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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:01Thank God
00:03O Lord, her blood is a blessing upon us.
00:04And protect it from disappearing
00:06Thank you, Muqayman
00:07With pleasure and health
00:08Man, we haven't even had him yet!
00:14Do you like the food?
00:16Thank you, everyone.
00:17but
00:19They're missing something.
00:21What did they lose?
00:22They didn't alter anything, they just omitted something.
00:24In need of a shortage
00:25I don't know what, but something's missing.
00:29Everything is available, by God.
00:30You're just a religious person and nothing pleases you.
00:32But you, no
00:34I'm telling you that they lacked something
00:36Something that makes him rough
00:38Something that makes the tongue slacken
00:40The problem is with your tongue because it's too long.
00:42Don't worry, my lord
00:43So now I'll have to stand on my feet all day because of your rash.
00:47And then you say they're missing something?
00:49correct
00:51They didn't find it in the roses, shame on them!
00:52They said to him, "Oh, red-cheeked one!"
00:53You're all over the place, you two!
00:54I'm telling you, they're missing something, but I don't know what it is.
00:57Think with me, what is it?
00:59What's missing?
01:00I'll make you everything you love
01:02But you, who are through you, do not dismantle a structure.
01:04What kind of building is this? You're teaching it to the nerd.
01:07No, what do you think about the fact that since we got married
01:09And your food is missing something
01:11By God, you're the one who's missing.
01:12Have some self-respect, woman!
01:13Take into account the randomness that
01:18The random one
01:20random
01:20And the food between you
01:22You're the one who should be ashamed and have some shame left in your eyes
01:26Sip
01:29You know what I mean.
01:42Is it a lie?
01:43I really believe he's missing something
01:46Which is the
01:48The one
01:50The one
01:51God knows
01:58Dear viewers
01:59Welcome to a new episode of the program
02:01Al-Dahih in Paris 2023
02:03The World Health Organization issued reports
02:05Scary about human consumption
02:07The singular form will cause diseases
02:09Diseases capable of killing
02:11Seven million people at the end of the decade
02:13present
02:14This substance is not heroin.
02:19Neither drugs nor even presence
02:21The material is much simpler than that.
02:23salt
02:23According to this report, increasing salt intake in the diet
02:27It kills approximately 1.8 million
02:29annual human
02:30And it increases the incidence of heart disease
02:32And the blood vessels that are like that kill
02:3518 million annually
02:36This is not the stroke that kills five million
02:38These, my dear, are terrifying numbers that only come from pandemics or world wars.
02:42To the point that this report called on governments
02:44It will allocate a specific percentage of salt in the food industry.
02:47Why put in a larger quantity than that?
02:49We need to save ourselves from salt before the time of the meal arrives.
02:51Okay, Abu Hamad, since the reports say so and the governments are committed to it.
02:54And I cleaned it completely, and what does that mean?
02:56My whole life has been tasteless, so why not food?
02:58Aziz, remember today
02:59No, Abu Hamad, you asked a valid question.
03:02Your passage, my dear
03:02What would happen if a person didn't know there was salt in the first place?
03:06The issue isn't simply about the food tasting bad or being spoiled.
03:09He'll tell you, my dear, and it will surprise you, that without salt, humanity might not have survived at all.
03:13But let's surprise you and tell you that salt, despite all its medical aspects
03:17It is one of the reasons for human life, just like water.
03:21Hey, you're a student in preparatory school, my dear. You know very well that salt is sodium chloride.
03:25N.E. will reduce the white powder, which doesn't just give food its flavor.
03:28But it provides us with one of the most important nutrients.
03:31Our bodies can't produce it
03:33But at the same time, he can't do without it.
03:35It is sodium
03:36We need sodium
03:37As I told you, too much salt is definitely harmful.
03:39However, a person needs 500 milligrams of sodium daily.
03:42This small amount contains sodium, the most important electrolyte in the body.
03:46And what is this electrolyte?
03:47Electrolyte, my dear
03:48In the tag
03:49My dear, these are minerals inside the body that carry an electrical charge.
03:52Let me tell you that your body depends on nerve impulses
03:55The brain uses it to communicate with cells.
03:56This means that by using electricity, the brain can communicate with the rest of the body.
04:00This is how you move your muscles or how thoughts travel in your brain.
04:03What does this mean, dear electricity?
04:12He helps in the body WhatsApp group
04:14So they can communicate with each other and stuff
04:15That's why recent studies that dealt with people
04:17They were taking less salt in their diet
04:19So that we don't lose more health, as is commonly believed.
04:21The studies yielded completely opposite results.
04:23These people suffered from increased cholesterol and triglycerides.
