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00:00To be continued...
00:30To be continued...
01:00To be continued...
01:29To be continued...
02:00A thousand sheets? You crazy? What do you need so much paper for?
02:05I'm a student, okay?
02:07Other people are students, but they don't need a thousand sheets?
02:10Sophie, what's going on?
02:11Sorry, ladies. As you know, everything's rationed. The most I could give you is a hundred.
02:19Yeah?
02:20Thank you. I'll take the hundred.
02:22Great.
02:22A great love, as you said. Goodbye.
02:36Goodbye.
02:37Goodbye.
02:37Goodbye.
02:38What are you doing, Sophie?
02:44What do you mean?
02:46A thousand sheets. Come on. I'm not stupid, you know.
02:49Fine. I'll tell you why you need them.
02:51I want to do something.
02:52And if Hitler arrived right now and I had a pistol, I would shoot him.
02:55If the men won't do it, then the women must.
02:57You are completely crazy.
02:58You want to get us arrested on the street?
03:00I had a normal childhood. I wasn't born to fight.
03:12I grew up in Vorktenberg, on the Kohur.
03:16To us children, these small towns seemed like the entire world.
03:19I had two brothers and two sisters.
03:22We lived in the town hall because my father was the mayor.
03:27When I was ten, we moved to Ulm.
03:30We didn't know anybody, but we five siblings had each other.
03:41And then Hitler came to power.
03:43My siblings and I were excited, drunk on the awakening that was felt everywhere.
03:48My father was a committed pacifist, and my mother was a devout woman.
04:06It hit them hard when, one after another, my siblings joined the Hitler Youth.
04:17And I definitely wanted to belong to it.
04:20Father, it was a test of strength between us children, I have, and the parents.
04:40Father, Sophie has joined us now.
04:43What does that mean?
04:44Yesterday, I joined the Hitler Youth.
04:50You two? You joined as well? Why?
04:54But Hans, Liesel, Inge, and Werner are already members.
04:56And all my friends.
04:58The fatherland needs us.
05:00The fatherland?
05:01You mean Hitler needs you, so that you can fight in his war that he has long since prepared for.
05:07That is an allegation. You just don't want to admit that Hitler is successful.
05:11Two years ago, we had six million unemployed, and now...
05:13Yes, of course. He's boosting the war industry.
05:16But he will let the tanks roll over you and trample all over freedom and justice.
05:21Nobody in this country dares to offer criticism.
05:23We learned to assume responsibility for others.
05:27We are a community of young people.
05:30We are all equal.
05:33Yes, Father. Don't you say we should stand up for others?
05:38Community, huh? Oh, really?
05:40You're telling me that you really believe those hollow phrases?
05:44But you will only learn through your experience with this... organization.
05:53The Hitler Youth, with their waving flags, eyes that looked always forward, the drumbeat, and the singing.
06:03Wasn't it something spectacular? This association.
06:10We the children had acted against our parents.
06:15Now I was in the BDM, the League of German Girls.
06:18I loved the uniform, the trips, and the songs.
06:30We were young and confident.
06:34Should the squares remain sitting at home, the future belonged to us.
06:39I was ambitious and made a career in the BDM.
06:42But I also liked listening to music.
06:54And I loved to go dancing.
06:56Evening.
06:59Looking sharp, thank you.
07:00Honey.
07:03Enjoy the party.
07:04Yes, thanks for coming.
07:06Every Friday, we would gather at my friend Anneliese's house to dance.
07:10Her parents even allowed us to drink alcohol and smoke cigarettes.
07:17And the best part was, there were boys there.
07:28This music is dreadful.
07:30Put something upbeat on, Anneliese.
07:32A bit of swing.
07:32That'll have some things up here.
07:34Yeah, yeah, it would.
07:35And the Gestapo.
07:36Oh, come on.
07:37I know you have something.
07:38Let's see what I've got.
07:53All right, go on.
07:55Aren't you Sophie?
08:14Yeah, and?
08:15Well, when I last saw you, you were still a little girl.
08:19I still am, compared to you.
08:21Oh, we're being formal, are we?
08:23Okay, as you wish.
08:24Forgive me then, ma'am.
08:25So you're an officer?
08:27I'm Fritz Hartnagel.
08:29Lieutenant of the Luftwaffe.
08:31You are making fun of me, sir.
