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The Sorbs or Wendish People.

October 14 2002 at 3:52 PM
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The Sorbs or Wendish People.

In my research I encountered an ethnic group which lived in Silesia and resided in many of the villages of my ancestors. Thanks to Tonya Hetler I have learned of their culture. Here are some excerpts she sent to me.

Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups
Stephan Thernstrom, editor
Copyright 1980 by The President & Fellows of Harvard College.
ISBN #0-674-37512-2

WENDS.

The Wends, a little-known immigrant group, settled in Texas among the Germans in the mid-19th century. An ancient Slavic people also known as Lusatian Sorbs, they had resisted assimilation in Europe for over 1,000 years, preserving their own language and customs though not their political independence.

BACKGROUND.

The ancestors of the Wends were West Slavs called the Milceni and Luzici who occupied an area east of the Oder River in the early Middle Ages. The Wendish homeland is part of the territory known as Lusatia in East Germany. Approximately 50 miles southeast of Berlin, it is about 1,800 square miles in area and is bordered by Czechoslovakia on the south and Poland on the east. The Spree River flows through its two major towns, Bautzen and Cottbus. The Wends have managed to maintain their identity although they have been ruled at various times by Germans, Hungarians, Poles, and Bohemians. In both world wars they unsuccessfully sought recognition by the major powers as a nation-state.

The first of their foreign conquerors was Charles, one of Charlemagne's sons, who defeated the Wends and burned Bautzen in 806; by the year 1100 the Wends had been subjugated. German nobles dominated the Wendish peasants and relegated the urban Wends to homes outside the walls or to restricted sections of the city. They could become active in society only through German institutions and the German language. The guilds were German, and the mercantile activity was conducted in the German manner. Under pressure, especially in the part of Lusatia under Prussian control, many Wends adopted German names and relinquished their Slavic traditions.

The Christianization of the Wends began prior to the German conquest, but it was vigorously promoted by the Germans. They also followed the Germans in the Reformation; most Wends converted to Lutheranism in 1530 after the Council of Augsburg. Martin Luther's emphasis on the vernacular encouraged the Wends to devise a written language, and in 1574 Luther's Small Catechism became the first work to be published in it.

There are two versions of Sorbian, also called Sorbic, Wendish or Lusatian, corresponding to the divisions of the Lusatian region. Both versions belong to the Western Slavic group. The southern area called Upper Lusatia speaks a dialect nearer to Czech (Luther's Catechism was translated into Upper Sorbian); the northern area, or Lower Lusatia, a dialect nearer to Polish. Traditionally the Wends call themselves Srbi in their own language, but the Germans call them Wenden, a term widely used both by others and by, many of the Slavic Lusatians themselves, including those who migrated to foreign lands in the 19th century. In the Middle Ages, Wend was the German name for all West Slavs, however, and as a result it came to symbolize the Germanization of the Wends that began in the 9th century with the Carolingians and continued through the Weimar Republic and the Nazi period.

Although Lusatia was also ruled at times by non-German princes, it has remained under German control since the Peace of Prague in 1635. Prior to German unification in 1871 it comprised parts of the kingdoms of Prussia and Saxony-Lower Lusatia being under Prussian administration and Upper Lusatia under that of Saxony. Since World War II it has been part of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) and divided administratively between the districts of Dresden and Cottbus. Wendish ethnic awareness has been encouraged under the German Democratic Republic, and the term Sorb has been adopted for the Slavs of Lusatia. The name is meant to reflect their Slavic heritage and at the same time to distinguish them from the Serbs of southern Europe. At present approximately 60,000 people in Lusatia call themselves Sorbs. They are served by a Sorbian cultural center (the Domowina) and a Sorbian-language newspaper, radio station, theater, folk ensemble, and publishing house. The Sorbian language is also taught in the schools.

MIGRATION AND SETTLEMENT.

