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Цитата(Wladimir-02 @ 4.6.2012, 13:06)
Alex: "Просто дело в моем отношении к политработникам. .... Вот с тех пор аллергия по всему телу к этим господам-товарищам"
день добрый Alex, интересный поворот в обсуждении статьи
то есть по-твоему получается так: статья полный бред потому что - 1) у меня аллергия по всему телу от политработников из-за того что 2) одного инженера эти "злобные" господа-товарищи, ломая через колено, пытались затащить в свой нехороший клан 3) но так как автор статьи ДОЧЬ ПОЛИТРАБОТНИКА, то её статья - полная, слащавая бредятина! в общем, логика есть сложилось впечатление, что твой комментарий к статье - просто выброс аллергенов
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Growing Up Under the Russians
October 12, 2016 Durs Grünbein Remembers a Childhood Under Occupation
....And so one day, shortly after the end of the War, the Russians entered Dresden. They took over the old complex of barracks to the north of the city, set up an exercise area on the Heller heath, distributed themselves among various quarters and official buildings throughout the various districts of the city, and were there to stay.Soon it was as if they had always been there.They belonged to the city like the women trailing home with their shopping bags at teatime, the red coaches of the Tatra trams, and the trash bins made of gunned concrete.Only later, long after the troops had been withdrawn from the eastern part of Germany, did it become apparent how rarely one of their soldiers was to be seen on the postcards of the period.Their day-to-day activities never even got a mention in the local section of the newspaper.They remained a foreign tribe among the Germans.It was, with them, the same as with certain neighbors who never become more than strangers even though we see them every day.They always presented an exotic sight, mostly turning up in small groups, uniformed recruits marching in line, or a gaggle of them in civvies wandering through the city and in the museums.People got used to seeing them around and soon learned to see through them.They seemed to have come from another planet, a star that appeared on their caps and the gates of their inaccessible quarters: they were the people from the Soviet star....