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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:01They brought my hands, I played with my joy
00:04banjo
00:06Van Damme
00:07Bardo
00:08Hello
00:09I am Napoleon Bonaparte, the Imperator
00:12And I'm returning to the farmer's incentive
00:14commander
00:15We came here to spread culture
00:17maybe?
00:18Joy Joy
00:19Fadl
00:21Wait there
00:22Don't believe it
00:23who?
00:24I am Rajib Rajib Rajib Rajib Rajib
00:26Rajab Rajab Rajab Abdul Hafeez Al-Falah
00:29Your grandchild from the future
00:31This is Napoleon Bonaparte
00:32A French occupier wants to deceive you
00:34actually?
00:35And you're trying to stop us, a million
00:36And the French campaign was prevented?
00:38You can't imagine, seriously.
00:39This campaign might affect us in the future.
00:41Khaled Youssef will make a series called "Sirrah Al-Batea"
00:44I'm here to watch this series
00:46I am a good man
00:48Jay is in the interest of the fan.
00:50He really seems kind, humble, and a good man.
00:52So, I ask him, what does this hand feed?
00:53What are you feeding your hand with?
00:59This is the full Nutella
01:00Yes
01:01liar
01:02This is the Rosetta Stone, and they're speeding up ahead of us.
01:04Lower the barrier, that's the eyebrows
01:19Beautiful Ajdiya
01:20That's great, Grandpa.
01:22These people only come with a soft touch, not a red one.
01:24What can I tell you?
01:25Don't you want to warn me about anything else?
01:26For example, I divorced my wife
01:28No, no, Grandma, it's fine.
01:29sure
01:30I feel like I'm not happy
01:31No, no, it's fine. How much?
01:32He confirmed
01:33I can divorce her, no problem.
01:34So that we can build on the future and stuff
01:36What are you talking about?
01:37I'll come to you about a more important matter.
01:38Then came the invention called the iPhone
01:42I want you to register a patent in your name
01:44Present care
01:44If you went and registered it
01:46Is it okay to divorce Tita?
01:47no
01:47Ha ha ha
01:51Dear walkers, we invite
02:01For your blessings, I know you'll be in a new episode
02:02From the Al-Daheeh program
02:03Dear, let me assure you
02:04This episode is based on a historical source.
02:06It is not plagiarized from the series "Sirrah Al-Batea"
02:09Nor from a film and its support in response
02:10Just to be honest
02:11In a painting by the French artist
02:13Gustav Burgin
02:14He films the moment of entry
02:15Napoleon and Nibert
02:16To Cairo
02:17You see, my dear, an idealized image of Egyptians
02:19And they are standing
02:20And they welcome him
02:21Some of them are kneeling and prostrating
02:23They show respect and appreciation
02:25For the occupying leader
02:26Salvo Plame
02:27One million
02:28They took our land, displaced us, and starved us.
02:30We occupied, we colonized
02:32I am not just a colony
02:33I am cutting under your feet
02:34As you can see, my dear
02:36This episode is probably imaginative, meaning the artist
02:38That definitely didn't happen.
02:39However, despite this
02:40Many French paintings
02:41About the French campaign
02:42This image was influenced
02:44As if she were completing the story
02:46French historians
02:47Repeat it about the campaign
02:48And after them
02:49Generations of European historians
02:50The story of the young leader
02:52Napoleon Bonaparte
02:53The one who reached the peak of his military successes
02:55And the feet of the French image were Saturday
02:57And the royalists were defeated
02:58And he greets these lovely people
02:59The leader
03:00Those whose armies invaded Italy
03:01France annexed it
03:02In the spring of 1798
03:04Preparations begin for its new courtyards
03:06In the East
03:07Specifically in Egypt
03:08Napoleon set a goal
03:09He works there
03:10model colony
03:11The spirit of the French Revolution lives on
03:13And it achieved its goals
03:14Freedom, equality, and fraternity
03:16And it is the source of all knowledge
03:17On the greatness of the French Republic
03:19Hamad Yamhaliz said that every country
03:20She has principles, she goes and occupies a country
03:21Apply it for you
03:22No, my dear
03:23History has been like this since the day we knew.
03:24Besides that, there's no looting.
03:25The situation is going this way
03:25A large country fears a small country
03:27You give them principles, take money, and say
03:29After you finish, you will love the principles that were coming
03:31So that you can deceive them
03:32And then you go and apply it in another country.
03:33Bonaparte
03:33Not only did they prepare soldiers to be part of their campaign
03:35He also used to talk to poets and musicians.
03:37They come with him
03:38What else but actors and dancers?
03:39They were all in it together
03:40And indeed, on the night of July 2, 1798
03:4336,000 French officers and soldiers will be deployed on land.
03:47In the strange
03:47He goes to Alexandria
03:48Napoleon succeeds in entering the city.
03:50And we see in his victory paintings
03:52Alexandrians lying on the ground
03:53The wounded Petitsulu pleaded with Napoleon that he was saving them from being killed.
03:56He raises his hand
03:57He is ordered to be pardoned.
03:58God, we are amazed by the French language and its manners.
04:00Forgiveness when one is able
04:02After that
04:02He leaves Alexandria and rides the Sahrawi.
04:04He marches the army on Cairo
04:06Preferred supplement in Western witchcraft
04:08Until he meets the Mamluks on the domes of Cairo
04:09In a meeting between East and West
04:11The legendary Battle of the Pyramids
04:13Which was usually embodied in another imaginative painting
04:16It appears in this painting
04:17Modern military tactics and techniques
04:20France uses it
04:21Amidst the courage and chivalry of the Mamluks
04:23The one who brought the Middle Ages
04:24And of course, I'm not going to tell you who wins.
04:32For the great leader Napoleon Bonaparte
04:34And the enlightened armies of the French campaign
04:36Which will bring art, music, and science
04:39All this with a view of the Great Pyramids
04:43Cinematic frame and stunning, imaginative imagery
04:45Dear friend, let me introduce you to the historian.
04:47Who is it, Abu Ahmad?
04:48The victorious
04:48That's because history, my dear, is always written by the victor.
04:50I'll show you the story of the loser
04:52Now let me tell you, my dear
04:54Entering Alexandria wasn't that easy.
04:56The artist accompanying the campaign, Denon Finan
04:58In his memoirs he says
04:59The defenders of Alexandria were fierce
05:02No one escaped from them
05:02They fought the French Tingoni
05:04And the leaders were captured
05:05General Mainou and General Kleber
05:07Alexandria also impressed Bonaparte himself.