The Wendish migration to the United States was closely associated with that of the Germans. In 1849 some Wends settled in Austin County, Tex.; in 1853 a party of 35 Wends sailed for Texas, and the next year Pastor Jan Kilian (I811- 1884) and 500 Wends landed at Galveston. Although some of the Wends had been driven there by economic hardship, especially crop failures in the 1840s and a land shortage resulting from population growth in Lusatia, the Kilian group were religious dissenters: some of them had lived under Prussian administration and left in reaction to government attempts to force the Lutherans and Calvinists to worship in a single state church; others had lived under Saxon administration and were unhappy over the doctrinal laxity in the Lutheran Church of Saxony and theimpact of rationalism on the clergy.

A citizen of Saxony during his early life, Kilian denounced both administrations and in 1845 contemplated emigrating to Australia. In 1848 he resigned his position in the Saxon state church and became the pastor of several samll clusters of independent Lutherans who refused to worship in the Prussian church.

Although Kilian exercised religious leadership, the migration to Texas was directed by laymaen living along the Prussian-Saxon border who had formed an organization to manage the emigrants and then asked Kilian to be their pastor and to serve the Wendish congregation they hoped to establish in Texas. Wends from both Saxony and Prussia joined the group, along with members of Kilian's own congregations. A few more Wends migrated before the Civil War broke out in the United States; altogether approximately 600 had arrived by 1860. Between 1865 and the end of the century another 600 came, followed by a few in the early 20th century. But of all the groups to migrate, Kilian's remained the largest and most significant.

The Kilian party first fraveled to Hamburg, from where they sailed to Hull, England. They took the railroad to Liverpool where they waited for a ship that was scheduled to return to Texas for another cargo of cotton. Before this ship, the Ben Nevis, could be boarded, however, several Wends were exposed to cholera, and 73 eventually succumbed to it or to other sicknesses.

The survivors arrived at Galveston in December 1854. Most of them traveled by wagon to join the earlier Wendish immigrants at New Ulm. During the winter months their leaders purchased the Delaplain League (4354 acres) present-day Lee County, and there built a church and a town called Serbin. A few built homes in the village, but most of the Wends were farmers, and, like other Texans, settled on isolated farms.

The first few years in Texas were difficult for the Wends. Delays in purchasing the Delaplain League prevented early planting the first year, and two years of drought followed. Inadequate shelter and diet resulted in more sickness and death. The familiar crops of Lusatia, such as rye, wheat, and flax, did not grow well in Texas, and the Wends had to adopt the local cotton and corn economy. The Civil War brought some prosperity, when the prices for cotton rose in both the Houston and Mexican market, and many Wends turned to carting cotton across the Rio Grande. But the Wends were also confronted with the conscription laws. Not owning slaves and not interested in fighting for Confederacy, as many as possible evaded military service, but nonetheless several of their young men lost their lives in the war.

Even in those more profitable years the Wends did not achieve the prosperity of their Texas neighbors. The agricultural censuses of 1870 and 1880 show that their farms were smaller and the productivity lower than those of the more established population. Handicapped by the low fertility of the Delaplain League, the Wends became prosperous farmers only through frugality, selfdenial, and hard work. The local German community played a significant role in Serbin's development. Many of the Wends who migrated to Texas were equally fluent in German and Sorbian, and Kilian, trained in German schools and at the University of Leipzig, preached in both languages. The church records of births, marriages, and deaths he kept in German, but the congregational minutes and obituaries he recorded in Sorbian. Some Germans had accompanied Kilian's migration, and several families had German spouses. Initially the church services were conducted in Sorbian, as was the language of the Lutheran school, taught by Kilian. However, German Lutherans also settled in the Serbin area and joined the Wendish congregation; by 1862 Kilian was preaching in German every sixth Sunday. Eventually tensions in the congregation arose over a variety of problems, and most often they were expressed in controversy about which language to use. Because of the conflict over the use of Sorbian, some Germans and "progressive" Wends left Kilian's congregation in 1870 and formed their own fellowship. Though weakened by the schism, Kilian's congregation continued construction of a larger sanctuary begun in 1866. The most significant monument to the Texas Wends, the building was dedicated in 1871 and is still in use.

