- 13/06/2025
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00:00O STASI RECORDS ARCHIVE IN BERLIN
00:08Remnants da antiga e-german do ministro da segurança
00:12estão em contato aqui
00:15Millions de fios, reports, fotos, index cards
00:19Um relic de passado foi deixado por o ministro do ministro
00:25Erich Mielke
00:27A red photo album, documenting some of the most decisive moments in his career
00:37The construction of the Berlin Wall
00:40Declared as the anti-fascist protection rampart
00:44This photo album records what happened on August 13, 1961
00:49and the days that followed
00:51The book's condition reveals how often it has been looked through
00:55In Mielke's eyes, the tale of the Berlin Wall was a tale of triumph
01:00The situation that unfolded after August 13
01:04proves that building an anti-fascist protection rampart
01:07was the good and right decision for the people of East Germany
01:11The working class seized power never to let it go again
01:14The working class seized power never to let it go again
01:18This is Erich Mielke's office, where he began each day, every morning at 7 o'clock sharp, as East Germany's Minister for State Security
01:37The minister would call first thing and ask what was new
01:49Had anything happened overnight?
01:52What was going on at the border and passport checkpoints?
01:55What about the people we were tracking?
01:58Something new came up every day
02:00And he always wanted to know everything
02:04Mielke had just one aim
02:08To keep an eye on everything happening in the country and at the border
02:12To keep it all under control
02:15To deter all enemies and traitors
02:18The minister placed great value on being informed immediately
02:22To ensure the appropriate response
02:24So we could coordinate all the necessary measures
02:27And when things came down to it, he was relentless
02:31Erich Mielke dedicated over 28 years of his career
02:35To ensuring that the Berlin Wall was insurmountable
02:39For him and his ministry, this was a never-ending challenge
02:48To Mielke, the Wall was what ensured that his party and the state security apparatus stayed in power
02:56He saw his ministry as the shield and sword of the Socialist Unity Party, the SED
03:02We who serve the Ministry for State Security stand at the ready
03:12To unconditionally fulfill any mission the party and government assigns to us
03:17To that, we give our word
03:27The Ministry for State Security gained importance when the wall was built
03:31Its responsibilities grew and so surveillance became more total
03:36The entire intelligence apparatus expanded dramatically
03:40Mielke's conference room
03:44Normally, East German offices would hang a portrait of the state leader at the head of the table
03:50But Mielke had an oil painting of the Berlin Wall hung instead
03:54It depicts the Brandenburg Gate
03:58Forever shielded, with state and party firmly secured behind it
04:06August 13, 1961, in Berlin
04:10Images that shook the world
04:13Over 2 million people had fled East Germany
04:16The isolated country was nearing collapse
04:18SED party heads were convinced shutting the border crossing to West Berlin would solve the problem once and for all
04:28Two days in advance, Mielke had informed his closest associates of the planned measures
04:34The Stasi's operation was given the codename, Rose
04:40The minutes of the top secret meeting read
04:44Today we enter a new phase of our Czechist work
04:48Steps are being taken to end desertion from the Republic
04:52While combat groups and border patrols visibly took a position to seal off the East German sector
05:05The Stasi operated in the shadows
05:15At the top secret Operation Rose meeting
05:17It was further decided that
05:20Enemy forces are to be apprehended immediately
05:24Without a fuss and by any means necessary
05:27These were preventative measures
05:30An uprising like that on June 17, 1953
05:33Could not be allowed to happen again
05:36Back then state security had failed
05:38And the Soviet army had had to step in
05:41The building of the wall was a limitless test
05:43For Erich Mielke and his ministry
05:51His photo album also documents the call to arms on August 23
05:56It was a show of power in East Berlin
06:04Party leader Walter Ulbricht followed by Erich Honecker, the mastermind behind the Berlin Wall
06:10The minister was on stage as well
06:13Relegated at the time to the second row
06:18He appeared tense
06:28The flood of refugees to West Berlin was endless
06:30Despite orders to shoot, people still found holes in the barbed wire fencing
06:37Or windows along the border to jump out of
06:39The border police were overwhelmed
06:42And so Mielke took action
06:44As minister, I need to be the best
06:51I am responsible for maintaining safety in this country
06:54To me, whatever the party decides is set in stone
06:58And I must enforce it with rigor and severity
07:02After discussing the matter with Erich Honecker, the party's secretary for security
07:08The party's secretary for security and Mielke's direct superior
07:13The Stasi organized the evacuation of the border houses
07:17Took over the securing of the sewage system
07:20Had everything barred
07:30The ministry targeted anyone attempting to flee
07:33And anyone suspected of it
07:35Our job was to keep things quiet and uneventful
07:41We couldn't do that in the years leading up to 1961
07:45Because the borders were still open
07:47Now the issue had been taken seriously
07:49And any attempts to breach the border or flee
07:52Had to be stopped
07:53By the end of 1961
07:59The Stasi had arrested 3,000 people suspected of planning an escape
08:04Or who were opposed to the wall
08:06Many were put on trial
08:07One event was particularly embarrassing
08:24In the first months of the wall
08:26A border officer, hired to prevent escapes, managed to flee himself
08:31In my eyes, those were all wretched scoundrels
08:36We saw them as traitors who were betraying our country
08:42No matter their motive, be it political or economic
08:46Nothing justified fleeing the country
08:48Who is who?
08:53To Mielke this was the decisive question
08:59And only the Stasi could find the answer
09:03Soon his ministry began inspecting and spying on anyone working at the border crossings
09:08Each border patrol was assigned a full-time ministry employee as supervisor
09:16Each barrack was to have its own informant
09:22And so the Stasi took total control over all officers patrolling the border
09:27Just a few months after the wall had been built, Erich Mielke moved to his new headquarters
09:42In the entranceway, his great idol, Felix Czerzhinsky
09:48Head of the Soviet secret police organization, the Cheka
09:51Despite their success, Mielke demanded his staff remain vigilant
09:58Deserters of the Republic have essentially been liquidated
10:05But it would be a mistake to assume that means our enemy has become less active
10:10Instead, in response to these measures, the ultras from Bonn
10:14And NATO agents have employed even more cunning tactics to reach their criminal goals
10:19By and by, as the wall was fortified, escaping over the border became increasingly difficult
10:29So refugees turned to evading the SED regime and Mielke's ministry
10:35In daring escape tunnels under the wall
10:38The task of liquidating molds was entrusted to a special unit within the ministry
10:42They used their intelligence to tear down escape tunnels they learned of
10:49To create ditches and counter tunnels
10:52Or to install microphones and motion detectors
10:56Mielke Stasi was eager to recruit spies from East and West alike
11:02And infiltrate groups attempting to help people escape
11:05It was like war, it was always a defeat when people left
11:16Somewhere the border was not properly secured
11:19And you didn't know that people wanted to leave
11:22And the more there were, or the more active they were
11:25The greater our defeat and our failure
11:27Stasi surveillance footage of a home in West Berlin
11:32Recorded on June 28th, 1962
11:37The secret operation Maulwürfel had been underway for several weeks
11:41When an undercover agent, codenamed Pankow, discovered plans for an escape tunnel
12:00The Stasi decided to set a trap for the diggers
12:03While the border patrol sealed what they assumed was an entranceway to the tunnel with sand
12:14Stasi agents awaited the tunnel builders underground
12:18As soon as the escape helpers entered the tunnel, the Stasi fired
12:22One helper, Siegfried Nofke, who was trying to bring his wife and son to West Berlin, was killed
12:42For appearances sake, the informant was also arrested
12:46He later received a medal for his duplicity
12:52Yet despite these efforts, Mielke's henchmen couldn't get a handle on the unraveling situation
13:05In early October 1964, 57 people managed to escape to West Berlin through a tunnel in Bernauerstrasse
13:14It was the largest mass flight in the history of the wall known to date
13:18The tunnel was discovered just as the escape helpers were leaving
13:26Shots were exchanged
13:28And East German border police officer Egon Schulz was killed
13:37The Stasi took up investigations and secured objects that had been left behind in the tunnel
13:44They included a woman's purse
13:48Gas masks
13:50And the alleged murder weapon
13:53A gun belonging to one of the escape helpers
13:56Internal reports by the Stasi's murder investigation committee, as they called it
14:01Reconstructed the course of events
14:03They concluded that Egon Schulz had been hit by a bullet from the gun found at the site
14:07But it was a Kalashnikov belonging to a comrade that killed him
14:16The official story that we reported was that tunnel builders had shot and killed Egon Schulz
14:21I only heard the other version of the story years later and not officially
14:36According to that version of events, Egon Schulz was accidentally shot by one of our own
14:42Someone who got nervous and reacted too frantically
14:44But the truth could not be allowed out
14:52So the top secret report was kept under wraps right until the demise of East Germany
14:58With good cause it was claimed
15:00And in light of your mother's tears
15:13Who mourns for you, her dear son
15:16We denounce before the entire world your murderers
15:22The shooters and their instigators in West Berlin and Bonn
15:26One of the guests present that day was Erich Mielke, Honecker's right-hand man
15:39It was his idea to portray the tunnel builders as murderers
15:43And his plan worked
15:45In the West, public support for escape helpers dwindled
15:48Step by step Mielke was handed over the reins for securing the border
15:58The Stasi grew responsible for bolt holes below and above ground
16:06The checkpoints were federal citizens, diplomats, military personnel
16:11And persons with a special permit came and went were particularly vulnerable
16:24With the wall in place and secured, escaping East Germany was most successful at border crossings
16:31Especially with forged documents
16:33In 1964, the Stasi completely took over passport control and searches for wanted individuals
16:42To the intelligence agency, the bottlenecks created by the Cold War were a goldmine for information gathering
16:51Everybody who crossed the border was now subject to inspection by the Stasi
17:03That included the over 4.5 million West Berlin inhabitants
17:08Who crossed over to East Berlin on holidays to visit relatives in the 1960s
17:13Their papers were processed by friendly border staff
17:16Undercover Stasi inspectors dressed as East German border troops
17:26But the border remained closed off to East German citizens
17:33Nevertheless, people kept trying to slip through any cracks they could find
17:37Each time the border was penetrated, it was followed up by an analysis
17:49That's why the Ministry for State Security formed working groups to design technologically improved facilities
17:56Which were then tested
18:00The testing site was kept top secret
18:02Here the Stasi examined the effectiveness of various barrier systems
18:08They prepared for all possible contingencies
18:12There were even blockades that could stop a tank
18:15And the staff was trained in how to respond to hostage situations
18:20And armed border crossing attempts
18:23Taking a hostage must never be successful
18:27That was our top priority
18:28If there was no time to negotiate
18:31Or the captor wasn't willing to negotiate
18:33Then there was only one thing left to do
18:36Shoot to kill
18:38An internal Stasi training video on operational psychology
18:50What does it mean to act wisely and courageously as a Czechist?
18:56What does it mean to live by the laws of war in times of peace?
19:02This film will show you how a dangerous enemy was fought and rendered harmless
19:07By the clever and courageous actions of a collective of Czechists
19:11Here at Checkpoint Charlie on Friedrichstraße, the East German riot police officer Burkhard Niering demanded entrance to West Berlin by taking a border control officer hostage
19:28Niering was shot dead
19:30Four Stasi members, including the killer, were later interviewed on camera
19:35My weapon was loaded and I shot at the terrorist
19:45He collapsed
19:48Aside the fact that we all felt uneasy and shook at the knees
19:54We were also filled with a sense of pride at having fulfilled our combat mission as Czechists at the border of imperialism
20:04The Stasi's dossier later found that Niering had described his military conscription as an infringement upon his right to freedom that had been forced upon him
20:18The report concludes, the body was cremated, the urn burial is pending
20:31Meanwhile, traffic at the border continued as if nothing had ever happened
20:36With as many as 7,600 employees, the Stasi department for passport controls and person tracking rose to become the largest of the ministry's operations
20:56It was the perfect disguise for a secret mission
21:07Checking passports was just our cover story
21:11Our actual job was to gather intelligence at the checkpoints
21:16We needed to know who was entering the country
21:20What kind of people were they? Where were they going?
21:22Where were they going?
21:25That was all work that only the Stasi could do
21:33Travelers often mistook these encounters for a harmless chat
21:37But to the Stasi agents, this was a tactical method for filtering incoming traffic
21:44Inconsistencies in someone's travel documents were cause enough to pull them out of line and have a talk with them
21:52If that someone was politically relevant, the corresponding reports were prepared and forwarded to the relevant departments within the ministry
22:02This is how millions of people found their way into the Stasi's filing system
22:13They were scanned for any possible clue and might even be tricked into accidentally providing evidence against someone close to them
22:23Some are registered as potential informants
22:27Each time the friendly border guard stepped up to check your passport, the Stasi was watching
22:32Erich Mielke made good use of the opportunities the Berlin Wall provided him
22:39His employer, the ever-present SED party, was pleased
22:44Mielke's most important ally, Erich Honecker, quickly rose through the ranks to become party and state head
22:51Good prospects for his top minister
22:53The 70s marked the detente period of the Cold War
22:58To the Stasi officers, it brought a wide range of new responsibilities
23:05West Germany recognized East Germany as a sovereign nation in the Basic Treaty of 1972
23:11And thus acknowledged its territorial integrity
23:16The aim was to restore good neighborly relations
23:22On the one hand, the wall had to remain psychologically and physically intact
23:29On the other hand, we wanted to present ourselves to the world as open-minded
23:32That meant an ever-increasing amount of work for us
23:36Everything related to detente politics was extremely dangerous to us
23:43The transit agreement aimed to ease travel between East and West Germany
23:48But it also improved the chances of East German citizens to steal away into West Germany
23:55hidden inside exiting cars
23:57Despite being denounced as human smugglers, the number of those assisting escapees once again rose
24:08These gangs were engaged in smuggling people out using all sorts of different tactics
24:14The violation of customs seals, installing secret hatches in their trucks
24:20Forging customs seals
24:22Or simply smuggling people in the trunks of passenger cars
24:26As soon as anyone suspected of being a smuggler entered from the West
24:41The moment he crossed our border, we wouldn't let him out of our sight for even a second
24:46Of course we had staff and cameras surveilling all highway service areas and rest stops
24:54Right up to the end, in 1989, we wrote down the plate numbers of every West Berlin car we saw
25:02Every single one
25:05The paranoia of a secret service agency
25:11Each foiled escape attempt was meticulously reconstructed
25:16Captured refugees, escape helpers, or individuals suspected of being either
25:28Were sent to the ministry's detention centers
25:31Roughly three quarters of the people detained by the Stasi in the 1980s
25:34Were accused of emigration or escape offenses
25:38Officially, East Germany had no political prisoners
25:41Whoever they locked up was a criminal
25:44These were all citizens who had violated East German law
25:47Every citizen knew East German law
25:49So, if I know the border is closed and I'm not allowed to cross the border
25:52Then I need to act accordingly
25:55To the Stasi crossing the border illegally was a particularly serious offence
25:58Those accused had to be categorized as such
26:02If I knew that a defendant had done all they could to penetrate the border by a
26:05criminal law
26:07So, if I know the border is closed and I'm not allowed to cross the border
26:10Then I need to act accordingly
26:12To the Stasi crossing the border illegally was a particularly serious offence
26:15Those accused had to be categorized as such
26:23If I knew that a defendant had done all they could to penetrate the border by hook or crook
26:29Then, of course, I had to assume that they would also try to break out of detention
26:33Prisoners were never informed of when their hearings were set
26:46And those presiding over their trials were Stasi members
26:52Mielke had seen to it that his ministry remained completely in charge of handling their enemies
26:58There was a desk in the back by the window
27:04The defendant on trial was meant to be facing the light, daylight
27:09So that observers could study his facial expressions better
27:14Simply by studying their characters you could learn about their intellect
27:19How they responded to certain things and how to address them
27:22We asked them about everything, even the smallest details
27:25And, of course, we also used psychology
27:33The ministry interrogators were well trained and ruthless
27:37Their job was to draw out confessions
27:46Defendants were not allowed to see anyone
27:49They were never addressed by their given names, but only by their cell numbers
27:53They were ordered to keep their hands above their blankets at night when they slept
27:56They were ordered to keep their hands above their blankets at night when they slept
28:04And, at least every 20 minutes, the light was briefly switched on and then off
28:11Mielke knew he could rely on his faithful followers
28:22The head warden was surrounded by like-minded comrades
28:25I didn't find it burdensome at all
28:32Neither did the members of staff who served there in fulfillment of their duty
28:38That was the job they had been entrusted with as members of the Ministry for State Security
28:43And, as such, it was never bothersome to us
28:45Celebrations for the 15-year anniversary of the Berlin Wall in August 1976
28:56The people were called to rise up and fight
29:00This time, Erich Mielke was in the front row
29:03Looking pleased and confident
29:04Publicly, East Germany was pursuing detente
29:08Publicly, East Germany was pursuing detente
29:12But this policy of all things is what triggered the mass expansion of the Stasi towards a total surveillance regime
29:20Between 1970 and 1980, the number of those employed by the Ministry more than doubled to 80,000
29:28We need to coordinate so effectively that there is no area of security-relevant process that we are not informed about on time
29:39Anywhere we go, we need patriots and confidants
29:42Volunteers and contacts who will support us in our fight
29:46There can be no space where at least one of our agencies isn't active
29:51Many ordinary citizens helped to keep watch
30:02Who was leaning towards the West?
30:04Who could be thinking about leaving?
30:06Who was in touch with whom?
30:14Every clue, no matter how small or insignificant it seemed, was followed up on
30:19Phone lines and mail were monitored more extensively
30:24Everything was examined and evaluated
30:31Anything that had successfully been employed to plan or execute an escape was seized immediately
30:37People tried using divers' equipment to swim across the Spray River or the Baltic Sea, things like that
30:43Some even tried using tethered balloons or hot air balloons
30:48So anything that could be used to build one was also seized
30:58Over 90% of all escape attempts were uncovered and thwarted in advance
31:03Hardly any refugee even made it as far as the Death Strip
31:07Just like the wall, Mielke's imperium had become indispensable to keeping the SED regime in power
31:28An internal recording of the ministry's 30th anniversary in 1980
31:32Mielke was at the height of his power when Erich Honecker promoted him to army general
31:39Outwardly, the SED leader and his faithful ministers seemed like two like-minded compatriots
31:47But privately they were far from friends
31:50It was clear that Mielke was the servant, the loyal foot soldier
31:55And Honecker the one giving the orders
31:57Nothing was allowed to interfere with his policies, especially his foreign policy
32:10And the Stasi kept receiving additional responsibilities
32:14In my opinion this was one of the greatest mistakes of the Ministry for State Security
32:19As an intelligence service and security agency to compensate for the deficits of the party leadership
32:31In 1975 East Germany was signatory to the Helsinki Accords
32:36Which included an acknowledgement of basic human rights and fundamental freedoms
32:41Such as the freedom of movement
32:43But for all intents and purposes, these exact rights were virtually non-existent within the regime
32:52Nevertheless, a growing number of East German citizens placed formal requests to exit the country
32:59And the Stasi handled them all
33:01We cannot let these powers catch us on the back foot
33:07We must always keep the upper hand in this situation
33:10That applies especially to recognizing potential applicants in advance
33:14So we can increase preventative measures
33:20Mielke's main efforts were geared towards compelling applicants to withdraw their request
33:26If they did not, they risked discrimination and criminalization
33:30That was the ministry's deterrent
33:33But East Germany was sliding into an economic crisis
33:37Honecker needed a solid currency and goodwill from the West
33:42In order to take out credits worth billions
33:45The Stasi was wary of the bind that would put them in
33:48It was in 1984, on a Sunday
33:55I got a call in the morning with orders to immediately contact hundreds of applicants seeking to leave
34:01And to inform them that they could relocate the following day
34:05We knew that that was the stupidest possible thing to do
34:09But it was just another one of those loan decisions made by Honecker
34:12That had to be carried out to the letter no matter the disastrous consequences we foresaw
34:19Whoever thought that would lower the number of applications for relocation was obviously being naive
34:26In fact, the opposite came to pass
34:29After those first applicants crossed over, it created a pull effect
34:33And inspired thousands of others to follow their lead
34:36One such applicant for relocation in 1984 was 23-year-old Michael Bittner from East Berlin
34:53The Stasi file Morgentau, or Morning Dew, tells his story
34:57It contains three handwritten applications, each one declined
35:02An internal note adds, the necessity for relocation is not given at this time
35:10The Stasi still believed it could convince Bittner, who had fulfilled his military service
35:17Without any objection, to stay in East Germany
35:20They were wrong
35:24On November 24th 1986, Michael Bittner tried to cross the death strip
35:3032 shots were fired
35:33As he reached the top of his ladder, Bittner is struck and dies
35:38The incident put Mielke in an awkward position
35:45Three days prior, two refugees had been shot and killed along the wall
35:50The celebration of Berlin's 750th anniversary in East Germany's capital was just around the corner
35:56Honecker and Mielke both feared international condemnation of the firing orders
36:03And so, they decided that Bittner's death had to be kept secret at all costs
36:09And so the Stasi forged an arrest warrant for the deceased
36:14It claimed that a criminal gang of human smugglers had smuggled him out of East Germany
36:19The truth about Michael Bittner's death became a state secret
36:24The whereabouts of his remains are unknown to this day