05:08The one who wrote about them and said
05:10They had a strong will
05:11For them, death was nothing more than a refreshing break from the journey.
05:14Trip
05:14Dear Khawaja, Bakous, Wardian, and Rushdi went to the sea
05:18It's natural that he's upset
05:18As for the march from Alexandria to Cairo
05:21No second misery
05:21It's clear, my dear, that Bali didn't know
05:23What is Egypt's climate like?
05:24So Shouf chose to walk through the desert to Cairo in July.
05:29O infidel
05:29Everyone goes to Alexandria for their summer vacation
05:31Okay, you're his friend and he went to Cairo in the desert
05:33My friend, I tell you, my dear
05:34Napoleon on his journey from Alexandria to Cairo
05:36He stopped at the first race he followed in the journey
05:38He felt like he'd forgotten something.
05:40It means someone is traveling and walking in the desert in July
05:44Cairo
05:44There are no cars and no air conditioning.
05:46There are no Super Gates
05:47My dear, discover that it was a distance you take with Mia.
05:49Don't joke around with the pills in this campaign.
05:51Indeed, my dear
05:51Of course this happened
05:52Thirst spread among the soldiers of the French army
05:54And the French soldiers knew for the first time in their lives
05:56mirage phenomenon
06:15And the soldiers begin to die of thirst
06:16The soldiers were convinced that they were facing a hundred men.
06:19They run after it, but they can't find a winsh.
06:20They see a mirage танي
06:21So it becomes clear to them that there is another hundred
06:23They chased after her, but that wasn't necessary either.
06:24And the soldiers begin to fall ill one after the other from thirst.
06:27Some of them, my dear, were said to be killing themselves.
06:29He is so unable to bear the feeling of thirst
06:31And just when they finally solve the water problem, another problem appears.
06:34A problem known as hunger, God
06:36Muhammad was the one they spoke least about.
06:37And the least of them was that they were forgetful of the gods
06:38Campaign of thirty-six thousand soldiers
06:40Ya won Zamzamia, two sandwiches, macaroni and brownie
06:42This is sleep preparation for that
06:43Let your words, my dear, be a comfort to those who are suffering from misery.
06:45As for the battle of the pyramids that we saw a little while ago
06:48It's a struggle, my dear, in the language of production and industry.
06:51Kroma was not originally a battle of pyramids.
06:53It happened in the Bashtel and Mbaba area
06:5515 km from the pyramids
06:56But surely today Nab will not return to the French death
06:59Rtaarika says in Bashtil
07:00Or a great battle line with Nasser Al-Baransi in Mbaba
07:02The French language itself couldn't choose Bachtel
07:04Or people who are absent and ignorant
07:05But I mean
07:06For the sake of spice, plot, and PR
07:08French state media
07:10In order to reach ordinary citizens
07:12France 24 finds content
07:13And François knows what happened
07:16We'll call it the Battle of the Pyramids.
07:18We'll imagine it at the pyramids.
07:19The pyramids will be drawn in the background.
07:21So that we can work as a story frame
07:23It combines the grandeur of history from behind
07:25And the greatness that is happening now
07:26Speed ​​between past and present
07:28Because everyone saw Napoleon as just another occupier
07:31Regardless of the preamble and wording
07:33He is to secure his interests
07:34and his country's interests
07:35Which is reconciliation
07:36Britain's annoyance and control of the roads
07:38Which it colonized in India
07:39Because Britain has an amazing palace
07:41It's difficult for someone who breathes water in the sea.
07:42And the most important thing is that the incident was chosen
07:43If you face her on land
07:44By occupying the point
07:46Which connects the Mediterranean Sea
07:48Bahr Al-Ahmad
07:48What is it?
07:49Egypt
07:49At this time, my dear
07:50France is probably in general
07:52They had come out of what is called
07:54The smooth roots
07:54Thank God they submitted their applications.
07:56They entered the era of enlightenment and renaissance.
07:58From the beginning of the fifteenth century
07:59And the second agricultural revolution took place
08:00In the seventeenth century
08:01The first Sam'i revolution
08:03In the second text of the eighteenth century
08:05In the same way
08:05During this period, Egypt was an Ottoman province.
08:08He's got her, Picts
08:09Between the reconciliation of the Mamluks and the Turks
08:10It separates it from Europe
08:12A barrier much larger than the sea
08:13The truth, my dear
08:14What used to separate Egypt from Europe
08:16The Mediterranean Sea never ate anything.
08:17But centuries and centuries of technological progress
08:20It wouldn't have been right for Napoleon to go and tell the Egyptians
08:22Honestly
08:22I'm here to conquer you because of you
08:24When he took it, I mean
08:25USB
08:25It connects Britain to India
08:26So I'm coming to mess with Britain through you.
08:28If I find any resources or anything in the fridge, I'll take it.
08:30And this is what Britain did in its colonialism.
08:32He would never say that to you
08:33But there is another solution
08:34I'm here to make you dream
08:35Civilization and progress
08:37I'm here to save you from backwardness and stagnation
08:40What you're drowning in, my dear
08:42I came this whole way
08:43Because of your danger, you
08:43For my sake
08:44That's why
08:49When the French campaign entered Egypt
08:50The one who has my weapon is extremely important
08:52Printing press
08:53The printing press is the weapon that confronts minds and hearts.
08:56Napoleon was very fond of printing.
08:57To the point that it affected
08:58The printing press is moving to Egypt
08:59By ship called Lorraine
09:00This was the flagship he himself was traveling on
09:03He personally supervised the printing of the first statement.
09:06It is distributed among Egyptians
09:07The one who writes in Arabic
09:08He began with "In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful."
09:10There is no god but Allah
09:11He has no children
09:12God, O pilgrim
09:13Napoleon wanted to emphasize that he was not an occupier
09:15But he is sincere
09:16Why does anyone who calls themselves an occupier say that about themselves?
09:18Because he doesn't say he's an occupier
09:18Napoleon wanted to say that he respected Islam and the Quran.
09:21He loves Muslims very much
09:22He makes a special request to the country's sheikhs and tells them
09:24Tell the nation that the French are sincere and Muslim.
09:27And as proof of that
09:28When they descended upon Rome, they broke the Pope's throne.
09:30The one who was inciting the fight against Islam
09:32In reference to his concern for Italy
09:33Why is he going to Italy?
