This song was made in 1896, family friendly YT, family friendly. My channel is dedicated to anthems, hymns and patriotic songs, here is the link to our discord server: / discord
It somewhat has to do with the fsct that the Nazis used a lot of folksongs as military music to boost patriotism. Hence, this innocent love song gets associated with the nazis.
@@davidlee1770 it’s almost like overly nationalist countries use their old folk lore/ traditions to help drive their narrative. Just because something is corrupted by one regime means it ought to stay corrupted.
I mean, there is a version that ends with someone fishing the girls dead body from a pond. In the body there was a letter that wrote “i once kissed and heavily payed”
Germany in 1896: *Writes a love song* Americans in 2020: NAZIS Wow, what a salt mine I've created. I'm American myself and I enjoy German war music quite a lot. So if everyone could just chill out a little that'd be great.
@@datlilnigga1876 It was for awhile throughout the great depression up until Hitler's rise to power..which then they used another flag..After WWII Germany was splitted up into 2 areas/states..The Soviet East Germany & the Capitalist West Germany.Both almost had identical flags but with different symbols.After re-unification they used the tricolour(Scwarz-Rot-gold).Meaning the Black, Red, Gold.
mein Großvater kannte diese Melodie auch. Er wurde in ein Lager gesteckt, weil er Kommunist war, und dann in ein Strafbataillon gezwungen, wo einige alte Veteranen des Ersten Weltkriegs ihm dieses Lied und viele andere beibrachten. nach dem Krieg kehrte er zu seiner Familie in die DDR zurück, sprach aber immer noch ungern über den Krieg.
Even the Nazis I’m ww2 had some sort of rule against raping the women of conquered places and with their deserter punishment being death I’m sure rape was the same obviously some Germans got away with it every countries soldiers do it when it’s a large scale invasion but the fact they made it a law for soldiers to be probably killed if they did that shows that maybe they had some traditional morals at the time when other countries like Russia would just invade and say alright men have at it yk
@@hartingtherealone in einem kleinem teiche da fischt man einem leiche das war so schön sie tragt 'nen zettel in der hand darauf geschrieben stand ,,ich hab einmal geküßt und schwer gebüßt" in english in a small pond a corpse was found that was so beautiful she carried a letter in her hand it was written in advance "i only kissed once and pay so heavily"
I have a half Polish relative in the past, her name is Rusałka Gabriella Meckel (1897-1956), she has a unique story of two German soldiers has a crush on her. Every time these two soldier have a free time they went to her house, just for a visit and sometimes one of them bring her a flower.
@@thedesertfox5331 This was happened in the First World War and after the war ends, one of them married her and took her to see Paris that she always wanted
@@tfdallas1774 it was ironically in the top 3 of Wehrmacht songs (most popular during the war with soldiers) just after the Westerwaldlied and Wenn wir marschieren.
@@GreekGopnik to some extent, yeah. you shouldnt discriminate against someone just because theyre different. likewise, you shouldnt force people to love their country.
Hmm I wonder why this stuff is being demonitised and deleted. Maybe because every single comment section on these videos is filled with antisemite borderline neo-nazi nonsence. This song has nothing to do with the national socialist regime apart from being used by the Whermacht as a continuation of its usage by the the imperial Reichsheer and the democratic Reichswher. I too disagree with german history being censored but its quite clear who's causing it and ruining it for everyone else.
The flag shown in the video is the flag of the occupiers of Poland before and during the First World War. This clearly shows that this song is a song of the German occupiers in Poland! It goes without saying that Poles don't like the songs of the occupiers. Especially when these songs are about how impudent occupier soldiers pulling Polish girls. Can't believe that this filth isn't deleted here! The title of the song means translated: "In a Poles little town." I can tell what the Germans were doing in small Polish towns at the time and in Poland in general too! The German army invaded the polish little town Kalisz (before Russian-occupied Poland) on 2 August 1914. The German soldiers took additional polish hostages, mistreating them and even killing them. The town was burnt down; only churches and public offices survived. A significant number of citizens were shot with many women and children. Prior to the war, Kalisz had 65,000 inhabitants. Afterwards, it was left with 5,000 inhabitants. The Polish territories conquered by the Germans were also looted, including the robbery of entire factories. Many Poles were also forced to work in Germany. People were indiscriminately forced into forced labor in raids. The working and living conditions of the forced laborers in the labor battalions were very poor. Large areas were deliberately devastated by the German army during their retreat from the Vistula river.... they shattered towns and villages. Much of the heavy fighting on the war's Eastern Front took place on the territory of the future Polish state. The scorched-earth retreat strategies left much of the war zone uninhabitable. Total deaths from 1914-18, military and civilian, within the 1919-1939 borders, were estimated at 1.128.000. By the way, the German song is about a Polish town where the German occupiers are staying. A decent Polish girl certainly wouldn't have been flirting with the damn occupiers.
