Alternative Sounds from Poland : Tides From Nebula
Unknown6/24/2012 01:10:00 PM 0 comments


Tides From Nebula is an instrumental, post-rock/metal band from Warsaw, Poland. The band formed in January of 2008

Their first album Aura was released on May 25th on the Lou&Rocked Boys.

Tides From Nebula’s new album entitled “Earthshine” was released on May 9th 2011.The writing of material for ‘Earthshine’ was completed in the first half of 2010. During recording to distance them from everyday life the band took to the remote Polish mountains. This new, inspiring environment proved to be the perfect setting to record, resulting in an album filled with emotional, ambient and energetic soundscapes.

‘Earthshine’ was produced by Zbigniew Preisner, renowned as one of the Worlds foremost composers of music for film and theatre. Zbigniew tracked the band down after hearing them on the radio and offered his experience and expertise. An offer that couldn’t be refused or understated ‘Working with such a great composer brought a new perspective to our compositions, Zbigniew’s invaluable experience has certainly enriched us as musicians’ states Maciej. ‘We put our all in to ‘Earthshine’ our very beings, what we have created makes us very proud’

Line-up:
Adam Waleszynski (guitar)
Maciej Karbowski (guitar, synth)
Przemek Weglowski (bass)
Tomasz Stolowski (drums)

for more, please visit their official website www.tidesfromnebula.com.
The Tragedy of Joseph Merrick. Live at Trix, Belgium

European Tour 2011 Teaser

Live at TVP

"earthshine" album teaser

Live show from Dunk Festival

Before Match : Poland vs. Russia
Unknown6/12/2012 08:32:00 PM 0 comments














Katowice Street Art Festival
Unknown6/03/2012 06:18:00 PM 0 comments

I saw Katowice for few hours in my last visit to Poland. But surely I will visit again and discover the city more. Katowice is located in Silesia and has large steel and coal sources. That's why there's big workers population. I am in love of architecture of buildings. You feel like you are in 40s or something.
There was street art festival on April in Katowice. I was not there but i found very cool pictures from internet. Check it out.

















Jewish life slowly returns to Poland
Unknown4/25/2012 11:53:00 AM 0 comments


Poland once had a Jewish population of three million, 90% of whom were killed in Hitler's Holocaust. But after decades of conversion to Catholicism and emigration, a Jewish revival is beginning.
Wearing his yarmulke (Jewish head covering), long beard and ringlets it's hard to believe that Pawel Bramson was once a skinhead. Now he is a shochet - a slaughterer who kills animals for kosher food in accordance with Jewish religious law.
For a short time in the 1990s, he and his skinhead friends in Warsaw saw Jews and other minorities as the enemy.
"Did we go out on the street and cause trouble? Yes we did. If we saw a black guy walking down the street we used to chase him. If we caught him, we did what we did. It's so difficult to say where this hatred came from. I can't explain it myself," he tells the BBC.
Mr Bramson, 36, cannot even remember ever seeing any Jews on Warsaw's streets at the time.
"It was madness, because we didn't know anything about Jews or Jewish culture. There were just slogans, like 'Jews rule the world', 'Jews are bad, they own all the property', those kind of things. A young person always needs to find an enemy," he says.
Shocking discovery
Born into and raised as a practising Roman Catholic, he made a discovery at the age of 24 which turned his life upside down. A friend had told his wife, Ola, that she was Jewish, and when she began working through the archives she discovered by chance that Pawel also came from a Jewish family.
"It was the biggest shock of my life, apart from when my son was born. It was really like a huge blow. For most of my life I had hated them and at a time when I'd only just begun to learn to tolerate them I discovered that I was also Jewish. It was too much to take in at once," he says.
Mr Bramson's parents were assimilated Jews who had become practising Catholics.
"I went to my parents and said, 'Hey, I've got these documents, why did you never tell me?' Later they confirmed it was true and that's when I started to go to the synagogue to learn more.
"I found out that my grandfather was twice in German labour camps. Other Jews died in concentration camps, so now I need to cultivate my knowledge and keep in mind the memory of my ancestors," he says.
His decision to become an Orthodox Jew caused difficulties with his parents who chose to remain practising Catholics. His case is just one of thousands that have come to light following the end of communism in 1989, Poland's chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, says.
"It's far more common than people are aware of, it's probably in the thousands at least. We have had support groups and certainly people have been shocked. The overwhelming majority of people come to peace with it. It's not simple, it takes patience," Rabbi Schudrich tells the BBC.
'Horrible murders'
Jews have been living in Poland side by side with their Catholic neighbours for almost 1,000 years. By the 1930s the community numbered more than three million, the largest in Europe.
Poland was then a multi-ethnic society with large numbers of Ukrainians, Belarusians, Jews and Germans. That society was destroyed during World War II.