09:34Do you mean I should use it?
09:35no
09:35Napoleon's publications at many times
09:37How much do you smell the Quran?
09:38And she uses his style
09:38That's beside the point, of course.
09:39Napoleon was very interested in religious appearances
09:41To attend the religious celebrations of the Egyptians
09:44And he lets the singers walk in his procession.
09:46And they praise the Prophet
09:46Aziz al-Napoleon said, "He performed the Eid prayer."
09:48White jalabiya
09:49And workers distribute small amounts of francs.
09:51For example, when Sheikh Al-Bakri meets
09:52Sheikh of the Sufi orders
09:53I don't work on the year of entry of the pregnant woman
09:55Celebrating the birth of the nuclear
09:56Because the sheikh felt the atmosphere was not suitable
09:58Here is Bonaparte with his own hands, very much so.
09:59He asks him and the generator works
10:00So that he can attend it himself
10:01We will look into the investigation.
10:02What is this?
10:03Oh, my grandfather, why were you in the Talia?
10:04And also the printing press publications
10:06It brings good news to the Egyptian people
10:07Napoleon makes them happy
10:08Relax, people
10:09You will govern yourselves.
10:11He tells them that he made the Diwan for them
10:12Which is like a local council
10:14A flaw is the presence of elders, dignitaries, and scholars within it.
10:16So that they can take the people's interests
10:18And they will be a link between us and the Egyptians
10:19Diwan in Cairo
10:20And Douin in the least
10:21And above them is a public council for all the people of Egypt.
10:24The country's Shura Council uniform
10:26Private Diwan
10:26Habara is a small council of the country's elite.
10:29So that it is like a cabinet
10:30He said he did this to bring the Egyptians back
10:32On the system of councils of conscience in governance
10:34One day before the council meeting
10:38Napoleon says in a word, why?
10:39If we set the first example for the world
10:41On enlightened invasion
10:42We work in it towards the triumph of minds
10:44Which is more difficult than a military victory
10:46Let's say that I am superior to any two other nations
10:48As much as Napoleon Menaparte
10:50He is superior to Genghis Khani
10:51Britain heard that it saw the enlightened occupation
10:53And so, in an atmosphere of interaction
10:55The first session of the General Court is being held
10:57And the hygienic system works
10:58And the people of Cairo are celebrating the good news
10:59Congrats
11:00You still have a Diwan
11:01Oh Abu Hamid, Napoleon was very kind.
11:02They were unfair in the series, Abu Hamid.
11:04Why would a professor like any other sheikh speak like that?
11:05Why would I make fun of him?
11:06Sisi, let me get an apple and I'll bring it to you.
11:09I'm telling you, my dear
11:10The picture wasn't that beautiful.
11:12This council was not contracting
11:14Except in the presence of General Bartie
11:16Chief of Staff
11:17General de Buey
11:19Cairo Commander
11:20Why Abu Hamid, so that they can bless the council?
11:21No, my dear, so they can monitor the council.
11:23He blocks the path of the members of the Diwan
11:25If they tried to discuss anything
11:26Not to the liking of the French
11:27That's besides the fact that there was a general
11:28After each session, he writes a report.
11:30Not just about the words we discuss
11:31He also adds his notes
11:32On the leadership of the Diwan and their conduct
11:34And which one of them might sell a dangerous person?
11:36Let me tell you something, for example
11:37The first topic
11:37I discuss in the Diwan
11:38He asked us for a billion
11:40By imposing a tax on property
11:41And recording old carcasses
11:42With new documents
11:43With an additional 2% registration fee
11:45This is in addition, of course, to imposing taxes on tradesmen.
11:47My capture fee is 2%
11:48Stamp duty on the back of the passport and paint
11:50And a license to perform Hajj
11:51Non-millimmon charged
11:52And 12 in Miakhd
11:52This, my dear, was the first topic in the Diwan
11:54In the name of God, the Most Gracious, the Most Merciful.
11:55Why me, my dear
11:55The members of the council will not be silenced
11:57A fight with consent
11:57We're still sweating
11:58He entered our country with his taxes, fees, and stamp duty.
12:00We, as a representative body of the Egyptian people
12:02We're telling you this is unacceptable.
12:03Behind your printing press, a witness
12:04The truth record, dear
12:05Napoleon
12:06The one who had a financial crisis at the time
12:07The English destroyed his legend
12:08In the Battle of Abu Erie
12:22But the other side is evil.
12:24Not just Aziz Daraib
12:25The one who decided against the will of the people
12:27The issue wasn't just about taxes.
12:28Many things started to happen
12:30Without people understanding it
12:30For example, Napoleon
12:31He needs to widen the roads.
12:32Because you're strong enough to walk in it
12:34He began demolishing houses and mosques
12:35And he removes debris from the railway
12:36And people didn't understand
12:37Why is this happening?
12:37He also decided to conduct regular inspections of homes.
12:39To ensure her health and safety
12:41The citizen remains from Hall countries
12:42His house is safe
12:43Dr. Jay finds him and searches him.
12:44He will be examined and found healthy.
12:45Open your horn
12:45Open your horn
12:46What refreshes
12:47I also found
12:48Napoleon was preventing them
12:49From burial in cemeteries
12:50Those who used to bury their loved ones there
12:51Because this violates health standards.
12:53Here, Egyptians began to get angry every day.
12:55Anger increases
12:56Until it explodes on October 20th
12:58Just three months after Napoleon entered Egypt
13:00When the people of Cairo demonstrate, and the students and the sheikhs of Al-Azhar send a message
13:02Specifically, the community of the blind and visually impaired
13:05Led by Sheikh Al-Jawsaq
13:06They go to the judge's house
13:07They chant and want it
13:08He goes with them to our house in Asbakia.
13:10He cancels all his new procedures
13:12This is when the judge sees them
13:13He's scared and locks the door of his house.
13:14They threw stones at him
13:15And they will march their demonstration towards Al-Azhar.
13:17They'll find my dear
13:18General Dubois
13:19And with him his army
13:20Yalghrabi Qad Commandan Cairo
13:21He meets the wall
13:23The wall, my dear
13:24They attack him and clash with him.
13:25Battle of Nabbit
13:26In front of rifles
13:27Suddenly, my dear
13:28The swords will prevail
13:30That's not all.
13:30They killed General Debwin
13:32When the news spread throughout the whole city
13:34People are coming out of every street and every alley
13:37They had knives and naps
13:38They set up barricades and attacked the French.