The two congregations existed side by side. In the period after the congregational division, more and more of the Wends began speaking German, and Kilian increased the use of German in his church services. Shortly before his death in 1884, Kilian began to receive assistance from his son Herman, who had graduated from the Lutheran Seminary in St. Louis. Through the diplomatic activities of the younger Kilian, the two groups renewed their friendship and, because German now predominated in the entire community, the two churches merged in 1914. Sorbian was taught in the school until 1916 and used in the pulpit from time to time until 1920, when Herman Kilian died and a replacement willing to preach in Sorbian could not be found. The new pastor, Herman Schmidt, although a Wend, used Sorbian only in private devotions and in pastoral visits. Ironically, the German culture and language that the Wends had resisted for so long in Europe finally became theirs in the United States, just as they had made the transition, however, World War I broke out, and widespread anti-German sentiment induced the Wends to shift to English. At the end of the 1970s some older people continued to speak Sorbian, but German remained the more common second language. The group that accompanied Kilian was interested in forming a single congregation, but the Wends who had settled earlier in Austin County did not join the settlement, and those whose occupations were suited to urban life remained in Houston. Establishing a tight, cohesive colony was complicated further by the low productivity of the land of the Delaplain League. As a result some of the Wends moved on, establishing settlements in Swiss Alp, Fedor, Warda, Manheim, and other places. Most of the Wendish immigrants who arrived after 1865 stopped at Serbin first and then continued on to one of these other Texas settlements. In more recent years the Wends have followed the general pattern of rural to urban migration by moving to Austin, Houston, Port Arthur, Corpus Christi, and San Antonio. In spite of this dispersion, however, unity among the Wends and recognition of their common heritage remain. This fellowship is maintained to an extent through membership in the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod and also, at least during the early decades of the 20th century, through the pages of the Giddings Deutsches Volksblatt (Giddings, Tex., 1899-1949). The Wendish Culture Club was founded in Serbin in 1971. In 1976 it was renamed the Texas Wendish Heritage Society and is now engaged in perpetuating Wendish tradition.

The folkways of the Wends are tied closely to the church calendar, especially the major festivals of Easter and Christmas, and to the personal milestones of birth, death, and marriage that are also sanctified in the church. Easter is celebrated with both religious services in church and the coloring of eggs. A particular custom observed in both Texas and Europe, and also found among other Slavic groups, is the use of "Easter water.'' The water dipped from a brook early on Easter morning supposedly stimulates health and beauty; in Texas it was sprinkled on sleepers' faces to awaken them. Of the personal observances, most elaborate is the wedding, which involves both a church service and an elaborate celebration. In Europe a professional wedding manager called a braska supervised practically all aspects of the celebration, but in Texas his role was limited to calling at the bride's home, leading the wedding party in songs and prayers, and directing the procession to church and back to the home. Some social gatherings in the earlier years also reflected the Wendish heritage. Feather-stripping parties, accompanied by dancing and singing, required each person to remove the soft part of the goose feathers until a cup was filled with feathers; then followed the merrymaking. In more recent years the Wendish customs have been neglected, and the celebrations of personal observances no longer reflect the Wendish heritage, but simply follow the practices of the larger Texas community.

In addition to the Texas settlement and the Wends who migrated elsewhere in the world - to Australia, Canada, South Africa - a small number went to Nebraska. Although there was some communication between a few Texas and Australian families, there was apparently none between the Texans and the small group in Sterling, Nebraska, which was closely tied to the German community; at least no record of any correspondence between the Nebraska and Texas Wends remains. The Wendish poet Mato Kossyk (1853-1940), who migrated to the United States and became a Lutheran pastor, visited the Sterling group in the 1880s and communicated with them in Sorbian. But by now awareness of the Wendish heritage of some Sterling families is only a dim memory in the minds of a few of the old people.

