Thursday, April 28, 2011

Watch Nurses Digitalplayground Online

I managed

I managed to finish the decoration of Easter. I could not show her at the time. So just picture it now.
Well, that world of sun and plenty of greenery around. Immediately merrier :-)

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Template For Bandanas

رسالة إلى الأخ Qasim Haddad

. . Dear brother Qasim Haddad

Hello,

not met, since a very long time but you always in mind what it represents in our cultural life. What I was to write Now you do not need to appeal to the conviction of your contribution to stop the widening crackdown antisepticism so long now all the groups that have contributed in this way or that and so much Or that in the national movement for change, the country has experienced recently.

know you stood critical of that move. I said in the statement of the second of March, you do not accept Some of the slogans raised in the street that is, those which "calls for the overthrow of the regime right now." Did not object to a right to do so. People keep you inspired and your position in the supervisor of your date. On top of that, people know that you are not the property Isomwa him, except he is oppressing them bragging


not agree with you in your situation declared that day. Just as the right of people to raise slogans glorifying System, it is also their right to raise slogans to abort it. I did not agree with you because I believe in what was the same in your statement about "freedom of the individual, and the right to think and take your position and independent, without To impose upon the position, or pressuring him to side with one party or another ". a



g

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Glory Holes Columbus, Oh

Bahraini Rulers Play Sectarian Card in Bid to Trump

By Finian Cunningham
URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24390     


Global Research , April 19, 2011


       
Increasing attacks on Shia mosques in the Bahraini state’s withering crackdown against the pro-democracy movement is a deliberate attempt to isolate the political opposition and amounts to a campaign of “sectarian cleansing”, say human rights groups.

Over the past four weeks since the Saudi-led Gulf Peninsula Shield military intervention in Bahrain, there appears to be a concerted drive by pro-state Sunni forces to target repression at the Shia population and in particular Shia mosques and other religious sites, such as cemeteries and meeting places known as Mattams.

Some mosques have been vandalized, with their doors, windows and the PA systems used in the call to prayer having been smashed. More recently, other mosques, such as the 800-year-old Al Shaboor, near the capital, Manama, have in the past week been razed to the ground with bulldozers. A similar fate was met by five mosques in Hamad Town, about 15km south of Manama.

The pro-democracy uprising that began on February 14 rocked the US-backed Sunni rulers for almost a month before the other Gulf states sent in heavily armed contingencies to quell the protests.

But the nature of the military intervention has evidently gone beyond its initial avowed remit of restoring “security and stability”. Over 34 unarmed civilians have been killed, two-thirds of whom since the Saudi-led forces arrived. The latest victim is a 24-year-old woman, Azeeza Ahmed, who was shot dead when army and police raided her home in the village of Belad Al Qadeem on April 16.

Up to 600 people, including medics, lawyers and academics, have been unlawfully detained, their whereabouts unknown. At least four people have died while in custody, their released bodies showing signs of torture. Some 1,000 workers have been sacked from jobs in major state-owned industries, accused of participating in anti-regime protests. And the vast majority of these victims of repression are Shia.

Nabeel Rajab, of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, describes the ongoing repression by the Sunni rulers as a “campaign of sectarian cleansing” against the Shia population. The upsurge in seemingly
wanton attacks on Shia mosques and religious sites is clearly demonstrative of this, he says. Such attacks, as with the previously mentioned violations, Rajab points out, constitute crimes against humanity – crimes that the governments of the six Gulf states, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Oman, are in effect party to.

The pro-democracy movement in Bahrain was seen as a largely, but not exclusively, Shia-led movement. This reflects the fact that the Shia represent 70 per cent of the indigenous Bahrain
population of less than 600,000, and that this group has historically suffered the most political and economic marginalization under the ruling Al Khalifa family who have held power since the oil-rich shaikhdom was granted independence from Britain in 1971.
However, the calls for replacement of the monarchy and for greater democratic freedoms galvanized Shia and sections of the minority Sunni population as well as labour unions and other secular groups. “Not Sunni, Not Shia, Just Bahraini,” was a common rallying slogan during the heyday of the
uprising that saw hundreds of thousands take to the streets of the capital.

Some of the government opposition spokesmen that have been detained, such as Mohammed Abu Flasa and Ebrahim Al Sharif, leader of the National Democratic Action Society, are from Sunni backgrounds.

