in your pockets – especially the back pockets! Keep your bags and backpacks in the front while traveling by public transport. Better be safe than sorry, that’s what I always say!
Vlad Dracul was real!
Yes, Dracula was real – vampires, however, are just fairytale material. Do not ask the first question if they are real and if we spotted any! We do not carry garlic with us nor a wooden stake. We do not live in the Middle Ages and just so you know… Vlad III, known as Vlad the Impaler (Vlad Dracul > Dracula) was Voivode of Wallachia 3 times between 1448 and his death. He is often considered one of the most important rulers in Wallachian history and a national hero of Romania – yes he did impale people, but only because they were doing mean things.
Do you have an example of things one should not do while going to Romania? Would love to hear your stories and if you agree with me or not!
Generally speaking, we’re taught very little about Polish history, including what Poland endured under Hitler and Stalin during World War II. Outlined below are a number of historical facts.
Hitler & Stalin wanted the destruction of Poland
Many are unaware that, when Hitler and Stalin jointly attacked in September 1939, the destruction of Poland was their main objective and, in the first two years of the war, Poles were the primary target of a coordinated German and Soviet extermination process designed to annihilate them on both sides of the Ribbentrop-Molotov line, which was the border between Hitler’s half and Stalin’s half of the former 2nd Polish Republic. Poland now ceased to exist as a nation state.
Top priority: Annihilation of the Polish people
As the first step of his Lebensraum policy, Hitler attacked Poland not only to annihilate the Poles but also to take over their land and settle it with Germans. A week before attacking, Hitler directed his senior generals to “Kill without pity or mercy all men, women, and children of Polish descent or language. Only in this way can we obtain the living space (Lebensraum) we need.” Hitler annexed his occupied half of Poland to Germany, which became Reich District Danzig, Reich District Warta River, Upper Silesia, and the General Government. The General Government was a purely military occupation zone that was ruthlessly administered by the Germans.
What was Stalin’s reason?
Stalin’s reason for attacking Poland was that Russia was “obliged” to come to the aid of its “blood brothers,” the Ukrainians and Byelorussians, who were trapped in territory that had been “illegally annexed” by Poland after the Poles defeated the Soviets in the 1919-20 Polish-Soviet War. In fact, in the 1921 Treaty of Riga, the defeated Soviets agreed to Poland keeping this territory, which was historically Polish before Russia, Prussia, and Austria partitioned Poland and erased it from the map in 1795. Stalin annexed his occupied half of Poland to Soviet-occupied Belarus and Ukraine and transferred the Wilno region to Soviet-occupied Lithuania.
Hitler demands the Polish elites to disappear
As Hitler’s first step in annihilating the Poles, he murdered up to 100,000 Polish elites. When the Germans attacked Poland, they had in hand a list of Polish elites whom they then arrested and summarily executed. This list, called the Special Prosecution Book-Poland (Sonderfahndungsbuch Polen), was developed with the help of ethnic Germans who were Polish citizens. The Germans called them “Volksdeutsche”, and many collaborated with the Germans against the Poles.
At the same time, the Germans imprisoned virtually all of Poland’s Jews in German-operated ghettos. Meanwhile, Poles were in a day-to-day struggle for survival because of the brutalities and severe conditions exacted by the occupiers. The Germans imposed near-starvation rations, confiscated crops and livestock, enforced onerous quotas on farmers, conducted daily executions to terrorize the populace, randomly arrested and tortured Poles, and conducted regular round-ups for deportation to concentration and labor camps.
The Red Army and NKVD
For his part, Stalin’s Red Army and NKVD (secret police) arrested and removed over 1 million Poles from Soviet-occupied Poland and deported them to the deep Soviet interior, where many thousand died from the harsh conditions of the gulags and labor camps. A fact not commonly known is that pro-communist Polish Jews greeted the Soviets with welcome banners, formed militias and revolutionary committees to support them, and identified Poles for deportation to Siberia. Another fact not commonly known is Stalin’s earlier murder of about 100,000 Poles who were Soviet citizens and were victims of his Great Terror campaign during 1936-38.
