Heidi Klum and Constantine Karamanlis



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Topic: Religions > Atheism
User: "Kansan1225"
Date: 05 Mar 2004 12:36:06 PM
Object: Heidi Klum and Constantine Karamanlis
JPG wrote:

Subject: Re: Heidi Klum's Black roots
From: JPG


Date: 3/5/2004 6:13 AM Central Standard Time
Message-id: <omrg40pn405vq773pd86065srrkl5atock@4ax.com>

On Fri, 05 Mar 2004 01:43:49 GMT, "Mr. Thorne" <lyricalreckoner@yahoo.com>
wrote:


in article 20040304203516.02169.00000956@mb-m19.aol.com, Kansan1225 at
kansan1225@aol.com wrote on 04 03 2004 17:35:

Our Lady Heidi Klum is proud of her Black roots:


Wow! I was sure she was a natural blonde!



As Kansan impregnated her, perhaps he can confirm her natural hair colour.

JPG

It's light brown. My hair color is dark brown. Even though both of us
are Europeans, we are not blond, because we are "Out of Africa", our story is a
re-enactment of Egyptian mythology.
The Entities have made Heidi and me realize our partial Negritude because
of the following:
My African-looking maternal grandfather, Constantine Kardaras, was a very
accomplished man. He was the schoolmaster of the town of Agia, near the city
of Larissa in Thessaly, Greece. He was a wealthy landowner, in addition, and
the father of five daughters.
According to Greek custom and law, a daughter receives the equivalent of
a house as dowry from her parents when she gets married. The value of the
house has to be commensurate with the parents' social standing. My grandfather
provided each one of his five daughters with dowries of $300,000 each, for a
total outlay of one and a half million dollars.
The most accomplished member of my family was Demetrios "Takis" Kardaras,
a nephew of my grandfather. Takis served as Mayor of Agia, my mother's
hometown, for many successful years and as a Member of the Greek Parliament for
a period of about twenty years.
Both of them, Constantine and Takis Kardaras, were liberal in their
politics, followers of Eleutherios Venizelos, the greatest Greek Prime Minister
of the 20th century, and George Papandreou, Senior, his successor.
In 1980 Takis Kardaras broke with his liberal Party and voted for the
conservative leader Constantine Karamanlis, Senior, for President of Greece.
(The President of Greece is elected by the Parliament.) His vote ensured
Karamanlis's election. Takis had considered him to be the best candidate at
that time and did not blindly follow Party discipline.
Most Greeks today would agree that the conservative Constantine
Karamanlis, Senior, was a top Greek political leader of the 20th century,
second only to the liberal Venizelos. Third place would go to George
Papandreou, Senior, or his son, Andreas Papandreou.
Greece is holding Parliamentary elections this Sunday, March 7, and the
top contenders are George Papandreou, Junior, the son of Andreas, and
Constantine "Costas" Karamanlis, Junior, the nephew of Constantine Karamanlis,
Senior.
The younger Karamanlis has a slight edge in the polls, about 3%. He was
born on September 14, 1956, in a leap year, on the feast day of the Elevation
of the True and Holy Cross. He is 47 years old. The number 47 is Masonic code
for the 47th proposition of Euclid, a.k.a. the Pythagorean Theorem. Euclid was
a North African from Libya, who codified geometry in Alexandria, Egypt.
Last night I searched the Internet and found a link about my mother's
cousin, the Greek Member of Parliament Demetrios "Takis" Kardaras, who ensured
the election of Constantine Karamanlis, Senior, as President of Greece, in
1980:
http://gak-agias.lar.sch.gr/ArchCol/archcol-priv-pers.htm

It is a link to the official archives of Agia, the hometown of my mother,
Caterina Kardaras Kaffes, and her first cousin, Takis. The archives hold his
papers, articles, collection of photographs, etc. The archives were organized
during his terms in the Greek Parliament and housed in a buliding in Agia that
Takis himself donated.
.

 

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