13:40Immediately
13:41Napoleon pushed his way into the castle
13:42And on the hills that surrounded Cairo
13:44And he begins to cut in the city
13:46His main goal
13:47Al-Azhar Mosque
13:47This is the gathering place for the Sawar
13:49It's time for serious meetings now.
13:50And its occasions
13:52Glory to the Prophet
13:52Italy
13:53The occupier is showing his true face
13:54And at night the ground attack begins
13:56The French enter Cairo through its gates
13:58They block people in the streets and remove the barricades.
14:00Their goal is to reach leadership of Al-Azhar Mosque
14:02When they arrive at the mosque, they enter it.
14:04And they are the two Rajab brothers.
14:05And they were wearing their shoes
14:06And they start vandalizing the mosque.
14:08They tear up books and Qur'ans and throw them on the ground.
14:10Even more so after Hassan says to the Egyptian historian
14:12In Abdul Rahman Al-Jabati
14:13They relieved themselves in the corners of the mosque
14:15And anyone they encountered inside the mosque
14:17From the sheikhs or students
14:18They strip him of his clothes
14:19And they will leave Al-Azhar, without it.
14:21And here all traces of respect for Islam and Muslim sanctities disappear.
14:25The ones the printing press leaflets were talking about
14:27And when we read more history
14:28We know that the French have inside them
14:29They were mocking the actions these Egyptians were taking.
14:31For example, in a speech by General de Powell
14:33One of his friends
14:34They said we are deceiving Egyptians with our creative attachment
14:37Those who claim to be religious
14:38Which we do not believe in, nor does Abu Naber believe in.
14:40A lame man
14:42Or as my dear French historian would say
14:44The paradox is that Stendhal
14:45That's his name.
14:46What happened was a political leap
14:48But it means that a political project has surpassed
14:49I feel you're telling history from a narrative that sings, from what you're saying.
14:52What is this if it is a legitimate political project?
14:53But, Abu Hamaya, you feel you're being unfair, Billion.
14:55What my dear friend Blyoni was saying in his memoirs
14:57The initial publications of the Egyptians
14:58It was a piece of charlatanry
15:00But deception of the finest kind
15:02But with Egyptians, yes, but the scam is high quality.
15:04So, my dear French friends, they mocked these slogans.
15:06Even the Egyptians themselves understood that this was empty
15:08And it was clear in the actions of some of the French.
15:11Their talk of respecting the faith is nothing but a scam.
15:12And it's not high quality, by the way.
15:13The people of Alexandria frequently clashed with the French forces.
15:17Because of the campaign, they take their things on the prison walls.
15:19And in the cemeteries of Haida Rana, respecting the faith is a frightening thing.
15:22We always find a sense of alienation between Egyptians and the colonizer.
15:24For example, the French scientist Pierre Bernier
15:26He wrote and said about his presence in Egypt during the time of the pregnancy
15:28Every time I think about our situation, I find it worse.
15:30All he encountered in the street were women or children
15:32We see them running away from us as if we were broken animals.
15:34Even the animals here are terrified of us.
15:36Especially the dogs, who follow us very aggressively.
15:39To the point that we can only get rid of it with weapons.
15:41This whole dog thing was very strange.
15:43Jaber used to say that the dogs would bark at the French whenever they saw them.
15:46Because of the strange illusion of wearing clothes
15:47And this, my dear, explains to you the mentality of Tomlin Bonaparte
15:49The one who actually succeeds is the one who destroys the image in three seconds.
15:52Six sheikhs of Al-Azhar are ordered to be executed.
15:54He ordered that the bodies of the martyrs be thrown into the Nile.
15:57Because these bodies pass through all the cities of the Delta
15:59As he said in his post, so that Egyptians may know that Bonaparte's sword is invincible.
16:03There is no point in opposing his will.
16:05In a cruel manner that contradicts all the beautiful words he was saying
16:08And the Homsi guy who was hitting him in the mood
16:10That's right, my dear, the French were the first to encounter the Egyptians who had adopted the new ways.
16:14But Egyptians know it as a tool for political propaganda.
16:16A weapon that spreads definition, fear, and propaganda
16:20And its impact can remain greater than the mortar
16:22And, as Napoleon says, its goal is to spread science and knowledge.
16:25Also, be aware that when a campaign fails, the French take the printing press with them and they are on the run.
16:29And they walk around without informing any Egyptian.
16:31How can we set up a printing press or even get a printing press running?
16:34This is my dear Hamad, like a groom
16:35The one who, when rejected, takes the chocolate with him as he leaves
16:37Or they put the mallow in the farrier and sprinkle it
16:39Let me tell you, my friend, that the printing press was an important part of a much larger entity.
16:43Napoleon founded it in Cairo, specifically in Sayyida Zeinam.
16:46Hassan Al-Kayan is the Scientific Complex
16:48The Scientific Institute was established by decree of Napoleon shortly after his entry into Cairo.
16:52And a decision cell for 175 scientists
16:54In mathematics, astronomy, and mining
16:56In engineering and medicine
16:57This is because Napoleon knew very well
16:59It is the military carriers that allow us to win with weapons.
17:01But establishing a new colony requires science and scientists.
17:04In the founding statement of the complex, they say that its goal in this step
17:07Spreading the light of science and knowledge in Egypt
17:09Discovering the secrets of Egypt and integrating Egypt into the European world
17:12I will be grateful to them for their kindness.
17:13And that's not all; Napoleon also said that his goal was to transform the people of Europe into a half-backward, half-descended people.
17:19He started to smear
17:20In truth, the Scientific Complex was admired by prominent Egyptians.
17:23Between the notables and the swollen
17:24Those who were easily allowed to enter here and look at their tools
17:28And it is possible to write Al-Jabarti on the Scientific Complex
17:30We will find it useful to explain the devices there and also how to operate them.
17:33He concludes his speech with a need to show the peoples of amazement
17:36When he says that these are things that minds like ours cannot comprehend
17:39Napoleon had important ideas which he presented to the scientists at the monastery.
17:42Like building hospitals and a college for teaching modern medicine
17:45And other projects
17:46And this is perhaps the main reason why many historians believe
17:49The French campaign was the first moment of the introduction of modern science to Egypt.
17:53And the beginning of the great change that occurred in its history
17:55But is that really what happened?
17:57Or what they are trying to say is that it happened?
17:59But he's the one who didn't talk about anything.
18:01Why follow the story of the French campaign's scientists?
18:04We find that all this greatness is behind a lot of darkness.
18:07It is evident that the scholars of the French campaign suffered contempt and rejection.
18:10Not Egyptians, but French soldiers
18:12What these people didn't understand was what would be done?
18:14We find scholars in their books complaining that soldiers are diminishing their numbers.
18:17They were merely a sweet rose in the lapel of the general's jacket
18:20When things get serious, the soldiers' orders come first.
18:23One of the scientists is the San Hilarra.
18:25He says in his memoirs that the miserable scholars of the campaign went to Egypt
18:28Just because Billion was a meaning in some of the praise sentences
18:31Which is added to his history
18:32All of this could have been used by scientists
18:34Because of the man's lego
18:35It's an exploratory trip and we'll see new lands
18:37But what was difficult for the French scientists
18:40If they coexist with him, they have always been exporting them to the Egyptians.
18:43For example, we forgot that the French were being used in road widening projects.
18:47And the Egyptians see before them a French engineer demolishing mosques and houses
18:51Not the one who said them
18:52The statisticians of sports and horsemanship are seen by the people
18:54They are registering houses and shops
18:56So that they can benefit from taxes and fees imposed on Egyptians
18:58Here too, they saw the scientists, not the ones who sent them.
19:00And the doctors who used to enter homes
19:01To inspect health standards
19:03They inspect people by force and impose fines on those who do not comply.
19:05This doctor seems to have a penchant for breaking into people's homes.
19:07no!
19:07He got a law!
19:08That's why, my dear
19:09The first Cairo revolution took place in Ibn
19:10The dreamers
19:11They were the first targets of the revolution
19:13And their watch
19:13A large number of them were forced
19:14He is holding a gun for the first time in his life.
19:16To defend himself
19:17General Caffarelli
19:18The Scientific Complex
19:19The photos show them breaking into his house.
19:21And they destroyed the machines inside.
19:22And they didn't destroy my machines, Abu Ahmad.
19:23my dear
19:24At that time, the Egyptians didn't know
19:25The machines can already hear it.
19:26This is because the French were completely unprotected.
19:28They teach Egyptians anything
19:30The general public knew nothing about the uses and benefits of these machines.
19:33correct
19:34The French presented it to the elders and dignitaries
19:36But that was just for show.
19:37Not for informational purposes
19:38Ignorance of something is normal, my dear.
19:40It infects him
19:40For example
19:41The final days of the campaign in Egypt
19:43When the campaign was decided
19:44She's going to open a textile factory.
19:45Committee
19:45Those who are not factory workers
19:46I decided that the Egyptians
19:47They will have no connection to it whatsoever.
19:48They neither work in it nor fear the workshops
19:50And some people don't even wear it.
19:52When the campaign came
19:52Egypt is being neglected
19:53This factory
19:54I concealed it completely
19:55Because of the secrets of French industry
19:57Don't move to his side, Tammy
19:58Also, my dear
19:59Don't forget something like language
20:00No, the Egyptians didn't learn French.
20:01Nor did the French learn Arabic.
20:03It's good for you too, my dear
20:04They didn't return for three years.
20:04So what does "lahqoush" mean?
20:05And let me tell you that the scholars' avoidance
20:07In the first revolution of Al-Qarara
20:08It made them afraid all the time
20:09They are related to the Egyptians
20:10Another important thing, my dear
20:11correct
20:12Egyptian scientists
20:13They lived in a state of searching
20:14And the digging of the sluggish
20:15They went with Abdul Qasr and Aswan
20:17Explore it
20:17They moved the writings on its walls
20:19Hoping they can decipher its code
20:20And they dug into the deserts
20:21They collected minerals
20:22And it was a lot of what they collected
20:24Double the end of the campaign
20:25Either at the hands of the English
20:26Those who took artifacts from them
20:27Rosetta Stone costume
20:28The monitored basin
20:29Strong through addiction to this
20:30At the hands of the campaign's own soldiers
20:33After the soldiers, Ahzi was thinking
20:34The scientists are countries
20:35They had a commissary with them
20:36They love to dig in the desert
20:37And they extend forward
20:38They hide the needs with care.
20:39I'm bound by the authority of Qawisa
20:41And here they stole the box
20:42So that they can discover later
20:43An Mafash
20:44Change a few stone samples
20:45It is used in studies for equivalency.
20:47So that the science from these countries can publish a paper here, or not?
20:49The soldiers rejoiced
20:50Destroyers of it
20:50Where are the monkeys?
20:51This is in addition to the manuscripts that he destroyed.
20:52General Mino
20:53The third commander of the French campaign
20:55It was an act of her
20:56Military remains
20:57Expected in the hands of the English army
20:58So, Abu Ahmad, it means the French flag.
20:59It means speed up his needs.
21:01They were firing it into the face of the cannon in front of the Egyptians.
21:03And the dogs were running after him
21:04I found it difficult for her, the first French scholar
21:06Dear friend, what you're trying to do is difficult for you. The Egyptian citizen and Egypt...
21:08Lord
21:08Let me tell you
21:09In the end
21:09Most of the efforts of French scientists were wasted
21:12I only have two important things left from them.
21:14First need
21:14Discovery of the Rosetta Stone
21:15The second need
21:16Description of Egypt
21:17The one who didn't appear fully
21:19Change after the end of the campaign
21:2028 years
21:21And of course
21:22In French
21:23The one who was at that time
21:23And to this day, few Egyptians know about it.
21:25February 1799
21:27Napoleon decided to complete his campaign and go to Syria.
21:30And again
21:31It is the same formula
21:32Send a post
21:34Respect for Islam
21:35And the Pope
21:35He reminds them of his trip to Italy
21:37He is originally a Muslim
21:38Well, that's it, and it's the Bab Al-Hara gate.
21:40And lust is a flaw
21:41I had some Levantine principles
21:43What I would like to share with you
21:45Human freedom skewer
21:47In the beginning, my dear
21:48Napoleon achieves rapid successes
21:50In two Campbell markets
21:51He will seize Gaza, Ramla, and Lod.
21:53But when he arrives in Jaffa and tries to solve it
21:55They are fighting
21:56The other side also appears
21:58Napoleon Bonaparte's
21:59Leader of Humanity
22:00And respects Islam
22:01He orders the killing of 3000 prisoners
22:03The people of Jaffa surrendered
22:05After Adham had promised safety
22:06And when he felt, my dear
22:07Killing them will be costly.
