0711「和楽器バンド」のボーカル・鈴華ゆう子が、魅力的な日本に住んでいる喜びの再発見と、日本をもっと好きになる魅力をリスナーの皆さんと共有していきます!

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 7

  • @RosaLopez-fd8sp
    @RosaLopez-fd8sp 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    🤔🤔🤔....😉😉毎週のように、ワガッキバンドを見逃すことはできません。 言うまでもなく、美しいフォトギャラリーと音楽のセレクション。 バンドのすべてのメンバーへの挨拶、とてもよく見えます。👍🥰🥰。 👸ゆうこ様について何が言えますか?.....単に美しい!!!!。 🥴🤤🤩😍🥰🥰🥰。
    🌹🌻🌹🌻🌹🐇🎌🇲🇽。

  • @user-jyanome-daisuki
    @user-jyanome-daisuki 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    今週も定例UPを有難う!!ベニ嬢の写真が素敵ですね。亦、狐面持った姫の写真も素敵でとてもセンスの良い写真を貼ってくれましたね。ボカロⅡアルバム予約と博多ライブ特観席確保は既に完了しましたよ~ん。ファンなら当たり前ね。特権薄いデジ会員からプレミアム会員に転進し、申し込んで応募したら当選できた特観席・・・・近くで視れるのが超嬉しいね。

  • @killgates8519
    @killgates8519 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    En tout cas j'aime le Wagakki Band !

  • @killgates8519
    @killgates8519 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Je vais apprendre le japonais !

  • @thomaslapsley7867
    @thomaslapsley7867 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    I just wrote Arnold Schwarzernegger on his video sent to Putin to stop the war in the Ukraine. He is also a superhereo international crime fighter like Puffy Ami and Yumi. Your right Arnold, the Russian people are not dumb. They are great thinkers and have a greater capacity for love. I'll quote the greatest Russian philosophers of all time: "Tolstoy and Vladimir Solovyov."
    I would also like to thank Arnold. My grandmother was born in Austria and real superhereos are against war and violence. She is proud of Arnold. Arnold's right it's never the rich and powerful that are really hurt in war. It's the kids, like Sadako Sasaki, whose statue is in the Hiroshima Peace Park Pavillion, that suffer the most. Sadako story is below in the reply section. The governments don't tell you how terrible it is for people during and after the war even for the winner. We can all help our superhereo's like Arnold, PuffyAmi Yumi Team Titians and Sadako at the Austrian World Summit etc... promote peace for our children... our future.
    "We can know only that we know nothing, And that is the highest degree of human wisdom." ― Leo Tolstoy and Rev. Earl Ikeda
    In all of history there is no war that was not hatched by the governments, the governments alone, independent of the interests of the people to whom war is always pernicious (having a harmful effect, especially in a gradual or subtle way.) even when successful." ― Leo Tolstoy
    “If no one fought except on his own conviction, there would be no wars,” he said.”
    ― Leo Tolstoy, War and Peace
    "War is so unjust and ugly that all that wage it must try to stifel the voice of conscience within themselves. ― Leo Tolstoy
    “The meaning and worth of love, as a feeling, is that it really forces us, with all our being, to acknowledge for ANOTHER the same absolute central significance which, because of the power of our egoism, we are conscious of only in our own selves. Love is important not as one of our feelings, but as the transfer of all our interest in life from ourselves to another, as the shifting of the very centre of our personal life. This is characteristic of every kind of love, but predominantly of sexual love; it is distinguished from other kinds of love by greater intensity, by a more engrossing character, and by the possibility of a more complete overall reciprocity. Only this love can lead to the real and indissoluble union of two lives (or peoples) into one; only of it do the words of Holy Writ say: 'They shall be one union,' i.e., shall become one real being, country, world united in peace.”
    ― Vladimir Solovyov, The Meaning of Love
    For World Peace,
    Thomas Lapsley

    • @thomaslapsley7867
      @thomaslapsley7867 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      The Story of Sadako Sasaki and the Hiroshima Peace Cranes
      Sadako was two years old, and two kilometres away from the atomic bomb when it was dropped on Hiroshima. Most of Sadako’s neighbors died, but Sadako wasn’t injured at all, at least not in any way people could see.
      Up until the time Sadako was in the seventh grade (1955) she was a normal, happy girl. However, one day during a school race that she helped her team win, she felt extremely tired and dizzy. This got worse and worse, until one day Sadako became so dizzy that she fell down and was unable to get up. Her school-mates informed the teacher, and Sadako’s parents took her to the Red Cross Hospital to see what was wrong with her. Sadako found out that she had leukemia. At that time they called leukemia the “A-bomb disease”. There was a low survival rate for 'A-bomb disease and Sadako was very scared.
      During Sadako's stay in the hospital, her best friend, Chizuko, came to visit her. Chizuko brought some origami (folding paper) and told Sadako of a legend. She explained that the crane, a sacred bird in Japan, lives for a hundred years, and if a sick person folds 1,000 paper cranes, then that person would soon get well. After hearing the legend, Sadako decided to fold 1,000 cranes and pray that she would get well again.
      Sadako kept folding cranes even though she was in great pain. Even during these times of great pain, she was known by hospital staff and other patients as cheerful and helpful, and always asking for scraps of paper or material to continue folding cranes. Although Sadako knew she would not survive, she folded well over 1,000 cranes and continued to be strong for the sake of her family. In October 1955, with her family standing by her bed, she died.
      Sadako’s classmates had lost many of their friends to the A-bomb disease and were saddened by the loss of Sadako. They decided to form a unity club to honor her and stay in touch after they all left school, which grew as students from 3,100 schools and from 9 foreign countries gave money to get a statue built to recognise the many children who lost their lives because of the bomb. On May 5, 1958, almost 3 years after Sadako had died, enough money was collected to build a monument in her honour. It is now known as the Children’s Peace Monument and is located in the center of Hiroshima Peace Park, close to the spot where the atomic bomb was dropped.
      The act of folding a crane started by Sadako and her classmates turned into a national, then an international, children's peace movement. Children from all over the world still send folded paper cranes to be placed beneath Sadako’s statue. In so doing, they fulfill the wish engraved on the base of the statue:
      This is our cry, This is our prayer, Peace in the world.