It’s important to understand that the consequence of Hitler’s and Stalin’s coordinated defeat and destruction of Poland was that Hitler was now free to round up Poland’s Jews, imprison them in ghettos across German-occupied Poland, build the death camps in the remote eastern part of German-occupied Poland, and transport Poland’s 3 million Jews, and later 3 million European Jews, to their deaths in these camps.
True Facts – #LestWeForget
Another little-known fact is that only in occupied Poland did the Germans have a standing order that anyone aiding a fugitive Jew in any way would be executed together with immediate family. Despite the Germans’ standing execution order, estimates of Poles who aided fugitive Jews range from 300,000 to 1.2 million, and estimates of those killed for doing so approach 50,000.
About 7,000 Polish rescuers are listed by Israel’s Yad Vashem as Righteous Among the Nations, far more than rescuers of any other country. Keep in mind that two Polish institutions were critically instrumental in rescuing Jews.
The first, Żegota, was the only government organization in the German-occupied countries established specifically to rescue Jews. The second was the Catholic Church, which rescued Jewish children on a massive scale by hiding them in convents, orphanages, and rectories. No German-occupied country had such an organizational and logistical infrastructure for rescuing Jews.
Countries during the Holocaust
Finally, it’s important to remember which countries played a prominent role in the Holocaust. Some established collaborationist governments with the Germans that not only helped round up Jews and deport them to concentration and death camps but also killed many of them. Countries that did so include Vichy France’s Petain, Slovakia’s Tiso, Croatia’s Pavelic and his Ustase militia, Hungary’s Worthy, and his Arrow Cross militia, Romania’s Antonescu and his Iron Guard militia, and Holland’s Henneicke Column. In several occupied countries, well-known fascist politicians such as Quisling in Norway, Degrelle in Belgium, and Mussert in Holland, formed Nazi-style political parties and took an active part in deporting Jews.
Ukrainian militias were involved in running Hitler’s extermination camps in occupied Poland and Auxiliary Police Battalions from the Baltic countries took part in the liquidation of the German-operated ghettos. In the case of military collaboration, many countries formed Waffen SS units and operated under German command. These included Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Latvia, Hungary, Estonia, Italy, France, Holland, Albania, Ukraine, and Croatia. It is important to remember that in occupied Poland, no collaborationist government was established, no Polish militias were formed to round up, deport, or murder Jews and no Polish SS units were created.
“There is no passion to be found playing small—in settling for a life that is less than the one you are capable of living.”
Nelson Mandela
A fairytale world in the mind of a little girl
There was once a little child – let’s call her The Nature Girl. It did not matter that as a child she lived in the city, the forest was close and it was always calling out for her. Her favourite pastimes were picking berries, mushrooms and going out for long walks in the woods.
Perhaps, as she also points out on her blog, it was in her blood… in her genes… Her grandfather Leon was a forester and she heard from her mother stories, fairytales since she was a wee lass. Nature and adventure were aways there, inside of her, waiting to be freed out.
The Love for the Mountains
Writing one’s dreams down always is a step towards admitting them, visualizing them, and taking further steps to make them true. The Nature Girl started fulfilling her dreams by noting them down on her Winnie The Pooh notebook (number 1 on the list was the magical Kilimanjaro) and as fearless as Christopher Robin, she took a leap of faith and started building on that…
She started trips to the Polish mountains, to Tatra, and the surrounding areas – the National Parks of Poland. She became associated with the mountains so much, that friends and family no longer asked when she would go to the mountains next, rather they asked when she would actually be in town 🙂
A Born Entrepreneur
The Nature Girl had to settle in for some time, like many of us, and join the road of the Corporate World. She worked for several clothing companies (from Cropp to Smyk, to 5.10.15, to 4F – in Poland; and Noriel – in Romania). She learned a lot of things that would prepare her for building her own brand and opening up a shop with beautiful merchandise Made In Poland: she learned what she did/did not like, she met people with diverse mindsets and experiences, she dealt with everything product-related from A to Z (be it negotiations, materials, orders, the quality of the products, the choices that the worldwide market has to offer, the possibility behind the colors/pantones and even people management – by building a 20+ team from scratch!).