22:08He'll need a lot of bullets.
22:10I'm talking to a guy who's a bullet, he needs a shower.
22:11A loud crackling sound
22:12So he ordered his soldiers
22:13If they provide ammunition
22:14And they are being targeted with the fish of the rifle.
22:16Are we going to waste our bullets again?
22:18Let me tell you, my dear
22:19The women of the victims originally
22:20According to some sources, it means
22:21If there is no food or drink here
22:23These people are enough
22:24They are my dear, they make me evil
22:25When news of these executions arrives
22:27Loli Akt Ahmed Pasha Al-Jazzar
22:28He decides with the people of Akka
22:30Endure until your last breath
22:31We will not give up
22:32Because that didn't happen to us
22:33When Napoleon begins his siege of the city
22:35Fate is giving her family a beautiful gift.
22:37The stabbing disease is starting to spread
22:39Among Napoleon's soldiers
22:40Dozens of them die every day
22:42Two months after the siege and the illness
22:44Napoleon is working
22:45One of his worst moral acts
22:47Which shows how opportunistic he is
22:48In order to give the disease of the slaps
22:50The one in his army
22:51doses of opium
22:52Well, Abu Ahmed was telling them stories, that was nice.
22:54My dear, they had opium in their hands so they would die instantly.
22:57The topic was devoid of mood
22:58My dear Napoleon wanted them to die in Overdose
23:01To eliminate the source of infection
23:02At the same time, news reached Egypt about the resilience of Akka.
23:05Napoleon failed once and again in storming it.
23:07And back, my dear, there's always a mess in history, and getting into it is difficult.
23:09An idea that reforms religion, the governor of Akka, and the story of Di
23:12Two things, my dear, don't try to get them involved, you and Russia.
23:14That's just filler, my dear, there's a popular saying that goes, "People are telling you..."
23:15You've opened up a difficult topic.
23:16When Egyptians buy new pictures
23:18This time it wasn't in Cairo, it was in the countryside and in the countryside.
23:20Every day a new area is imagined
23:22From Sharqia to Alexandria to Damanhour
23:24Even on the island of Fa'alah, in the markets
23:25The riots erupted and the French tried to quell them.
23:27In a realm of extreme brutality and without any mercy whatsoever
23:30General Lanus, who said the French were present in Tyre, is a disgrace.
23:33He wrote in his report after Eichmann's picture
23:35This is a well that has disappeared from existence.
23:37He burned and struck with fire 2500 of its people
23:40This isn't Lanos, this is Sanos.
23:42At the same time, disturbing news begins to reach Meister Napoleon.
23:45The Ottomans are preparing an army to go to Abu Air in Egypt.
23:48So that they can get it back
23:49At that time, Napoleon would sit alone with his serpent.
23:51And you want him to probably not open Acre
23:53Egypt might also lose
23:54He decides to withdraw and return to Cairo
23:56And she's working again after Cairo
23:57And a statement was printed saying that Napoleon had won.
24:00What is writing, my son?
24:01Al-Mudah printed a statement saying that Napoleon had achieved a great victory at Acre.
24:05He leveled it to the ground and made its inhabitants flee.
24:07My son, I'm a writer of books with research beyond my own knowledge.
24:10The man is being turned away, and he's saying, "I have nothing to do with it."
24:12But this time the Egyptians didn't believe his posts.
24:14Napoleon himself was unaware of the consequences of his actions.
24:16Because he knew in reality that he had been defeated
24:18It could mean the end of his campaign in the East
24:20Or as he put it in his memoirs
24:22I buried my dreams in Acre.
24:24Days after Napoleon's arrival, the Ottoman army reached Abu-Air.
24:27And he succeeds in landing his soldiers there.
24:29He met the French in the Battle of Abu-Air.
24:32The one in which Napoleon achieved a dazzling victory
24:34But he doesn't even have time to catch his breath from the bad news he receives.
24:37He receives news from France that the French armies are facing problems in Italy and Austria.
24:42And France itself remained under threat
24:44Its location is in complete secrecy. Napoleon is leaving Egypt.
24:47Just one day before he leaves, he sends a message to the Grand Vizier in Istanbul.
24:51He is asking for peace with the Ottomans.
24:53He tells him what battles fail to resolve in Amman.
24:56The meeting and the religion improve in two hours
24:58Napoleon travels, delegating command to General Kléber after him.
25:02Without even bothering to meet him
25:04He simply informs him in a message that he will be traveling.
25:07Because he has other commitments.
25:09He sought peace with the Ottomans
25:10You should consider the situation in Egypt and sort it out, and I know what you did.
25:13He says it clearly just to be honest with you.
25:15If you don't receive any supplies from France
25:17any?
25:18Lie down
25:19The ceiling of your negotiations with the Ottomans is open
25:21If the Sultan asked you to do something, what would you do?
25:23Even if you wash it, we're still withdrawing from Egypt.
25:25We withdraw
25:26Thank God it was just enough to cover the withdrawal
25:28And from here, my dear
25:29Kleber's era begins
25:30Of course, the students know what it will improve in?
25:32Kléber's reign begins in September 1799
25:36In the name of God, what God wills
25:37In a woodcutter's army, a financial crisis, and a fugitive commander
25:40Negotiations with the Ottomans for withdrawal from Egypt
25:42This eventually led to the signing of the Treaty of El Arish in 1800.
25:46Between the French and the Ottomans
25:48Agreement on France's withdrawal from Egypt
25:50And they will be satisfied with it
25:51The Ottoman forces are already beginning to advance from the direction of the Levant.
25:53So that they could take over Cairo from France
25:55But England, the ally of the Ottomans, had a different opinion.
25:58Not Kleber, he lay down
25:59Don't count it as a withdrawal.
26:01French countries surrendered, a destructive force.
26:03This is where Kleber doesn't like what he's saying.
26:05He decides to turn the table upside down
26:12Moh, a unit of the Ottoman army, manages to infiltrate and enter Cairo.
26:15She tells the people of Cairo that the French have gone back on their word.
26:18They do not intend to withdraw and intend to continue in their role as occupiers.
26:20And here the people of Cairo begin to appear in their second form
26:23The picture starts from the Al-Bulaa area
26:25And this time, unlike the first picture, their weapon is not sticks and they are silent.
26:29No, the Egyptians are lighting cannons and building a primitive bomb-making factory.