08:33Excuse me, that wasn't my intention.
08:35I'm just proud to be a soldier.
08:37Okay.
08:38Doesn't a soldier have to follow orders?
08:42Then I order you to dance with me now.
08:45Granted, Madam General Field Marshal.
08:58Fritz was a good dancer.
09:00Perhaps that's why I fell in love with him.
09:02For a while, the BDM wasn't that important.
09:10Perhaps because I didn't want to grow up.
09:23And then came the 10th of November, 1937.
09:27We received a visit from the Gestapo.
09:57Is that so early?
10:08I have no idea.
10:10But we'll find out soon.
10:21What's going on?
10:27Robert Scholl.
10:29Who else?
10:30You did ring my doorbell, after all.
10:32Search the house.
10:35What's this about?
10:37Inga, Sophie, and Werner Scholl.
10:41Come with me.
10:42But what are my children accused of?
10:44Can you tell me that?
10:46Activity in illegal youth organizations, mostly.
10:49Just because they meet and sing songs outside the Hitler Youth?
10:52We'll hold them in the local jail for questioning.
10:54You can inquire after them there tomorrow afternoon.
11:01Tomorrow afternoon?
11:04Does that mean you want to detain them overnight?
11:07I suggest you pack them a few things now.
11:09They actually only arrested us because my brothers Hans and Werner belonged to a group
11:22who sang old youth songs and read books by Stefan Zweig.
11:26That was forbidden.
11:28Hans was made to take responsibility as the instigator.
11:33Inga, Werner, and I were soon released.
11:36But Hans was in prison for weeks.
11:38A government that actually locks up children.
11:47What were you supposed to think?
11:48And then, Hitler started the war.
12:04Father had been right about everything.
12:07As a career soldier, Fritz had to stand ready from the very first day.
12:11We seldom saw each other.
12:13Just like millions of others, our letters were our only connection.
12:24The 5th of September, 1939.
12:28Dear Fritz,
12:30I can't understand that people's lives are constantly being put at risk by other people.
12:35I will never understand it, and I find it appalling.
12:39Don't say that it's for the fatherland.
12:44If Fritz received leave, we often went away together.
12:49God, Fritz!
12:50The most important thing!
12:52Oh, yeah!
12:53Yeah!
13:05We had bought a couple of cheap rings so that we could pass for a married couple.
13:22Otherwise, they wouldn't give us a room.
13:25But our time together was much too short.
13:28We hoped that the war would be over soon.
13:31However, in the meantime, the fatherland wouldn't leave us alone.
13:47Young girls had to spend a year in the Reich Labour Service.
13:51There in the Labour Service, the female youth should be raised with the correct work ethic and community spirit.
13:56I landed in agriculture.
14:01It was terrible.
14:04Get up, my little workers!
14:06Six o'clock, time for exercise.
14:10Oh, man.
14:12It's too early for us.
14:13It's so early.
14:22Come on, there.
14:23Let's go to the beds.
14:24Don't forget to be very tidy.
14:33Okay, you've got mine.
14:35Come on, take care of me.
14:42Yeah, I hate to hear the word worker.
14:44Okay, sure.
14:45I'm Sophie Shaw.
14:47Oh, don't forget this.
14:48Do you really think that you're better than us?
14:51Smart Sophie.
14:54Oh, look at what our headteacher is reading.
14:57What is it?
14:58Augustine.
14:59Digestalt als gesuge.
15:01What are you doing?
15:02Give it back.
15:03Give it, give it back to me now.
15:04What's going on here?
15:05Stop immediately.
15:07I think you all need an extra session of early morning exercise.
15:09And then off to the field, to the harvest.
15:14Oh, man.
15:14Flag ceremony, shoe ceremony, sports ceremony.
15:29How I hated it all.
15:31It was cheerless and soul-destroying.
15:33I felt like I was just a slave.
15:35But you were brought up well during your time with the Reich Labour Service
15:41because you raised yourself
15:43with inner distance and outer adjustment.
15:49During this time, the texts of St. Augustine were my one and only comfort.
15:54Our heart is restless until it rests in you, wrote Augustine.
16:01He was a seeker of God like me.
16:05I yearned for peace and to determine my own life.
16:09In the spring of 1942, I was finally in Munich, in this wonderful city.
16:28Free at last.
16:30At last I could live.