But, having said that, the repression that has unfolded since the Saudi-led Peninsula Shield entered the country has been directed with disproportionate force at the Shia population.

Pro-democracy sources and human rights groups say that the Bahraini government is now using a policy of divide and rule to isolate the opposition as a “sectarian problem” and in particular a “Shia
problem”.

One source, who did want to be named, said: “The targeting of the Shia is a tactic by the regime to distort the pro-democracy movement from a nationalist one into a sectarian one. It is also a way of undermining international support for the pro-democracy movement by trying to present it as
an internal problem of the state dealing with ‘troublesome Shia’. In this way, the Bahraini uprising is being made to appear as something different from the uprisings for democracy that have swept the region.”

Nabeel Rajab, who describes himself as secular with both Sunni and Shia family relatives, said:
“The government is attempting to incite divisive sectarian tensions, to intimidate Sunni people into not supporting the pro-democracy movement because it is being presented as a Shia movement. The destruction of Shia mosques is a clear sign of this sectarian policy and in my view reflects a wider campaign of sectarian cleansing across Bahrain.”

Saudi troops have used bulldozers to demolish dozens of Shia mosques in Manama and in other locations such as Sitra, in the north east, at Al Barbaghi, Karzakhan, A’ali and in Hamad Town. The
latter is particularly significant and could explain why five mosques in that one place alone have demolished. Hamad is one of the newbuild towns in Bahrain with a mixed community of Shia and Sunni. The ruthless targeting of one section of the community is being seen as an attempt to drive a wedge of fear and distrust between them.

Pro-democracy activists point to the government’s announcement last week that all buildings, including places of worship, are liable for demolition if they are found to not have a licence from the Municipal and Urban Planning Affairs Ministry. This, they say, is just a way of legalizing the targeting and destruction of Shia mosques.

Since that announcement, the number of Shia mosque demolitions seems to have increased
rapidly.

Another pro-democracy source pointed to a more sinister motive. “The regime wants to start a sectarian war between Shia and Sunni. They are humiliating the Shia trying to make them take revenge on Sunnis.”  Nabeel Rajab says that despite the provocation by pro-state forces, an all-out sectarian war is unlikely.

“Bahrain is not a tribal society. Shia and Sunni communities have lived side by side peacefully here for centuries, even before the Khalifa family arrived some 220 years ago,” said Rajab.

“So I don’t think these communities will start fighting because there is too much common ancestry between them. However, there is a danger of conflict between the Shia and the tens of thousands of new Sunni nationals that the regime has brought in from neigbouring Arab countries over the past 20 years to fill the ranks of the army and police forces.

“The regime would like to see a sectarian conflict blow up because that would distract from the common struggle for democracy against the rulers. It would also serve to justify the state of mergency that the regime has imposed, the brutal crackdown on human rights, and the involvement of other Gulf armies in Bahrain.”

Saudi Arabia and Bahrain are designated as key allies by Washington and London, and are important
export markets for American and British weapons manufacturers. The US recently signed off on a $60 billion arms deal with Saudi Arabia, and its Fifth Fleet is based in Bahrain, which is seen as a bulwark against Iran’s growing influence in the region. Despite the escalation of violence against civilians in Bahrain by Saudi and Bahraini state forces, Washington and London have remained tightlipped. Both Western governments have pointedly refused to condemn the actions of their Gulf allies.

The unprecedented bulldozing of mosques by Arab military forces has disturbing echoes of similar violations by Israeli troops in Palestinian territories. The development in Bahrain comes in the wake of diplomatic cables disclosed earlier this month by the whistle-blowing website, Wikileaks, in which
Bahrain’s King Hamad bin Isa Al-Khalifa boasted in 2005 to the then US ambassador, William Monroe, of the kingdom’s close ties with the Israeli state and its intelligence agency Mossad.

