Site icon Living in Jordan as Expat

A Pole in Jordan

Joana

After A German in Jordan and An American in Jordan, the third guest post in this series. I would like to give a big thanks to Joanna for her views and input and writing such a great post. Joanna is Polish, living in Jordan since August 2016. She loves traveling and exploring new places and cultures. She is involved in founding and developing a start-up. Nature, yoga, plenty of books, and freshly brewed coffee are the things that make her truly happy. If you enjoy this post and are interested in more information on living in Jordan, see my Ultimate Guide to Living in Jordan as Expat and read from an Austrian, Canadian, Russian, German, Brit, Japanese, French, Spaniard, Irish, American or Italian live their life in Jordan.

Thanks a lot for this great guest post!

4 Things I like about Jordan

4 Things I miss or dislike about Jordan

Places & Events You Need to Know

The Polish community (called Polonia in our language) is very small but it exists here. However, apart from the Polish Embassy, there aren’t many truly Polish places or events. What I can recommend from my perspective though, is European Film Festival that happens every autumn. It’s free of charge event that shows movies from different European countries, including Poland as well. If you crave for Polish-like food, the place I recommend is a shop called Russian Media that sells all sorts of goodies that are staples in Polish household ( kasza jaglana, kasza gryczana, ćwikła, ogórki kiszone, kiełbasa, serek wiejski, śmietana, kefir,chleb żytni and the list goes on) and as it turns out we share them with other Slavic countries.

As for the other places that I can highly recommend are:

– the bookshop that I love called Dar Safahat ( دار صفحات), they have ridiculously cheap English books so it’s perfect for a bookworm.

Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts – always amazing exhibitions and on the second floor you can enjoy a very unique coffee shop called Jungle Fever. It has a collection of art books in different languages, I even found two in Polish! And the interior design of it reminds me very much of those little hipster coffee shops in Warsaw.

Cielo Cafe – another gem to discover! It’s a coffee shop and art gallery in one. Very folky, beautiful design. It’s like a mix of different folklore, I could even find Slavic folk there too! So definitely worth visiting!


If you liked this one, make sure to check out the other posts in this series of guest posts.

Exit mobile version