04:27What you can do next is cardiology
04:28And Habib means, based on what I know about the allocation groups
04:30We can get sodium from vegetables and fruits.
04:33Obtaining sodium today is very difficult.
04:35Did you notice, my dear? What did you say?
04:36Today I am talking to you about
04:38Pre-hypermarket eras that provided everything needed for the beginning.
04:42Our beautiful human being
04:43The most precious thing is the time he lived on Earth
04:45He lived on one or two types of food at most.
04:47When we made something like salt
04:49This is how you can maintain regular maintenance.
04:51If your body receives the sodium it needs
04:53She complained, my dear, we won't have to put up with this episode.
04:55On saving the salt to gain what only
04:57But we'll talk about the salt that saved us.
04:59The entire history of humankind
05:01Are you absolutely sure, you fool?
05:04Quail? Benefits of salt for the body
05:06She wasn't well-known, but despite that
05:07People didn't need any medical reasons.
05:09Because you love salt, salt was always present.
05:11It is so highly appreciated, my dear, that
05:13Greek poetry is a form of poetry called salt.
05:15Divine matter, really? And if so
05:17What will ranch sauce do? Platonia, my dear, was saying
05:19The salt substance is the substance
05:21Which the Greek mechanism loves
05:23It is clear that the drowning man's mechanism is their ambition to eat.
05:25He was nonexistent, why would he tell you that the tribes
05:27The Germanic peoples had a belief
05:29The gods hear their best prayers
05:31If you deal with what comes from salt
05:38While in the Old Testament the Hebrews believed
05:41If they have entered into a covenant with God
05:43It is the salt pact
05:44At this time, my dear, hills are a topic with a name in our popular culture.
05:46Strong relationships are symbolized by shared bread and salt.
05:49Any food consumed while working on any business agreement
05:51It is said that we have shared bread and salt.
05:53So no one should betray the other
05:54Not only that, but many cultures considered it a magical ingredient.
05:57It protects us from many evils
05:59Remember in The Blue Elephant, he was the one who broke the spell?
06:01In traditional Japanese theater, actors do not stand on a stage.
06:04Unless salt is sprinkled first to ward off evil spirits
06:07So the show is bright like this and sexy, I mean
06:08Our Eastern traditions include sprinkling salt to protect against envy and evil.
06:11Sprinkle salt on the seventh day after birth, and the superstitious person hopes to sprinkle salt seven times.
06:15Salt isn't just something people use; it's also about its taste and appearance.
06:18If that's the case, then it's fine, many things can fill the gap.
06:20Rather, it was due to the environment and circumstances in which they found themselves.
06:23Let's leave aside your surprise, my dear, and your statement that humans have linked salt with fertility.
06:27Baghdad, Abu Ahmad?
06:33Yes, dear humans, they have linked salt to fertility.
06:36Because fish that live in salt water
06:37They multiply by the hundreds in a single birth cycle.
06:40This was more than any other living creature at the time of the first humans.
06:43This, my dear, explains why the Romans
06:45They used to call the man "the parrot"
06:47Backboy for women means salty man
06:50From which the English word came
06:52Which means lustful
06:53This, my dear, also caused some monks to abstain from salt.
06:56Because it might arouse desire
06:58Ready, my dear?
07:00People became attached to salt and considered it a magical substance.
07:02It is capable of expelling spirits and increasing fertility.
07:05It remains part of any contracts or agreements.
07:07My dear, there's a good reason for that.
07:08Because the first thing I did was bring out the salt in front of him
07:10It was death, or more specifically
07:12Decomposition and accompanying rot cause death.
07:14And this, my dear, is when we go back in history to the ancient Egyptian civilization.
07:17The servants noticed that salt can absorb water from the body of the deceased if applied in certain proportions.
07:22This, in other words, eliminates any chance of bacteria feeding on and breaking down body tissues.
07:28Then he skillfully and innocently extracted the internal organs.
07:33The idea of mummification and preserving the king's body begins to emerge for them.
07:36He felt he was ready for the afterlife
07:38The Egyptians used natron salt as one of the most important substances to preserve the bodies of kings from decay.
07:43My dear, mummification not only preserves the body, but also preserves the history of ancient Egypt.
07:46We are grateful for the salt.
07:48We solved many mysteries of our history thanks to Mummy One
07:50The mummy of the king, for example, was the dwelling place of the shepherd.
07:52She told us it was a cannon that he had set up against the Hyksos.
07:54Also, his strange hand position
07:56It made us guess that he was a stranger, confined or bound like a prisoner.
07:59And he is a corpse and he returns the Egyptians
08:01He was subjected to a large amount of torture
08:03If we also look at the mummy of Tutankhamun
08:05We will learn that this king went through a long illness.
