Walenchka of Poland...........
I wrote this article, as you can see from the date below, on
Ana is a Polish girl in her early twenties. She shares the love of
Ana’s story is a sad one. She fell in love with an Arab over the Net and visited
We met when she became a member of “Dubai Discussions”, a Yahoo Group that I run. She posted her story on Dubai Discussions and amazingly there were several other women who had suffered similar fates in
I wrote the below piece to cheer up Ana and make her laugh. It is based on a fictional miner called “Walenchka” (not to be confused with
She told me that it helped her and whenever she felt low, she would read the article.
Happiness has now found Ana. She is a stewardess with Etihad Airways and works out of
Prakash
Date:
Subject: Walesa and Walenchka are two different people...............
Hi Ana!
You are confusing Walesa with Walenchka.
Walesa was an electrician (and a good one at that!). Walenchka was a miner and a rotten 'un.
Walenchka's biography is below. Read on...........
Leech Walenchka burst into the world spotlight in 1980 during the infamous liquor strike in
On Aug. 14, Leech Walenchka, a miner who had long been active in the underground labor movement, (meaning that most of the time he was under the ground and used to actively telephone his colleagues on the surface to let them know his views) arrived at the barricaded pub just as the dispirited workers (no pun intended) were on the verge of setting up their illicit liquor stills. Scaling the pub walls, he delivered a stirring speech from atop a bar stool.
Revitalized by his drunken passion, the strike spread to liquor outlets across the nation. Christened "Beer or bust," the strike became a drunken revolution.
Walenchka entered into negotiations with the government, convincing it to grant legal recognition to drunkenness and the right to form unholy unions with the Mafia. This became the Grodziskie beer Agreement, which Walenchka signed on Aug. 31.
For his heroic efforts, Walenchka was named "Drunken Pole of the Year" by Time magazine. Over the next 18 months, however, relations between the beer barons and the government became progressively worse until, on
Walenchka was released (still sober) that same fall. Under his leadership, alcohol continued to exist underground (in the mines).
Celebrated worldwide as a symbol of the power of alcoholic euphoria, Walenchka was awarded the Nobel Drunken Prize in 1983. For the next five years, the country became marked more and more by drunkenness.
Acknowledging that it could no longer control the country, the government re-legalized alcohol and invited Walenchka to join it in forming a coalition government. In the resulting election, drunk miners won almost every contest.
Having planted a whisky bottle in every house in his beloved country, Walenchka was ready to take on a new role to serve
Through his unwavering commitment to acohol, Walenchka made
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home