News update:

Since being interviewed by Global Research, Bahraini human rights activist Nabeel Rajab and his family were attacked in their home in the early hours of April 18. Rajab and his family, including his elderly mother, are suffering from the effects of asphyxiation after unknown assailants threw three teargas canisters into his home in Budaiya while the family was sleeping. Rajab, who is president
of the Bahrain Human Rights Centre and is also on the board of directors for Human Rights Watch’s middle east section, has been a fearless critic of the Bahraini regime over its maltreatment of etainees. The internationally acclaimed rights activist is facing a summons from the state military prosecutor
and possible detention after he published photographs showing signs of torture on the body of Bahraini man Ali Issa Sager (31) who died while in state custody
last week. [1]

Notes:
[1] http://www.facebook.com/pages/Nabeel-Rajab/194515507249804#!/media/s et/fbx/?set=a.203298013038220.49480.194515507249804






URL of this article: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=24390     

       

Marge Simpson Green Dress

A Report by Physcians for Human Rights on Bahrain

http://bahrain.phrblog.org/report

A Call for Bahrain to End Systematic Attacks on Doctors and Patients

Physicians for Human Rights

http://bahrain.phrblog.org/report/




alternative link http://wp.me/p18GrX-1q


:

Saturday, April 23, 2011

How Should Steeltoe Boots Fit

Demolition of Mosques & Cultural sites 1

mosque believer Balnouedrat
before demolition وبعده
 
Momen Mosque in Nuwaidrat (Sitra)
Before and After



 
 
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How To Draw Happy Birthday In Bubble Letters

Merry Christmas decorating

Ż I wish you all
healthy, happy Easter.
joyous, spring mood
and cordial meetings
with family and friends.

Friday, April 22, 2011

How To Build Taller Wood Swing Set

US-Saudi counter-revolution

. .
Fear and loathing in the House of Saud
By Pepe Escobar

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD21Ak01.html

Early last week, US President Barack Obama sent a letter to Saudi King Abdullah,
delivered in person in Riyadh by US National Security Advisor Thomas Donilon.
This happened less than a week after Pentagon head Robert Gates spent a full 90
minutes face to face with the king.
These two moves represented the final seal of approval of a deal struck between
Washington and Riyadh even before the voting of UN Security Council resolution
1973 (see Exposed: the Saudi-US Libya deal , Apr 1, Asia Times Online).
Essentially, the Obama administration will not say a word about how the House of
Saud conducts its ruthless repression of pro-democracy protests in Bahrain and
across the Persian Gulf. No ''humanitarian'' operations. No R2P
(''responsibility to protect''). No no-fly or no-drive zones.
Progressives of the world take note: the US-Saudi counter-revolution
against the Great 2011 Arab Revolt is now official.



Read more
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/MD21Ak01.html

.

Jockstrap Vs Compression Shorts

Bahrain escapes censure by West ......

. .

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/bahrain-escapes-censure-by-west-as-crackdown-on-protesters-intensifies-2269638.html

Bahrain escapes censure by West as crackdown on protesters intensifies

Saudi troops' demolition of mosques stokes religious tensions

By Patrick Cockburn in Cairo
Tuesday, 19 April 2011
The Independent

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/bahrain-escapes-censure-by-west-as-crackdown-on-protesters-intensifies-2269638.html
:

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Stomachsitting Wrestling

quest to rebuild the wall of fear

يشتد الحصار الإعلامي الذي تعاني منه   المعارضة Bahraini since troops entered Saudi Arabia and the UAE for the suppression of the protest movement in Bahrain. Despite the continuation of the "events" in Bahrain, media Gulf or under their control are not exposed to this country only in defense of the system is produced by repeating the official informed. can be seen how to contribute Fallopian Arab And Al-Jazeera and other satellite channels Peninsula Shield in the military campaign carried out by security a Saudi Arabia and the UAE, in Bahrain. However, the Bahraini opposition Despite this unprecedented Alhsarghyr proved their ability to deliver voice to the outside world. This led the news for Bahrain major newspapers in the United States, Britain and France. Thanks to what is published by these newspapers and other means of media and means of social contact world to know the details of what is happening in Bahrain raids The brutality is unprecedented and the world sees how to get back to Bahrain case of the police state they were in the nineties. A








 


,

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Can I Go To A Spa With Herpes?

Nothing to see in Bahrain

. .

Monday, April 18, 2011

Gay Cruising In Taroudant

Reputation Laundering

Arun Sudhaman
Working the angles around media, comms and marketing.

Middle East crisis puts PR firms in the spotlight

Posted to the Holmes Report here

Escalating unrest in several Middle Eastern countries is sparking growing interest in the role PR agencies are playing on behalf of the region’s beleaguered governments.

Facing particular scrutiny is the Government of Bahrain, which has retained Bell Pottinger for the past two years. The agency appears to have expanded its role since first being appointed to promote investment in the country; over the past week, it emerged that Bell Pottinger has helped set
up
a media centre to help journalists cover protests within the country.