08:08He suffered from Asma's syndrome, also known as Marvin's syndrome.
08:09He lived with deformed limbs
08:11He had a spinal condition.
08:12However, he had heart problems and a cleft palate.
08:15He eventually died as a young man in Al-Muqariyah.
08:17Matin, you're a trader, my dear.
08:18These are all very, very many meanings
08:20We couldn't have known it without the salt.
08:22And Hamad has a smart question.
08:23Like the question you liked at first
08:24Help yourself
08:24When salt entered history through the grand gate
08:27This is also royal
08:28Layla, the general public and the blood loved her
08:30Okay, Hamad, if you knew the general public
08:32Their name in literature is the salt of the earth
08:34So who is this love that came from?
08:36What I'm telling you, my dear, is that salt, besides preserving the bodies of dead kings,
08:39The truth is that he also preserved the life of ancient Egypt.
08:42ordinary citizen
08:43The lives of the Egyptian servants depended on the Nile River and its floods.
08:47The flood that, if he spoke or was absent from them
08:49This means there is a famine.
08:50Here, the resourceful Egyptians were able to overcome drought and the absence of the Nile flood through salting.
08:55Salting allowed them to preserve large quantities of fish and birds for long periods.
08:59Within months, if you sprinkle salt, the humidity will decrease, and the bacteria won't be present. Sprinkling salt stops the bacteria and prevents humidity.
09:05Therefore, the need will remain intact in the Nakht West Thebes laboratory.
09:08To this day, there are clear pictures of Egyptian servants.
09:10They skin the chickens and begin the process of salting them, then they store them in a small, elegant jar.
09:15Among the most prominent of these inventions that are still with us today
09:19Unfortunately, in my personal opinion, it's feseekh.
09:22The feseekh that we eat today in Sham El Naseem was a staple food for our ancestors, enough to sustain them and prevent death from starvation during times of drought.
09:27They'll come back dizzy from all the water bottles, but at least we'll survive.
09:30Let me also tell you that salting didn't just appear in ancient Egypt, but was a revolutionary solution that swept the whole planet.
09:36If you go hunting to the other side of the world, you'll find it with the Chinese.
09:38The Chinese knew about salt and its preservation properties, possibly even before the Egyptians.
09:42The oldest book about salt in ancient Chinese dates back six thousand years.
09:46This reminds us of Lake Yunqing in Shanxi Province, also known as the Red Lake.
09:50This lake had a strange feature: its water evaporated in the summer.
09:53This leaves us with a very thin layer of salt at the bottom.
09:57According to Chinese legend, Emperor Fuyang was one of the founders of China and one of the inventors of writing.
10:02He was the first one, my dear, to start a war in history over salt.
10:06He wanted to control this lake, someone said, "Oh, Abi Ahmed, really?"
10:08Is it possible for people to enter his wars for salt?
10:10My dear, people go to his wars for oil.
10:12You won't enter his wars for salt.
10:13Oh man, oh father of Ahmed, you fear war for the sake of salt
10:15Why did societies in the past have such shoulders?
10:17My dear, as I told her, salt was very important to preserve the food.
10:20So, if there's no salt or if you have no access to salt, it means you have no salt.
10:22This won't preserve the food.
10:23Times of floods, times of drought, or times of famine
10:27This was the only means of security against natural disasters.
10:29My dear Chinese, they've started salting everything around them.
10:32They started salting the vegetables, especially behind the vineyards.
10:34Dear Aziz, the topic has reached them that they salt the eggs.
10:35This is information for you
10:36Eggs don't turn white when placed in a salt solution.
10:38It's good to keep it for many months.
10:40To this day, salted eggs or pickled eggs
10:42It is packed in jars and sold as one of the most important foods.
10:45Which is very widespread in China
10:46Any Chinese person who goes anywhere takes salt with their egg jar
10:49With love, you took us to Greece and led us to ancient Egypt.
10:52And then we went to the People's Republic of China
10:53Haven't you noticed that you forgot about the white man?
10:55So remember what we said was happening in Europe so he wouldn't be upset.
10:58Also, my dear, salt in Europe played a role in reducing [something].
11:01But in a different way
11:02In the Catholic Church, the number of fasting days has been continuously increased.
11:05Until almost half the days of the year were fasting
11:08As you know, my dear, during the Christian fast you can't eat anything during it.
11:12Meat, poultry, eggs, milk
11:14Penalties were also imposed on those who slaughtered meat on Fridays.
11:17But the church made things easier for the believers at this time and told them
11:20I don't allow them to eat fish.
11:22This was of course good news for residents of coastal cities.
11:24But for the rest of Europe, access to fish was a difficult issue.