Bibliography

The best study in English of the European Wends is Gerald Stone, The Smallest Slavonic Nation: The Sorbs of Lusatia (London, 1972). George Engerrand, The So-Called Wends of Germany and Their Colonies in Texas and in Australia (1934; reprint, San Francisco, 1972), also examines the European background as well as the Texas settlement. Anne Blasig, The Wends of Texas (San Antonio, Tex., 1954), is valuable because of its emphasis on the Serbin settlement, and Lillie Moerbe Caldwell, Texas Wends: Their First Half Century (Salado, Tex., 1961), adds material on the social life of the group. The most recent study is George R Nielsen, in search of a Home: The Wends (Sorbs) on the Australian and Texas Frontiers (Birmingham, England, 1977). Source materials on the Texas Wends are to be found in the Concordia Historical Institute, St Louis, Mo., and the Texas District Archives of the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod in Austin.

Written by: Geroge R Nielsen

You can find many of the families listed in this publication:

"Nineteenth- Century Emigration of 'Old Lutherans' From Eastern Germany (mainly Pomerania and Lower Silesia to Australia, Canada, and the United States)"
Clifford Smith Westland Pubns ISBN:0915162067 This publication is a summary of a work entitled "Die altlutherische Auswanderung um die Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts" by Wilhelm Iwan, published in 1943. It explains the history of why some of the "Old Lutherans" felt enough persecution to emigrate. Most of these individuals left in groups as members of organized congregations and most were of the lower classes. Most were from small towns excepting a few from Magdeburg and Erfurt.

Silesia was the first region in which the idea of emigration emerged. At first the idea of Russia attracted some but then a letter from a blacksmith, Karl Berger, from Guttmansdorf, Kreis Reichenbach, Silesia, told of his life in Michigan. Many settled in New York, Michigan, Wisconsin and Canada.

Those that went to Australia arrived first at Port Adelaide aboard the Solvay, on 16 Oct 1837.

The book is organized by date of emigration, then by province, district and village emigrated from and then family names are listed along with first names and ages.

I received this book through interlibrary loan from Indianapolis University Libraries, 755 Michigan Street, Indianapolis, IN, 46202. I should have it back in the system by November 1998.

http://members.aol.com/BeallComp/wends.htm

 
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Gobzhad
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Is there a list

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October 14 2002, 9:52 PM 

of prominent people who "pass" historically as Germans
YET are Sorb ethnically?
I've heard that Gutenberg (father of mechanical printing) and a certain pioneer of woodcut printing (I forget his name) were Sorb. Can you give me links or references?

 
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Re: Is there a list

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October 15 2002, 12:40 PM 

This is the info I could dig up...I have no list..

Johann Gutenberg,
http://web.utk.edu/~sdavies1/SIS490DeadGerman.html

http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/library/news/collections/bible.html
The birth of Sorbian literature came with the Reformation and the need to translate religious texts. The number of books printed was very small. The first printed Lower Sorbian book was a Hymnal and Catechism by Albin Moller (1574) and the first Upper Sorbian printed book was a translation of Luther’s Little Catechism by Wenceslaus Warichius (1595). The Thirty Years War put an end to the limited printing activity and it was only resumed towards the end of the 17th century, when an Upper Sorbian Grammar (Principia lingua Wendicae) by the Jesuit JX Ticinus appeared in Prague (1679), written in the Kulow dialect. At this time all books were written in local dialects, usually that of the author. An Upper Sorbian New Testament was published in 1709 and like the Upper Sorbian translation was printed in Black Letter (Fraktur) with a parallel German and Sorbian text. The first dictionary of Upper Sorbian (Vocabularium latino-serbicum) compiled by J.H. Swetlik appeared in 1721 and was, like Ticinus’s earlier grammar, based on the Kulow dialest, and the same year witnessed the publication of a second Upper Sorbian grammar (Wendische grammatica) by Georg Matthaeus. Of especial importance, however, in the development of the standard Sorbian language was the first published translation of the whole Bible, which appeared in 1728.

