Polonia Bookstore Chicago

koszyk

Cart

Dear Readers, The Bookstore will be closed June 21st- July 5th. All orders placed between June 20th, 2024 and July 5th, 2024 will be processed and shipped starting with June 8th, 2024. We appreciate your patience and apologize for any inconvenience.
Best Seller

Memories of Poland Lessons From Growing Up Under Communism – In English

Availability: In stock

Original price was: $19.50.Current price is: $17.55.

Paylie Robert’s Books 2015, 410 pages (soft cover)

Quantity :
Add to Wishlist
Author: Paylie Roberts ISBN: 978-0-6924-2340-0 Language: English Availability: 5-10 days Year Published: 2025 Categories: ,

Paylie Roberts spent the first eight years of her life living under communist rule in Poland. From age eight on she grew up in the US and became so Americanized that she refused to acknowledge her native Polish heritage, including her birth name. Only after researching the history of why her family was exiled from Poland by the communist government did she realize the tremendously important and unique lessons that the Polish Solidarity movement offers about overcoming tyranny, oppression, and corruption, and how these lessons are imminently relevant and applicable to America today. Paylie combines her personal story with historical facts and sheds light on the many unnerving similarities between growing up in communist Poland in the early 1980s and life in the US now, in a way that is engaging, insightful and inspiring. She recounts her memories of living under the Soviet Union’s rule over Poland, as her family struggled along with most other Poles just to survive. This book also includes memories that are only told by Poles as they were never recorded in “official” history due to media censorship during those years. Paylie wrote this book not only to honor the brave Polish people (including her parents) for defeating tyranny using largely non-violent means, but also with the hope of spreading knowledge that could help prevent her worst fears from manifesting regarding what the future in “free” America may hold.

Loading...