>>197827887I'm gonna effort post.
That depends.
Anti-German sentiment is stronger among older, conservative / nationalists, EU-sceptics. On the other hand, many just don't care. Many do enjoy making business with Germany, visiting it (myself included), etc.
Tbh there was never deep reconciliation between Poles and Germans.
Polish communist government spread anti-German and Russophilic propaganda, but only anti-German one stick to the masses. Soviets forbade us to take reparations from the Germany.
Our clergy tried reconciliation in 1960s ("we forgive and we asked for forgiveness", stuff like that), Germans didn't give a fuck, expelles' lobby was too strong.
Then came the Brandt, he recognized western border on the Odra and Nysa. People living in the "new territories" were actually scared of Germans coming back and incorporating Lower Silesia or Western Pomerania back into Germany. Whole kneeling and taking fault was more focused on being sorry for the Jews rather war and war crimes as a whole.
Then came the 80s, while Germans helped during the martial law period, the whole "we were treated unfairly" narration gained popularity there.
Then the Berlin wall came down, united Germany once again confirmed Oda-Nysa border, but first post-communist PM, Mazowiecki annulled any claims on reparations (some say he was too soft). AFAIK there was a lot of crime (theft, stealing cars, smuggling) in Germany nearby border with Poland in the 90s.
Then the EU: while many Poles migrated or worked seasonally in Germany and were happy there, many others met with racism from the German side.
Tusk-Merkel time was probably the best period in Polish-German relations: it ricocheted though. Mostly because a) Tusk was too subservient towards Germany and EU in general in the eyes of many b) Merkel foreign policies are blamed as one of the reasons of Russo-Ukrainian war.