11:27The package is precious, meaning it's in isolation, and the story is that there are no means of transportation.
11:29The distance a car travels in an hour is measured in kilometers.
11:31At that time, he needed days of walking.
11:33Fish is a perishable commodity.
11:35This is where the need for the fish salting process becomes apparent.
11:39So that we can store it and move it to the far wall
11:41Those who have no access to the sea
11:42This process is preferred but limited in Europe.
11:45Until when will there be a thirsty century?
11:47When fishermen from the Basque Country arrive
11:49Their ships dock on the North Sea
11:51They meet a fish, a cod fish, a fish
11:53The Vikings raided it for hundreds of years
11:56Perhaps, my dear, one of its most important features
11:58Her body is completely free of fat.
12:00The cyanide mentioned that
12:01He said, "I met Abu Ahmad."
12:02It's not the fats, Abu Ahmed, that make the food taste better.
12:04So, is that how it is, Abu Ahmed?
12:05I love the fish and its clothes
12:06My dear, fats are in our food these days.
12:08But for people who want to preserve food
12:10And you need to add salt
12:11Fats counteract salts
12:13This slows down the salting process.
12:15Hence, the cod was the perfect fish.
12:17It means we can easily salt it.
12:18fat-free
12:19And don't take too much salt
12:21At the time of the first meal, we will have a good amount of food.
12:24Less salt, no fat
12:25And on top of all that, it is permissible to eat it during the days of fasting.
12:28Just as the church is researching
12:29It appears to be easy to catch and inexpensive.
12:31Yes, my dear, a mark above the wage
12:33Cod fish is from the religion of the communes, we eat it in your neighborhood.
12:36And so, my dear Europe, is witnessing the Age of Enlightenment, thanks to the cod fish.
12:40Cod fish are making a breakthrough
12:41And it becomes the staple food for Europe's poor
12:44During the night, it is like preparing the main meal for half the year.
12:48And after that, my dear salt, it is associated with certain places.
12:51A problem began to emerge regarding its extraction and production.
12:54Salt has become very popular
12:57All the inhabitants of the planet are now in need of salt.
12:58As you can see, salting has become extremely important because it helps preserve food.
13:03This, my dear, is from ages past the refrigerator, the deep freezer, and the microwave.
13:07That's why, my dear, when I tell you that salt changed the history of humanity
13:10You still need to understand me, and the reasons aren't just religious or dietary.
13:12But salt will be the reason for the discovery of the world by humans, or some humans.
13:16Exploring the region with much greater expectations
13:19Between curiosity and trying to discover new Platts
13:21This man isn't saying "salt" as if he's searching for water.
13:24The geography of the old dream will be governed by the roads of salt.
13:27Salt Roots
13:28For example, the first large Roman public street was built in the Roman Empire.
13:32Its name was Via Salaria, meaning Date Road
13:34Because it's simple, we built it to bring salt from the sea to Rome.
13:37And according to Time magazine, salt routes will be a global trend, from Egypt to Greece across the Mediterranean.
13:42From Morocco to Timbuktu
13:43If we go back to Europe, we will find that with the fish salting boom, the demand for salt increased significantly.
13:47The barrel of herring that contains fifty fish
13:49It needs twenty-five kilos of salt to be salted
13:52This is where the Europeans began to frantically search for salt.
13:54A trade route built on cooperation between northern and southern Europe is emerging.
13:58The group in the north has a lot of fish they can catch
14:01The community in the south has plenty of sunshine which they can use to evaporate water and extract salt from it.
14:06This is where the salt and fish trade begins, its worst part.
14:09The world's first free trade zone
14:12I became known by the name of the Henzid League
14:14This, my friend, represents cooperation between cities and an alliance that guarantees free trade between these countries.
14:19European Union with a surge of activity
14:21This association was so powerful that it was able to impose many maritime laws.
14:25The laws will affect the way the world sails.
14:27Jamal provided us with documented nautical charts.
14:30They formed a military alliance among themselves
14:31An integrated system to combat piracy and protect our trade.
14:35Look at all this journey in every sardine
14:37Salt will not only create trade links and sailing regulations
14:41But you will see very, very large fleets.
14:44For example, you have the fleet of the Republic of Venice
14:46This is one of the largest merchant fleets in history.
14:49The fleet whose sea and merchants
14:51He feels the whole world through their huge journeys
14:53Which made them a severe case of epilepsy
14:55They have a political standing and influence.
14:57And vehicles at Samawi
14:59To the point, my dear, that they started preparing campaigns like the Fourth Crusade.
15:02All, my dear, is the glory that Venice, or Venice, has experienced.
15:05It was in the presence of Soleil
15:07Salt was the only commodity produced by the Venetian Islands.