26:33To confront the French carrier
26:34Here, Kleber besieges Cairo and deprives its inhabitants of food and drink.
26:38The cannons are ordered to bombard it during the day.
26:40Despite the resilience of the Egyptian people for almost a month
26:42But their resistance eventually collapses.
26:44And then the French army entered Cairo.
26:46Street fighting yachts with the walls
26:48Her fiercest battle will be in loyalty
26:50When her men fortified themselves in the famous Abu Al-Aila Mosque
26:52They are trying to stop the French who won't leave.
26:54They tell the story of everything inside the Amwab Mosque.
26:56And then the French pledged allegiance to her.
26:58And other neighborhoods in Cairo are taking the most heinous revenge on its inhabitants.
27:01They raid the women, invite the sheikhs, and loot the houses.
27:04It's best to leave things as they are until Clipper comes out.
27:06Orders in Privy in the year 1800
27:08By stopping the killing and ending the persecution of the people of Cairo
27:11But my dear, just as you know
27:13Time does not heal the cliber for long.
27:16So that he can fix the work
27:17On June 14, 1800
27:19Clipper is in his garden in Al-Asbakiyah
27:21He is in line with the chief engineer of the French campaign
27:23Then a beggar appears asking for charity.
27:25Faishwar has a clipper in Arabic, he tells him
27:27There's nothing, there's nothing
27:28The beggar starts pleading more
27:30He approached Kleber, wanting to kiss his hand.
27:32Kleber doesn't respect himself like Nour El-Sherif and he pulls his hand away
27:34No, she always lets him in so he can kiss her.
27:36Here, Aziz, the beggar, grabs his hand and pulls him towards him.
27:39He stabbed him four times with the dagger he had hidden among his clothes.
27:42The blows that instantly kill Clipper
27:44The beggar tries to escape and hide
27:46But the soldiers find him and attack him.
27:48And then we find out that he wasn't a beggar or anything.
27:50But he is one of the unknown ones who appeared
27:52Among the most famous historical figures
27:54Because of what he did
27:55Because of the punishment resulting from the act
27:57Suleiman al-Halabi
27:58In the Tel El Aqareb area of ​​Cairo
28:00The trial of Suleiman al-Halabi is being held
28:02And amidst the attendees
28:04He will be present at this public trial.
28:06Our famous historian Al-Jabarti
28:08The one who records the details of the trial while he is present
28:10He doesn't deny his amazement at the first trial.
28:12Made according to the modern system
28:14This is the first time he's seen anything like this in Egypt.
28:16He was impressed by the guarantees of justice that were included in it.
28:18The trial will be public.
28:20It contains a forensic report on the general's injuries.
28:22The surgeon's report on the chief engineer's injuries
28:25And the judge's discussion of the witnesses
28:27Lectures, Q&A, and evidence
28:29We confront the witnesses with the accused.
28:31A lawyer representing the accused is present.
28:33After the ruling, the reasoning behind the ruling is printed.
28:35In three languages: Arabic, French, and Turkish
28:37And what explains why this ruling was reached?
28:40A very strange sight for Egyptians at that time
28:42This makes al-Jabarti praise the trial.
28:44And the French people he spoke about
28:46These people are guided only by reason.
28:48Of course, Abu Hamid, the French are nice, look at them.
28:50Why did you accuse them in the first place?
28:57And the injustice that could have occurred
28:59From some of the Mamluk or Ottoman rulers
29:01But the modernity that appealed to the mountain people might be
29:03clean outer straw
29:05She was deceived and fell again
29:07Because what happened after the end of this fair trial
29:09Everything in it is wrapped in paper.
29:11A horrific torture session begins for Suleiman al-Halabi.
29:13On the ground
29:15Let him see all the people who knew he was going to kill the clipper
29:17And they didn't report it
29:19He sees them as their heads are being cut off
29:21Their bodies burn in front of him, and then
29:23They take him, burn his right hand, and execute him.
29:25It contains one of the most famous and eunuch
29:27Death sentences in the history of Egypt
29:29They put him on a stake, my dear.
29:31A stake, my dear, if you don't know, is a solid object.
29:33It is inserted through the human anus.
29:35Until it comes out of his mouth
29:37And my dear friend, he does that.
29:39This process, my dear, is done with extreme professionalism.
29:41So that she doesn't pass by while entering a murder-suicide site.
29:43Related to a living traveler
29:45He doesn't die and goes through a slow experience
29:47Until he dies after Solomon's death
29:49His body is being destroyed in Iraq, and his body is being revived.
29:51The birds are injured and then they take
29:53A French scientist displayed his skull
29:55Medical students should study it.
29:57Characteristics of the infallible human
29:59Then you move on to the Museum of Man in the capital, Paris.
30:01And it's still on display there to this day.
30:03Biggie after Kleber's death
30:05The oldest leaders of the French campaign
30:07The man who was in the shop
30:09French soldiers' mockery
30:11Because of his weak personality and excessive weight
30:13In a way that, in their view, contradicted the principle of being a base
30:15The military, unlike Kleber
30:17This man is determined to stay in Egypt
30:19To the point that he announces his conversion to Islam
30:21He calls himself Abdullah Jack Mino
30:23He is marrying an Egyptian Muslim woman.
30:25She is the daughter of Bida, the doorman, one of the merchants of Rashid.
30:27But the Ottomans and the English wouldn't stay silent.
30:29They are preparing a new carrier to expel the French from Egypt.
30:31And indeed, after a few months
30:33English soldiers are getting off
30:35In Fboir, they defeated the French at the Battle of Knob.
30:37And they get General Abdullah Jack
30:39In Alexandria, the Ottoman army
30:41The one coming from Damascus advances until he meets
30:43The French in Bilbeis in Sharqia
30:45And the French are defeated by his response, and here, my dear
30:47The French campaign finds itself caught between two sieges
30:49And they should make it clear to everyone that the campaign is ending
30:51Or Shakt, and in June
30:53General Belliard signs
30:55surrender in Cairo
30:57After that, General Abdullah Jaak surrenders.
30:59Two surrender agreements were signed in Alexandria.
31:01They are listening to the soldiers of the French campaign
31:03They are leaving
31:05The campaign, my dear, that started with thirty-six thousand soldiers
31:07She had lost more than half of it
31:09They lost more than half of their soldiers in three years.
31:11In exhausting battles
31:13Something you almost dropped
31:15Did Napoleon die?
31:17All of this is happening in France, and people are letting this happen there.
