Filipinos in Poland
Total population | |
---|---|
(525 (2012)[1]) | |
Languages | |
Filipino, other languages of the Philippines, Polish, English | |
Religion | |
Roman Catholicism · Protestantism | |
Related ethnic groups | |
Filipino people, Overseas Filipino |
Filipinos in Poland, the citizens of the Philippines as well as their descendants who are currently living in Poland, are mostly residing in the country on a temporary basis.[2] As of September 2012[update], there were an estimated 525 Filipinos across the country.[1]
Contents
Demographics
Although Filipinos in Poland are spread throughout the country, they are mostly concentrated in urban centers, with Filipino communities in cities like Warsaw,[3] Kraków,[4] Poznań,[5] and Łódź.[6] Most Filipinos in Poland are employed either in the banking sector, in the hospitality industry, as domestic helpers, or as Catholic clergy.[7] Some are employed also as computer programmers,[8] while a number are also students: twelve Filipinos have studied at the University of Warsaw from 2010 to 2013 under the European Union's Erasmus Mundus program.[9]
Society and culture
The Filipino community in Poland regularly organizes events, at times with the participation of the Philippine Embassy in Warsaw. Filipinos are a fixture at Warsaw's only English-language Catholic Mass, where many are active in church services,[8] and around 100 people also gather every first Sunday of the month to hear a separate community Mass at the Parish of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Mother of the Church in the Mokotów district of Warsaw.[10]
Likewise, the Philippine Embassy organizes events around major Philippine holidays such as Independence Day and the People Power Revolution.[11][12] In 2011, the Philippine Embassy organized a Marian pilgrimage to Domacyno, its first outreach project outside of Warsaw.[13]
There has also been interest in organizing an Association of Filipinos in Poland.[14]
Filipinos in Polish popular culture
Filipinos have appeared on Polish television shows such as Dzień Dobry TVN,[15] Pytanie na śniadanie and other programs. Notably, Filipinos who joined Polish talent shows on television have done well: these include Christina Bien winning Szansa na sukces in 2008,[16] Alexander Martinez placing third in the second season of Mam talent! in 2009,[17][18] and Conrado Yanez placing second in the Polish version of Must Be the Music in 2011.[19]
See also
References
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External links
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