Archive through Apr...
 
Notifications
Clear all

Archive through April 30, 2000

50 Posts
12 Users
0 Reactions
9,011 Views
(@jakeb)
Estimable Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 148
Topic starter  

To Igor,

YOu have done NOTHING except subject this board to your filthy fowl mouth and incredibly boring posts. I can forgive you for being mentally weak, almost a retard, but bad behaviour and fowl language will not be tolerated.


I undertand that part of the blame lies with the disguting way that your uneducated Russian peasant parents have raised you. Now you must understand you are in a civilized nation, not Russian and here you MUST learn to behave like a human being.

Even by lower goy standards there is something seriously wrong with you.

I, nor the Sephardic will tolerate any more idiotic postings/bad language from you.


   
Quote
(@saladin)
Estimable Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 105
 

War supposed to be finished in three months is still far from over and now this idiot says it will take three years to 'resolve'.

There is no doubt that the Mujahideen will crush the Russian Army to oblivion pretty soon.


Sergei Yastrzhembsky, the Kremlin's Chechnya spokesman, said in an interview published today that it will take up to three years to resolve the Chechen crisis.

``The return to normalcy in Chechnya will take from one to three years,'' Yastrzhembsky told the newspaper Trud. ``In this period, a special system of governance subordinate directly to Moscow will be created.''

As far as talks with Chechen leaders was concerned, Yastrzhembsky said no leader has emerged who could represent the entire Chechen nation. ``Such a uniting has not appeared so far,'' he said.

``There are no partners for dialogue among people who oppose federal forces with arms in their hands, talks with them can only be about unconditional surrender,'' he said.

But as the war drags on, amid criticism from abroad and faltering public support at home, the Russian government has acknowledged talking with Chechen intermediaries about a political solution.

APO/Russia-Chechnya/


   
ReplyQuote
(@jakeb)
Estimable Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 148
Topic starter  


Igor,

Never forget, I hold the sword of truth and justice. This can either be used to reward or punish you, depending on how you behave


   
ReplyQuote
(@allaustralian)
Eminent Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 49
 

TOWING THAT TOILET SMELLING DUNGFACE TURK, KILLER OF ARMENIANS AND KURDS, AS BAIT TO CATCH SHARKS IS NOT A BAD IDEA! LOL!!
DID YOU CLEAN MY TOILET, PISSSSFACE??!!
LOL!


   
ReplyQuote
(@chechnenyonok)
New Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 1
 

I am SORY for you too, belly dancing dumbfucked Turka.


   
ReplyQuote
(@chechenyonok)
Active Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 13
 

Stupid quotes, I shall remember them:

Saladin 04/29 "There is no doubt that the Mujahideen will crush the Russian Army to oblivion pretty soon."

Feel free to clarify how soon


   
ReplyQuote
(@chechenyonok)
Active Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 13
 

Uzbek: "According to the Russian Media, there are still hundreds of fighters holed up in Grozny. This is my question to you: Why haven't the Russians been able to take complete control of Grozny?"

Answering his own questions without even realizing it. So Uzbek-like. (They usually s-h-i-t in their own pockets without realizing it).


   
ReplyQuote
(@chechenyonok)
Active Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 13
 

POP QUIZ FOR SALADIN & Co.

When a good Muslim man dies, he gets three wives in heaven. What does a good Muslim woman gets? 1/3 (one third) of a man)?


   
ReplyQuote
 igor
(@igor)
Noble Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 1518
 

Turk waiting for your comments on Turkish atrocities. GO FUUCK YOUR FATHER BERNSWEIN THE COWARD PEE WEE HERMAN WITH THE SKRAWNY ARMS RETARD


   
ReplyQuote
 igor
(@igor)
Noble Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 1518
 

Turk waiting for your comments on Turkish atrocities. GO FUUCK YOUR FATHER BERNSWEIN THE COWARD PEE WEE HERMAN LOOK ALIKE WITH THE SKRAWNY ARMS RETARD


   
ReplyQuote
 igor
(@igor)
Noble Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 1518
 

BERNSWEIN COME AND BRING YOUR SWORD.I WANT IT FOR MY COLLECTION YOU GOOF.WHEN YOU COME HERE I WILL SPREAD SOME JAM ON YOU AND LET ONE OF OUR NICE BEARS FUUCK YOU IN THE ARSE BEFORE IT DEVOURS YOU,YOU GOOF


   
ReplyQuote
(@allaustralian)
Eminent Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 49
 

SALADIN... SALADINN...SALAD INN... SALAD... LOL!
ALL AMERICAN'S CUMPUKE SALAD DRESSING... THROWN VIOLENT AGAINST A WALL! LOL!