@@daveshalikiani3305 This is a ridiculous and absurd claim! Has he already committed genocide like the Nazi nation? Incidentally, these are typical ridiculous and absurd claims by people who want to cover up the fact that they have no logical and good counterarguments. A pathetic behavior.
Erika: Hey Hans, want to date? Hans: No, I like Samoan girls, not Germans. *Gets rejected in Samoa* Hans: Well shit, guess I'll go with Polish girls then *Gets rejected in Poland* Hans: Hey Erika I'm sorry.
@@chadofthexxthcentury4741 And if that doesn't work, the Netherlands Norway Denmark the Balkans Russia and North Africa, Belgium Luxembourg are still available. Soldat needs wife. Soldat without a wife get sad🦍
@Tired of being jewed You realize that this guy actually is a Pole, right. You know, the people that probably have a shitload of actual firsthand family stories from that time about this shit?
@Phil Man Read my response. The Poles did commit atrocities, but, as I write, "these happened AFTER the German invasion in 1939 and do not compare whatsoever in magnitude or number with German atrocities against ethnic Poles, Russians, Czechs, Ukranians, Roma, Jews, French, Dutch, etc. etc. etc." The Germans were the villains of WWII, in terms of atrocities and ideology. Yes, the Allies did commit atrocities, such as the Bengal Famine, the Japanese internment camps, the Katyn Massacre, etc. These, however *PALE* in comparison to the staggering number of atrocities and mass murders the Germans and Japanese and Italians and other Axis nations committed. Here's a short list. - Auschwitz concentration camp - Buchenwald concentration camp - Treblinka concentration camp - Sobibor concentration camp - Babi Yar Massacre - Unit 731 - Nanjing Massacre - Warsaw Ghetto - Aktion T4 - Baatan Death March - Etc. - Etc. - Etc. Please educate yourself before spouting ignorant neo-Nazi talking points. Go back to middle school.
My great grandma was born on the 21st of March 1920 in Poland to German parents who too were born in Poland (Russian partition) in a village called Wyrobki. She had many siblings possibly around 18 or 19 (She had older twin sisters who died young) she was her parents last set of children being born a twin (Georg was her brother). In 1939 either before or after their birthday in march he died of a blood disease. Then 6 months later one of her 3 remaining brothers (Either Gustav or Edmund) died defending his country from German invasion when the war broke out (It is never really spoken about at least as far as I know that Germans fought for Poland). His last words to my great grandmother was "Alice we go to cannonfodder". He knew that was the last he would see of his sister. Her brother Jan was captured by the Germans and eventually released and the family were told to sign some papers and they did which granted them German citizenship (Volks Deutche) she told me she had no idea what the papers were just told to sign them. Her brother Jan died in August of 1944 in Warsaw. He was a policeman and was killed by the Polish rebels (Sad to think he fought for freedom and he was killed by his own countrymen) My great grandfather was born on the 16th of March 1922 in a town called Gostynin. His father was German (Protestant) and his mother Polish (Catholic). His mother was shunned from Church for her marriage and she was not allowed to attend. My great grandfather and his siblings were all raised Catholic still however. He had many siblings most of whom remained in Poland after the war. He met my great grandmother when the Germans moved her to Gostynin with her family from their brick farm which her father had built after going to America twice to make money. He never forgave the Germans as they put them in a run down wooden farm. This farm so happened to be next door to my great granddads families farm. She once told my dad "Granddad was a nosy man, he peeped in our windows and kept creeping over to visit" and supposedly she said they went in the cow shed and thats how my great aunt was made xD. They married in 1942 in Gostynin Lutheran Church (previously a castle until the 1820's and then in 1946 it was turned into a Catholic church and then closed permanently by the Communist government) and in August their oldest daughter was born. Then in 1944 my grandmother was born. In 1946 they were forced to leave Poland after a decree made by the Communist government