It is very sad and horrible to watch these innocent people suffer so much, but wait brothers we are now in a stage where everything is falling apart even it doesn’t look like. The final stage is very near and we will put our hands from around the world together and we will make a final attack to end this world tyrany
Saker, the ‘smoke and mirrors’ musical score – quite seductive – very fine addition to my day – thanks Saker, for offering it – Sentimentally pure – very sincere work – and yet with the video content – a desperate yearning to be free and pure as fresh soul ‘sounds’ can be – listening as the waters of purity cleansed my soul – i knew too, one day, we will all be free
Good song.It was sad to see the pictures of at the time,the alive 18 year old hero,who was killed in the fighting a month ago.I long for his dream of a nazi defeat, and a free nation, to be realized.
“After a year and a half of the “revolution of dignity,” as it has been called by those who gave the coup of February last year.
Ukraine goes to the full and complete independence of …… right, coherent thought, survival instinct ….
These are some of the facts of the present Ukrainian, without going into valuations, just facts:
1. A couple of months Poroshenko appointed governor of Odessa to his former classmate, famous dining ties, Mikhail Saakashvili. The Georgian who provoked the armed conflict with Russia in 2008 and is now wanted by Interpol, for the request of the Georgian government.
This character, just taking office, said he would work for free for Ukraine because he and his team salaries are paid by……. the State Department of The United States. To confirm this information has even shown the promissory notes confirming such information.
Of course it is normal for an independent country having a governor from another country with the salary paid by a third country.
2. After weeks of scandals involving smuggling, reaching even to the shooting and almost open rebellion of the Right Sector in the city of Mukachevo, the Ukrainian government has decided to fight with measures that no one else would be able to imagine. In several weeks each office on the West frontier, that is, bordering with EU, spend to be managed by an English private company. Apparently in a country of 40,000,000 inhabitants there is no honest people capable of managing such a strategic sector.
3. Today in the Swedish press has appeared a news that a few weeks before I had seen in the Ukrainian press, but I ignored it thinking it was joke.
Sweden will buy from The Ukraine the humus of the Poltava region at 5 euros each tonne. Humus is the best and richest farmland. They think buy and take it to Sweden to spread it there in the fields, leaving a wasteland in this Ukrainian region and also make a reservation deposit of several thousand cubic meters, although the exact amount is not known.
And so it progresses the independence of Ukraine, I would say that going towards independence of Ukrainian population.
Not to mention the killing of the most advanced rocket manufacturing “Yuzhmash”, to which electricity was cut last week.
Another sign of their “independence” was a motion from a West Ukrainian politician to change the country’s name to “Ukraine-Rus” to “dig” at Russia more.It seems in the early nationalist circles of the 19th Century that was what they wanted to call the area.So with all the bad problems happening now.The solution is “obvious” to them,change your name.
When I see stories like the below I begin to wonder at the level of insanity in today’s Poland.Supporting the Ukrainians is insane,totally insane.But more than that, I wonder about Poland today.This story talks about one of the people in the story becoming a Cosmonaut under the pre-1991 government.And how their whole family (those remaining) were saved by the Soviet Armies liberation of Poland.What has NATO done to…er…I mean for Poland.And what advances in science has the EU Poland made.While in alliance with Russia,Poles were heading to Space as Cosmonauts.And today,in alliance with NATO,Poles are heading to Germany and Britain as plumbers and maids.Not really the same thing at all:
“Polish cosmonaut recalls surviving the UPA”
Translated from Polish by J.Hawk
The Catholic cemetery in the Ukrainian town of Berezne no longer exists. Bulldozers razed the gravestones making room for the city park. But when the Hermaszewski family visits that spot, they always place candles on the ground. This is the final resting place of Roman, the father of General Mirosław Hermaszewski. The Hermaszewski’s are a large, brave, patriotic family.
