The struggle for LGBT equality: Pride meets prejudice in Poland | World news | The Guardian
Just a website dedicated to providing good literary journalism, essays, opinions, stories, and miscellaneous notes on life. After a precarious on-and-off period of employment in toxic workplaces, I finally decided to stop working altogether for awhile. But from my experience humans tend to let power get the better of them. So on that note of the failure of humanity When I first learned about the Holocaust in school, I remember several girls crying, a couple boys walking out the class, and me sitting there wide-eyed. The plan was to go to Berlin first, and then visit Auschwitz in Poland afterward. When I got out the airport in Germany, it felt pretty damn strange.
Florianska Street, one of the busiest streets in Krakow, always bustling with people.. Most single women who live here are students who are only here during school term time. Plus, during the Summer the city is full of girls who have travelled here from all over the world. Meeting women in the daytime can be far more enjoyable.
So we turn into Blues Avenue, then into Suraska Street. Just before the square, we can see gangs of thugs 10 metres ahead of us, attacking people: a large guy in a red balaclava is kicking everyone in sight, including some teenage girls, with the full weight of his body. We take refuge in a pharmacy. I try to reassure her.