- By Shailvee Tiwari
- Fri, 30 May 2025 03:50 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
Polish Woman Viral Video: Agnes Mann, a Polish woman who moved to India two years ago, is now getting real about what it’s actually like to live here. In a fun yet honest video, she opens up about the ups and downs she’s faced, and it’s struck a chord online. “I've been living in India for 2 years & I'm not ashamed to admit THIS,” reads the bold text at the start of her video, which shows clips of her celebrating Holi, spending time with her kids, cooking, and travelling across the country.
In her heartfelt caption, Agnes writes, “Two years deep in India, and here’s the honest truth. No sugarcoating, just real talk. From my ongoing Hindi struggles to missing my Polish kitchen, navigating the chaos of Indian time, and those oh-so-frequent power cuts.” She adds, “Sharing my unfiltered experience because authenticity is everything! What are your ‘unashamed’ truths?”
Agnes doesn’t hold back, she talks about things that bother her, like loud noise, missing Polish food, constant electricity cuts, and the fact that she still can’t speak Hindi fluently. Agnes runs a YouTube channel where she documents her life in India with her Indian husband and three children. While many people related to her honest thoughts, others were quick to criticise and told her to go back to Poland if she wasn't happy.
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The viral video, shared on Instagram by Agnes on her account 'agnesmannyt' a while ago, garnered many likes, comments, and views from people. One user wrote, "You can always go back, in case you don’t know." "Can't buy an inverter. Can't live a happy life. Can't enjoy food and miss Polish food. Girl, why u even here, living unhappily? Instead, go back and live happily, genuinely saying," a second user added.
"When can I enter being a Muslim, so who is stopping uh? And power cut seriously, yes, it was an issue in previous years, but the situation is way better now, even in villages," added a third user. "Please go back to Poland, you are free to do everything. Make sure your child doesn’t go out in public without you. I heard in Poland they are not that friendly with brown skin," added a fourth user.