This was the result of the work of a commission established by the Upper Lusatian Landesstände to translate the whole Bible using a literary variant broadly based on the whole Bautzen region. Members of the commission were deliberately selected from various localities in the Bautzen area, which led to the work being written in a form not based on one dialect, but on the dialects of the whole region. The translation was based on the German version of Luther, but comparison was also made with the Polish, Czech and Slovene bibles.

(Note: A Lower Sorbian translation of the whole Bible did not appear until 1796).


Here is a photograph of Sorbian horsemen in their characteristic black coats and cylinder hats.

BTW, here's a book about sorbs migrating to America.

In Search of a Home: Nineteenth Century Wendish Immigration, by George R. Nielsen.

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D0890964009/markcyndisgenealA/103-2618760-8770229

Link to The Texas Wendish Heritage Society.
http://wendish.concordia.edu/

Link to The Wendish Texans.
http://www.texancultures.utsa.edu/publications/texansoneandall/wendish.htm

Here's a link to Sorbs in Australia,
http://www-user.tu-cottbus.de/Sorben/inhalt08/austral/mainpage.htm

HERE'S AN INTERESTING TALE!
What's A Wend? by Russell Szlauosch (Schwausch) August, 1987.
http://www.onr.com/user/russells/text/whatsawend.html
Some time ago, during a sacrament meeting talk, I briefly mentioned that I grew up thinking my ancestors were German only to find out they weren't. A member of the Bishopric extracted from me a promise that I would record this story for posterity and other curious minds who want to know. So, to make good on that promise I have set to paper the genealogical meanderings of the Schwausch progeny.

Sorbian language in Germany.
http://www.uoc.edu/euromosaic/web/document/sorab/an/i1/i1.html

DOMOWINA - Union of Lusatian Sorbs.
http://www-user.tu-cottbus.de/Sorben/inhalt06/domowina/eng/start.htm

Sorbian traditions and customs.
http://home.t-online.de/home/320051871311/webpage/documents/Winter/intro.htm

 
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Foundation for the Sorbian Nation, Sorbian Cultural Information.

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March 18 2003, 2:16 PM 


 
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Re: The Sorbs or Wendish People.

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April 23 2003, 2:51 PM 

A map showing Sorbian tribes and the use of the name "Serb" in various pronunciation between 900 - 1000 AD


Gottfried Leibniz.....He was Sorb by origin.

Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz (July 1, 1646 - November 14, 1716) was a German philosopher, scientist, mathematician, diplomat and lawyer. He was Sorb by origin.

He was born in Leipzig, in what is now Germany. He was a highly intelligent youth who entered Leipzig University at age 15. He graduated from there with a bachelor's degree in philosophy at 17 and with a doctorate in law at 20.

Leibniz constructed the first mechanical calculator capable of multiplication and division. He also introduced the binary number system that is being used in all digital computers.

Independently of Isaac Newton, he 'invented' the infinitesimal calculus in the 1670s. According to his notes, a critical breakthrough in his work here occurred on November 11, 1675, when he demonstrated integral calculus. He introduced several notations used in calculus to this day, for instance the integral sign ∫ representing an elongated S from the Latin word summa and the d used for differentials from the Latin word differentia. Leibniz thought symbols to be very important for the understanding of things. He also tried to develop an alphabet of human thought, in which he tried to represent all fundamental concepts using symbols and combined these symbols to represent more complex thoughts. Leibniz never finished this.

His philosophical contribution to metaphysics is based on the Monadology, which introduces Monads as "substantial forms of being", which are akin to spiritual atoms, eternal, indecomposable, individual, following their own laws, not interacting ("windowless") but each reflecting the whole universe. In the way sketched above the notion of a monad solves the problem of the interaction of mind and matter that arises in Rene Descartes' system, as well as the individuation that seems problematic in Baruch Spinoza's system, which represents individual creatures as mere accidental modifications of the one and only substance. The Theodicee tries to justify the apparent imperfections of the world by claiming that it is optimal among all possible worlds. It must be the best possible and most balanced world, because it was created by a perfect God.