Mirosław’s grandfather, Sylwester Hermaszewski (family crest Zaremba) worked at his friend’s. He had 16 children, 11 of whom reached adulthood. To raise and educate them, in 1910 they bought a few dozen hectares of land in Police, near Lipnik, where they uprooted the forest and sowed the land. There were 60 Polish families in Lipnik, and altogether there were 459 Poles in the area, including in the nearby villages. Huge families. Hajdamowicz, Kulikowski, Kunicki, Murawski, Bielawski, Hermaszewski families.
In 1925 Roman Hermaszewski married Kamila Bielawska, and soon their children started coming into the world: Alina, Władek, Sabina, Anna, Teresa, Bogusław, Mirosław. The youngest son was born in 1941 in terrible times. During the German occupation the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) units felt pretty confident. They killed Poles with impunity.
In March 1943 the Hermaszewski family moved to Lipnik out of fear. They lived at a friend’s house with the grandparents and children of an aunt who was deported to Siberia. Around midnight of 25 March they were awoken by the first shots. Incendiary tracer bullets were setting house roofs on fire, heavy machine gun fire bursts were cutting through the air. Roman Hermaszewski ordered his children to run to the pond. Each grabbed a small bundle, the mother carried the 18 month old Mirosław. The fires burned so brightly it was like daylight.
Then the Ukrainians attacked. They came with pitchforks, knives, axes. They yelled “death to the Poles” and killed everyone. The Poles ran along a drainage ditch toward the village of Zurne. Banderites were firing at the fleeing crowd. A Ukrainian caught up with Kamila who carried her son. He shot her in the head and thought he killed her because she fell. She came to several hours later and started running again. When she realized she wasn’t holding her child she started to despair.
When the day came Roman and his son Wladek went in the direction of Lipnik. In the snow, on a small rise near a bush I saw my father’s jacket and in it there was our Mirek, wrapped in a blanket and not showing any signs of life–Władek recalled many years later. They were horrified by the possibility the child froze. The father held his son against his breast and that’s how they went back to the village. There were hundreds of dead along the ditch and in the backyards. Aunt Adela Hermaszewska sat under a bloodied feather blanket, terrified out of her mind, and held three children who were murdered before her eyes.
Grandfather Sylwester’s body lay by the poplar. He didn’t run away because he did not believe any of his Ukrainian friends would kill him.
“Grandfather called Ukrainians ‘brothers.’ He paid for that by being stabbed seven times in the chest with a bayonet,” Mirosław Hermaszewski says. While they were weeping over grandfather’s body, the father suddenly felt that Mirek moved. Overcome by emotion, he whispered “You are the youngest, you must live!”
“The Banderites burned down everything, the whole village. We moved to Berezne over Sluch River,” Mirosław says. Only one of their cows survived and soon they were starving. Father went briefly to Lipnik. He mowed the wheat on his so that they would have at least a few sheafs. Then shots were fired from hiding, he was hit in the chest. “We know who fired, we know the name. It was a Ukrainian,” Mirosław Hermaszewski says.
They took the father to the hospital in Berezne. Mirek cried because father could not pick him up. Roman died shortly afterwards. He’s buried in a cemetery that no longer exists. Kamila and the children took shelter at a church in Berezne, then escaped to Kostopol.
The Red Army entered the city shortly after the 1944 New Year. After the war they settled in Silesia, in Wolow. Kamila Hermaszewska raised and educated her children there. She was brave, industrious, and caring.
Kristina & Kira (10 month old child) in Gorlovka, Donbass, Sun 27/7/14 in the still picture above.
“Unpunished crimes: bombing Gorlovka”
http://euskalherria-donbas.org/2015/07/27/crimenes-que-quedaron-impunes-los-bombardeos-de-gorlovka/#more-3802
It is very sad and horrible to watch these innocent people suffer so much, but wait brothers we are now in a stage where everything is falling apart even it doesn’t look like. The final stage is very near and we will put our hands from around the world together and we will make a final attack to end this world tyrany
Voice is getting stronger and stronger, Speaker is Jewish
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xe5cQDIbMs
Great back up music to a good song.