Bell Pottinger CEO Paul Bell confirmed that the agency represents Bahrain’s Economic Development Board (EDB) but declined to comment further, stating that the agency did not discuss its work for clients. Earlier today, protesters appeared outside the firm’s London HQ, attacking its work for
the country.

Last year, The Guardian claimed that PR firms were making London the world capital of reputation laundering. Lobbyists in Washington DC, meanwhile, have also seen their work on behalf of foreign
governments
examined in detail .

The launch of the media centre has attracted criticism among journalists, after a BBC producer was held for 15 hours at Bahrain International Airport.

However, a source familiar with the situation said that the development represents a “highly atypical” response, “in the context of the region”.

“This is unfamiliar territory,” said the source. “Governments in this region are used to controlling information. This has been a very credible response by the government of Bahrain, and highly atypical in the context of the region.”

“What people assume with PR agencies is their real business is burying the truth,” continued the source. “Not so – this is where you step out with as much real information as you can provide. It is the kind of thing you expect to see from a full-fledged democracy”

Mass protests are continuing in Bahrain today, after authorities released 308 political prisoners. The unrest has seen Bahrain’s credit rating downgraded but the Gulf Arab kingdom’s central bank governor Rasheed al-Marak has insisted there has been “no indication of major capital flight.”

In the US, State Department filings reveal that PR counsel for Bahrain’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs is subcontracted by Bell Pottinger to Washington DC lobbying firm Qorvis. Meanwhile, the Holmes Report understands that last month Edelman New York began handling Bahrain’s EDB brief
in the US.

Qorvis, one of DC’s leading lobbying firms, also represents the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and Equatorial Guinea. Another DC consultancy, The Livingston Group, has previously represented Libya.

According to this story , Bell Pottinger also handled some work for the Government of Egypt last year. Bell confirmed that his firm is no longer handling any Egyptian assignments of this nature. It has also
emerged that the firm is representing exiled Libyan royal
Muhammad Al-Senussi , the country’s crown prince.

Bell Pottinger is one of a number of agencies that retain lucrative Middle East government contracts. Abu Dhabi’s Executive Affairs Authority retains Edelman as its primary PR agency, while Hill & Knowlton works Egypt’s IT Industry Development Agency and its General Authority for
Foreign investment.

Financial agencies such as Brunswick, FD and Citigate are also particularly active, handling assignments for the various financial centres and investment vehicles that are government-owned.


Saturday, April 16, 2011

Sundiro Knallert Dele 2001 Sundiro Knallert?

Common

I really like these moments of our common Pawełki. Within a week, unfortunately there are not many. Making up for the afternoon and wekendy.
with a set of papers from Lidl have done so far:
boxes for birds
basket with flowers
az newspaper kurczaczka

Bait Bus Gratis Mobile

Candy secret

writing post yesterday, I decided to send the egg to the first set of the person who leaves a comment.
first comment I got from emade76 .
I would like to address and provide three favorite colors on koraliki_agi@wp.pl
I'll be able to match you color Easter eggs.
There will be sets of images, because they had already flown to the recipients.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Which Shoes To Wear At Poof Dresses

egg sets

This is my idea of \u200b\u200bChristmas greetings. Egg Set: Felt a card + egg.



Last week was felt to me to prepare the eggs for decorating our house. Easter Decoration almost ready, was the only wyhaftowania (up!) Green oval. I've started in August on the canvas Aga. Tomorrow relax: cinema with your child and meeting with a friend: 0)

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Borderline Personality Or Aspergers

Wymianka chickens

Gifts wymiankowe came to me day after day. This double joy :-)
chicks arrived for me from Dominica Thank you very much, the joy You made me a lot. And now brag about the gifts that I received from you. Pictures lot. I do not have the whole package in one picture. I just did not fit in my frame.
Beautiful "wstążeczkowy" karczochowy "chicken
beautiful, równiutkie crocheted wonders. For me it's more riding school. Wyszydekować something I can, but my work is not such równiusieńkie. Great
napkin.
and pets: cock
rabbit
and the second tap - pendant
and for this a card, pendant delights to eat and drink, embroidery floss and watercress
wonderful gift. All done very carefully. A lot of joy. Once again, thank you very much