The statement that "we live in the best of all possible worlds" was regarded as amusing by Leibniz' contemporaries, notably François Marie Arouet de Voltaire who found it so absurd that he parodized him in his novel Candide, where Leibniz appear as a certain Dr. Pangloss. This parody is the root of the term panglossianism, which refer to people holding the view that we live in the best of all worlds.

Leibniz is believed to be the first person to suggest that the concept of feedback was useful for explaining many phenomena in many different fields of study.

http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gottfried_Wilhelm_von_Leibniz

 
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Re: The Sorbs or Wendish People.

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January 26 2004, 10:10 AM 

Eurolang, the European news agency for minority languages.

Another Sorbian school to be closed.

Copenhagen 14/01/04, by Brigitte Alfter

The Sorbian minority in eastern Germany is facing the closure of another primary school, this time in the village of Heinersbrück/Most near Cottbus. The closure is expected to come into force after the summer holiday and until then a solution for the 42 children will have to be found.

According to Kito Ela from the Sorbian language centre ‘WITAJ’ in Cottbus the school in Heinersbrück/Most is a bilingual school with a strong Sorbian profile. Some of the children have been travelling up to 20 kilometres to use the school because of its renowned service in Sorbian.

The school will be closed according to legislation in the German province of Brandenburg, which requires a minimum of 15 students in a double-class (i.e. where two years or grades are taught together). For several years the school in Heinersbrück/Most was granted exemptions from this rule, but this will not be extended, as the 3rd and 4th year again lack students.

There are two options as to which school the children will be sent to. WITAJ and the main Sorbian organisation Domowina have requested that Sorbian-medium teaching is continued in the new school. In this context WITAJ would prefer one option, Jänschwalde, rather than the other town, Peitz, because Jänschwalde has a bilingual cultural tradition, whereas Peitz is a traditionally German town.

‘We are sorry about the closure, because this is a typical Sorbian area’, Kito Ela said about Heinersbrück/Most.

Last summer another Sorbian school, Crostwitz in the province of Saxony, was closed. In that case the parents supported by Sorbian organisations decided to raise the matter in court. The case is still pending.

In Heinersbrück/Most the parents and WITAJ have tried to find different solutions. They have suggested running the local school themselves as a branch of the larger school in nearby Jänschwalde. But the local authorities could not agree on the model, Ela says. Protests such as occurred in Crostwitz are not expected in Heinersbrück/Most immediately though.

Kito Ela told Eurolang ‘We will only protest, if the Sorbian profile is not adopted by the new school’.

(Eurolang)

 
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Re: The Sorbs or Wendish People.

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January 25 2005, 9:54 AM 

Support the creation of a Lusatian State, a country for the Sorbs!

http://www.geocities.com/free_lusatia/Lusatian_State



Vaya con Dios!


    
This message has been edited by TsarSamuil from IP address 212.181.9.227 on Jan 25, 2005 10:00 AM


 
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Sorbs?

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March 14 2007, 12:18 AM 

Only Deutchlanders call "Sorbs" sorbs! as for so called Sorbs you might want know that they themselves do not call their nation Sorbs but Serbs who speak Serbsky, Take it from a Lusatian Serb!

The word Serb preceded the word SLAV. The earliest found name was first written as Serbi, in the 1st century A.D., by Plinius Caecilius Secundus. It was thought to be the Greek emperor Constantine Porfirogent, who introduced the word Slav into history around the 7.th century A.D (“slav”-celebrated), in a very brief description of the Serbs, who were celebrated for their capability to fight. This is why most western historians insist that the Slavs arrived in that period into Europe. The Berlin-Vienna school of history (1860) picked this scant statement and used it to their full advantage by getting the western civilised world to adopt their view, thus declare that the Slavs have arrived last in Europe of all the Indo-European races, and thus had taken away land belonging to others.

 
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Re: The Sorbs or Wendish People.

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February 9 2011, 3:23 AM 

e neka si im rekao!!!!

 
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