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Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Silesia

06.09.08, 03:18
Juliusz Ligoń - Fragment poematu z 1883 r.

"Kochajmy się wszyscy wzajem, Naszych przodków obyczajem, Bośmy są
jedną rodziną,
Dowody tego w nas płyną.
Kaszubi, Staroprusacy, Mazury i Warmiacy, Wielkopolanie, Ślązacy,
Wszyscyśmy bracia, Polacy.
I dalej, pod Karpatami, Też jednym duchem tchną z nami, Na Litwie ,
i Królewiacy,
Wszyscyśmy jedni rodacy."

Źródło: "pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dyskusja:Juliusz_Ligo%C5%84"
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    • Gość: alois Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.dip0.t-ipconnect.de 07.09.08, 11:40
      no i widzicie. juz wtedy Polacy prowadzili swojoa nacjonalistyczna propagande.
      Ale pozniej sa niewinni!!! same ofiary!
      :))))
    • Gość: Menschenfresser Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.dip.t-dialin.net 07.09.08, 22:25
      Karpaty ??? to moze Turki tyz ? :)
      • Gość: . Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 08.09.08, 06:34
        a to w miymcach niy uczom, ze slask lezy takze w karpatach?
        doch, dummkopf:)))
        • amoremio Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si 08.09.08, 23:03
          A Polska nad Mozem Czarnym ?
          • amoremio Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si 08.09.08, 23:04
            Bo Ligon napewno niy miol na mysli Bedskidow.
            • Gość: . Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 09.09.08, 09:15
              czy beskidy leza w karpatach?
              jak tak, po po co jape drzesz:))
              • wilhelm4 Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si 10.09.08, 03:48
                Sa ich czescia.
    • Gość: . Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 09.09.08, 09:22
      niyma jak porzodny bohater negatywny:
      'W roku 1848 gdy Śląsk dotknęła klęska głodu, Juliusz Ligoń zorganizował polską
      pomoc charytatywną dla poszkodowanych. Następnie założył "Komitet pomocy
      polskiej" oraz "Polskie Konsum", które można określić jako pierwszą organizację
      o charakterze spółdzielczym.
      W roku 1869 założył „Towarzystwo Pożyczkowe” na potrzeby Kółka, także
      umożliwiające pobieranie pożyczek polskim robotnikom.
      Przez całe życie był szykanowany za swoją propolską działalność, nie mógł podjąć
      stałej pracy zarobkowej, skonfiskowano mu jego biblioteczkę, przeprowadzano
      często rewizje i nakładano wysokie kary finansowe, przez co żył w wielkiej
      biedzie razem z żoną i sześciorgiem dzieci.'
      normalnie bandyta jak cza:))
      nie to, co pozytywny schloooooncki bohater, rodzimy uczestnik 'schlooooonckiej
      samoobrony':
      pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskar_Dirlewanger
      de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oskar_Dirlewanger
      • Gość: Gruchlik Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.versanet.de 09.09.08, 13:09
        A wiela na tym zarobiou?
        Poszukej i napisz - a jak ci bydzie wstyd, to jo napisza!
        Pyrsk!
        Gruchlik
        • Gość: . Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 09.09.08, 16:33
          niy rob z sia ciula, ino szkryflej, jak mosz co:))))
          • wilhelm4 Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si 10.09.08, 03:49
            Dirlewanger Slazakiem ??!
            • Gość: Wasz Marjanek Re:do Willego. IP: *.versanet.de 10.09.08, 07:04
              Willi - cojs ejs sie majtnou.
              Oscar Dirlewangler prziszou na swiat we Würzburgu - to je we Bajerach.
              Pyrsk!
              Wasz Marjanek

              Pray for the peace of Jerusalem: they shall prosper that love
              thee.Psalm 122:6
              • Gość: . nie moze byc! IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 10.09.08, 16:25
                przeca w schloooonckiej samoobronie bouy ino schlooooooncouki, bestosz
                dirlewanger na zicher schloooooncoukiem bou!
                • Gość: Zista s posypkom Re: do tchorza kropki: nie moze byc! IP: *.versanet.de 10.09.08, 17:15
                  Te kropka - juzajs ejs uciyk ze oddzialu zamkniyntego??
                  Pyrsk!
                  Zista s posypkom
                  • Gość: . Re: do tchorza waschmarjanka IP: *.neoplus.adsl.tpnet.pl 10.09.08, 17:45
                    ty sia tam waschmarjanek wiynkszego ciula nirzes jes niy rob - rzes miou uo tym
                    ligoniu jakas rewelacyjo naszkryflac, i kaj to jes?
                    • Gość: Zista s posypkom Re: do tchorza kropki IP: *.versanet.de 11.09.08, 09:51
                      Sam mosz - gorolski lyniu!

                      It became their routine. Alison Ligon and her father, Dr. Julius Ligon Jr.,
                      would hop in his brown Mercedes and head for the Hurricane Seafood Restaurant on
                      St. Pete Beach.

