Anonymous ID: 09dde9 May 3, 2023, 6:56 p.m. No.18793497   🗄️.is đź”—kun

From Studio 6B

https://americasvoice.news/

Story on Czech Hockey player Jaromir Jagr

Jaromir Jagr always carried a picture of Ronald Reagan with him in school, and the reason is beyond heartwarming

 

https://www.thehockeybeast.com/worldwide/jaromir-jagr-always-carried-a-picture-of-ronald-reagan-with-him-in-school-and-the-reason-is-beyond-heartwarming/

 

When Jaromir Jagr left Czechoslovakia for the NHL and Pittsburgh Penguins, he wasn’t scared of living in a completely new country. Jaromir Jagr had been a big fan of the United States since forever. A year before he got drafted by the Penguins, in 1989, it was Czechoslovakia’s revolution. That allowed him to fulfill his dream of playing in the NHL. He perhaps would’ve made it anyways, but it wouldn’t have been without struggle. In fact, when he attended the NHL draft, it was the first time a Czechoslovakian player did so without a blessing from the government. Jagr didn’t feel strong for the Soviet Union, and neither did Ronald Reagan. He was the 40th president of the United States, and he identified the Soviet Union as the ”evil empire.” And so did Jagr and all of his family, especially since Jaromir’s grandfather died in 1968, during the days of the Czechoslovakian freedom movement known as the Prague Spring. That’s also the reason Jagr plays with No. 68 on his back. As a young kid growing up, long before he signed his first NHL contract, Jagr was in school, and everything he was taught was how bad the US were, how they were the constant enemy. Jagr disagreed, so he kept a photograph of Ronald Reagan in his grade book. Jagr had to sneak at the picture because if he were caught with it, he would get into trouble. One day, a teacher saw the photograph as Jagr got graded, and Jagr was asked to throw it away. He didn’t. He kept on hiding it in the grades book. He did so until he graduated.