th er e?prusska es what was it like there? > t theherere w wasas, no t co mf or ta blcoe mftoor . stay there because every night we every night we heard -- heard -- >> reporter: it's okay >> ritep'sor otekar:y. it's okay. it's okay. >> very horrible >> very horrible sounds every night >> reporter: poland sounds every night. now host in 4 >> reporter: poland mill io fu ge es f ro m no ukraine. million refugees from ukraine. more than 100,000 mo t ha n 10ar0,ri00ve0 every dy arrive every day. teacher natalia so to re nk o teflacedhe wr i her sister and their childrenit her sist a nd t heheirr son sh ow us what he brought from ho me her so they b ug ht f ro>>m snack s. >> snacks, yeah. >> reporter: food, his phone, and nothing else >> l it>>tl se.nacks? >> na ck s, y>>ea rh.eporter: tha it she told me sh >> rgrepatorefteul for polan help nothing else. sh e "wtoe lddi mdne 'tsh ee'o be w el co megrd atwiefthul p hearts," she say s. "we didn't expect to be welcomed with open hearts," she says. a real concern after huge antim ntrei-almi cgronan ra nt protests in warsaw in 20 15 w heprn otpoeslatsnd closed its borders to syrians fleeing that 2015 when poland