News
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25.02.2020 AmmanInformation for visa applicants
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04.02.2020 AmmanCall for proposals for a development project in the Polish Aid programmeThe Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Amman invites all interested parties to take part in a call for proposals for a development project in the Polish Aid programme.
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04.02.2020 AmmanScholarship offer of the Polish National Agency For Academic Exchange
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13.01.2020 WarsawCall for proposals to participate in the Summer Courses of Polish Language and Culture 2020 Program
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30.12.2019 WarszawaSTATEMENT BY THE PRIME MINISTER OF POLAND MATEUSZ MORAWIECKI
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05.12.2019 Amman, JordanMeeting of the Ambassador of the Republic of Poland with the Joint Chief of Staff of the Jordanian ArmyOn December 5th Ambassador of the Republic of Poland to Jordan A. Świeżaczyński, accompanied by Colonel S. Mnitowski's Defence Attache, held a meeting with General Yousef Al. Hnaity, Joint Chief of Staff of the Jordanian Army.
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28.11.2019 Mafraq, JordanCompletion of the first phase of the Polish Aid Equal Opportunities projectOn 28th of November 2019, the first phase of the Polish Aid project "Equal Opportunities" for those affected by the conflict in Syria was completed in Mafraq.
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10.10.2019Olga Tokarczuk receives the Nobel Prize in LiteratureOlga Tokarczuk, Polish writer and activist, won the Nobel Prize in Literature for “a narrative imagination that with encyclopedic passion represents the crossing of boundaries as a form of life.”
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01.09.201980th anniversary of the outbreak of the Second World WarEighty years ago, German aggression on Poland started the Second World War. In the early hours of 1 September 1939, troops of the German Reich crossed the Polish-German border. Polish Army put up military resistance and expected the Allies’ reaction. On 3 September 1939, France and the UK declared war on the German Reich but did not take any real military action. Poland’s tragic fate was sealed on 17 September 1939 when the Soviet Union launched the invasion of Poland from the East. The attack of the German Reich and the Soviet Union resulted from the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact signed by the two totalitarian regimes, a secret protocol to which effectively divided Central Europe into the so-called spheres of influence.