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This is why I was saying, one may need to make sure they push the arrow button and maybe go full screen… altar, well, maybe I used the wrong terminology. I have not seen something like this previously.I don’t even see an altar
It could be about it bothering one’s eyes by gazing on a bright light. No one said they didn’t like it.I guess if one doesn’t like the lighting one could go somewhere else.
I’m not bothered by it.
That’s amazing, “Amerika”, I remember when it was brought up on TV. I had not thought of that show, mini-series in years.There was an excellent mini-series called Amerika in 1987, about three years prior to this. The liberal media pooh-poohed the series as horrifically bad; on the contrary, it was one of the finest things ever shown on American TV. It lasts 14 hours and unfolds in a slow, deliberate manner more like you would see on European TV. After we were married, my (legal ex-) wife and I watched the series together. She said that it was actually pretty accurate. Soviet America was portrayed as a very dismal place. It very much resembled Warsaw, Lodz, and Niepokalanow at that time. The people’s will was pretty much destroyed and everything was dilapidated and a certain type of gray. The young people were being indoctrinated in the communist schools.
I was there about 2 years ago. Niepokalanow is an easy train trip from Warsaw. I almost got there but due to the schedule of the trip I was on, I didn’t have time to go to Bl. Jerzy Popieluszcko’s grave and Niepokalanow both, so I opted for Blessed Jerzy’s church.I was in Poland almost 30 years ago, shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of communism throughout the East Bloc. To get to Niepokalanow, you had to get off the main road from Warsaw to Lodz, then IIRC it was up a dirt road.