The US actor Jesse Eisenberg was given a citizen of Polish Polish by President Andrzej Duda, after the Jewish population was told during the world’s war in a great film a real pain.
Eisenberg wrote, was ordered and filmed, about two American cousins traveling to Poland to honor their grandmother, based on the owner of Eisenberg.
He told the citizen ceremony: “As we scored this movie in Poland, and I walked down the streets and began to have my family longer than this place longer than the life of New York.
“And of course, history ended with intense.”
He continued: “Besides the tragedy of history is also the tragedy that my family has no longer feel any connection to Poland, and I am interesting that I want to try more.
“And I hope this evening at this ceremony and this wonderful honor is the first step in me, and for my family, again this family.”
Eisenberg was encouraged to make a true pain after the death of his great he was at 106 in 2019. He was killed in Poland.
President Duda said: “I am glad that people from across the ocean are recognized their legacy, acknowledged their ancestors from the Republic (in Poland) and seek to make connections to our country.”
Eisenberg was selected for an oscar for film writing, while his co-star Kieran Culkin won the award for better actor support.