15:10Because of the lakes and canals between the islands
15:12In the 13th century, the Azizi era witnessed climate change, including floods and storms.
15:17The salt industry in Venice has declined and is being sprayed
15:19Cover me, you wretch!
15:20My fertility is going to be gone, I'm not
15:21That's when the government there began to think about the beginning
15:24For example, she pays money to traders for the salt that comes from abroad.
15:28The issue of shipping salt to Venice remained a profitable one.
15:30But my dear friend, ships don't return empty when they sail.
15:33So she started carrying other goods from there
15:35A major trade movement, based on salt, began.
15:38Bigeeb started bringing goods to Europe from all over the world
15:40Spices like those that come from India
15:42This salt doesn't need to be hidden.
15:43During the period between the 14th and 16th centuries
15:46Which are the pinnacle of Venice's glory
15:48And its fleet that controlled the Mediterranean Sea
15:50The truth is that 30% to 50% of her trade was in salt.
15:54These trade voyages formed a large part of the history of European civilization.
15:58For example, you have the character of Marco Polo and his famous travels.
16:00These trips began primarily
16:02Through his brother's and uncle's trade
16:04The Polo brothers who traded in salt with the Mongols
16:07Salt is not just small in the routes of the Old World and its three continents
16:11But the first thing was to reach the new world and explore it.
16:13One year, Abu Ahmed, you have a mistake in this information.
16:16Because Professor Christopher Norran is the one who discovered the Americas
16:19Azizi's first name was Christopher Columbus
16:28And there are people living there
16:30Don't distort the colonial narrative
16:32It is tearing at Ahmad Maghk
16:33Europeans did not discover the Americas; the Americas already existed.
16:35They had people over them who killed them and worshipped them
16:38We might go back to salt after
16:39So, my dear, the cod fish I told you about in the first episode
16:41No, Abu Ahmed, forgiveness is not granted. Yes, you are being transferred and deducted.
16:43I didn't want anyone to deduct anything from my account.
16:44No, no, that's enough, my dear, that's enough.
16:46Let's go back to the old solution.
16:47Veggie cod
16:58It happened before the Age of Exploration
17:00Christopher Columbus
17:01How did Ahmed find out this information?
17:03And it wasn't the Basques who announced that they were the first people to arrive.
17:05Their paths are captive to the colonial narrative.
17:07Kali, I'm telling you, my dear, and it will surprise you that one of the habits
17:10Famous fishermen
17:12Those who were inclined towards them were in a great sky, and they were blessed there.
17:14People hide from here
17:16Basque hunters preferred from Khubbayn
17:18Their discovery as Europeans of the Americas
17:21They preferred to hide away from the world an entire new continent
17:23Because Bistrzawa is from there
17:25My dear friend, I don't know what this information is, except from reading history.
17:27When scientists discovered traces of Basque grammar
17:29Which they used to repel whales on the coasts
17:31The American Prado
17:32And you said we're not going to tell people about this issue of the two-karat system.
17:34God is great
17:36The fishermen were among those who sought to protect the Americas.
17:39Unlike the explorers, whose interests included elevating their work
17:42We finally found something, that's why
17:43The whole dream is from the year 1497
17:45With the arrival of the Italian explorer John Cabot
17:48For the Canadian coasts
17:49And the year 1498
17:50With Christopher Columbus' arrival on the shores of Central America
17:53The discovery of the Americas began
17:54Major calls for settlement emerged in the new lands of Al-Aziziyah.
17:58and investing money
18:00Money and campaigns
18:01We attract a song that they invest in, a campaign of grief.
18:04Here, my dear, is part of the larger propaganda campaign.
18:06It will be based primarily
18:08On salted cod
18:10As I told you, it was the most important duty in Europe.
18:12Absolutely, there is a flaw in us.
18:14The beaches of North America were rich
18:16Cod, but bromiganda
18:18She's exaggerating this to such an extent that she
18:20You'd be exaggerating and saying that the coast in this New World
18:23Full of cod
18:24To the point that if you dropped a barrel anywhere
18:26She will release a fish tank, and indeed
18:28Money and investments begin to pour in.
18:30On the great Black journeys and on the decisive words of the famous hospital
18:33John Smith Cod Fish worked
18:34Large sacks for the new settlers
18:36Those who started it are like fish, you share them.
18:38But my dear, as you remember and know, cod fish
18:41It has no importance other than being salty
18:43That's why, my dear, listen to this important information.
18:45I see you, honestly
18:46The first patent focuses
18:49In American history
18:50It was simply a process of evaporating seawater.
18:53For the purpose of salt production
18:54The first step does the first step, the second step does the second step
18:57And the second step does the third step, which does the third step
18:58This is a joke reference video that was on the internet.
