Sunday, April 26, 2009

To Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan who killed Polish Scientist in Pakistan

To Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan who killed Polish Scientist in Pakistan

Calling You Taliban do not kill Polish People the great People

Calling You Taliban do not kill Polish People the great People

Egzekucja Polskiego Geologa ostatnie chwile przed (execution of polish engineer) Piotr Stańczak

I do not know what to say? It is to late now and why you had to kill my Polish brother?
Only one country in the western word knows Islam well is Poland. Polish Islamic history for 1000 years.
why? they did to the Polish Man Scientist Man of Poland and Geologist ? ask your masters?Alex Lech Bajan Washington DC

TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI

TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI

TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI PART1
Pan prof. dr hab. Piotr Jaroszyński - TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI (4/4). Wykład został wygłoszony na VIII Międzynarodowym Sympozjum z cyklu «PRZYSZŁOŚĆ CYWILIZACJI ZACHODU», Terroryzm dawniej i dziś, który odbył się 21 kwietnia 2009 na Katolickim Uniwersytecie Lubelskim.
Plik dźwiękowy pochodzi ze stron Radia Maryja


TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI (2/4)


TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI (3/4)


TERRORYZM A WOJNA CYWILIZACJI (4/4)

Monday, April 6, 2009

Dziekanski of Poland brutally killed by Canadian airport security Inquiry reveals more of Dziekanski's life in Poland Updated Sun. Apr. 5 2009 3

Dziekanski of Poland brutally killed by Canadian airport security




Inquiry reveals more of Dziekanski's life in Poland
Updated Sun. Apr. 5 2009 3:45 PM ET

The Canadian Press

VANCOUVER -- If most Canadians remember Robert Dziekanski as the panicked, out-of-control figure who died in RCMP hands at Vancouver's airport, Wojciech Dibon might tell them about the Dziekanski who acted as a father to him, taking him camping and teaching him about geography.

But Dibon wasn't able to tell the inquiry into Dziekanski's death about the man he knew.

Dibon, the son of a woman Dziekanski was living with, was 17 when he died and he remains so distraught over the man's death that he was unable to testify at the inquiry sorting out what happened at the airport early on Oct. 14, 2007.

"He and Mr. Dziekanski were very close," says Walter Kosteckyj, the lawyer for Dziekanski's mother.

"This young man didn't have a father figure, Mr. Dziekanski took him camping, taught him the skills of manhood, spent time with him."

Dibon was one of the last people Dziekanski saw before he made his fateful trip to Canada, coming along for the two-hour ride to the airport on Oct. 13, 2007.

Upon arriving in Vancouver more than 20 hours later, Dziekanski spent hours lost in the airport, unable to connect with his mother who was frantically searching for him in another area of the facility.

RCMP were called after Dziekanski, sweating and exhausted, started throwing furniture in the international terminal. Within seconds of arriving, the four officers stunned the man several times with a Taser, and Dziekanski died on the airport floor in the minutes that followed.

The amateur video of Dziekanski's chilling screams and his encounter with police will be the epitaph left for most Canadians, but his friends and neighbours recall a different man, kind and friendly but also with his own share of flaws, eager to start a new life.

Dibon was hospitalized shortly after Dziekanski's death.

"He's had a hard time dealing with that," says Kosteckyj.

Dibon's absence, along with the inquiry testimony last week of others who knew Dziekanski in Gliwice, Poland, adds depth to the man Dziekanski's supporters have angrily accused government and police lawyers of trying to vilify.

He loved geography and read many books about the country that was to be his new home, the inquiry heard.

He played chess and gardened.

He may have had some trouble with the law as a teenager. He smoked and drank.

He was terrified of flying.

"Like a normal person," says Iwona Kosowska, offering a simple explanation when asked to describe her former neighbour.

"He was a very, very good man."

Dziekanski was born in the town of Pieszyce in southern Poland and later moved with his mother to Gliwice, a small industrial city not far from the borders with Slokavia and Czech Republic.

He lived in the same apartment with his mother, Zofia Cisowski, for much of his life, until she moved in 1999 to Kamloops, B.C., where she found work as a janitor.