16:33Fritz had unexpectedly received leave before he had to go to the Eastern Front.
16:39Another goodbye for months.
16:54What are you doing?
16:57I'm decorating you.
17:02We hereby give Lieutenant Fritz Hartnagel the Order of Margaret,
17:06first class for character, appearance at his services to the German woman.
17:13I didn't actually know there was an award for that.
17:16Now you know there is.
17:20Close your eyes.
17:27This is a flower charm.
17:30So that you come back in one piece.
17:33Are you sure?
17:34I feel as if I'm at my own funeral.
17:39It's not funny.
17:44Don't worry about me.
17:47I'm gonna be okay.
17:49You know, they say,
17:51bad weeds grow tall.
17:53So many have died in Russia.
18:03You'll take care of yourself.
18:05Promise me.
18:07I promise.
18:10We'll write to each other.
18:13As often as possible.
18:15So that we don't lose each other.
18:16Whether we would see each other again.
18:26Who knew the answer to that in those days?
18:30How quickly one learns to live with terrible things.
18:33The war against Russia.
18:49Had Hitler really believed that he could conquer the giant realm?
18:52After the first victories, the German offensive came to a halt.
18:57The army brought death and destruction to the country.
19:02This war was long since lost.
19:03And every day thousands more were dying.
19:07For Führer, people, and the fatherland.
19:13So, how was the lecture?
19:16By April 1942, I was enrolled at the University of Munich,
19:21where my brother Hans studied medicine.
19:23I had chosen biology and philosophy for my subjects.
19:30Ah, it was boring.
19:32Come, let's go to your place for tea.
19:34We can't.
19:35I have to go to anatomy.
19:41Wait a minute.
19:50Have you read this?
19:53Leaflets of the white rose?
19:57Nothing is more unworthy than a civilized people
20:00allowing an irresponsible and dark herd
20:03of loyal government cliques to govern?
20:12Is it not so that today every honest German
20:14is ashamed of their government?
20:16Who amongst us senses the extent of the shame
20:18that we and our children will feel?
20:20Not so loud.
20:21Holy shit.
20:22Where did you get this?
20:25I have to go.
20:27Hans, wait a minute.
20:28Maybe...
20:28Come.
20:29Stop it.
20:30There was something outrageous in the leaflet.
20:46Since Poland was conquered, 300,000 Jews have been murdered
20:50in the most savage way.
20:52Here we see a crime that can resemble nothing in the whole of human history throughout the ages.
21:00Fritz had also hinted at such a thing.
21:03A terrible thing was happening in the name of Germany.
21:06Hans?
21:14Everyone wants to absolve themselves from their guilt.
21:18Everyone does.
21:20And sleeps once again with a calm conscience.
21:22But they cannot absolve themselves.
21:25Everyone is guilty, guilty, guilty.
21:26But it is not yet too late
21:37to rid the world of this loathsome government.
21:42Wait, that's not clear enough.
21:45We must word that more clearly.
21:47What is unclear?
21:48Everyone will get it.
21:49What about...
21:51This most loathsome of all monsters of government?
21:59Sophie?
22:00What are you doing here?
22:01I'm sorry.
22:02I wanted a cup of tea before I went back to class.
22:05Hello, Alexander.
22:07Hello, Sophie.
22:09Stick around.
22:10I was going anyway.
22:12We were just doing something for class.
22:16Go get some tea in the kitchen, Sophie.
22:19I'll come to you.
22:20I'll just see Alexander to the building.
22:33Damn.
22:34Do you think that she may have heard something?
22:37I don't know.
22:39Even if she did, she's my sister.
22:42We'll continue tomorrow,
22:44but at my place in Harlequin.
22:45You want some tea?
22:58Yes, please.
22:58Please.
22:59It was obvious to me who had written the leaflets.
23:28Hans had no idea how much I admired him.
23:33He had the courage not to look away,
23:35as millions of others did,
23:37and consequently risked his life.
23:45Hans?
23:46I want to help.
23:53Help with what?
23:56Come on.
23:57The leaflet that we read at school?
23:59You know who wrote it, right?
24:00You shouldn't ask me about the author.
24:04You will endanger him.
24:07So I'm endangering you?
24:11This most loathsome of all monsters of government?
24:14Oh, come on, Hans.
24:15I heard it.
24:15So?
24:20I want to help out.
