Watch Exile In Buyukada with English subtitles in Full HD. 🎬🏝️💔
Sent into exile on the mysterious island of Büyükada, she thought her life was over. But in the shadows of the old mansions, she meets a man whose secrets are as deep as the sea. Between the beauty of the island and the danger of the past, a forbidden love begins to bloom. Will her exile be her prison or her ultimate escape? ✨🌊
#ExileInBuyukada #MysteryRomance #IslandLife #EngSub #Billionaire #ShortDrama #FullMovie #ForbiddenLove #JefeRico #DramaShorts
Sent into exile on the mysterious island of Büyükada, she thought her life was over. But in the shadows of the old mansions, she meets a man whose secrets are as deep as the sea. Between the beauty of the island and the danger of the past, a forbidden love begins to bloom. Will her exile be her prison or her ultimate escape? ✨🌊
#ExileInBuyukada #MysteryRomance #IslandLife #EngSub #Billionaire #ShortDrama #FullMovie #ForbiddenLove #JefeRico #DramaShorts
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00:00:11Estánbúl.
00:00:13Estánbúl.
00:00:14Estánbúl, capital de la ciudad de la Comunidad de los Byzantines.
00:00:19Estánbúl, capital de la Comunidad de los Othomanes.
00:00:22More than 2,000 years of history steeped in great culture and international power struggles.
00:00:33In the Sea of Marmara, south of the Bosphorus that slices through the city, lies the island of Boyukada, the
00:00:41biggest of the princes' islands.
00:00:43A haven of peace and tranquility twelve miles from the urban chaos of the city.
00:00:54No roar of engines, no blaring horns, no exhaust fumes to mar the tranquillity of its luxurious mansions.
00:01:03Just the clip-clop of horse carriages, the only means of transport on Boyukada.
00:01:11When Istanbul was called Constantinople, this island was known as Príncipo.
00:01:36Boyukada can be best described in the words of the German author Gustav Schlumberger, written a hundred years ago.
00:01:44A ferry runs alongside a long picturesque key, which is always filled by people.
00:01:51A ferry runs alongside a long picturesque key, which is always filled by people.
00:01:55Here, coffee houses are never empty.
00:01:58Various flowers and trees, cascades of ivies, white-flowered acacias, Judas trees, jasmine.
00:02:14All of which provide a colourful background for this cheerful town.
00:02:24Its name came from its function, a place of exile for the princes of the city.
00:02:43In 1929, just six years after the new Republic of Turkey replaced the Ottoman Empire,
00:02:49it served again as a place of exile, this time for the co-leader of the Russian Revolution, Leon Trotsky.
00:03:26Marginal Trotsky
00:03:27The Second Lifeória
00:03:27Gracias por ver el video.
00:03:57Gracias por ver el video.
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00:33:10Redcliffed Island, set in deep blue, Buyukada crouches in the sea like a prehistoric
00:33:17animal drinking. Trotsky wrote these words in his unpublished memoirs. The village
00:33:25cemetery seemed more alive than the village itself. Around 1930, Buyukada was still as deserted
00:33:38as it probably as it probably as it probably was when the disgraced brothers and cousins of the Byzantine emperors
00:33:43lingered away their lives on its shores. Nature itself seemed to have designed the spot to be a regal penitentiary.
00:33:54The islanders, a few fishermen and shepherds, lived as their forefathers did a thousand years earlier. The horn of a
00:34:02motor car never disturbed the stillness.
00:34:04Only the braying of an ass came down from the outlying cliffs and fields into the main street. For a
00:34:13few weeks in the year, noisy vulgarity intruded.
00:34:23In the summer, multitudes of holidaymakers, families of Istanbul merchants, crowded the beaches and the huts. Then calm returned, and
00:34:36only the braying of the ass greeted the still and splendid onset of the autumn.
00:34:59Trotsky had finally found a safe home.
00:35:08Trotsky had finally found a safe home.
00:35:15Trotsky had finally found a safe home.
00:35:18Trotsky changed addresses several times before he found his final home.
00:35:24In some places, he was simply uncomfortable. In others, mysterious fires broke out. Blamed on the GPU, but never proven.
00:35:32It's open.
00:36:00¡Gracias!
00:36:04Trotsky liked the new house, a spacious, dilapidated villa, rented from a bankrupt Pasha.
00:36:11He immediately got to work.
00:36:13The authorities allowed friends to visit, and one of the first to join him was his secretary.
00:36:19Madame Chara.
00:36:25Продолжим.
00:36:29In the near future, the fate of Germany, but all the world will depend on who will be in this
00:36:38country.
00:36:43The establishment of socialism in the Soviet Union, revolution in Spain, revolution in England,
00:36:53the crisis of French colonialism,
00:36:57the national освободительное движение в Китае и в Индии,
00:37:01all these problems depend only from one question.
00:37:06Who will come to the power?
00:37:11Fashists or communists?
00:37:16Fashists or muses of influence?
00:37:16Кому это передать?
00:37:18Передать это Седовому.
00:37:21Пусть он пошлёт почты в New York Times.
00:37:24Вы опять рассердите Сталина.
00:37:26Вы же знаете, что мир не прислушивается к его голосу,
00:37:29а ваши речи печатаются во всех американских газетах.
00:37:33Вы мне льстите.