   
ReplyQuote
 igor
(@igor)
Noble Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 1518
 

All Australian are you Billy Barfly?


   
ReplyQuote
(@antonio)
Estimable Member
Joined: 17 years ago
Posts: 240
 

The Fresno Bee
April 28, 2000, Friday SOUTH VALLEY EDITION

Keeping the Faith
Armenian church in Yettem honors victims of the Turkish genocide by living better lives today.
By Diana Peck SPECIAL TO THE BEE

When Arousiag Shuklian reflects on her childhood, her body quivers and she weeps.

Shuklian, 97, grew up in the village of Divrig in Turkey. When she was 11, Turkish soldiers arrived at her door to drive her family out of the village
because they were Armenian. Her father and brother were taken and never returned. She was separated from her sister but remained with her mother.

For 29 days they marched through the Syrian desert, with little to eat and drink. At one point, she became so thirsty, her mother stopped to cup her hands in ground water to give Shuklian a drink.

For that, her mother was beaten and murdered before her eyes.

On Sunday, St. Mary Armenian [Orthodox] Church in Yettem will remember the family members Shuklian lost as well as the more than 1.5 million men, women and children who died in the Armenian genocide of 1915 to 1921.

The Rev. Sahak Kaishian, pastor of St. Mary, said Shuklian is the only genocide survivor of the church's membership.

"If you look at the world's population of Armenians prior to 1915 and then after the genocide, it was so drastically reduced that they were no longer a threat, if that can be used as a term, to the Turkish government or whatever
their agenda was," Kaishian said.

Shuklian survived the march through the desert because a Turkish soldier spared her life, but he held her captive as a slave for three years.

She spent her days laboring for a family that abused her mentally and physically. When they became angry with her, they would throw her into "the pit," a dark hole infested with bugs and lice and guarded by dogs.

On some occasions they would give her to the Turkish soldiers. Her salvation finally came when an Armenian soldier on horseback rescued her and placed her with the American Red Cross. She later was transferred to an Armenian orphanage and finally emigrated to the United States at the age of 19.

The church Shuklian attends hasn't forgotten the genocide. Kaishian pointed to a stained-glass panel depicting the beginning of the massacres on April 24, 1915.

That's when the leaders of communities, professionals and intellectuals were gathered and killed.

Taking advantage of a weakened society, the Turkish government proceeded to murder more than two-thirds of the Armenian population.

Kaishian believes that although the killings were politically and ethnically motivated, they also were instances of religious conflict. Some Armenians were spared their lives by converting to the Muslim faith.

Shuklian's sister was one of them. They were never reunited because her sister married into the Muslim faith and remained in Turkey until she died.

If there is anything positive that can be derived from the past, Kaishian believes, it's the testament of unyielding faith of many Armenians.

"I don't want to just remember that we were victims of inhumanity," Kaishian said. "There was a great number of cases where people could deny their faith in order to save their life, but they sacrificed their life in order to preserve their faith."

Kaishian said it is difficult for some to recount their history.

Virginia Shuklian told the story of her mother-in-law, Arousiag Shuklian.

"It's so sad when she talks about it," Virginia Shuklian said. "She just cries and quivers and shakes."

Shuklian said that for years her mother-in-law wouldn't talk about it, then one day, among friends, she opened up and shared her story.

"We need to respect and remember what has happened, but also be able to move on and do positive things in the world around us," Kaishian said.

"We need to incorporate what has happened to us, as a people, to make us a better people, and move on in a positive direction."


   
ReplyQuote
(@jakebonecrusherbernstei)
Eminent Member
Joined: 25 years ago
Posts: 21
 

I WILL BREAK BONES,OF ALL THE INFIDELS...MY SEPHARDIC POSSE', WILL BEAT THE ASSES,OF ALL SWINE!!!


   
ReplyQuote
Page 1 / 4
Share: