The heart touches Asia.
Our dear and beloved daughter Jana was born on the 27th of June 1984 in Dachau, Germany. This was our passionately awaited child. Maybe it is because we couldn't wait to see Jana, that the birth lasted 24 hours. Jana was a very pretty baby with curly blond hair. I don't know why many say that newborns are ugly. That is not true! Desired and loved children are beautiful.
Jana is an observer from birth on: lying in the buggy during walks, she would try to taste the wind with her tongue (I guess she was trying to understand its essence and which connection there is between the two of them). What was actually going on in her mind, which questions she asked and which answers received, I don't know. Jana pulled out her tongue and would not remove it for a long time. I knew that this conversation with the wind was an important cognition process. When she was lying in a meadow Jana would pull a blade of grass to her face to examine through it the sun, to silently examine the blade itself, slowly stretching it between her fingers.
Jana was a very life-loving, curious and vigorous child. A person of resolute words and actions. Jana demands much from herself and tries to plan and use her time in a way that there are no useless minutes in life, that everything benefits her own development and that of the people surrounding her. Jana is a generous person, she is generous on feelings of love to her relatives and friends, she is devoted to them and invests a lot of energy and time in their relationships.
1988/89 Jana went to kindergarten in Mainz. 1990 she went to first grade in Minsk to school Nr. 6. After that year our life's circumstances forced us to return to Germany for two years. During that time Jana went to school in Mainz-Gonsenheim, a school also her loved grandmother and then Helmut went to... When Jana registered for school she was offered to go to first grade to make learning easier. But Jana insisted on going to second grade. After a month or two at the first parent-teacher meeting the teacher tried to tell us that Jana will have to go to first grade. But some time later at the next meeting the teacher told us that Jana in a most wonderful way coped with the programs of the first and second grades.
Then in 1994 we moved to Minsk again. There Jana went to 4th grade to school Nr. 24, a gymnasium that concentrated on learning the German language. 1999, when Jana turned 15, she got accepted to the Townshend International School in the Czech Republic, which she graduated from with honors. After school she stayed in the Czech Republic for a Baha'i Youth Year of Service. Then Jana moved to Mannheim to study economics.
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Babylon English-English |
San
n. river flowing through the Carpathian Mountains in central Europe
SAN (Storage Area Network)
subnetwork of shared storage devices arranged in a way that all storage disks are available to a LAN or WAN (Computers)
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Wikipedia English - The Free Encycl... |
SAN
SAN (acronym) or san may refer to:
In mathematics:
In technology:
In biology:
Sanhedrin (Talmud)
Sanhedrin (×¡× ×”×“×¨×™×Ÿ) is one of ten tractates of the Nezikin (a section of the Talmud that deals with damages, ie. civil and criminal proceedings). The Gemara of the tractate is noteworthy as precursors to the development of common law principles .
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Babylon German-English |
San
n. San, saintly, sacred, holy; title placed before the name of a canonized person (often appearing in the names of cities, towns, family names, etc.); river flowing through the Carpathian Mountains in central Europe
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Babylon French-English |
San
n. San, river flowing through the Carpathian Mountains in central Europe
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Babylon Italian-English |
san (m)
saint, title placed before the name of a canonized person
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