The decision came with a little push from the outside, with a little help from a friend… The Nature Girl did plenty of tests that showed her that she was a born entrepreneur, with high empathy and a lot of energy! (something that you can obviously see when you meet her in person). She took her time, made the order in her thoughts and feelings and at the beginning of the last year – 2019 – the wheels had been placed in motion: she would open up a place of her own, a creative environment where she could thrive and make in change the world a better place (by “giving jobs to cool people and supporting institutions that I think are underrated in Poland” – as she also mentions on her blog)!
PEAKAPRE – Unique Designs & Safe Materials – all Made in Poland
The Nature Girl, Justyna Kawa from Peakapre, does not wish to bring to the market yet another clothes shop where you just buy things and that is it – end of story! She has plenty of dreams related to this #MadeInPoland brand. Despite the costs being higher or the trouble that it entails, even by making the companies that provide her the sewing for the products, or the material for the clothes getting used to the regular way of doing business and asking for the example of work before starting the production; Justyna wants to create everything Peakapre related in Poland. She wants this done here, not in Asia; she wishes to draw, invent, create the models, be able to select the colors and the materials, sew everything in Poland (sewing is done in Lodz). This way she knows she supports the local economy.
PEAKAPRE – The Name
Justyna’s dream started small but she has a vision that will last for a lifetime. Peakapre‘s name went through a long thought process, connected to her history of traveling and falling in love with the beauties that it can offer.
There is an animal, like a goat, that lives in the mountains – it is called chamois (in Romanian: black goat – “Capra neagra” – and it is even protected by law). It is a species of goat-antelope native to mountains in Europe – can be found in the Tatra Mountains but also in the Carpathian Mountains.
Justyna lived in Romania and traveled along the Carpathian mountains, so she fell in love with this animal and the wording in the Romanian language: “Capra neagra” – so she decided she would some way integrate that with her new project.
The brand was supposed to be Pick/Peak Me but after further brainstorming and checking with the EU on the rights/patent that could e given, a mash-up of the 2 was done and Peakapre (Peak – kapre (Capra with a K)) was born!
The PEAKAPRE Mentality
Peakapre wants to be close and personal with each customer. Justyna envisions a community where people give back to the world, to Mother Earth. She wants Peakapre to be a way of escaping the routine, the daily struggles. An adventure that awaits you within your reach. The challenge for yourself to be the best that you can be, to get in touch with nature, with what Mother Earth has to offer and what (more important!) you have to offer to her, in return!
Peakapre does not want to be yet another “big brand name” and it does not wish to join the trends on the market (like focusing on creating and selling masks for the Coronavirus pandemic). The Nature Girl wants you to have something beautiful, comfortable, eco-friendly (premium knitwear, beautifully finished, with OEKO-Tex safety certificates and Human Friendly), something that you would love wearing on your hiking trips and you would tell others about it. She wants you to go with her, on a journey, and rediscover yourself and the places surrounding you.
Peakapre is here not only for the mountain lovers, but it is also here for the travelers, for the adventurers, for the fearless ones that believe that Mother Earth is not an unlimited resource. She is here to stay with us only if we take care of her. And a good step into that direction is by supporting the local economy, buying things locally, investing in top quality products, and making sure you buy only the things you need.
DISCLAIMER!
That being said, I need you to know that I will always support the #MadeInPoland products. I bumped into Peakapre while I was browsing the internet (and Instagram – they are very active there!) for clothes made in Poland, produced 100% locally. I love traveling and I love both the mountains and the seaside. I believe that we need to give back to Earth and not consume as much as we do now. I believe minimalism should not be just a trend and eco-friendly should be a way of living, so when I met Justyna from Peakapre it was love at first sight. A lot of the things she said rang true in me and even if we come from such different environments, we recognized we can both connect through the energy that we share.
I was given a set of 2 jumpers and 2 t-shirts to also try out, but I will do a review on them later on after I test them thoroughly! For today I just wanted to share with you The Nature Girl’s story. I do hope you jump by their site and check out their products as well.
Yours truly and very sincerly,
The Twisted Red LadyBug That Loves PEAKAPRE Mentality & Loves Showing You Amazing People/Stories/Brands #MadeInPoland
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