19:01Enter America, my dear, where there
19:02Technology and AI companies
19:04Open EI and Open Heimer
19:06And every open in the world has its first patent.
19:09It was a bag of evaporated salt
19:10Let us salt with vapor like salt
19:13And my dear friend, this history is a lot of nonsense, you comedians!
19:25But let me tell you, there's another evil face of salt.
19:28Oh Abu Hamid, you're always like this in your episode, don't leave me hanging
19:31What idea did I use to understand it?
19:33You always have a plot twist and you play it in the narratives
19:35My God, Lord, what a life
19:37It is known from beginning to end.
19:38Why, my dear, why are you doing this? This is supposed to cause you trouble.
19:41Dear Baloot, this is in the position
19:43The salt you put on your life
19:44As I told you, my dear, too much salt can be harmful.
19:47It's possible that the back will remain very healthy.
19:48Salt, too, my dear, if its importance as a commodity upon which the world depends were to increase
19:51Just like you heard, he'll turn evil.
19:53Anxiety is working throughout the world
19:54Like petroleum, and petroleum is important to us.
19:56That's why we see America getting involved, going where, and doing what.
19:59The importance of needs is being overlooked.
20:01This creates conflict around her
20:02Violence
20:03And if you heard about the Arnabid War, you'd be confused.
20:05Interested in time
20:06The one who discovered in China the use of glazing and its greens to preserve food
20:08We play
20:09The ruling families in China are beginning to take a clear stance on the salt trade.
20:13That is, it has a complete monopoly on it.
20:14This trump card must be in our hands; with it, we can possess everything.
20:18During the reign of the Teng dynasty in China
20:19From 618 to 907 AD
20:21Text within the Chinese government: Heji's monopoly on salt
20:24This has had a significant impact on the shape of Chinese society itself.
20:27The aristocratic flaunting is part of their pride.
20:29If they put salt on their stoves in large quantities
20:32You'll know we're decent people first of all, right?
20:33Look at the saltiness
20:34Salma expected it, my dear.
20:35People didn't like this talk.
20:36Popular uprisings took place
20:38Massive uprisings against the government's monopoly on the salt trade
20:41Here, my dear
20:42The government will decide to fight them with salt.
20:44What kind of stupidity is this, Abu Ahmed?
20:45Hershom Salt
20:46That's what they want.
20:47No, my dear, that's not what I meant.
20:48My point is that salt here was a weapon of pressure in the hands of the Chinese rulers.
20:51Is this a metaphorical reference to Abu Ahmad?
20:53And this one too, my dear
20:54Let me tell you something very important
20:55During the time of the salt monopoly
20:57The Chinese government discovered a terrifying inspection
20:59If we put rock salt
21:01or potassium drops
21:01Prev or Carbon Court
21:03We produce a highly flammable powder.
21:06And the gases cause huge explosions
21:08And we will have the first signs of the invention of explosives.
21:11The powder is historically known as black powder.
21:15The Chinese Sing family will use it to expand
21:17During the period when the singer was being misled
21:19In some way, the enchanted one will be the East.
21:21In order to become an effective weapon in the Crusades
21:24The interior of the valley is filled with spherical pottery.
21:26Olof Werme gave
21:28Repelling the enemy from here becomes a grenade to the other side
21:31This, my dear, was the first hand grenade known to history.
21:34This, my dear, is the first call in the language of gamers.
21:37We can say, my dear, in a way that is abbreviated, concise, and flawed.
21:42A simple, incomplete, and flawed need.
21:44Coldness, in a simple twist, is my son, one of the sons of salt.
21:46And that's how it might be, in the case of a skewer
21:48This is a statement I have made.
21:52Muslims and Crusaders used rock salt explosives
21:55This increased the brutality of the wars between them and also the number of their victims.
21:59Unfortunately, the bloody story of salt won't end with China.
22:02Not just the Crusades
22:04It will be one of the most important war strategies of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
22:09Salt will be key to controlling the utilitarian role over the peoples it has occupied.
22:13And also a key to liberating these peoples from their control
22:16For example, we see this in the American Revolutionary War.
22:18When the Americans decided that the most important form of their independence was their self-reliance
22:22In their salt industry
22:24Instead of borrowing from Britain
22:25Specifically, the famous Liverpool salt
22:27That's why at the beginning of the War of Independence
22:28When the British succeeded in driving George Washington and his men away from the American coasts, they remained
22:33George Washington will issue swift orders
22:35Do anything to get salt
22:37Here the American bracelets will begin to boil seawater over a wood fire.
