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@lobinhaland

entre o fascínio e a aflição

⚧️ ele | nb Katılım Aralık 2010
908 Takip Edilen786 Takipçiler
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cel@lobinhaland·
@mayarasmith_ bizarro alguém achar qualquer resquício de decolonialidade em algo feito por big tech imperialista
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cel@lobinhaland·
vi um vídeo de uma criança que brinca de lixeiro no mercado e meio que eh o sonho de todas as crianças ne. pular em um veículo em movimento e se segurar igual um bugio
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cel@lobinhaland·
me pergunto se a Sadako do chamado tem esse nome por causa dela
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories

The funeral of Sadako Sasaki in October 1955... On 6 August 1945, the United States dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan. Sadako Sasaki was two-years-old and living in the city. She had no apparent injuries and grew into a strong and healthy girl. In 1954, when she was in sixth grade, she suddenly developed signs of illness. One day during a school race that she helped her team win, she felt extremely tired and dizzy. It grew worse until she fell and could not get up. In February 1955 she was diagnosed with leukemia and admitted to the Hiroshima Red Cross Hospital. She was eleven-years-old. At the time, leukemia was called the A-bomb disease. Almost everyone who contracted it died. Sadako was terrified. She wanted to go back to school. A roommate at the hospital told her about the Japanese belief that anyone who folds 1,000 paper cranes would be granted a wish. Sadako began folding, hoping to recover. The cranes hung above her bed on strings. There is disagreement about how many she completed before she died. Some accounts record 1,300 cranes. Others say she managed 644 before she became too weak to continue, and her classmates folded the rest. What is not disputed is that she folded until she could not. Sadako Sasaki died on 25 October 1955, after an eight-month struggle. She was twelve-years-old. Her classmates decided to form a unity club in her honour, which grew as students from 3,100 schools across Japan and nine foreign countries raised money for a monument. On 5 May 1958, the Children's Peace Monument was unveiled in Hiroshima Peace Park, close to where the bomb had fallen. Children from across the world continue to send folded paper cranes to be placed at the statue's base. One of Sadako's own cranes was donated to the Japanese American National Museum in 2016 by her family. The inscription on the monument reads: This is our cry. This is our prayer. Peace in the world. © Reddit

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cel@lobinhaland·
tem um bebê q não para de tossir no ônibus e se eu não estivesse também tossindo ia lá reclamar com a mãe dele que não botou uma máscara na criança
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cel@lobinhaland·
quem poderia imaginar 💡💭 que fumar depois de pegar sereno ia dar tosse de cachorro
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racuel
racuel@lhamadepijama·
recebendo visita em casa e meu fogão desse jeito
racuel tweet media
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Rod
Rod@Elpichula02000·
Em qual espectro político do caetanismo cultural você está?
Rod tweet mediaRod tweet mediaRod tweet mediaRod tweet media
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cel@lobinhaland·
pra mim a maior surpresa de 2026 eh descobrir que o Brasil fede COVID eh de Curitiba
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cel@lobinhaland·
ficar doente durante viagem = maldição de bruxa
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cel@lobinhaland·
em situação de eu amo Curitiba
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g1
g1@g1·
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cel@lobinhaland·
queria mto entender pq costeletas assim eram moda nos anos 70
cel tweet media
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cel@lobinhaland·
minha mãe hj começou a reclamar que recolhi os Ypê dela aqui de casa e nem pra fazer o reembolso fui capaz... pois bem mamis amanhã vai cair na conta os 5 pila do detergente #sextoooou
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