After Cisowski left, Dziekanski lived with Dibon's mother, Elzbieta, although it's still not clear whether they were romantically involved, and if so for how long.

While he was trained to typeset in a print shop, by the time he left for Canada he was mostly doing odd jobs, heavy labour or handy work. Without a full-time job or much money, his mother would send home cash from B.C.

He planned to learn English when he arrived and find a job, possibly working with his mother.

And he also wanted to travel across Canada to see a place he had only read about in the many books and atlases he had collected about the country.

His hobbies included playing chess and bridge with friends and working at a nearby garden plot given to him by a family member.

"I would play quite often chess with him and just before he left he gave me a gift of portable chess board," said Ryszard Krasinski, Dziekanski's friend of eight years.

"He had a huge collection of atlases and other geographical material and he had very deep knowledge of geography."

When he left for Canada, Dziekanski, who only spoke Polish, had barely been outside the country and never overseas.

His long trip to Vancouver was his first time flying, and the thought of being on a plane terrified him.

When a friend arrived to drive him to the airport, Dziekanski was in a panic, clutching a radiator, vomiting and refusing to leave.

The scene brings to mind the video of Dziekanski's final moments the next day in Vancouver, the would-be immigrant pacing around the international terminal, throwing furniture and rambling in Polish about smashing the area around him but also asking for help.

Dziekanski's neighbours insisted he didn't anger easily and was never aggressive -- a description echoed by border agents and airline staff who said he was calm and co-operative when they dealt with him.

RCMP lawyers at the inquiry have made much of Dziekanski's apparent legal troubles stretching back to an incident more than two decades earlier.

Dziekanski may have spent time in a reformatory school following a robbery when he was 17, but details have been foggy because it didn't result in a criminal record.

Police and prosecutors in Canada have also suggested Dziekanski was an alcoholic, but his neighbours say he was only a social drinker and had rarely, if ever, seen him drunk.

Whatever his problems, they weren't too much for Canadian immigration officials, who approved him to enter the country.

"He was talking about it quite often -- he told me he was going to Canada, where there is milk and honey," says neighbour and family friend Magda Czelwinska.

"He was very happy because he loved his mother very much and he couldn't wait to meet her."

Monday, September 15, 2008

Polish émigré 5 years since entering U.S., he gets into 7 Ivy Leagues

Polish émigré 5 years since entering U.S., he gets into 7 Ivy Leagues

Poland - making a difference



By Bob Considine
TODAYShow.com contributor

Polish émigré 5 years since entering U.S., he gets into 7 Ivy Leagues
Polish émigré couldn’t speak English; now he’s admitted to 17 top schools

By Bob Considine
TODAYShow.com contributor
updated 9:05 a.m. ET, Wed., June. 18, 2008
Lukasz Zbylut has taken “the old college try” to a whole new level.

The New York teenager, who emigrated from Poland only five years ago, applied to seven Ivy League schools — and was accepted by every one of them.

Now he’s thrilled to further his education at his “dream school” of choice — Harvard. What, Yale wasn’t good enough for him? How about Princeton?


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

“I do feel sorry, and I feel awful for turning down such great institutions,” Zbylut told TODAY co-hosts Matt Lauer and Meredith Vieira. “But it’s Harvard.”

Among the other schools he declined were Columbia, Dartmouth, Penn, Cornell, Georgetown, Stanford and New York University.

There were 10 other prominent schools that also accepted the ever-smiling 18-year-old. But he knew he could only pick one.

“It’s a great feeling to have,” Zbylut added. “And it’s very exciting — and confusing, to an extent.”

A class act
Lukasz Zbylut (pronounced Loo-KASH Zbeh-LOOT) was in seventh grade when he came to the United States. At that point, he admits, he had only a limited grasp of the English language.

“It’s quite amazing that the first words you learn in any language are the curses,” Zbylut said with a laugh. “It’s ‘thank you’ and the curses. Someone should study that at some point. But I’ve come a long way since then.”

Zbylut said the transition to attending school in the U.S. was “easier than expected.”