Saker, the ‘smoke and mirrors’ musical score – quite seductive – very fine addition to my day – thanks Saker, for offering it – Sentimentally pure – very sincere work – and yet with the video content – a desperate yearning to be free and pure as fresh soul ‘sounds’ can be – listening as the waters of purity cleansed my soul – i knew too, one day, we will all be free
Good song.It was sad to see the pictures of at the time,the alive 18 year old hero,who was killed in the fighting a month ago.I long for his dream of a nazi defeat, and a free nation, to be realized.
What makes me feel this song, sad but almost chocked hopeful, is nostalgia, for all who has gone into this horrible war long enough already……
Hopefully, God willing, one day, not too far ……
“Itxaropena” ( “Hope” ) by Ken Zazpi
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzUvA2rMnwM
“At times you do not believe in you,
listen to that little voice inside,
from commitment and contradictions,
emerges this silent scream.
Feel a flash in the shade,
when words are whitered,
again and again over the inability,
feel that we are still free.
Hope can not be enclosed,
in our aching hearts it is free
despite punishing us, we become one,
with every tear, every step.
Feel a flash ….
In the kisses on the faces,
in the smiles of children,
in your sad eyes that I love so much.
Listen to this silent voice,
listen, from the darkness,
listen to the heartbeat,
feel me near ..
Feel a flash ….”
“The Ukraine, increasingly more independent”:
http://euskalherria-donbas.org/2015/07/27/ucrania-cada-vez-mas-independiente/
“After a year and a half of the “revolution of dignity,” as it has been called by those who gave the coup of February last year.
Ukraine goes to the full and complete independence of …… right, coherent thought, survival instinct ….
These are some of the facts of the present Ukrainian, without going into valuations, just facts:
1. A couple of months Poroshenko appointed governor of Odessa to his former classmate, famous dining ties, Mikhail Saakashvili. The Georgian who provoked the armed conflict with Russia in 2008 and is now wanted by Interpol, for the request of the Georgian government.
This character, just taking office, said he would work for free for Ukraine because he and his team salaries are paid by……. the State Department of The United States. To confirm this information has even shown the promissory notes confirming such information.
Of course it is normal for an independent country having a governor from another country with the salary paid by a third country.
2. After weeks of scandals involving smuggling, reaching even to the shooting and almost open rebellion of the Right Sector in the city of Mukachevo, the Ukrainian government has decided to fight with measures that no one else would be able to imagine. In several weeks each office on the West frontier, that is, bordering with EU, spend to be managed by an English private company. Apparently in a country of 40,000,000 inhabitants there is no honest people capable of managing such a strategic sector.
3. Today in the Swedish press has appeared a news that a few weeks before I had seen in the Ukrainian press, but I ignored it thinking it was joke.
Sweden will buy from The Ukraine the humus of the Poltava region at 5 euros each tonne. Humus is the best and richest farmland. They think buy and take it to Sweden to spread it there in the fields, leaving a wasteland in this Ukrainian region and also make a reservation deposit of several thousand cubic meters, although the exact amount is not known.
And so it progresses the independence of Ukraine, I would say that going towards independence of Ukrainian population.
Not to mention the killing of the most advanced rocket manufacturing “Yuzhmash”, to which electricity was cut last week.
Another sign of their “independence” was a motion from a West Ukrainian politician to change the country’s name to “Ukraine-Rus” to “dig” at Russia more.It seems in the early nationalist circles of the 19th Century that was what they wanted to call the area.So with all the bad problems happening now.The solution is “obvious” to them,change your name.
When I see stories like the below I begin to wonder at the level of insanity in today’s Poland.Supporting the Ukrainians is insane,totally insane.But more than that, I wonder about Poland today.This story talks about one of the people in the story becoming a Cosmonaut under the pre-1991 government.And how their whole family (those remaining) were saved by the Soviet Armies liberation of Poland.What has NATO done to…er…I mean for Poland.And what advances in science has the EU Poland made.While in alliance with Russia,Poles were heading to Space as Cosmonauts.And today,in alliance with NATO,Poles are heading to Germany and Britain as plumbers and maids.Not really the same thing at all:
“Polish cosmonaut recalls surviving the UPA”
Translated from Polish by J.Hawk
The Catholic cemetery in the Ukrainian town of Berezne no longer exists. Bulldozers razed the gravestones making room for the city park. But when the Hermaszewski family visits that spot, they always place candles on the ground. This is the final resting place of Roman, the father of General Mirosław Hermaszewski. The Hermaszewski’s are a large, brave, patriotic family.