against supposed traitors. (Sadly this is the price of war). My great great grandfather collapsed on a road on the way to Germany and begged my great grandma to take him home to be burried with his family. She left him there dead(born 1866 dead at 80) as she could not stay. She still had 2 children and an mother aged 67 to get to safety. She arrived in East Berlin and had to stay in a red cross camp. A woman told her she could stay with her but she had to sell her jewellery including her wedding ring to pay her to keep them. My great grandma became furious and demanded an apologise saying "You invaded my country, You forced my family to move and now you tell me to pay you to survive, how dare you". The woman apologised to her. My great grandma found out from an in-law who had escaped a prisoner of war camp that my great grandfather was alive. He was guarding prisoners (This in-law was of course his relative coincidence). She was so happy as the last time she saw my great grandad was 1943 when he came to her telling her the war was lost (He was in the Gebirgsjaeger from 1940-1944 or 1945 we don't know entirely when he joined the Americans either in Italy (He told my dad never to mention that to his Polish friends in England) or in Germany after the war had finished. He was given a choice in 1948 return to a hostile country his family had been forced from (except his siblings and parents due to being half German and seen as asimilated possibly due to Catholicism) or go to America or Britain. He chose the latter and worked as a miner in Rotherham. My great grandma came in 1950 with my grandma and great aunt and in 1955 her mother came over. They had 2 more children in 1955 and 1956. Oma as my dad was told to call her (He thought he was cheeky calling her her first name) died in 1980 2 days after her 101st birthday on April 28th. She was burried with my uncle who died 7 almost 8 years before in 1972 aged 9 (Hodgkins lymphoma/luekemia, perhaps Georg had that in 1939). Then in 2002 my great grandma's oldest/older sister died aged 59 6 months after came my great grandfather aged 80 (coincidence with his father in law). His ashes are burried with Oma (real name Emma Brandt nee Schmidt). On November 27th I will never forget the call that my great grandma was in hospital at 6:48 AM. We left our house 2 and a half hours north of Rotherham to be called at 8:20 to hear she had passed away. We arrived at the hospital and spent as long as we could with her in the hospital bed. She looked at peace and ready. She had said since 2002 she wanted to die to be with her husband. A day later this song came on my dad recommended songs out of the blue and ever since it has been her song. I will never forget you Nanna Seaside (She lived by the beach when my sisters were younger and they called our great grandparents that. I am the youngest and copied from them) and will always love you.
I presume your family are ethnic Germans but viewed themselves as Polish citizens, am I right? There were some cases of ethnic Germans (though, these lived in the parts that were Polish even before the partitions) siding with the Poles. The few famous ones were Michael von Unrug or Karl Albrecht von Habsburg-Altenburg but unfortunately they have been expelled for being ethnic Germans, regardless of their affiliation or being Pro-Polish. Sadly it was what the Communist Puppet Government did but it's even more disheartening when Germans don't even know such facts.
@@lubliner3022 yeah I mean she always said she was Polish even after she cane to Britain. Although she spoke German and had German surnames she still said it. Yeah its a shame that so many don't know history. I can't remember the admiral who was ethnic german and had no prior links to Poland who refused to speak german in prison camps saying he forgot how to speak it in 1939. He even demandaded a translator when Germans spoke to him 😂😂
near the end he says "she was laying on my arm/my heart was beating so warmly" which sounds kinda like he just came, and is the "I don't kiss" not referring to prostitutes' tendencies to not kiss their clients? Pretty sure the implication of the song is that the only attractive Polack was a prostitute, but that may just be my personal bias
@@magicjohnsins No nothing about prostitution. In the song the young Polish girl is killed by her family who consider her a traitor (and is only a teenager).