“Schools in Poland are very rigorous, as you can imagine,” he said. “When taking my first exam, I was constantly turning to the girl next to me because in Poland, [testing] is very collaborative. Here, it’s the opposite.”

In addition to holding such high grades, Zbylut is co-captain of his school’s United Nations team; founder of its debate team; president of its mock-trial team and editor of the school newspaper. And, just for kicks, he plays soccer.

With such credentials, Lauer asked, why did Zbylut apply to so many schools when he knew he’d be accepted to so many of them?

“That isn’t really true, especially the last decade,” Zbylut explained. “[It’s] very competitive. We’re into the single digits when it comes to acceptance rates.

“I thought of myself as a great candidate, but I was never certain of getting into a single one college.”

Zbylut plans to study politics, law and philosophy at Harvard. But there was one school that actually did turn him down — the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Zbylut said he didn’t mind the snub.

“I really don’t regret it, because I would never be as passionate as a student they potentially could have given the spot to,” he said. “I’m hoping that the spot they gave would have been to someone who is very passionate about politics and everything.”

UN soldier in Lebanon trades her blue beret for a veil

UN soldier in Lebanon trades her blue beret for a veil






MARJAYOUN, Lebanon (AFP) -- Sylvia Monika Wyszomirska is a Catholic from Poland, but in an effort to integrate better into south Lebanon's conservative society she has traded her UN peacekeeper's beret for a headscarf during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.


""Out of respect for the environment I work in, I feel I need to try to integrate myself"" during Ramadan, said 37-year-old Wyszomirska who has been stationed in the country for four months.

""And since my contingent is deployed in a Muslim area, I have decided to wear the hijab,"" the Muslim veil, over military fatigues, the mother of a little girl told AFP.

Wyszomirska chose a veil in the same light shade of blue used for the berets worn by members of the 13,000-strong United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL), which keeps the peace along the tense Lebanon-Israel border.

A native of Krakow, Wyszomirska works as a translator for the 200-member Polish contingent of UNIFIL, and her job brings her into direct contact with the people who live in Shiite-majority villages across the Marjayoun region.

Her deployment to southern Lebanon is not Wyszomirska's first encounter with Muslim tradition. She has also been to Kuwait and Iraq and worked in Syria as well to perfect her Arabic.

""When I was studying Middle Eastern languages at Jagiellonski university back home we also learned about the customs, traditions, history and geography of the countries we might end up working in -- places like Lebanon, Iraq, Syria and Kuwait,"" she said.

Wyszomirska's decision to wear the veil during Ramadan has helped to break the ice with local villagers, both for her personally and for her colleagues in the Polish contingent.

""At first relations were lukewarm, especially since we don't come from a rich country with things to offer the people,"" she said. ""All we can offer them is respect and a smile. But since I started wearing the veil, people have been more welcoming with me and also with my colleagues. This has opened more doors and opportunities to strike up friendships.”

""They began inviting us into their homes for coffee or sweets. And when we pass by the children smile and wave at us,"" she said.

""Today I feel almost as if I have a second family in Debbine, Blat and Arid,"" she added of the mostly Shiite villages in the area.

Wyszomirska said that wearing the veil was ""a gesture from the heart -- it was not imposed on me.""

Her superior welcomed the idea that she wear veil during the holy month.

""He also suggested to me that I explain Ramadan customs to the other soldiers so they can respect the traditions and refrain from eating and drinking in public during fasting"" between dawn and dusk, she said.

Another woman peacekeeper in the Polish contingent, a 36-year-old, said she thought ""wearing the veil was a smart move, because it brought us closer to the residents,"" but also added that she would not do the same herself.

""It would change my look completely, and that's not something I want.""

Some of the villagers were slightly taken aback by the sight of the fatigues-clad Wyszomirska wearing a veil.

""I was surprised to see Sylvia wearing the headscarf, because I know she's not a Muslim,"" said Zahraa Hijazi, a veiled student from the village of Debbine.

""But in any case nuns wear veils even though they are Christian,"" she added.

