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Dr Lukasz Niec and his wife. Source: Facebook |
On
January 23, 2018, a post appeared on a Polish-themed Facebook page. Dr. Lukasz
Niec of Kalamazoo, Michigan, was under arrest by ICE, pending deportation to
Poland. Niec, when he was a toddler, had been brought to the US in 1979 by his
parents. He had a green card. He became a physician. His sister, wife, and professional
coworkers testified to what a fine man, husband, and father Niec is.
Apparently,
he was going to be deported for minor brushes with the law, like speeding
tickets. The record suggests that Niec is a bad driver. He is an American bad
driver. He, simply, is American. He is not Polish. He doesn't speak Polish. His
parents are dead. He has no family in Poland. He last lived in Poland when he
was five years old. Further, the US has a doctor shortage. America benefits
from this man's professional skill and service.
I
hoped that Facebook comments on this link would address the above points.
Instead
what I read was sickening.
Polonian
after Polonian attacked Dr. Lukasz Niec, someone they'd previously never heard
of and knew virtually nothing about.
Two
samples:
"Play
stupid games, win stupid prizes. He knew the risks involved in not resolving
his citizenship status that he chose to ignore for all of these years. Sorry,
it's sad and maybe a little unfair, but the bottom line is: HE GOT CAUGHT,
enough said!"
"Here
since age 3 and no one ever thought of becoming an American? Something smelly
here. All I can say is OBEY OUR LAWS to the T or leave."
Many
posters knew nothing about Dr. Niec, didn't want to learn anything about Dr.
Niec, and took the opportunity of a post about Dr. Niec to
·
Laugh
at his predicament
·
Besmirch
his character as "something smelly" – with zero evidence to support
their insinuations
·
Refuse
to learn more
·
Attack
immigrants as criminals out to destroy America
I
posted about Dr. Niec's plight on this blog. Two posters submitted off-topic
comments complaining about Jews.
They
didn't want to talk about a Polish American facing an unjust and life-destroying
deportation.
All
they wanted to do was complain about Jews.
I
wish I could say that this event is unique. It's not unique. I've been writing
about Polish and Polonian matters for over a quarter century. In all that time,
I've heard Polish Americans and other Polonians complain a lot. I've not seen
Polonians unite and organize to accomplish any goal.
Polish
American authors make slim to no appearances on school syllabi. Polish and
Polonian history and culture make slim to no appearances in museums and popular
culture.
What are
Polonians doing? Fighting with each other, and complaining about Jews. Oh, and
posting photos of themselves eating pierogies.
I
cannot help but compare this with the strategic organization, mutual support,
and camaraderie I often witness in other groups, from Hispanics to African
Americans to Jews to environmentalists to feminists. Yes, all groups have
in-fighting. But they also manage to unite and cooperate to accomplish goals.
I
recently joined an ad hoc group formed to achieve a given environmental goal –
saving a local park from development. A group of complete strangers met up via
the internet. In no time we were friends, supporting each other, caring about
each other, spending time together, visiting each others' houses.
We
were nice, and friendly, and supportive. We didn't make snide remarks or start
fights. And we achieved our goal. We saved the park. I've never seen Polonians
manage to do the same thing, to achieve even the tiniest of goals. It's always
snide remarks, petty squabbles, and ultimate surrender with nothing
accomplished.
"All
of them came steerage...The only common theme [about life in Poland] was
poverty, hunger, and no opportunity. My grandfather would get drunk and abuse
people. There were black eyes. In the season when they castrate the animals my
father was told he was going to be castrated. He had to run away and negotiate
his return. He said if they ever said that again he'd figure out a way to kill
them all. My father would be willing to hit a cow with a board until the board
broke, or the cow died.
"It
was not a culture of empowerment. Quite the reverse. The message was of
disenfranchisement, of scraping on the edge of society. They used a
divide-and-conquer method of power. My father's father was threatened by any
aggregation of power or collaboration among his own children. Children were
paired off against each other. Power was gained through intimidation. They used
almost any means to an end. It was a culture of [lengthy pause] street rats. It
was a very low class level of behavior that continues to this day. They would
steal each other's property. Like tractors. The sheriff got tired of it. It was
usually the result of a grudge. 'I borrowed your hayfork two years ago; I
returned it. You asked to borrow my wheelbarrow; you didn't return it, so I got
your tractor.' This was all said in an ugly tone.
"They
had to nibble on the sides of society. There's not much ethics. You survive
however you can. Raising a few cows, a few fruit trees, moonshining, making
sausages, making other different kinds of food, logging, trapping, cutting
wood, selling it, dealing in iron and metals, knowing metals, knowing which
metals are in batteries, knowing what's valuable, hauling gravel, knowing how
to build a building, knowing how to make bricks. It if took soldering, shoeing
a horse – a tremendously opportunistic culture.
"'There
ain't anything we can't do. If we can't do it, we'll steal it from somebody. If
we can't steal it, we'll watch it, and learn how.' Can-do people. It's
intimidating. I should know how to change a tire, the oil, rewire a house, fix
windows. 'Why should you have to bring somebody in? You can trust no one.
Everybody will rip you off. The world is full of predators and they will take
advantage of you.'"
Dr. Goska commented:
ReplyDelete"I've been writing about Polish and Polonian matters for over a quarter century. In all that time, I've heard Polish Americans and other Polonians complain a lot. I've not seen Polonians unite and organize to accomplish any goal."
Regrettably true--but not entirely. Here is a recent example where Polonians did not end up in an arguing match, and where Polonians did accomplish something significant--moreover in a matter of international politics. It is, I think, worth your blog readers knowing about:
http://stopacthr1226.org/
What is http://stopacthr1226.org/ all about? The 'About' page is not very helpful for this.
ReplyDeleteThe hashtag title is appearing inconsistently, and the problem is under repair.
DeleteThe site is about H. R. 1226--a law that would encourage American government involvement in forcing Poland to pay "restitution" for German crimes and the consequences of German crimes.