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Marcin and Angelika Klis died in the explosion while waiting to pick up their daughters at the Ariana Grande concert on May 22, 2017.
The couple were originally from Poland and arrived in the UK to father their daughters, Aleksandra and Patrycja.
The two girls, who were 20 and 14 respectively on the night of the concert, heartbreakingly described their parents during the Manchester Arena investigation today (Wednesday).
It is part of a broader series of family statements from the 22 patients who will have to help build a more detailed picture of who they were.
The driving force of York Klis’ taxi and his wife, a Tesco saleswoman, arrived in the UK and worked to supply everything they could only for their children, the audience said.
“We think about our parents all the time, they are never out of our thoughts,” their children said in response to the consultation.
Suicide bomber Salman Abedi, surrounded by a crowd of excited young men coming out of the concert, detonated the bomb from his missile-filled backpack, sending thousands of nuts and screws tearing everything in its path.
The couple died along with 20 other people, and many others were injured in the May 22, 2017 attack.
Details of the couple’s life and death were released in the commemorative phase of public research, in which the circle of relatives of each of the other 22 people who died in the attack paid tribute, adding statements, videos and photographs of their loved ones.
A tribute was read to his daughters through a legal representative, who showed the last photo of them on the screens.
The image of the smiling couple taken the night of the attack near the arena as they waited for the concert to end and picked up their daughters from the event.
Within hours, they were dead and their children orphaned.
The Manchester public learned that the two had been born in Slowno, a small town in northern Poland and had grown up in the town near Darlowo.
They married in Poland in 1996 and divorced ten years later, but remained separated for a short time and, as they had not remarried, were still very much in love, it was said in the audience.
The girls said, “I don’t know much about their expansion and education. I don’t know how my parents met, but they met in the early 1990s and fell in love. “
In 2004, his father, a postman in Poland, moved to the UK, running first for Tesco and then as a taxi engine after the total circle of relatives moved to York in 2007.
Angelika, who had studied economics in Poland, first worked as a housekeeper and then as Tesco’s employee until she died.
She enjoyed sunbathing, buying food and massages, and her father enjoyed photography and rock music, the women said.
They returned to Poland once a year and also enjoyed the family holiday circle in Rome and Egypt.
He said: “Every few weeks they organized a circle day of relatives because spending time with us made them happy. We enjoy every minute of the time we spent together.
“Mom and Dad’s love was incredibly strong, they were as in love as if they were carefree teenagers in the world.
“Especially, they were happy. They were friends of the soul and needed to be one without the other.
“Mom and Dad were wonderful and wonderful people.
“The loss of our mother and father and the pain and loss we feel are very difficult to explain.
“We are devastated by what has happened and our lives have turned around. “
The public investigation into the cases of the attack is expected to last until the spring of next year.
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