24:23Absolutely not.
24:26It's too dangerous.
24:27You could quietly induct me.
24:29You can't get rid of me anyhow.
24:30You need to go.
24:42Your train leaves at 2.
24:43After I bring these to Augsburg,
24:53I will get the next train to Ulm.
24:55That's not the plan.
24:57But it's more practical.
24:59I can pass on the leaflets to Herzl in Ulm.
25:01Then I'll go right back to Munich.
25:04Two cities in one day?
25:05That's too suspicious.
25:10What will you say if they check you?
25:12That I'm visiting my parents, Nul?
25:13What else?
25:14Okay.
25:15And you just wanted to take a walk in Augsburg?
25:17No one will believe you.
25:27Of course it was risky.
25:29But the train ticket was cheaper than sending a parcel.
25:32We led the Gestapo on a wild goose chase.
25:37They would think that the White Rose
25:39was a wide network of resistance fighters.
25:42We distributed leaflets not only in Munich,
25:45but also in Augsburg, Stuttgart, Frankfurt,
25:48and even in Austria.
25:49Oh, my God.
26:19We were only a handful of students, but our leaflets made the regime nervous because we
26:40told the truth.
26:50Yes, come in.
26:51We won't do that under any circumstances.
26:54Got it?
26:55Bye.
26:56Heil Hitler!
27:00These leaflets were transferred to us from Augsburg.
27:09It would appear that they are the same as the ones that have appeared in Munich.
27:14Determine whether they are written on the same machine.
27:17We will find out who is behind this rabble rousing and flush them out.
27:21Yes, sir.
27:39And then there was the thing with Giesler.
27:43Paul Giesler, Gauleiter of Munich and Bavarian First Minister at the mercy of Hitler.
27:49A Nazi of the most disgusting sort.
27:52He was supposed to give a speech at the university and had had too much to drink.
27:57It was clear that it would be embarrassing, but nobody thought that he would go on for so long.
28:04Ladies and gentlemen, to my wonderful surprise, I see quite a few soldiers and students, of course, filling this beautiful room.
28:19An unpleasant surprise, however, are the many female students I'm looking at here.
28:24Intellectual voles.
28:27My ladies, I hope that you will be able to find happiness in the form of a strong man with a lot of spunk.
28:35Instead of wasting all of your time, you'll let your own.
28:40And you, if you're a child instead.
28:43And if you should be too ugly to try and find yourself a man,
28:47now I'd like to offer you my hand to assistance here.
28:50It'll be sure to give you a good time.
28:53It was unbelievable what Giesler had said.
28:56The Chief of Propaganda Goebbels is meant to have raged when he heard of it.
29:05Conversely, we were delighted.
29:10At last, resistance seemed to be growing against the regime.
29:14Perhaps now our leaflets would be able to fall on fertile ground.
29:20Calling all Germans.
29:22With mathematical certainty, Hitler is leading the German people into the abyss.
29:27Hitler cannot win the war, only prolong it.
29:29He, and his helper's guilt, has exceeded every measure ever thought possible.
29:39Alexander had organized a photocopier, and we were able to produce thousands of leaflets.
29:45But this also increased the risk of being discovered.
29:48And yet, still the deaths continued on the front.
29:56In Stalingrad, an entire army was fighting for survival.
30:01Hitler's delusion had led to around 250,000 soldiers becoming completely encircled in the city of Volga.
30:09Hitler was prepared to sacrifice them all.
30:12Fritz was there too.
30:22We have very bad days behind us, he wrote to me.
30:25We have been in constant retreat for eight days.
30:28My battalion is completely worn out.
30:32I don't know how it all will go.
30:34I want to pray, and still pray in these times.
30:37But then I received a message.
30:51Fritz had been unbelievably lucky.
30:54A blessing in disguise.
30:56He came out of the Stalingrad cauldron with frostbitten fingers.
31:00In one of the last aeroplanes.
31:07But hundreds of thousands were not as lucky as he was.
31:18Stalingrad.
31:20Mass grave.
31:22At the end of January, the Nazi leadership prepared the Germans for catastrophe.
31:27Hermann Göring delivered a mendacious speech on the radio.
31:30And every German, even in a thousand years, has to speak the word of Stalingrad.
31:40And remember that Germany, at the end of the day,
31:45set the flag to the end of the war.
31:49The law is so.