Mirosław’s grandfather, Sylwester Hermaszewski (family crest Zaremba) worked at his friend’s. He had 16 children, 11 of whom reached adulthood. To raise and educate them, in 1910 they bought a few dozen hectares of land in Police, near Lipnik, where they uprooted the forest and sowed the land. There were 60 Polish families in Lipnik, and altogether there were 459 Poles in the area, including in the nearby villages. Huge families. Hajdamowicz, Kulikowski, Kunicki, Murawski, Bielawski, Hermaszewski families.
In 1925 Roman Hermaszewski married Kamila Bielawska, and soon their children started coming into the world: Alina, Władek, Sabina, Anna, Teresa, Bogusław, Mirosław. The youngest son was born in 1941 in terrible times. During the German occupation the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) units felt pretty confident. They killed Poles with impunity.
In March 1943 the Hermaszewski family moved to Lipnik out of fear. They lived at a friend’s house with the grandparents and children of an aunt who was deported to Siberia. Around midnight of 25 March they were awoken by the first shots. Incendiary tracer bullets were setting house roofs on fire, heavy machine gun fire bursts were cutting through the air. Roman Hermaszewski ordered his children to run to the pond. Each grabbed a small bundle, the mother carried the 18 month old Mirosław. The fires burned so brightly it was like daylight.
Then the Ukrainians attacked. They came with pitchforks, knives, axes. They yelled “death to the Poles” and killed everyone. The Poles ran along a drainage ditch toward the village of Zurne. Banderites were firing at the fleeing crowd. A Ukrainian caught up with Kamila who carried her son. He shot her in the head and thought he killed her because she fell. She came to several hours later and started running again. When she realized she wasn’t holding her child she started to despair.
When the day came Roman and his son Wladek went in the direction of Lipnik. In the snow, on a small rise near a bush I saw my father’s jacket and in it there was our Mirek, wrapped in a blanket and not showing any signs of life–Władek recalled many years later. They were horrified by the possibility the child froze. The father held his son against his breast and that’s how they went back to the village. There were hundreds of dead along the ditch and in the backyards. Aunt Adela Hermaszewska sat under a bloodied feather blanket, terrified out of her mind, and held three children who were murdered before her eyes.
Grandfather Sylwester’s body lay by the poplar. He didn’t run away because he did not believe any of his Ukrainian friends would kill him.
“Grandfather called Ukrainians ‘brothers.’ He paid for that by being stabbed seven times in the chest with a bayonet,” Mirosław Hermaszewski says. While they were weeping over grandfather’s body, the father suddenly felt that Mirek moved. Overcome by emotion, he whispered “You are the youngest, you must live!”
“The Banderites burned down everything, the whole village. We moved to Berezne over Sluch River,” Mirosław says. Only one of their cows survived and soon they were starving. Father went briefly to Lipnik. He mowed the wheat on his so that they would have at least a few sheafs. Then shots were fired from hiding, he was hit in the chest. “We know who fired, we know the name. It was a Ukrainian,” Mirosław Hermaszewski says.
They took the father to the hospital in Berezne. Mirek cried because father could not pick him up. Roman died shortly afterwards. He’s buried in a cemetery that no longer exists. Kamila and the children took shelter at a church in Berezne, then escaped to Kostopol.
The Red Army entered the city shortly after the 1944 New Year. After the war they settled in Silesia, in Wolow. Kamila Hermaszewska raised and educated her children there. She was brave, industrious, and caring.
“She was completely dedicated to us,” Mirosław reminisces. Her three sons became pilots. The youngest flew into space in 1978 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.
http://fortruss.blogspot.ca/2015/07/polish-cosmonaut-recalls-surviving-upa_31.html