Για να καταλάβεις πόσο αγενείς είναι έχουν γραφτεί χιλλίαδες σελίδες που προσπαθούν να καταλάβουν γιατί. Μόνο οταν ήρθα εδώ το διαπίστωσα.
στο δεύτερο link προσπαθέι να γράψει πως είναι αγενής στα μαγαζία αλλά όχι στην Προσωπική ζωή (συμφωνώ μαζί του)
The reasons
1. Polish people working in shops, businesses, and government departments at the ‘customer relations’ level are usually poorly paid and utterly disinterested in the public perception of the institution they work for. In these situations they tend to feel powerless and undervalued. It’s not difficult to understand why these people fail to interact with customers in a positive and smiley way. I wouldn’t, and neither would you.
2. The woman behind the post office counter who treats you as if you were slightly less important than the dirt she wipes off her shoes would, if you met her in a private social situation, be a paradigm of politeness and hospitality. The private and the public spheres are strictly but unconsciously divided in the Polish mind, If a person is introduced to you by a friend you treat them with genuinely impeccable politeness and generosity. If you happened to meet the same person in the guise of a customer or passerby on the street you treat them as if they were a potential child molester.
3. And this is the ace in the hole that adds spice to the issue. Rudeness is an art form in Poland. Polish people take great, but secret, delight in the devastating insult or social slight. It appeals to the essentially black nature of Polish humor. In other words, sometimes Polish people are rude because it’s extremely funny to be rude. Just about every Polish film regarded as a ‘classic’ features endless scenes of incredible and extremely funny rudeness. After many years I have to admit, it IS in fact devilishly funny.
Εξυπηρετική και καλοδιάθετη Πολωνέζα πίσω απο μπάρα μαγαζίου δεν έχω δεί πουθενά στην χώρα τα τελευταία 8 χρόνια που έρχομαι.