31:52The law of honor.
31:54The war of honor.
31:55The war of honor.
31:56And the war of honor.
31:58The war of honor.
31:59The war of honor.
32:00The war of honor.
32:01The war of honor.
32:02The war of honor.
32:03The war of honor.
32:04The war of honor.
32:06What an intolerable fat ass.
32:09To serve such lies.
32:10But Hans, no one will believe that there is a final victory.
32:13Everyone knows that the war is lost.
32:15This is our best chance.
32:24We were getting braver.
32:33It was my idea to write slogans on the walls of buildings.
32:37Even at the entrance to the university.
32:39There, all the students walking past would be able to read it.
32:55Okay.
33:05This is unbelievable.
33:10They are so bold.
33:12But who would do something like that?
33:21Madness.
33:24After Stalingrad, the population's mood threatened to change.
33:35The Führer and the Nazis were really afraid.
33:44Schaefer here.
33:46I need you to send more over to me straight away.
33:48It's urgent.
33:50Now there was a 1,000 Reichsmark reward for our heads.
33:55Our nocturnal activities had triggered a large-scale manhunt.
33:58One-scale manhunt.
34:12Come in.
34:14Hal Hitler.
34:15You wanted to speak to me, sir.
34:17Hal Hitler.
34:21These leaflets and their graffiti tonight.
34:24Are they the same perpetrators?
34:28We assume that's the case.
34:30We are currently closely analyzing the text and the writing.
34:34Our lab tests have confirmed that the printer paper that was used was in fact bought in Munich.
34:38So we're looking for the perpetrators here in the city.
34:42Listen to me more.
34:45These leaflets have made some serious waves among the people and are even being felt at the highest level.
34:52You must absolutely catch these people.
34:56There is nothing more important.
34:58Of course.
34:59Thank you, sir.
35:01Fritz was now in hospital, in Lemberg.
35:03I was so happy that he was alive and was looking to the future.
35:05My dear Fritz, if I was too tired to make plans because they were all ruined by the war,
35:09now they are beginning to shoot like forest flowers along a long, warm rainfall.
35:12So colorful and outrageous.
35:13But they don't want to happen outrageously.
35:15But very practically.
35:18I am so happy that he was alive and was looking to the future.
35:22My dear Fritz, if I was too tired to make plans because they were all ruined by the war,
35:25now they are beginning to shoot like forest flowers along a long, warm rainfall.
35:28So colorful and outrageous.
35:30But they don't want to happen outrageously, but very practically.
35:33As soon as the war was over, I wanted to start living with Fritz somewhere.
35:47To start living at last.
35:59When will you get home?
36:03We still had 1500 leaflets we wanted to distribute at the university, in daylight, between lectures.
36:18Let's go.
36:33We're done. Let's go.
36:48We're done. Let's go.
36:49Shoot. We have some left.
37:06Go back.
37:08First and second floor.
37:19I don't know why I threw the leaflets down.
37:31Cockiness?
37:33Or was it just lack of consideration?
37:35It just simply happened.
37:49What is going on?
38:04Stop! Stop!
38:06You are under arrest.
38:08Now give me a break. Let me go.
38:11Folger, you are coming to the rector.
38:13Why didn't we run away when the caretaker approached us?
38:18Why did we let ourselves be led away?
38:21Perhaps we just imagined that nothing bad would happen to us.
38:25What could the Gestapo actually have on us?
38:26Hans and I had agreed.
38:28Admit to nothing for which there was no evidence.
38:34What could the Gestapo actually have on us?
38:38Hans and I had agreed.
38:40Admit to nothing, for which there was no evidence.
38:42which there was no evidence today you distributed this leaflet at the
39:02university with your brother Han Sho they were lying on the second floor and I
39:09brushed them over the balustrade in passing in passing yes exactly I
39:16understand that I did a stupid thing but I can't change that now
39:27you had a case with you which was completely empty my brother and I wanted
39:37to visit our parents and own on the way back I wanted to put the laundry which
39:41our mother had washed for us in the case at first I really thought we'd get away
39:52with it
39:58in the evening when we were being questioned by the Gestapo propaganda minister
40:03goebbels spoke at the Berlin sport class he knew that the loss of stalingrad
40:08couldn't be glossed over instead he whipped up the masses
40:12we had actually thought that the Germans would rise in the
40:42against Hitler and his regime for it was now clear to everyone that the war was
40:47lost how naive of us
40:54sir we found the typewriter that wrote the letter in his apartment and he has admitted everything you've
41:09wrote the letter in his apartment and he has admitted everything you've done
41:14excellent work on this matter dismissed
41:16well
41:23our
41:24we're
41:25so
41:29Your brother has admitted to everything.
