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 42 Years Unmourned, Unnoticed.
42 Years Unmourned, Unnoticed.
Hedviga Golik made herself a cup of tea and sat down to watch TV. Shortly after sitting down she died. This was in 1966. Her body has only just been found. picked by pocksucket 1 year ago
tags hedviga golik dead forty two years
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12
 ieldanth
1 year ago
What was in that tea?
quote #2
34
 Moe
1 year ago
This has been posted at least twice in the last month or so.
quote #3
22
 tigerton...
1 year ago
quote #4
11
 mewhiten...
1 year ago
that is crazy....but I would be interested to see the inside of that apartment, that would be pretty cool.
quote #5
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28
 yoornotm...
1 year ago
Maybe she was a b***h and no one cared that she died.

"Mommy, why haven't we seen Grandma in a while?"
"Shh, don't jinx us!"
quote #6
28
 yoornotm...
1 year ago
Oh, and that's got to be a great neighborhood. In 42 years, no one broke into her apartment?

It's ridiculous that she was reported as missing and no one thought to check her apartment.
quote #7
3
 wildgrit...
1 year ago
I saw this report before but I just love the following statement.

She said: "I still remember her. She was a quiet woman who kept herself to herself but was polite."

Yeah, dead people are like that.
quote #8
4
 carousel...
1 year ago
Can't imagine why the electric, gas, phone, TV companies didn't get suspicious when the bills went unpaid. And how about the postman? Surely she got some mail. Wouldn't her post box be filled to overflowing?
quote #9
7
 palmiere...
1 year ago
« carouselle : Can't imagine why the electric, gas, phone, TV companies didn't get suspicious when the bills went unpaid. And how about the postman? Surely she got some mail. Wouldn't her post box be filled to overflowing?
I don't think there were any 'TV Companies' billing people in Zagreb in 1966. She probably didn't have a phone, maybe not even electricity. This was Croatia in the 60's, ie, the other side of the Iron Curtain at a time when the majority of the people in these countries lived in poverty.
The world changed a lot in 45 years, especially for people in Eastern Europe and the former USSR.

The only really sad thing here is that she had no one who missed her.
quote #10
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