Ένας αστυνομικός στο Μοναστηράκι πήρε το μικρόφωνο από μουσικό του δρόμου και τραγούδησε με τη συνοδεία κιθάρας.
Στο βίντεο που δημοσιεύτηκε ο ένστολος φαίνεται να στέκεται δίπλα στον μουσικό έξω από τον σταθμό του Μετρό. Πιάνοντας το μικρόφωνο, αρχίζει να τραγουδά το «Stand by Me» του Ben E. King.
Το περιστατικό συνέβη την Πέμπτη και ο αστυνομικός φαίνεται πως «κέρδισε» τις εντυπώσεις με την ερμηνεία του, αφού ολοκληρώνοντας το τραγούδι χειροκροτήθηκε από περαστικούς.
Monday, November 18, 2019
Monday, November 4, 2019
92-year-old Melpomeni Dina meets families of WWII Jews she saved (video)
One by one, the 40 descendants of a group of Israeli siblings leaned down and hugged the elderly Greek woman to whom they owe their very existence, as she sat in her wheelchair and wiped away tears streaking down her wrinkled face.
Clutching the hands of those she hid, fed and protected as a teenager more than 75 years ago, 92-year-old Melpomeni Dina said she could now “die quietly.”
Sunday’s emotional encounter in Jerusalem was the first time Dina had met the offspring of the Mordechai family she helped save during the Holocaust. Once a regular ritual at Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, such gatherings are rapidly dwindling due to the advanced ages of both survivors and rescuers and may not happen again. The soon-to-be-extinct reunion is the latest reminder for Holocaust commemorators preparing for a post-survivor world.
“The risk they took upon themselves to take in an entire family, knowing that it put them and everyone around them in danger,” said Sarah Yanai, today 86, who was the oldest of the five siblings Dina and others sheltered. “Look at all these around us. We are now a very large and happy family and it is all thanks to them saving us.”
Clutching the hands of those she hid, fed and protected as a teenager more than 75 years ago, 92-year-old Melpomeni Dina said she could now “die quietly.”
Sunday’s emotional encounter in Jerusalem was the first time Dina had met the offspring of the Mordechai family she helped save during the Holocaust. Once a regular ritual at Israel’s Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial, such gatherings are rapidly dwindling due to the advanced ages of both survivors and rescuers and may not happen again. The soon-to-be-extinct reunion is the latest reminder for Holocaust commemorators preparing for a post-survivor world.
“The risk they took upon themselves to take in an entire family, knowing that it put them and everyone around them in danger,” said Sarah Yanai, today 86, who was the oldest of the five siblings Dina and others sheltered. “Look at all these around us. We are now a very large and happy family and it is all thanks to them saving us.”
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