41:52Our officers have discovered the typewriter
41:55with which the leaflets were written in your flat.
41:59And hundreds of stamps.
42:02And addresses.
42:05Perhaps I could have bluffed.
42:08I could have claimed that I didn't know anything.
42:12I could have played the clueless girl.
42:15I want to tell you the truth.
42:18It is our belief that the war is lost.
42:21And that every human life which is sacrificed
42:23for this lost war is a needless victim.
42:26We wanted to do something against the awful bloodshed.
42:33Now there was no way back.
42:36I had chosen the truth.
42:38Hans and I submitted a full and complete confession.
42:47And took all of the blame in order to protect our friends.
42:51There was nothing more we could do except wait for our trial.
42:54I have brought you something.
43:10The indictment?
43:11Yes, that is well.
43:12Yes, that is well.
43:13Yes, that is well.
43:16Yes, that is well.
43:17No, no, no.
43:18No, no, no.
43:19No, no.
43:21No.
43:23No, no.
43:24No.
43:26No.
43:27You would have had to have been aware of the consequences of your actions, Ms. Shoal.
43:48I would have done it again.
43:51No regrets.
43:57No regrets.
44:27Creating a highly treacherous enterprise, abetting the enemy, subversion of National.
44:35They want to kill us.
44:45Oh, come child.
44:49Come child.
44:52Perhaps they'll only send you to prison.
44:55You're still so young.
44:57But they sent Roland Friesler, the top Nazi judge.
45:08He came from Berlin by the night train for our trial.
45:12He didn't come to judge us.
45:14Heil Hitler!
45:15He came to execute us.
45:16Heil Hitler!
45:18Our friend Christoph Probst had also been charged.
45:22Material had been found at Hans' which implicated him.
45:25In this hard fight for the fate of our people, you can think of nothing better than to gutlessly stab our soldiers who look death, straight in the eye every day, in the back like yellow-bellied cowards.
45:40The state enables you to study and to lead a privileged kind of life, and you use that to shamelessly create disgraceful lies and horrible slander.
45:51You are therefore blackards, disgusting, unpatriotic scum!
45:58I will not tremble when the time comes.
46:02I won't give them the satisfaction.
46:07They shall not think that they have won.
46:14The following judgment is given on behalf of the people.
46:17The defendants have, repeatedly, called for the sabotage of war equipment and the fall of our people's national socialist way of life by using leaflets,
46:31which have propagated defeatist thoughts and insulted the Fuhrer,
46:34and have consequently aided and abetted enemies of the Reich and reduced our military strength.
46:42They gave us hardly half an hour to say goodbye to our parents.
46:47Therefore, you have been sentenced to death.
47:02Whether you feel the axe when it cuts through your throat.
47:14Whether you see your own head fall.
47:25I'm not dying in vain.
47:26I am on the right side.
47:32There is a higher justice.
47:33There is a higher justice.
47:56There is a higher justice.
47:57Hello.
47:58It is a higher justice.
48:02Today they kill us, but tomorrow they will die.
48:32The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want.
48:44He maketh me to lie down in green pastures, and he leadeth me beside the still waters.
48:49And though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.
48:54For thou preparest a table before me in the presence of mine enemies.
49:02I have a letter for you, Lieutenant.
49:22Can you do me a favor and open the letter?
49:24Mm-hmm.
49:32My dear Fritz.
49:38Yesterday I bought a nice flowering plant.
49:40I put it right on my desk in the light of the window.
49:44Its graceful tendrils are covered with delicate purple petals.
49:49It brings a real joy to both my eyes and my heart.
49:52And I only wish that you could come before it withers.
49:57When will you come home?
49:59Perhaps we can soon start somewhere together.
50:04Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:06Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:07Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:08Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:09Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:10Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:11Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:12Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:13Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:14Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:15Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:16Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:17Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:18Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:19Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:20Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:21Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:22Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:23Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:24Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:25Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:26Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:27Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:28Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:29Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:30Best wishes from your Sophie.
50:31Best wishes from your Sophie.
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