                      They would order fried grouper sandwiches and watch the sunset as sea gulls
                      searched for their own fish dinner. He would drive when she was little, but soon
                      she had to slide behind the wheel instead because of the disease that would
                      later lead to his death.

                      "It was our getaway," said 31-year-old Ligon about one of her fondest memories
                      with her dad. "As I grew up, we watched it change from a sand trap to a
                      full-fledged restaurant."

                      Ever since she was 3, her father, the dentist, struggled with multiple
                      sclerosis. First, he could no longer use his hands and had to give up his
                      practice. Slowly over the years, his body withered on the inside.

                      He died June 6. He was buried Thursday after a ceremony at the First Baptist
                      Institutional Church, where family, friends and church members reflected not on
                      Dr. Ligon's death but his inspiration. During one musical prayer, a young man
                      sang so loudly the speakers crackled.

                      For 28 years, Dr. Ligon had lived in a body that was slowly dying even as he and
                      his family kept leading a strong life.

                      Once an All-American football and basketball player in high school and college,
                      Dr. Ligon still retained a strong build after he was diagnosed in 1976, even
                      after his body started to fail him internally.

                      When 59-year-old Dr. Ligon died after respiratory complications and infections
                      during a hospital visit, his family accepted his death through their faith.

                      "I'm blessed that I had a big brother that became my friend," said Michelle
                      Ligon, Julius' younger sister and a lawyer in St. Petersburg.

                      Through the years, Dr. Ligon first relied on a cane, then crutches, a wheelchair
                      and a motorized chair, which he could easily maneuver.

                      According to the Multiple Sclerosis Association of America, the disease attacks
                      the central nervous system, where it damages the protective covering around the
                      nerves. It then leads to a lack of communication between the nerves and brain,
                      causing limbs to become numb. Although 75 percent of people who have the
                      disorder don't need wheelchairs, MS affects everyone differently.

                      "Usually people who lead more active and stressful lives experience a faster
                      progression of the disorder," Michelle Ligon said. "So while it was a curse that
                      Julius' hands went first since he was a dentist, it was a blessing that he
                      stopped practicing."

                      In 1972, Dr. Julius Ligon moved to St. Petersburg, his ex-wife's hometown, after
                      completing dental school in Nashville. He fell in love with the beach and sea
                      gulls over Tampa Bay. He fell in love with the pelicans, the pink sunsets and
                      the gulf view. He also fell in love with the community.

                      "He was warm, genuine and captivating, and you didn't have to be around him long
                      to realize that," said Alison Ligon, who is now a college professor in Atlanta.

                      When Dr. Ligon opened his dental practice on historic 22nd Street S, people
                      visited the dentist even when there was nothing wrong with their teeth.

                      Five years after starting his practice, he had to retire after MS left his hands
                      numb.

                      "(His brother) Reggie became his hands and I became his legs," said Michelle,
                      referring to how they would place Dr. Ligon's motorized wheelchair in the back
                      of the specially equipped van.

                      Reggie Ligon, five years younger than Julius, was never too far behind in
                      anything. While growing up in Terre Haute, Ind., he wanted to pick up his
                      brother's sweaty football helmet in high school and wear it. He followed him to
                      Indiana State University and to dental school, and also settled in St. Petersburg.

                      "Anything he did, I wanted to do," said Reggie Ligon, a dentist in St.
                      Petersburg. "He was my mentor and guiding light, so I always looked up to him.
                      "When he became debilitated and couldn't do things for himself, there was mental
                      anguish," he said, his smile fading. "But we wanted to do anything to make him
                      comfortable."

                      Even with MS, Dr. Ligon never missed exciting milestones. When his nephew Brian
                      Ligon played on a championship Lakewood High School basketball team, his family
                      drove him to some of the games.

                      MS has no cure, but scientists and doctors have recently developed medications
                      that can disrupt the disorder's path by altering the immune system. Dr. Ligon
                      received treatments as technology and medications advanced, but since treatment
                      can't reverse the disease, it focused on alleviating symptoms.

                      With unpredictable symptoms came continuous prayers. "A day didn't pass without
                      my dad and our family giving thanks for life," said Alison Ligon. "His
                      positivity is something I'll always learn from."

                      When Dr. Ligon was unable to play basketball or grill his favorite meal -
                      pineapple steak - his sister remembers how he found joy in other things.

                      He adored jazz and the comedian Richard Pryor, who also has MS. "He was able to
                      explore other aspects of life like his spirituality and communicating who he was
                      to people without saying a word. That was the greatest gift," Michelle Ligon
                      said. "We all have trials in our life, whether it's illness, work or
                      relationships. You can either live in the challenge or you can find your way
                      beyond it, and Julius found his way beyond it."
              • wilhelm4 Re:do Willego. 10.09.08, 16:51
                No wlasnie sie dziwja.
    • oberschlesier1921 Re: Negatywny(watpliwy)"bohater" made in Upper Si 10.09.08, 15:44
      ino gorole to niy nosze rodzynstwo.
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