Revision as of 11:33, 19 August 2005 editNeutrality Plumber (talk | contribs)51 edits easter-egg link: "negative" is not equal to "-anti", nor to "anti-Polonism", +cat← Previous edit | Revision as of 11:39, 19 August 2005 edit undoWitkacy (talk | contribs)9,823 edits rvNext edit → | ||
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'''Polish Plumber''' was a phrase first used by ] and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from Eastern Europe as a result of the ] during the ] in ] in ]. | '''Polish Plumber''' was a phrase first used by ] and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from Eastern Europe as a result of the ] during the ] in ] in ]. | ||
It is also a fictional character featured in a poster by the ] tourism board in response to what was perceived as negative ] against Poland. The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old male model Piotr Adamski, who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the French phrase "''Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux''" (English: ''I am staying in Poland, do come over in numbers''). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber and a follow up poster featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old Bożena Szwartz. | It is also a fictional character featured in a poster by the ] tourism board in response to what was perceived as ] ] against Poland. The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old male model Piotr Adamski, who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the French phrase "''Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux''" (English: ''I am staying in Poland, do come over in numbers''). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber and a follow up poster featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old Bożena Szwartz. | ||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
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Revision as of 11:39, 19 August 2005
Polish Plumber was a phrase first used by Philippe de Villiers and members of the no-camp as a symbol of cheap labour coming in from Eastern Europe as a result of the Directive on services in the internal market during the EU Constitution referendum in France in 2005.
It is also a fictional character featured in a poster by the Polish tourism board in response to what was perceived as negative rhetoric against Poland. The Polish Plumber is portrayed by 21-year-old male model Piotr Adamski, who beckons French tourists to come to Poland with the French phrase "Je reste en Pologne, venez nombreux" (English: I am staying in Poland, do come over in numbers). Posters and t-shirts were also produced featuring the Polish Plumber and a follow up poster featured "Polish Nurse", a female equivalent, portrayed by 22 year old Bożena Szwartz.
External links
- Polish Tourist Board (in French)
- BBC news article