My cakes flew to Jeniulki. Unfortunately, before it is packaged, I had charged batteries into the camera. Photos telephone gone bad. But something can be seen. Two chicks: on paper and on the tag. Joined by egg: felt, crayons, and marzipan and a little "przydasi and sweets.
pendant is hafcikowy chicken, stuck to the plastic egg. I did this the first time that inspired me post Damar5 . I liked it - I do not think this is my last tag of this type.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Can I Play Golf With Cervical Spondylitis

Wymianka Lucynki Easter in part. 2

I have corrected the earlier post. However, my cakes have already reached the Pauli. Which means that I can show it. It was to be felt przyszykowałam jajecznie and eggs, pisankową a card, a candle and a few egg pisankowych ozdóbek. For the lamb to a plastic cross stitch canvas. Pauline, I assure that it is made by me. Thank you for your kind words felt even approximate the eggs. The green "grass" became 3: light green, pink and blue.
this week and felt the production of eggs has dominated my free time. I'll show them gradually.

Cellulitis Affect On Lab Values

Wymianka Easter in Lucynki

Pretty rosy easter eggs on it yourself a card + stands were brought to me from Ines . Thank you for the wonderful gift that is already decorated my flat. And today, delighting them my Mom. My present probably still wanders. As it happens I'll show him.

United Kingdom Place Name Quiz

TURMOIL IN THE ARABIAN PENINSULA

The following is an extract from a longer article by J.E. Peterson published by Foreign Policy Research Institute. April 2011

http://www.fpri.org/enotes/201104.peterson.arabia.html


BAHRAIN

Bahrain is a good example of why the GCC states are not all interchangeable. It is a small country and its oil reserves, small to begin with, have just about run out. Thus the post-oil future that hangs over all six members has struck already in Bahrain. While Bahrain’s ruling family has been in charge for more than two centuries, it has been more autocratic than its neighbors and consequently the archipelago has witnessed regular periodic protests and periods of dissidence for more than a century.

Bahrain’s troubles are often ascribed to sectarian tensions between a Sunni minority (including the al Khalifa ruling family) and a Shia majority. But the country’s political problems are better seen as a perpetual contest between the al Khalifa (who trace their background from a tribe of central Arabia) and their tribal allies who also came to Bahrain from the mainland on the one hand, and the great majority of the both Sunni and Shia population on the other. Among the Sunnis are the hawala families, of Arab origin but who arrived in Bahrain from the Persian coast of the Gulf; they dominate in business. The Shia are principally the Arab Baharna, generally regarded as the original inhabitants, but there are also many Persians who have immigrated over the last century. The opposition also charges the regime with having naturalized thousands of Sunnis, especially Jordanians, Syrians, Yemenis, and Pakistanis, in an attempt to redress the sectarian imbalance.

Sunni and Shia dissidents have banded together in their opposition to the al Khalifa regime in 1938, 1953-1956, 1965, and the early 1970s. But the Shia have taken the lead in organized and persistent opposition because they are the disadvantaged in Bahrain. Shia villages are visibly poorer and lack many of the amenities found in Sunni villages. The Shia are systematically excluded from the military and the security forces and are under-represented in government employment in general and in senior positions in particular. Thus most of the large numbers of young and unemployed are Shia who have become increasingly disaffected. The serious unrest of the late 1990s was a Shia-driven phenomenon although it had the quiet support of many Sunnis as well.

When long-time ruler Shaykh Isa died in 1999, many Bahrainis saw the succession of his son Hamad as a positive development. Isa had never been very interested in the affairs of government and he reigned while his brother Khalifa ruled as prime minister. Khalifa not only made himself one of the wealthiest men in the Gulf, he also easily became the most hated man in Bahrain for many Bahrainis.

Through his control of internal security, Khalifa spearheaded the wave of repression that saw Bahrainis jailed for political offenses, some of them tortured, and others victims of the peculiarly Bahraini practice of exiling. For expatriates, Bahrain was a welcoming place to live and work, but deep-seated tensions underlay the friendly, prosperous air of the capital al-Manamah.

In his first two years as ruler, Hamad enacted a number of long overdue reforms. Prisoners were freed, exiles were welcomed home, real steps were made toward freedom of speech and press, and the ruler engaged in serious dialogue with opposition leaders. In 2001, however, he declared himself king and the process of change stagnated. True, he held elections for a national assembly but the elected assembly was matched with an appointed assembly whose speaker could cast the final vote breaking any tie. Furthermore, electoral constituencies were gerrymandered so that Shia representatives won a maximum of 18 of the 40 available seats, even though they constitute the majority of voters. Most of the other seats have been won by Sunni Islamist supporters of the government.