"Due to the lack of central authority in Poland just after the war there were gangs of Poles who were killing Jews in the couple of years just after the war. Horrible, horrible murders, 1,500, 2,000 people. It made a huge spiritual and psychological impact saying, you know, we're still not safe and so people said, either I leave and if I don't leave Poland I leave Judaism," Rabbi Schudrich says.The Germans murdered 90% of Polish Jews during the Holocaust. At the end of the war Poland's allies, the Soviet Union, US and Britain decided to shift the country's boundaries westwards, forming a homogenous Catholic country governed by a communist system imposed from the outside by the Soviet Union.
Thousands of Holocaust survivors chose to leave, emigrating to Israel or the US. Jews who stayed were often communists who believed in the power of the system to transform the country.
But anti-Semitism was also used as a tool by the communist authorities. More than 20,000 Jews left Poland after an anti-Zionist purge led by the Politburo in 1968. Now, it's estimated there are just 20,000 people at most with Jewish roots left in Poland.
Since 1989 there has been a gradual reawakening of interest in Poland's Jewish history and culture. Now there is a large annual Jewish festival in Krakow that attracts thousands of international visitors, and Jewish film and literature festivals.
Yiddish and Hebrew classes are popular and Poles have taken it upon themselves to look after some of the thousands of Jewish cemeteries across the country. Polish prisoners even take part in such community schemes on a voluntary basis and Rabbi Schudrich visits prisons to give talks on Jewish history and culture.
Warsaw's Tslil choir sings in Hebrew and Yiddish. Most of the members, like Marta Wesolowska, are not Jewish but they feel a special connection to the music.
"I think this is really quite exotic for us but very deeply rooted in the Polish tradition. Jewish music was a part of Polish culture for hundreds of years and after the Second World War it was destroyed and we try to revive this tradition," she told the BBC.
Poland is still viewed from outside as a giant Jewish graveyard, the place where the Germans built the death camps Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec and Auschwitz. It's an image Rabbi Schudrich has spent decades trying to change.
"Until 1989 no one was aware that so many Jews were left in Poland. People could have realised it but they didn't, so there was an image that it was all over here and that's the image I heard when I came here in the '70s and it took me a while to realise it just simply is not true.
"Stereotypes change very slowly, so it's a process, for me it's a painfully too-slow process," he says.
bbc.co.uk

Turkey's military expenditure $14.5 billion in 2011
Unknown4/24/2012 06:49:00 PM 0 comments

Turkey’s army expenditure rose to $14.5 billion in 2011 from $14.134 billion in 2010. DHA photoTurkey, holder of the second largest army in NATO, spent nearly $14.5 billion on its military last year, becoming the seventh largest spender among the member states, according to data gather by the Anatolia news agency.

The Turkish military’s total population stood around 720,000 in 2011, while the U.S. military topped the list with a little less than 1.43 million soldiers. NATO’s largest army’s expenditures fell from $785.8 billion in 2010 to $731.9 billion last year. Still, this figure more than doubles the expenditures of the remaining NATOmember states. 

The total number of soldiers held by the 28 NATO member states is approximately 3.5 million, with about 2.27 million of that total being soldiers from European member states. Turkish soldiers constitute some one fourth of NATO’s Europe forces. 

France has the third most populated army with 227,000 soldiers. Germany, U.K., Italy, Spain, Greece and Poland follow respectively. 

The ratio of soldiers currently in total work power within Turkey is 2.1 percent. The figure is highest in Greece with 2.7 while the NATO member average stands at 0.9. These figures also cover civil personnel working for the military.


