Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος
3.8K posts

Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος
@AngelD247
🇺🇸US Diplomat in Brasília🇧🇷, Miami High, Middlebury College BA, MA, #Polyglot #MeToo #BLM #Stingarees #MillionDollarBand #LaSagüesera #305
Florida Entrou em Aralık 2008
1.4K Seguindo193 Seguidores
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou

May the Fourth be with YOU, from the Obama Presidential Center.
Opening June 19. @BarackObama @MarkHamill
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Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou

@DialaHaro @Jhonffonseca Acento más mexicano no podía tener. Lo de “vosotros” lo sacó del culo, para lucirse y reírse de los europeos. Pero definitivamente no es español.
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@Jhonffonseca No era mexicano el asesino. Fijate bien como se expresa, un mexicano hubiera dicho Ustedes no VOSOTROS, no inventen
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🇲🇽 TRAGEDIA EN TEOTIHUACÁN
“¡Vosotros que habéis venido de la puta Europa no vais a regresar! Si os movéis, os sacrifico. ¿Lo veis? ¡Cumplo mi palabra!”
Así gritaba el atacante mexicano desde lo alto de la Pirámide de la Luna, mientras disparaba contra decenas de turistas aterrorizados.
Resultado: una turista canadiense asesinada a sangre fría y múltiples heridos, entre ellos un niño, en uno de los sitios arqueológicos más emblemáticos de México.
Un acto de barbarie que convirtió un lugar de historia y maravilla en una trampa mortal.
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Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou

She was sixteen when she arrived at Auschwitz. That very night, she was ordered to dance in front of the man who had just sent her mother to die.
Edith Eger arrived at the camp on May 22, 1944, with her family. Josef Mengele stood at the selection line. A single gesture was enough to decide everything.
When it was her mother’s turn, he sent her to the left. Edith tried to follow her. Mengele stopped her. He said she would see her mother again later. It was a lie.
That same evening, he looked for her among the prisoners. He had heard that she was a dancer. He ordered her to perform.
Edith danced.
She closed her eyes and went somewhere else. In her mind, she was no longer there. She was in Budapest, in a theater, with music and an audience. Her body was in the camp. The rest of her was not.
When she finished, Mengele threw her a piece of bread.
She shared it with the other women in the barracks. That act was remembered. Later, one of them helped keep her alive.
Then came everything else.
Auschwitz, forced labor, the transfer to Mauthausen. Finally, the death march to Gunskirchen. Fifty-five kilometers on foot, with no strength left. At one point, Edith collapsed. She could no longer walk.
Two women recognized her. One of them was among those with whom she had shared the bread. Together with her sister Magda, they lifted her and carried her forward.
The camp at Gunskirchen was the final stop. Starvation, bodies everywhere, no medical care.
On May 4, 1945, American soldiers arrived. Edith was lying on the ground among the bodies, still alive. One soldier noticed movement and pulled her out.
She was seventeen years old.
After the war, she returned home. She found her sister Klara again. She tried to rebuild a life. She married, had children, left Hungary, and moved to the United States.
For years, she did not speak about what had happened.
Then she met Viktor Frankl. That encounter changed the course of her life. She returned to school. At the age of fifty, she earned a doctorate in clinical psychology. She began working with people marked by deep trauma.
In 1980, she returned to Auschwitz. She walked through the camp as an adult. She said that there she was finally able to do one specific thing: forgive herself for surviving.
Not those who had harmed her. Herself.
In 2017, she published The Choice. The book reached readers in many countries.
Today, she continues to speak, to work, and to tell her story.
One of the last things her mother said to her while they stood in line at Auschwitz was that no one can take away what you keep in your mind.
Edith Eger built her entire life on that sentence.

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Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou

Miles de luces encendiéndose dibujan el Real. Así fue el Alumbrado de la Feria de Sevilla 2026, desde el aire.
📸 Antonio Pizarro
#sevilla #diariodesevilla #feriadeabril #feriadesevilla2026
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Texas can require the Ten Commandments to be displayed in public school classrooms, a US appeals court has ruled, setting up a likely Supreme Court case. cnn.it/4cFOODe

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@cnnbrk So…the judges who made this decision got their law degrees online, like, at Temu? That tracks.
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@cnnbrk So…no separation of Church and State?
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Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou
Angel Di-Rod / 🇮🇹Angelo / 🇬🇷Αλέξανδρος retweetou

Two crews. The same dream.
Dad would have loved every second of this past week. He believed in what space exploration said about humanity: that our best instinct is to go further, together.
Safe travels home, Artemis II crew. LLAP 🖖
@nasaartemis #startrek #toboldlygo #nasa


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