The political situation remained unresolved until the “Arab spring” of 2011 burst forth in Tunisia and Egypt. In imitation of Cairo’s Tahrir Square, Bahrainis occupied Pearl Roundabout as the center of their vocal opposition to the government. The goal of most of the protesters was not the toppling of the regime as in Tunisia, Egypt, and Yemen, but genuine reform beginning with the dismissal of the prime minister (and the king’s uncle) Khalifa. He was seen by many as the leader of the hardline faction of the ruling family while the heir apparent and son of the king, Salman, was regarded as the liberal leader, urging dialogue and accommodation. King Hamad was said to be in the middle.

In the end, the hardliners won out and the regime reacted with repression, eventually clearing the roundabout. More protesters began to call for the overthrow of the regime and the government acted with force, arresting many and instituting martial law. Not all Bahrainis have protested and there have been mass demonstrations in support of the government. But the government has been stubborn in its rejection of opposition demands. It apparently has sought to stoke a sectarian dimension of conflict, it has declared that Iran was behind opposition movements, and it has re-arrested some opposition leaders and closed the principal opposition newspaper.

Disturbingly, the al Khalifa have received the support of fellow GCC monarchs and they invited Saudi Arabian and United Arab Emirates (UAE) troops to enter Bahrain in support of Bahraini security forces—although it is debatable how much of an “invitation” Saudi Arabia needed. The situation has quieted and many of the foreign media have departed. But underneath, nothing has changed. All the al Khalifa remain in their usual positions, the old allegations of unjustified arrest and torture have resurfaced, hundreds of Bahrainis are being held by security forces, and thousands of young Bahrainis remain unemployed and disaffected.  The economic damage of the last several months is enormous while the tenuous “social contract” between ruler and ruled is fraying badly.



.....

http://www.fpri.org/enotes/201104.peterson.arabia.html


.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Jock Strap High School

After the break

break was not planned and started suddenly. We fell to the computer. We lost everything that was not written on the plates. I pity the most of some patterns, which have not yet had time to write. difficult, if not these, it will be different. Fortunately, we have our pictures.

And what about me:
first wymiankowo:
- today I got a package from Ines - thank you warmly beautiful gift, already waiting for Easter. pictures will do tomorrow, in good light and show on the blog.
- my consignment of chickens Jeniulki reached, and the other is still on the road.

second Hafcikowo:
- the February Nelsonek Aga finished canvas. Image of "naked":
and "dressed" in konturki:
I really like to embroider konturki. I leave all to the end. I like to look at how much change the picture.
- Easter decoration - green oval and grows slowly emerges from the last tulipanek:
third Easterly:
zestawiki created a mini Christmas - cards and felted egg eggs przeróżnie decorated.
That presents a set of blue:
Now, after a pause, not opędzicie from me ;-) I have little things to show. Tomorrow wymianki.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Changing Region On Sony Dvp-ns75h

Dzidzia - S. Chutnik

young Polish writers such as Dorothy Chutnik and Masłowska, clear in his work with the Polish, the archetypes, quirks, traditions and superstitions. They do it in a very original way of using language. I'm not saying it's wrong, somebody had to move that ring the earth, who, if not young.



second novel is a moment of crisis especially after the successful (as yet!) Debut - "Pocket atlas of women", awarded Passport Policy. Heroines of other novels Chutnik - Fri " Dzidzia " and the two women are mother and daughter Danuta Mutter, title Dzidzia, impaired psychofizycznie girl. Mother - a Polish woman and her child, at this point, a picture perfect world. The mother, whose brutally taken away previous children trying to keep her daughter at the impaired at any price to fight for it even before the court.

Chutnik confronts in his novel of the Polish stereotype of how guilt and punishment. Handicapped child as a punishment for the sins of previous generations, as a saint as a corpse. The author would deal ruthlessly with the Polish anti-Semitism, hypocrisy, and superstition. But this is only the top layer of history, because her character is true of Poland, sick, inept, self-mortifying and used.

Sylvia writes Chutnik ironic and grotesque language makes reality becomes ever more surreal and so incredibly unlikely. Clearly feels the prosecution of the author, directed not only to the ruling, but the Poles themselves. To shake off! Let finally be normal.