Ridiculous. No Pole greets Germans in this way. You are obviously a troll. By the way, this song is a song of the German occupiers in Poland! Can't believe that this filth isn't deleted here! The title of the song means translated: "In a Poles little town." I can tell what the Germans were doing in small Polish towns at the time and in Poland in general too! The German army invaded the polish town Kalisz (before that was Russian-occupied Poland) on 2 August 1914. The German soldiers took additional polish hostages, mistreating them and even killing them. The town was burnt down; only churches and public offices survived. A significant number of citizens were shot with many women and children. Prior to the war, Kalisz had 65,000 inhabitants. Afterwards, it was left with 5,000 inhabitants. There is also a wiki link to the massacre with the title: "Destruction of Kalisz"! These were by no means the only atrocities committed by this criminal soldier. There were also such massacres in Belgium, as well as in Poland, cities were also destroyed there! The Polish territories conquered by the Germans were looted, including the robbery of entire factories. Many Poles were also forced to forced labor in Germany. People were indiscriminately forced into forced labor in raids. The working and living conditions of the forced laborers in the labor battalions were very poor. Large areas were deliberately devastated by the German army during their retreat from the Vistula river.... they shattered towns and villages. Much of the heavy fighting on the war's Eastern Front took place on the territory of the future Polish state. The scorched-earth retreat strategies left much of the war zone uninhabitable. Total deaths from 1914-18, military and civilian, within the 1919-1939 borders, were estimated at 1.128.000. By the way, the German song is about a Polish town where the German occupiers are staying. A decent Polish girl certainly wouldn't have been flirting with the damn occupiers. It's disgusting when occupying soldiers badger Polish girls. This disgusting song actually serves to mock the occupied Poles. This is to show the Poles that the Poles cannot prevent Polish girls from being annoyanced by disgusting occupier soldiers. But this hated occupiers were wrong. Because the Poles were able to prevent this and expelled and killed the hated occupiers.
thanks from Poland. Germany is our good ally now, and we all remember the past and learn from it, we respect the dead and make cooperation for a better future, no more war. We need to stop Russia that makes war in our century.
@Pablo Bullshit, the fact that Germany is an economic power is irrelevant in our competition. Poland is pro-EU but opposes the German-French power in the union, which is why we are creating a counterbalance with the countries of Central and Eastern Europe for this arrangement and soon together with Ukraine and Moldova. Poor and weak Poland as an economic colony is in the interest of Germany, the role of a leader in Central and Eastern Europe and the weakening of Germany's position with the help of the USA is in the interest of Poland. We have been competing for centuries on many levels and our interests are always contradictory, in industry, water and maritime economy, foreign policy and military. Remember that Poland's GDP is growing very fast and faster than experts predict, interesting fact The Polish economy took 2nd place in the world in GDP growth from 1990 to 2020 with an increase of 857% so think what will happen in 2050. Poland and Germany will never be partners.
To understand the context of the song. Poland was separated till end of WW1. The part occupied from Prussia aka Kaiserreich had German troops like American troops in Germany after WW2 These guys end of 19th century were young, pretty, well groomed and chivalrous. Girls then loved that type of man. There is known about many girls who kissed and married the guy later. Polish girls were known as the sweetest and prettiest in whole Europe. And for a German a bit exotic though.
This song is more beautiful when u know polish legend about princess Wanda, which didn't want to marry German prince Rydygier. She decided to suicide in river Wisła instead of to be married by German. Then Rydygier invaded Cracow :)
Das Lied, zusammen mit den Bildern, sind einfach wunderschön. Gerührt von dem Klang des Liedes, vergießt man den Anlaß, und man nimmt nur wahr, die Schönheit der Begegnung und... ihre Tragik.
It wasn't on the map, but it doesn't mean that it didn't exist! In my humble opinion, as long as a country lives as the idea in people's hearts and minds it exists and can't be denied. That's why Poland survived.
Fun fact: Prussia then Germany occupied Poland along with Russia and Austria (and you robbed them of their land and properties with ruthless germanisation programs) . No wonder no one wants to kiss you.
I thought the song was created by German soldiers during ww2 The version of this song is a bit weird because all the other versions end about a dead corpse that was so beautiful (presumably the gurl)
because after a year or so, she kisses the german soldier. later the soldier is searching her in poland. he find her dead body, she got murdered by polsih guys because she kissed a "nazi" yes, thats the story
@@maciejkowski67 I like to think that there were some honorable people everywhere. I've known a few Poles of low moral character. However I never wrote off the entire Polish nation as a result.
@@gordhammond7105 Of course they are... but in 1943, during Getto Uprising and in 1944 Warsaw Uprising, majority od German showed to be mass mourderers. In 1944, in Warsaw Wola district in few days they killed about 80000 civilians. They were average German men who did it. After finish fighting they house by house destroyed whole city.
Im german and i thought no one would like us after the wars and more and many more things but still, theres people that like the german folk. They even learn the language.
@@kukuio Sie haben den Text nicht VERSTANDEN! Zu dem geschichtlichen Zeitpunkt war Polen Preußisch . Zumindest die Städte wie Stetin , Danzig, und Gotenhafen , Geschichte wissen und bilden wäre von Vorteil . Und nur darum geht es , den Text zu verstehen . Wie alt sind Sie ??? WISSEN SIE EIGENTLICH WIE VIELE GELD-SCHLDEN POLEN HATTE?????SEIT MARIA -TERESIA ZU PAUSEN ?????
