
It’s not just Polish-Americans who have adopted the language.
In 2016, the US Census Bureau released a report that revealed that Polish is one of the top two languages spoken in the US, followed by English and German.
There are also Polish restaurants and Polish-American film directors who are also on the rise.
A recent survey found that there are about 40,000 Poles living in the United States, and many of them are part of the immigrant community.
“I feel like a part of something bigger, which is the Polish community, that’s what we’re all about,” says Sandra Sjostrom, who grew up in the country.
“I think we’re kind of like the first wave of people coming to the United, but it’s not like it’s a natural progression.”
In 2017, Sjostritm moved to Washington, DC, and worked for a year as an intern for a local political party.
Sternberg is not surprised that the Polish-origin community is growing.
“[We have] a history of being more politically active in the last few years,” she says.
“There’s a very large Polish community here, and I think that’s a result of the fact that there’s a Polish-Canadian community here and there’s an influx of Polish-Irish people coming here.
We all feel like part of a big community.”
A Polish-born American is one who gets the opportunity to share his story on his blog, Balkan American.
The blog, which he started in 2016, takes a different approach to the topic of poles and their history than many other posters do.
Bakary, a 27-year-old who is originally from Poland, spoke to Quartz about why he doesn’t feel he ever truly belonged in America, and why his Polish identity matters to him.
“The majority of people don’t have a sense of Polish as a language, but if you know Polish and the history, you realize there’s this big Polish community,” Bake tells Quartz.
To understand why, it’s important to understand the history of Poland.
At the time of its creation, Poland was ruled by a Polish monarchy.
The monarchy, as well as the country’s aristocracy, were Polish Jews, who fled Nazi Germany in the 1940s.
After World War II, Poland gained independence from the Soviet Union, and was renamed the Polish Republic.
Since then, the country has undergone a series of reunions, and the majority of its population lives in the western half of the country, including the eastern part of Poland, which borders Germany.
Many Poles, including Baker, believe that their ancestors came from Poland.
In fact, it was in the late 1800s that Polish-Jewish historian Hélène Chernin was awarded the Order of St. George, which was first awarded to Jews who had served in the Polish army.
In the early 20th century, there was an influx from the former Polish-German Commonwealth, which included the city of Wroclaw, home of the former Warsaw Pact countries, and its surrounding regions.
This led to a massive influx of Poles from Germany and other Eastern European nations, who eventually became known as the “Baltic population.”
At one point, there were as many as 2 million Jews living in Poland, according to the Polish Ministry of Education.
By the mid-1960s, the country’s economy was struggling, and the government decided to deport millions of Polish Jews to Nazi-occupied Poland, where they were given a land-grab to live in and create a Polish state in what became known as the “Balkans.”
During this time, Poland was plagued by political mafia and massacres.
Today, more than 70% of the population is foreign-born, and the Polish language is the most spoken language in the world.
However, as the Polish population grew in the ’70s and ’80s, it also experienced a significant influx of immigrants.
Polishes first arrived in the U.S. in the early 1900s, and by the 1950s, the U