36:28Thanks to their cover-up, festivities for Berlin's 750th anniversary were undisturbed
36:31One of the main attractions, a float commemorating the building of the Berlin Wall
36:37The combat groups of the working class secured the Brandenburg Gate
36:41This image swept around the world
36:44By 1989, Mielke had served as minister for 31 years
36:48The duties for Berlin's 750th anniversary were undisturbed
36:51One of the main attractions, a float commemorating the building of the Berlin Wall
36:55The combat groups of the working class secured the Brandenburg Gate
36:59This image swept around the world
37:02By 1989, Mielke had served as minister for 31 years
37:12But he still had no time to rest in the private rooms directly adjacent to his office
37:18Now other images were sweeping around the world
37:23In Hungary, the Iron Curtain was wearing thin
37:26Thousands of East German citizens fled to Prague
37:28Where they occupied the West German Embassy
37:31Until they were allowed to continue to West Germany
37:34In trains passing through East Germany
37:37An increasing number of East Germans were filing applications requesting relocation
37:42By early November 1989, nearly 200,000 applications had been received
37:48Everybody could see that the ship was sinking
37:51And we had no room left to maneuver
37:53We had no leg left to stand on
37:55There was no place left to turn
37:56Of course that had all been different in 1961
38:01Then, slowly but surely, doubt started arising
38:05A sense of helplessness began to spread
38:08It came from the top down as well
38:10And slowly but surely, we became more and more aware of it
38:14At first, the mounting crisis could be pushed aside and ignored
38:20In October 1989, the SED leadership celebrated themselves and 40 years of East Germany
38:33Meanwhile, thousands of protestors marched through East Berlin up to the Palace of the Republic
38:38Mielke's worst nightmare was that they would continue on to the Brandenburg Gate and march to the wall
38:46I don't know what he felt or sensed
38:50All I know is that he thought he could still salvage this
38:54Even if that meant we had to shoot
38:56I'm convinced we would have opened fire at the Brandenburg Gate
38:59But the protesters did not march to the gate
39:08In the following weeks, however, more and more people took to the streets
39:13Demanding change, free elections and the freedom to travel
39:17The SED and Stasi tried to get the spiraling situation under control by releasing a new ordinance
39:24Allowing travel and immigration upon request
39:28A small misunderstanding that famously had a groundbreaking effect
39:33As far as I know, this goes into effect immediately, without delay
39:38On the night of November 9th, more and more people flocked to the border crossing at Bornholmer Straße
39:44To test this new would-be freedom to travel
39:49Open the gate, the people demand
39:52Stasi Lieutenant Colonel Harald Jäger was on his own that night
39:57Eventually, he ordered the border crossing to be opened
40:01There was no superior around to give direction
40:05A Lieutenant Colonel of the Ministry would never have been able to order the border to be opened
40:12Under normal circumstances, that could never have been the case
40:18So there was no need to train for this case
40:22Opening the border crossing would have been considered high treason
40:25The thousands of people standing in front of us were the ones who opened the border
40:26If they hadn't been there, I would never have opened it
40:41To this day, nobody knows where Erich Mielke was that night
40:45Four days after the fall of the Iron Curtain, he held his first and last speech in the People's Parliament
41:00I love all people
41:04Truly I do, that's what I stand for
41:06In 1992, Erich Mielke was charged with being partially responsible for the killings at the wall
41:16But the proceedings were abandoned due to his failing health
41:20He died in May 2000
41:21Erich Mielke's photo album of victory was not the only legacy found in the state security storerooms
41:36After the fall of the wall, there were also all the nondescript things that the state security took from arrested fugitives
41:49And also from the walls dead and archived
41:53None of this was to be made public
41:56Everything was to remain forever in the dark
42:19So I do hope to hear my work
42:22When you have come from the front
42:25You can never have come from the back
42:27I have a moment
42:29The beauty of the world is not the power of the roof
42:32So I can never hear any of them
42:35But I do hope to hear many people
42:36I am the right to hear many people
42:39I will never see them
42:41I will never know
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