Probably name "Maruschka" is distorted version of polish name "Maryśka" what some german solider heard and used. "Maryśka" is diminutive for "Maria", what is polish version of name Mary
I feel so sad .. one of my ancestor (french under german occupation) fought for prussia in 1914. He returned in 1918 , had a kid in 1926. He refused to give his son to the nazis so he was deported in Dachau , died there in 1945. Looking for his ww1 history, french administration told me that every papers related to french prussia’s fighter during ww1 were destroyed during the fall of berlin , due to americans bombers.... . Sometimes i hear this, and wish he listened it too. Even if He Was forced to fought. I’ll never know where he was, makes me so sad..
French under german occupation? Was he enlisted in 1914 in occupied territories or do you mean he was from a certain territory in western Germany the French stole during Louis XIV. rule and was taken back in 1871?
@@yolomanolo2601 no he was french before 1870, in moselle. Then France lost Elsass and moselle, and he fought for the Kaiser in 1914. Near my village there was a Hulan regiment. Maybe he went there. All the archives from moselle from this time were destroyed in a bombardment during ww2. I will never now. And damn i feel sad.
@@robin57380 So much waste of Life between France and Germany. We should have split the territory along the language border and be done with wars in 1871.
@@yolomanolo2601 I don't know man. It's really complicated. My family have mainly german roots. I speak a language which is a derivative from german, which is the old language in Moselle. I speak german as well, french too obviously. I kind of agree with your position, but then ww1, nothing would have change. I have germany in my heart, but my blood is french. We can agree that i'm a good mosellan haha
@@anakinskywalker9772 "I love Germany. I am currently stdying German and I have a B1 certificate .Greeting from Greece" So he's just a nice Kamerade ^^
🇵🇱 text: W jednym z polskich miasteczek mieszkała jedna dziewczyna Ona była bardzo piękna Była najpiękniejszym dzieckiem jakie było można w Polsce spotkać Ale nie, ale nie, powiedziała, ja nie całuję się. Ona była najpiękniejszym dzieckiem Zaprosiłem ją na tańce Z jej wianka wypadła czerwona róża Podniosłem ją spod jej stóp i poprosiłem o jeden całus Ale nie, ale nie, powiedziała, ja nie całuję się. Była najpiękniejszym dzieckiem jakie było można w Polsce spotkać Ale nie, ale nie, powiedziała, ja nie całuję się. Ona była najpiękniejszym dzieckiem I kiedy żegnaliśmy się leżała w moich ramionach Ona była taka piękna Na koniec podarowała mi pierścionek i pożegnalny pocałunek Nie zapomnij Aneczki polskiego dziecka Była najpiękniejszym dzieckiem.
Bei uns war es genau so. Wenn wir in unserer Jugendgruppe im Wirtshaus gesungen haben, das Polenmaedchen war immer dabei. Wir lagen vor Madagaskar, Am Strande von Rio usw.
Ironically this song was one of the most popular in the German Wehrmacht. But the truth is that it is not at all pro-polish it's at best ambivalent and this song here was not the text that wad sung 1933-1945. In fact there existed one also often sung version where the polish girls was effectively killed in a pond (maybe she killed herself or other Poles killed her). So in some way yes it's too good to be true and this version here is post-war so no wonder it sounds a little pro-polish maybe.
it's more pro-human and pro-love than anything else. just goes to show the difference between what the people who wage wars think vs the people that do the actual fighting.
Polish legend. Ruler of Germany: Want to marry Princess Wanda Wanda: Reject him He: Go to war against her state and win Wanda: Commited suicide - Jump to the river He: *trigged The end.
In Kaiser times, Poles werent killed, unlike Nazi period. Even during Hitler, many Germans didnt feel hate to Polish people, and most were forced to do that under threat of being killed ourselves
Actually it was both @@scanida5070 I think Otto von Bismarck went against poles after they had decided to fight off Pro-german authority. Causing germanization till some year after he realised it is useless and costs more than enough.