Source: http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com

Poland to reintroduce border control during Euro 2012
Unknown4/24/2012 06:43:00 PM 0 comments


The Polish government has said that border controls will be reintroduced for Schengen zone neighbours during the Euro 2012 tournament.
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Speaking at a press conference on Monday, Interior Minister Jacek Cichocki said that checks will not be made on every vehicle entering the country, and that in practice there would be little visible change.
Dominik Tracz, Commander-in-Chief of Poland's Border Guards, added that 60 special minibuses – so-called ‘Schengen-buses’ - will be employed to make fast, on-the-spot checks, at 254 locations around the country.
“We are sticking to the rules,” he said of the checks.
“They won't be made on everybody nor every vehicle.”
Poland dropped border checks for Schengen zone neighbours - Germany, Slovakia, the Czech Republic and Lithuania - in 2007.
However, with Euro 2012 co-host Ukraine still outside the Schengen zone, and travellers used to long delays at the border, officials are facing additional problems in ensuring a smooth flow of supporters between the two countries.
Under EU law, temporary reinstatement of border controls is possible in special cases that relate to risks to public safety. Poland's decision echoes that of Germany during the 2006 World Cup, and that of Austria and Switzerland during Euro 2008. (nh/pg)

Turkish Airlines closer to buying Polish LOT
Unknown4/24/2012 04:00:00 PM 0 comments


(Reuters) - Turkish Airlines has examined the financial condition of Poland's flag carrier LOT ahead of a potential bid, a newspaper reported on Saturday.

Polish daily Rzeczpospolita, without naming its source, said the Turkish carrier conducted due diligence of LOT in March. The paper estimated LOT's value at around 2 billion zlotys ($630.4 million).

A spokeswoman for Poland's Treasury Ministry, which oversees state assets, declined to confirm the report, but said the ministry has held some discussions with Turkish Airlines in recent months.

The treasury will pick an adviser for the sale process in May, she added.

Turkish Airlines' spokesman Ali Genc also confirmed discussions on a possible LOT acquisition were being held.

"No other decision has been taken by the board," he added.

In January, Chairman Hamdi Topcu said the carrier would start talks to buy LOT. ($1 = 3.1727 Polish zlotys)

Turkish Raki
Unknown4/20/2012 09:34:00 PM 0 comments

Turkish spirit "Raki". Maybe not well known alcohol as much as Polish vodka. But when you start to enjoy it makes addiction. Actually when someones try raki first time he/she can hate it because of smell and taste. It contains around %40 alcohol and mostly people are mixing it with water. And it becomes white color when you mix it with water.
So what can you eat with Raki? Well, when you say -raki to someone, probably it will remind him fish. Honestly Raki&Fish is one of most popular combination in Turkey. Espacially next to Bosphorus and Golden Horn You can find top class fish restaurants.
Beside fishes, people like to eat cheese and melon while drinking raki. And other cold served dishes like Haydari, Fava and different kind of dishes with oliveoil.
There is special glass for drinking raki. It' thin and deep glass. But if you cant find these kind of glass, some people using turkish tea glass.
So, let's talk about taste of Raki. Have you ever tried Ouzo? Greek spirit. If you are in to different kind of alcohols I am sure you tried Ouzo. Because its well promoted drink than Raki. Raki and Ouzo similar taste and similar smell. Because both are producing by fermented and distillaited by fruits, mostly grapes. And smell is coming from anise.
I started to my words with the name "Turkish Raki". But Raki blongs to all balkan countries not unlike Bulgaria, Serbia, Albania, Bosnia and Croatia. And almost all of them are using same name for Raki. For example Rakija in Bosnia and Croatia, Raki in Albania, Rachiu in Romania etc.
Another most important thing is Rakı must be Cold. There must be icecubes in glass or glass must be in ice. Theres also special ice bowl for raki glass called Ehlikeyf.
Most famous raki brand is Yeni Raki. Others are Tekirdağ, Efe raki, Kulüp Raki, Burgaz,Ata, Fasil, Çilingir etc.
In this video below, you can see people from different part of Turkey who is enjoying Raki with nice music. Its a commercial video of Yeni Raki. BTW Alcohol commercials are not allowed on TV :P But they made good video.





New Blog about Turkey and Poland
Unknown1/27/2012 04:22:00 PM 0 comments


It's brand new blog about Poland and Turkey's culture, politics, cuisine and all updates. You can find useful tips about both countries. We will post recipes of local dishes, learning both languages, updated news from Poland and Turkey.
You will see posts in English, Turkish and Polish language.
So if you are in to one of these countries, just follow us.
for any questions and ideas just send email to extremeresponse@gmail.com