After two back-to-back incidents where Indians were racially abused in the US, including a case where an Indian-American was attacked by another, a new video has surfaced on social media showing a similar incident. This time, it was on the other side of the Atlantic where an American man was found targeting a man, presumably an Indian.
In the undated video, a white man, who called himself an American, was seen filming the other man on the roads in Warsaw, the capital of Poland, without taking the latter's permission and asking him a number of questions that were racially motivated.
ALSO READ: Now, one Indian-American racially abuses another in US, calls him ‘disgusting dog’, ‘dirty Hindu’
The targeted man asked why he was being filmed without his consent and asked the white man to stop doing so. But he refused and even called the former a "parasite", "invader" and one who is "genociding their race".
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“In America, there’s too many of you guys. Why are you in Poland? Do you think you can just invade Poland? You have your own country, why don’t you go back,” the man behind the camera said.
The attacker asked why the Indian man had come to the “white man’s land” and accused him of taking undue advantage of “our hard work”.
“Why are you being a parasite? You are genociding our race. You are an invader. Go home, invader. We don't want you in Europe,” the American tourist said. He said, "Poland for Polish only". He also accused them of invading America and Europe.
The four-minute video went viral on Twitter and other social media platforms.
Netizens later identified the man as Jon Minadeo Jr, who purportedly heads Goyim TV, a white nationalist and deeply anti-Semitic channel, according to one Twitter user.
















This photograph taken on April 28, 2026 shows a boy getting "thali", a sacred thread tied to his neck symbolising marriage to Hindu warrior god Aravan during the annual Koovagam transgender festival at the Koothandavar temple in Tamil Nadu's Kallakurichi district. For a few fleeting days each year, at the heart of the Koothandavar Temple where ostracised transgender community members from across India come to honour the Hindu deity Aravan, a tradition rooted in millennia-old Hindu texts -- and to enjoy a brief oasis of freedom.Getty Images
This photograph taken on April 29, 2026 shows a member of the transgender community mourning as a priest cuts the "thali", a sacred thread symbolising end of her marriage to Hindu warrior god Aravan during the annual Koovagam transgender festival at the Koothandavar temple in Tamil Nadu's Kallakurichi district. For a few fleeting days each year, at the heart of the Koothandavar Temple where ostracised transgender community members from across India come to honour the Hindu deity Aravan, a tradition rooted in millennia-old Hindu texts -- and to enjoy a brief oasis of freedom. Getty Images