First! The song is a song of the German occupiers in Poland! Can't believe that this filth isn't deleted here! The title of the song means translated: "In a Poles little town." I can tell what the Germans were doing in small Polish towns at the time and in Poland in general too! The German army invaded the polish town Kalisz (before that was Russian-occupied Poland) on 2 August 1914. The German soldiers took additional polish hostages, mistreating them and even killing them. The town was burnt down; only churches and public offices survived. A significant number of citizens were shot with many women and children. Prior to the war, Kalisz had 65,000 inhabitants. Afterwards, it was left with 5,000 inhabitants. There is also a wiki link to the massacre with the title: "Destruction of Kalisz"! These were by no means the only atrocities committed by this criminal soldier. There were also such massacres in Belgium, as well as in Poland, cities were also destroyed there! The Polish territories conquered by the Germans were looted, including the robbery of entire factories. Many Poles were also forced to forced labor in Germany. People were indiscriminately forced into forced labor in raids. The working and living conditions of the forced laborers in the labor battalions were very poor. Large areas were deliberately devastated by the German army during their retreat from the Vistula river.... they shattered towns and villages. Much of the heavy fighting on the war's Eastern Front took place on the territory of the future Polish state. The scorched-earth retreat strategies left much of the war zone uninhabitable. Total deaths from 1914-18, military and civilian, within the 1919-1939 borders, were estimated at 1.128.000. By the way, the German song is about a Polish town where the German occupiers are staying. A decent Polish girl certainly wouldn't have been flirting with the damn occupiers.
@@GreatPolishWingedHussars first of all, how does this massive essay relate to anything i said, and second, why are you writing it here? write it somewhere where people will actually read it entirely and take deep thought about it, not some random youtube comment replies section, this is litteraly deranged
@@57zwastaken Another fool who presumes to speak for everyone. You shouldn't judge others by your own standards of inability to understand longer texts. There are definitely people who are able to read and understand longer texts. In fact, this is not the first long comment from me and many people have already thanked me for the information in my comments. Also, my comment relates to the topic of the video!
@@tuluppampam Yes, that's right, in 1896 it was Poland's enemies who sang the pathetic song. The German soldiers who later massacred Polish civilians in World War I probably also sang this disgusting song.
You're definitely not Polish! Because no Pole likes disgusting songs from the criminal occupiers! Because this is a song of the German occupiers in Poland! Can't believe that this filth isn't deleted here! The title of the song means translated: "In a Poles little town." I can tell what the Germans were doing in small Polish towns at the time and in Poland in general too! The German army invaded the polish town Kalisz (before that was Russian-occupied Poland) on 2 August 1914. The German soldiers took additional polish hostages, mistreating them and even killing them. The town was burnt down; only churches and public offices survived. A significant number of citizens were shot with many women and children. Prior to the war, Kalisz had 65,000 inhabitants. Afterwards, it was left with 5,000 inhabitants. There is also a wiki link to the massacre with the title: "Destruction of Kalisz"! These were by no means the only atrocities committed by this criminal soldier. There were also such massacres in Belgium, as well as in Poland, cities were also destroyed there! The Polish territories conquered by the Germans were looted, including the robbery of entire factories. Many Poles were also forced to forced labor in Germany. People were indiscriminately forced into forced labor in raids. The working and living conditions of the forced laborers in the labor battalions were very poor. Large areas were deliberately devastated by the German army during their retreat from the Vistula river.... they shattered towns and villages. Much of the heavy fighting on the war's Eastern Front took place on the territory of the future Polish state. The scorched-earth retreat strategies left much of the war zone uninhabitable. Total deaths from 1914-18, military and civilian, within the 1919-1939 borders, were estimated at 1.128.000. By the way, the German song is about a Polish town where the German occupiers are staying. A decent Polish girl certainly wouldn't have been flirting with the damn occupiers. It's disgusting when occupying soldiers badger Polish girls. This disgusting song actually serves to mock the occupied Poles. This is to show the Poles that the Poles cannot prevent Polish girls from being annoyanced by disgusting occupier soldiers. But this hated occupiers were wrong. Because the Poles were able to prevent this and expelled and killed the hated occupiers
@@me-dc8pj Yes, that's right, the song is from 1896 and also in 1896 it was Poland's enemies and occupiers who sang the pathetic song. The German soldiers who later massacred Polish civilians in World War I probably also sang this disgusting song. I described the crimes of this disgraceful soldiers in detail in my comment above!
@@me-dc8pj Look at a map of Europe in 1896, where is Poland? Partially under German occupation. German was our occupier long before ww2. There is a ton of anti german song from this period, for example Rota (1908) which almost became the anthem