22:40That was obviously a difficult thing
22:41Because you are asking a prophet to bring you four and a half kilos of salt
22:44You need to boil 1520 liters of water
22:47It means you'd think 1500 ounces of something, an hour's worth, next to each other.
22:50So that I get four and a half kilos of salt
22:52Here is the United States Congress on December 29, 1975
22:56This will be the outcome at the beginning of the war for American citizens.
22:58They are shaking with all their might and making their salt
23:01He will motivate them with rewards of up to a third of a dollar.
23:04Hey, you're a bit of a slut, Diab and Hamad Hirish
23:06A third of a dollar, my dear, at that time was no small amount at all.
23:08This amount was allocated to anyone who could produce 22 kilograms of salt.
23:13This is in addition to the fact that there are those exempt from military service.
23:16Ten workers out of the total number of workers present in each salt workshop
23:19Because, my dear, armies don't just fight with coldness.
23:22But it fights with food too.
23:24Salting and the salting process were done with caution in the soldiers' food.
23:26Its extreme and vital importance became apparent in the heat of battle.
23:31And in the remote area that supply lines cannot reach
23:33The thing is, my dear, salt has become part of the Union Army's payroll.
23:38So, you've already taken half your salary, now just make do with salt.
23:41Confused, 1500 and 2 kilos of salt, Awafiz
23:43Every soldier in the US Army receives 680 grams of salt in their ration.
23:48In the American Civil War, which lasted four years between the North and the South
23:51It killed between 600,000 and 1 million Americans.
23:54That means about 3% of the total population
23:56Gemini is very important in this war; it is the salt siege.
24:04That's why General William Sherman wrote to the Northern commander that the supply of salt to the Southern army must be completely prohibited.
24:11The southern army is trying to reach our salt mines.
24:13The sale of salt was banned because, quite simply, without salt, eating is hypoallergenic.
24:16He said, "My dear, salt production workshops are being turned into military targets."
24:20If the workshop instructor malfunctions, you'll be left with nothing but a military service.
24:22Thank God for the possibility, I finished and they were able to complete the episode normally.
24:26In contrast, the southern army is very active in smuggling salt, just as it is in smuggling weapons.
24:30Salt smuggling was just as important as arms smuggling during the siege.
24:34The shortage of salt in the south has turned it into a commodity worth only a few pounds.
24:37To the point, my dear, that workers in the south demanded their salaries be paid in salt.
24:41Dear salt, it wasn't just used for preserving food.
24:43It was also used to tan leather.
24:45It also contributes to the manufacture of army clothing that keeps soldiers warm in the winter cold.
24:49After all, my dear historians consider the failure of the Million Campaign against Russia, which ended his legendary status as a military traitor,
24:54How many of the reasons are there? Insufficient salt supply
24:56They also used it to disinfect minor wounds and protect them from infection.
25:00That's why if we go back to the American war, we'll find the Confederate president of the South, Deverson Davis.
25:04He will offer exemption from military service to anyone who goes to work in salt production.
25:09As the war drew to a close, it became abundantly clear that the salt blockade strategy had been a very significant factor in the surrender of the southerners.
25:15The lack of salt created a starving army, and this was evident in the first demands of the southern army leader after the surrender.
25:20The army is groceries and between Makalesh, they want the rats to eat
25:22While Britain, in particular, held sway over America, salt was leading a revolution in Britain's most important uses in the Old World, according to Muhammad.
25:28India
25:29In 1804, Britain passed a law allowing the East India Company to monopolize the production and supply of salt in India.
25:36In her book, *The Universal Dictionary of Purity*, Mary Eaton states that one of the greatest measures of poverty in India is
25:43His need for salt
25:44Many of the uprisings that Hindus carried out were caused by the salt monopoly policy.
25:49The British Crown adopted a strict policy towards any trade or dealing in salt once it had control over it.
25:54That's why, when the Indian people began resisting colonialism under the leadership of Mahatma Gandhi, they saw Britain's monopoly on salt as the height of evil.
26:01That's why Gandhi writes his famous letter to Lord Iron, the representative of the British Crown.
26:05He tells him that he will begin confronting all the evils that colonialism has fostered, starting with the salt laws.
26:10He adds that humans cannot be deprived of the right to produce salt.
26:13It cannot be subjected to exorbitant taxes because it is like water and air, and one of the greatest necessities of life.
26:19And indeed, on March 12, 1930, the Mahatma, along with 78 of her assistants, went out on a march on the dark-skinned women.
26:26His shop in Ahmedabad is the nearest to his shop, about 500 kilometers away, in the Dandi area.
26:31What did Sheikh Zayed bring, Abu Ahmed?
26:33Not Dandy, full of it, no
26:36The men are trying to extract salt from the seawater.
