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ちゃま
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ちゃま
@usachama
ねこのぶーちゃんが大好き。おだやかな時間と旅行が好き。腎臓がんサバイバー(2021年3月ロボット手術) 雑多に呟きます。
埼玉 Katılım Ekim 2009
277 Takip Edilen201 Takipçiler
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@chienowa135 "体調悪いの?じゃあこっちでゆっくりしたらいいから"と、あさっての解決案出してくるんですよね…詰んでる🥺
仮に断れてもこちら側が悪い立場になる節もあるという。
どんまいです…(わかる😭)

日本語

@usachama 逆の立場なら、体調に加えて気も遣うし、キャンセル料金を私が払ってでも無理はさせたくないと思いますが、向こうはまた考え方が違うので…(´・ω・`)難しいです…〻ಠᴥಠ〻💦
日本語

@chienowa135 なんと…やるしかないのか:〻oᴥo〻:
割り切って移動時だけでも旅気分満喫しましょ🍱
あとはひたすら時が過ぎるのを祈ってます🙏🏻(ガンバレ〜‼︎)
日本語

@usachama 有難うございます(´;ω;`)
しかし予約も済ませているので、遠回しにお願いしたけど無理そうです…〻ಠᴥಠ〻
マスクして大人しくするしかないのか…(´・ω・`)
日本語
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令和版2chいいね。ほんわかしてる。
昔は書き込んだ先から巨大ハンマーで潰してくるような連中がひしめいてたもんな…
#インターネット老人会
s'@cccrimecc
【復活】ワイ将、誰でも匿名掲示板の雰囲気を体験できるサイト作ってしまうwwwww 1 風吹けば名無し 2026/03/31(火) スレタイと内容を書くとAIがレスをつけてくれるのでスレ伸びて草が生える模様 ■ fake2ch.com 完全に自腹運営なので拡散してカンパを呼びかけてクレメンス!たのむ
日本語
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In the autumn of 1942, a slight, 32-year-old Polish social worker named Irena Sendler passed through the gates of the Warsaw Ghetto with a carpenter’s toolbox in her arms. Beneath the hammers and nails lay a drugged six-month-old infant, breathing softly, utterly silent. One cry would have meant instant death for both of them. Irena smiled at the guards; they waved her through. They never suspected that this quiet woman would repeat the journey 2,499 more times.
The ghetto was a slow-motion extermination. Starvation, disease, and random murder stalked every street. Jewish parents faced a choice no human being should ever have to make: keep their child and watch them waste away, or hand them to a stranger who promised a chance—however thin—at life.
Irena came officially to inspect for typhus. In reality, she came to steal children from death.
Babies left in toolboxes or ambulances under false bottoms. Toddlers sedated and tucked into potato sacks. Older children led by the hand through the stinking, lightless sewers while German boots marched overhead. “Not a sound,” she whispered as rats scurried past their feet.
She knew that the rescued children would be given new names, new religions, new families. Their pasts would vanish unless someone remembered. So, on fragile scraps of tissue paper, Irena wrote each child’s real name, their parents’ names, and their new hiding place. She rolled the papers tight, slipped them into glass jars, and buried them beneath an apple tree in a neighbor’s garden. If she were caught and killed, the truth might still survive.
She was caught.
On October 20, 1943, the Gestapo kicked in her door. They took her to Pawiak Prison and demanded the list. When she refused, they smashed both her legs with iron bars. Then her feet. Then her arms. For weeks the beatings continued. She never spoke. They scheduled her execution. On the appointed morning, guards dragged the broken woman from her cell.
Instead of a firing squad, she found herself outside the prison walls—alive. The Polish underground council Żegota had bribed a guard to mark her file “shot while trying to escape.” Officially dead, Irena Sendler limped back into the shadows to keep working.When the war finally ended, the first thing she did was dig up the jars under the apple tree. She spent years trying to return the children—now scattered across convents, farms, and foster homes—to whatever family might remain.
Almost no parents had survived. But the children had. Because of her, 2,500 Jewish boys and girls lived to grow up, to marry, to have children and grandchildren of their own—an entire secret branch of the human family tree that the Nazis never managed to cut down.For decades her story stayed buried deeper than the jars themselves. Then, in 1999, four high-school girls in rural Kansas stumbled across a brief mention of her name. They found the old woman still living quietly in Warsaw and brought her courage back into the light.
Journalists called her the greatest rescuer of the Holocaust. Irena only shook her head.“I could have saved more,” she said. “That regret follows me to the grave.”Irena Sendler—armed with nothing but a ghetto work permit, a toolbox, and a refusal to look away—proved that even in the heart of the worst evil humanity has ever devised, one determined person can still keep the darkness from winning completely.

English
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@moja_moja_cat 私もそれは感じました。
空気読んで捻り出した返し刀だけど、思わぬ反響で胸中ヒヤついてるのでは…と。
なんであれ傍観するのみですが、少し残念な気持ちになりますね。
日本語

@usachama せっかくよい機能が開放されたのに、という感じです。あのジョークを面白いと思って放つ神経はどうにも理解できないです。日本人の彼は悪乗りしたというより攻撃をかわしつつ皮肉交じりのユーモアで返した感があるので、その後の彼自身からの注釈含めて悪い人ではなのは伝わりますが。。
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