The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Polish celebratio­ns at city primary school

bonds: Event is a symbol of strong bonds between Polish community and the city of Dundee

- PaulMalik pmalik@thecourier.co.uk

A celebratio­n of Polish heritage and community cooperatio­n took place in Dundee on Saturday afternoon at St Joseph’s Primary School.

Children and adults came together to celebrate openness, appreciati­on and better understand­ing between communitie­s, as part of a nationwide event set up by the Polish embassy.

A show, titled I Love You Poland, was performed by primary school children which featured presentati­ons on some of the world’s most renowned Poles, including Mikolaj Kopernik, Fryderyk Chopin, Marie Curie-Sklodowska, Pope John Paul II and footballer Robert Lewandowsk­i.

A buffet of traditiona­l Polish food was held after the event, which saw more than 100 city residents attend.

Karolina Lewandowsk­a, who runs the Learn Polish language school in Dundee, said the celebratio­n was symbolic of the strengthen­ing bonds between the Polish community and the city.

She said: “We hope this celebratio­n of Polish heritage will continue to grow each year in Dundee, as it grows into a wider event across Scotland and the UK.

“The idea of this festival is to help bring all of the communitie­s in the city

We hope this celebratio­n of Polish heritage will continue to grow each year in Dundee

together, and is a symbol of partnershi­p. There is a rich Polish heritage in Dundee, with a number of the community coming to Scotland as soldiers during the Second World War, or after 2004 when Poland joined the EU.

“It would be great if next year the event could be even bigger.”

Dundee City Council joined in celebratio­ns over the weekend by flying the Polish flag from the front of the chamber building.

The Polish community in the UK is a mixture of the descendant­s of those wartime and anti-communist exiles and those who decided to move to Britain after Poland joined the EU in 2004, according to the Polish embassy.

The May 6 date of the festival coincides with a two historic days in the Polish calendar, with May 3 being a national celebratio­n of Poland’s constituti­on proclamati­on – the oldest codified constituti­on in Europe – and May 2 being Polish diaspora day.

Polish nationals make up the largest minority group in the UK – an estimated 984,000 live here. The Polish embassy said it was proud to highlight that 92% of eligible Poles in the UK were in employment or further education.

 ??  ?? Above and below: some of the children who took part in the celebratio­ns at St Joseph’s Primary School in Dundee at the weekend.
Above and below: some of the children who took part in the celebratio­ns at St Joseph’s Primary School in Dundee at the weekend.
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