26:39Here the British are facing Gandhi
26:41The British at the time looked down on Gandhi
26:43An old, shaggy man, 62 years old, always wearing a cloak, as if he had just arrived from his old age or
26:47He emerged from his dream
26:48It's impossible for a man with such simple strength to walk that distance on foot in the heat and humidity.
26:53But Gandhi Fowdel's entire journey and career took him from village to village and from place to place.
26:58He interacts with people, shares his ideas with them, and manages to convince some of them to join him, even if only for a small part of his journey.
27:03And after 25 days of the march that Britain belittled
27:06The march, my dear, now has more than 100,000 people.
27:10A march that attracted followers from all of them
27:12This also created a state of global interest
27:15The New York Times was writing about the Salt March every day.
27:18Reporters from international news agencies conducted interviews with Gandhi during the march.
27:22Time magazine, because of this career, chose Gandhi as Man of the Year.
27:26Finally, my dear, after a long journey that lasted 25 days
27:30He takes Gandhi to Dundee Beach
27:32Does it deliver to our place, Abu Ahmad? No, it delivers to me.
27:35Gandhi arrives with 50,000 people gathered from all over India.
27:40Look, my dear Gandhi, he's standing on the seashore, holding up a pile of salted figs, and saying
27:43With this bloc, he shook the foundations of the British Empire.
27:47God bless your troubles, uncle.
27:48He and the Indians begin on the beach, the Dead Sea boils
27:51They tasted salt from it
27:52Gandhi called on millions of Indians to defy the ban and follow his example.
27:56Here, civil disobedience is spreading through the illegal production and purchase of salt.
28:02We'll bring the black cat away from the British authorities.
28:05During the month of January, my dear, the British government arrested more than 60,000 people.
28:10On charges of violating salt ban laws
28:12Thank God no one's with them. I'm finished, you can continue the episode.
28:15So that, after 17 years of Gandhi's peaceful movement, India could gain its independence.
28:19Thousands of years later, the law of salt renunciation will be passed.
28:22He retires from the job he has performed for millions of years.
28:25When French chef Nicolas Gapier went to the million-dollar bar and managed to convince
28:29He finally found an alternative to salting
28:32We will simply heat the food to a very high temperature.
28:35Then immediately put it in a tightly sealed jar.
28:39I tried it, so we won't need to salt it to preserve it.
28:41This idea was quickly picked up by one of the British industrialists.
28:44And he is Brian Duncan
28:45The one who started the first British preserved food company
28:49Dunkin' Company
28:50The company whose product is a major reason why humans reach certain places
28:54They hadn't been able to reach it before.
28:55For example, the Arctic exploration campaign in Law 19
28:58Then comes another blow to the salt
29:00When the American sailors discover that we are refusing to send a prophet like that
29:03If we add fish salt, this will prevent spoilage.
29:06And that way we don't need to eat fish as much as we can.
29:09We need salt to export it to Europe
29:11In 1800, the American Thomas Moore manufactured
29:13Wooden box inside a modern box
29:15And from his own words, differences, and Arn
29:16If you put ice inside this box
29:17It will last you much longer than usual.
29:20To the point that he was able to put a full tub of butter inside the box.
29:23It is kept cool and firm throughout the summer.
29:25In the path, the issue is that you want to come to the salt.
29:27When the Frenchman Louis Pasteur comes to us
29:29He discovers the pasteurization process
29:31Pasteurization is a reliable method
29:33Especially for food preservation
29:35Dairy products
29:37At the end of the day, in this era, when we say
29:39The word "salt" comes in the phrase "we need the salt."
29:41The one on the table that enhances the taste of the food
29:43A lonely maidservant attended to the salt in Azhan
29:45The only good thing is that it's mischievous.
29:48For Chef Nasser, but the truth
29:49The honorary role that deals with salt today
29:51A great deal of salt history
29:53As one of the most important commodities and resources
29:55What humans have known throughout the history of projects
29:57Finally, my dear, I hope you don't drip salt.
29:59For your health, and also don't underestimate it.
30:01For your health and because I want you to give your body
30:03For 500 milligrams of sodium per day
30:05Don't forget that you are indebted throughout your entire history.
30:08And you, for white powder
30:09The whole world has changed, my dear.
30:11In front of that powder, because you are often
30:13You're watching this episode while you're eating.
30:15But the danger now lies in the arguments of the previous episodes.
30:18And the upcoming episodes
30:19After you finish eating, look down at the sources.
30:21And that's how it is, share on the channel
30:22If you're my dear, it's better for you to stay in my circle about living and remaining friends.
30:27The episode is over, I'm not going to say anything more.
30:30They went down to the countryside
30:57Translated by Nancy Qanqar