31:19Let me tell you, my dear, Napoleon was finished.
31:21He did what he wanted: the French campaign in Egypt
31:23He realized before anyone else that it had completely failed.
31:25Firstly, due to the distance between it and France
31:27And secondly, because of the presence
31:29The very powerful English fleet
31:31The one that exists in the continuous sea
31:33The fleet that fought Egypt was cut off from any supplies
31:35Napoleon completely lost interest in Egypt
31:37I don't care about any of this, I'm going back to my country.
31:39To the countryside of Arba Napoleon the Little
31:41And Faraj Ali Ibrahim Fayya recited the blackboard paragraph before going to sleep.
31:43Napoleon's salvation lay in the art of his dreams.
31:45Regarding Egypt, take the glory and the spotlight.
31:47The camera is a picture and the camera
31:49Battle of Walih, his blood
31:51As I say, a rose in a jacket buttonhole
31:53You can see this in the Mamluk Sultanate, which Napoleon took with him to Cairo.
31:55The one who preferred Malazi Napoleon throughout his life
31:57And he was keen to stay ahead with his family
31:59And it appears in every drawing that is done
32:01He dressed in Mamluk Eastern attire to make people think
32:03With its carrier on the East, the oppressed, the phoenix
32:05Abd, and therefore the image in front of the French
32:07Or the Europeans are immortalized
32:09Although Napoleon invaded the East
32:11And he is the guide, along with Abd al-Mamluki
32:13He appears in every picture
32:15It remains an event like any other military event.
32:17It happened and it's over, but historians and writers
32:19The French and those behind them, including Napoleon
32:21The Emperor of France is now gone.
32:23He was keen to emphasize all the time that his campaign had changed the history of Egypt.
32:25It was the beginning of a modern era in Egypt.
32:27The French historian Alandicco says
32:29Napoleon's passage through Egypt was the first ray of light
32:31The darkness of barbarism pierced
32:33But when we ask him about this ray of light
32:35What's different in Egypt? We can't find clear answers.
32:37The Egyptians, yes, they saw the printing press.
32:39This is an important invention, but they saw it as a tool for deception.
32:41Egyptians also learned what a modern, fair trial means.
32:44But they saw her while she was attacking them
32:46They were familiar with advanced artillery and the structure of modern armies.
32:48But they saw her as she was plundering his capital.
32:50It's possible that this is the ray of light emerging from the darkness.
32:52Secondly, my dear, we are not trying to say
32:54These are all things that were unnecessary.
32:56And the Egyptians didn't learn much from the presence of the French.
32:58That's for sure, but the French weren't doing these things for God and country.
33:01They didn't do it because they wanted to appoint me; they felt sorry for the Egyptians.
33:04How are we living without modernity?
33:06How can they wake up every day without realizing that they have followers among them?
33:08The proof is that they didn't destroy anything; they took everything with them.
33:10Because there are people who sit in the market, we are the ones who are old, you are the one who presented, you are clever
33:13But why did you give it to me? Wasn't it to please me?
33:15And it ends and ends
33:17That's right, my friend, when the campaign came, there was a period of scientific stagnation.
33:20But before that, there was a great scientific and historical legacy in Egypt.
33:23Is it possible that Egyptians are behind in some areas?
33:25But they are advanced and good in other things.
33:27For example, French doctors were surprised
33:29When they found the Egyptians had a better way to enlarge the genitals
33:32How to make a splint to treat fractures
33:34They also learned eye disease treatments from the Egyptians.
33:36And they started using it, and also
33:38The Ramadan Hospital, my dear, in ancient Egypt, has been the Ramadan Hospital since that day.
33:41My second question, dear reader, is: What is modernity?
33:43What is modern? This is a narrative that supports the French campaign.
33:46Do you know the standards of modernity according to European standards?
33:49Anything resembling is a definition of backwardness.
33:52No one assumes that modernization and sophistication are just a lot of things.
33:55Of course, the aspect of strength is an important aspect, but it is not the only aspect.
33:58Even if we assume that European civilization is the ideal model
34:01It means there was no opportunity to learn idealism except through colonialism.
34:04Couldn't a communication issue have been resolved?
34:06A mission here, we have arrived
34:09French university, American university
34:11Uncle, or someone else, can find a website that works in a certain time.
34:13Someone gets a job offer and goes there to enjoy themselves
34:16He comes back and tells us, "Guys, these French people are nice."
34:19They start doing that after that
34:20We have here in the sanatorium many things from countries that were not colonized by Nash.
34:27Invade us with French fries
34:28The good thing will arrive no matter what
34:29It was possible, by God, for you to be forgiven for many things.
34:31As the American thinker Christopher Herod says
34:34In his book Bonaparte in Egypt
34:36Levi needs something called the inevitability of the movement of history.
34:38And if the scholars of the French carrier hadn't been comfortable with Abdel Luxor
34:41This does not necessarily mean that the pharaohs were
34:43She would have remained anonymous the whole time
34:45It means when someone tells you that the French are the ones who introduced us to our civilization.
34:48Yes, it was not necessarily going to stay that way.
34:50This man's point of view is that history is putting me in its stories
34:53You will know a specific time when the French had not done it
34:55One of their neighbors was on her
34:56Like scientific discoveries, my dear
34:57This did not happen because a specific person appeared at the specific moment
34:59You are a historical inevitability and a context
35:01You will lead him to make this discovery.
35:03Therefore, you will find many scientific ideas.
35:04Two, three, four, or ten
35:06They arrive at it at the same time
35:07They arrived at it at the same time
35:08And let me tell you, my dear, in the end
35:09Sometimes evil comes with good in its hand.
35:11And sometimes good comes with evil in its hand too.
35:13Because you know
35:14Good and evil, my dear, are like tea in this world, they play around.
35:15But my dear, that doesn't mean anything at all.
35:17Evil, invasion, colonialism, and occupation
35:20Bloodshed and injustice towards people are necessary factors
35:23To bring updates and good things to the future
35:25We can place an order.
35:26These things come
35:27And while we eat this ordeal, we see the bleak life.
35:29Let's see what life holds, let's look at the sources
35:30We, on the other hand, subscribe to the channel.
35:31I'm telling you, my dear, that Al-Ahly fans know very well.
35:34France doesn't always bring good things.
35:36Anthony Modest, may God bless him
35:38What's in it?
35:39He played ten matches and drank four cups of tea.
35:41And expulsion, by God, there's nothing in your history but French living

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