Debbine mayor Mohammed Sherif Ibrahim agreed that many of his constituents were surprised by Wyszomirska's decision to wear the veil ""because it is out of the ordinary"".

""But it is also a nice gesture that breaks down barriers between UNIFIL and the local people,"" he said.

Monday, August 11, 2008

wypowiedzi przedstawicieli niemieckiego Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych zdecydowanie dowodzą, że niemiecka dyplomacja w konflikcie rosyjsko-gruziński

wypowiedzi przedstawicieli niemieckiego Ministerstwa Spraw Zagranicznych zdecydowanie dowodzą, że niemiecka dyplomacja w konflikcie rosyjsko-gruzińskim wspiera Moskwę.

Minister stanu w niemieckim Ministerstwie Spraw Zagranicznych Gernot Erler (SPD) w udzielonych ostatnio wywiadach kilkakrotnie zarzucił Gruzji naruszenie prawa międzynarodowego. Jego zdaniem, Gruzja pogwałciła to prawo, ponieważ postanowiła rozwiązać problem prorosyjskiej separatystycznej Osetii Południowej za pomocą wojska. W wywiadzie dla monachijskiego "Sueddeutsche Zeitung" Erler ostrzega, aby nie oceniać Rosji zbyt pochopnie i zbyt ostro. - Eskalacja nastąpiła w wyniku obustronnych prowokacji - stwierdził wiceszef niemieckiej dyplomacji i dodał, że od początku było jasne, iż wtargnięcie wojsk gruzińskich na teren Osetii sprowokuje Rosję do działania. Wiceszef niemieckiego MSZ przyznał, że dobre stosunki rosyjsko-niemieckie, do których wyjątkowo przyczynił się poprzedni socjaldemokratyczny kanclerz Gerhard Schroeder, powinny zostać wykorzystane do tego, aby Niemcy zostały negocjatorem w konflikcie kaukaskim.
Również wypowiadając się dla radia NDR-Info Geront Erler obwiniał gruzińskiego prezydenta o to, że zamierza rozwiązywać problemy za pomocą wojska, czego nie da się zrobić. Niemiecki polityk stwierdził, że taka strategia jest zerwaniem nadzorowanego przez siły międzynarodowe zawieszenia broni z 1992 roku. Jego zdaniem, w obecnym stanie rzeczy przyjęcie Gruzji do NATO na pewno zostaje na długi czas odłożone.
Szef niemieckiej dyplomacji Walter Frank Steinmeier (SPD) rozmawiał telefonicznie zarówno z szefem rosyjskiej dyplomacji Siergiejem Ławrowem, jak i z gruzińskim prezydentem Micheilem Saakaszwilim, lecz efektem tych rozmów był jedynie apel o zawieszenie broni. Tygodnik "Der Spiegel" w jednym z komentarzy określił działania Waltera Steinmeiera jako naiwne.
Z kolei specjalista frakcji SPD w Bundestagu do spraw zagranicznych Gert Weisskirchen w wywiadzie dla "Deutschlandfunk" stwierdził, że prezydent Gruzji Micheil Saakaszwili ofensywą na Osetię dostarczył następnych argumentów przeciwko przyjęciu tego kraju do NATO.
Kanclerz Angela Merkel (CDU) także rozmawiała telefonicznie z przedstawicielami Moskwy i Tbilisi. Zaapelowała o natychmiastowy i bezwarunkowy rozejm w konflikcie w Osetii Południowej. Wezwała przy tym wszystkie siły uczestniczące w konflikcie do powrotu na pozycje, jakie zajmowały przed wybuchem walk. Podkreśliła też konieczność zachowania terytorialnej integralności Gruzji. - Rosyjskie naloty lotnicze na gruzińskie terytorium winny być natychmiast wstrzymane - powiedziała.
Niemieckie media nie potwierdziły jednak rosyjskich informacji, jakoby Angela Merkel miała zamiar w przyszłym tygodniu przylecieć do Moskwy na rozmowy o sytuacji kaukaskiej z prezydentem Rosji Dmitrijem Miedwiediewem.

Waldemar Maszewski, Hamburg