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WARSAW: 'I'm A Ukrainian. I'm A Pole'

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  • WARSAW: 'I'm A Ukrainian. I'm A Pole'

    'I'M A UKRAINIAN. I'M A POLE'
    Micha³ Kubicki

    Polish Radio External Service
    http://www.polskieradio.pl/zagranica/news/ artykul73216_Im_a_Ukrainian__Im_a_Pole_.html
    Jan 9 2008
    Poland

    'I'm a Ukrainian. I'm a Pole' - billboards with captions of this kind
    have appeared all over Warsaw and in several large Polish cities. The
    campaign is part of an EU project 'Equal opportunities for all'.

    Hundreds of billboards have been put up in Warsaw, Gdansk on the
    Baltic coast, the Silesian city of Katowice, £odz and several other
    towns. They feature photographs of people of various walks of life and
    various nationalities. They are all Polish citizens. On one there is
    a middle-aged couple, a lawyer and a tourist agent. The caption reads
    'We are Armenians. We are Poles.' The other shows Ania, a Polish
    Jew who works as a dance teacher. The caption says: 'I'm a Jew. I
    am a Pole'. There are also billboards introducing Germans, Romanis,
    Karaims and Ukrainians living in Poland.

    Mike Urbaniak, who's in charge of the campaign, explains its goals.

    'The main goal is to show to the Polish society that there are
    actually ethnic and national minorities in our country. There's a
    need to get to know different minorities. Remember that we've joined
    the Schengen zone, so there are no borders and people are travelling
    freely. It's very important to show to Poles that there are people
    of different background and that they are a vital part of Polish and
    European society.'

    Most observers of the Polish scene agree that there is a need to
    promote the concept of the so-called double national identity.

    Stanislaw Janecki, editor of the weekly Wprost, welcomes the campaign
    as a step towards preparing Poles for a multinational society.

    'I'm afraid we are too homogenous a society and Poles think that
    there are no minorities. It's a mistake because multicultural and
    multinational society is developing fast. We will confront the great
    wave of different ethnic groups because Poland is in the European
    Union and will be open widely to minorities. It could cause a kind
    of ethnic clash.'

    The campaign has been devised by the Jewish community in Poland and is
    a part of a wide-ranging 'Equal opportunities' project which involves
    many EU countries. Mike Urbaniak again.

    'It was a huge programme introduced by the EU at the beginning of
    2007. We planned to do this a few months ago but we had parliamentary
    elections so we had to switch it off and we started our campaign at
    the beginning of 2008.'

    The campaign is held under the honorary patronage of Poland's First
    Lady Maria Kaczyñska.

    --Boundary_(ID_qFwibY7hZzVQEdjqP3 oUZQ)--
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