Oginski Polonaise Farewell to Homeland
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Found this by accident on Spotify, looking for Boccherini. probably the best accident in history of mankind.
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Oh, so mr. polonophob is still alive? :)
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Prefer it on balalaika :/
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I can't help commenting. I am a Pole, I am proud of it. At the same time I am European (I live in Europe so who could I be - American?).
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A te chaty polskie te domy w zrąb złamane płoty dawnych granic
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Nigdze brzoza tak pieknie nie rośnie nigdzie kwiaty tak pięknie nie pachną jak w Polsce
Polska to najpiekniejszy kraj świata
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@discouniverse From begining You attack my country and I don`t say any bad word about Yours... just about You and Your opinions. Don`t expect respect if You not show it. Infact You in Lithuania not respect law of Polish minority and You get consequences of it because Lithuania is part of UE where minorities are under care. You accused Poles for crimes but infact You haven`t any proofs for this....
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@discouniverse This force is Your imagination only... Most of this Polonized Lithuanians was just voluntarians... They felt in the same time Poles and Lithuanians because it was one country like British Commonwealth. Polish Lituanian Commonwealth was like UE in this time - different nations in one country. We are now in UE and Lithuanians not respect laws Polish minority on Lithuania. They even can`t write His names in Polish.
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This music touches your heart and elevates your spirit. Niech zyje Polska! Vive la Pologne!
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even music style polonaise is not today's poland's heritage, but and Lithuania's heritage, because for 200 years when this name developed two nation were living as one and called themselves poles...so put aside your polish nazi idiotism...Lithuanians lived and in USSR and were called soviet people without any nationality, even passpots was soviet passport and not russia's or kazakhstan's...so do you think that stalin was Lithuanian???
Poland is beautiful. Oginski loved her with all his heart, body and mind. Polsca jest piekna.
killerbob2005 3 years ago 5
"Wow!" again. You don't know the Poland's history, and you don't know the history of your own country. You say "Vilnius University was polish schovinizm centre, like and whole catholic church". Lithuania stopped to be a catholic country, didn't it?
You don't remember WWII, when Lithuania was allianced with Stalin and annected Poiish Central Lithuania (there lived Polish, Jewish and Russian people and only 12,84% was Lithuanians. In Vilnius, 2,6% (1916) and 0,8%(1931) population was Lithuanian.
klaudiuszvinicius 2 years ago 4