00:37:41con Trotsky
00:37:42con la llegada de Trotsky
00:37:43los comunistas turísticos
00:37:45se volvieron más visibles
00:37:46posters y las letras
00:37:48se volvieron
00:37:52las demostraciones
00:37:53rocked Istanbul y Izmir
00:37:55muchos fueron arrestados
00:37:58todos los ojos
00:37:59se volvieron a Trotsky
00:38:00cuando uno de los arrestados
00:38:02said the communist pamphlets
00:38:04he'd been caught distributing
00:38:05were given to him
00:38:06by the owner of a club
00:38:08on Boyukata
00:38:12was Trotsky the source?
00:38:15nothing came out
00:38:17of the investigation
00:38:19the Turkish security forces
00:38:21were becoming apprehensive
00:38:23more and more people
00:38:24showed up on Prinkipo
00:38:26the police were certain
00:38:28that some of them
00:38:28were communists
00:38:31when a policeman
00:38:32came to the house
00:38:33and asked for a list
00:38:34of the people inside
00:38:35Trotsky was furious
00:38:37he immediately wrote
00:38:39to the Istanbul police chief
00:38:40and complained
00:38:42today a policeman
00:38:43came to my house
00:38:44and asked for a list
00:38:46of the people
00:38:46staying and working
00:38:47with us
00:38:47I'm sure you were not
00:38:49informed of this incident
00:38:50but I find it unacceptable
00:38:52this is a violation
00:38:54of my personal rights
00:38:55however if you like
00:38:57I am prepared
00:38:58to come to your office
00:38:59and answer
00:39:00all your questions
00:39:03still Trotsky
00:39:04was not always correct
00:39:05in his judgments
00:39:06about the growing number
00:39:08of visitors
00:39:09on Boyukata
00:39:11among those
00:39:12who came to the island
00:39:13was Sobolevikos
00:39:15a Lithuanian
00:39:16who appeared
00:39:17to be a militant
00:39:18oppositionist
00:39:19he settled in the house
00:39:21after Trotsky
00:39:22personally asked
00:39:23for him to be granted
00:39:23a visa
00:39:25he and his brother
00:39:26stayed on Boyukata
00:39:28for three years
00:39:29and they also worked
00:39:30as bodyguards
00:39:31and were always armed
00:39:3330 years later
00:39:35in 1960
00:39:36Sobolevikos
00:39:37was arrested
00:39:38in the United States
00:39:39for spying
00:39:40carrying papers
00:39:42that identified him
00:39:43as Jack Sobo
00:39:44he told FBI agents
00:39:48during interrogation
00:39:49that he had been
00:39:50in the employment
00:39:51of the GPU
00:39:52reporting on the activities
00:39:54of the Boyukata
00:39:55household
00:39:56directly to Stalin
00:39:57Jacob Blumkin
00:39:59had been recruited
00:40:01by Trotsky
00:40:02into the Communist Party
00:40:03he was an officer
00:40:05of the GPU
00:40:08he asked for a meeting
00:40:09with Trotsky
00:40:11which was arranged
00:40:12by Trotsky's son
00:40:13Leon Sidov
00:40:14who said that
00:40:15he'd met Blumkin
00:40:16in the street
00:40:17by chance
00:40:18Jacob Blumkin
00:40:20offered to smuggle
00:40:21Trotsky's writings
00:40:22into the Soviet Union
00:40:23using Turkish fishermen
00:40:26Trotsky declined
00:40:28but the two men
00:40:29had a long talk
00:40:30and Trotsky gave Blumkin
00:40:32a carefully worded message
00:40:34to the oppositionists
00:40:35back home
00:40:36a few months later
00:40:38news came
00:40:39that Stalin
00:40:39had executed Blumkin
00:40:41for being a Trotskyist
00:40:43the informant
00:40:45the informant
00:40:45was said to be Blumkin's lover
00:40:46Liza Gorskaya
00:40:47herself a GPU agent
00:40:49who Blumkin had confided in
00:40:52and told about his meetings
00:40:53with Trotsky
00:40:57Trotsky shocked
00:40:58called on his supporters
00:40:59around the world
00:41:00to raise a storm of protest
00:41:02over the execution
00:41:04of Blumkin
00:41:13the circle around Trotsky
00:41:15became wider
00:41:16with every passing day
00:41:17and week
00:41:21they came from
00:41:22all over Europe
00:41:23and they spent
00:41:24most of their time
00:41:25in Trotsky's study
00:41:27some were no strangers
00:41:29to the Turkish police
00:41:57should they come
00:41:58against God
00:41:59if you are right
00:42:00they should cross
00:42:01and then
00:42:03you have to have a
00:42:03if Hitler
00:42:04if Hitler
00:42:04will go to the right
00:42:05in the right
00:42:05inausia
00:42:06with the labor
00:42:06mass
00:42:07he will be
00:42:08to the next
00:42:09and then
00:42:09it will kill him
00:42:11and it will be
00:42:12and then
00:42:12if this
00:42:12will not happen
00:42:13he can support
00:42:15he can support
00:42:15the social-democrat
00:42:16who is
00:42:18a part of the
00:42:18of the
00:42:19class
00:42:19so that
00:42:20they must say
00:42:21they must say
00:42:28¿Postupiste ли вы также
00:42:30по отношению к нам?
00:42:38Necesitamos обратиться
00:42:40к миллионам рабочих Европы.
00:42:42Vámonos en vuestro lado.
00:42:45Si el fachismo
00:42:46se va a la la nación,
00:42:47los nacionistas tanques
00:42:49se van a la frontera de Europa.
00:42:52¡Toma la consolidación
00:42:54de todo el clase trabajador!
00:42:55¡Toma la frontera!
00:42:59¡Toma la frontera!
00:43:01¡Toma la frontera!
00:43:02¡Toma la frontera!
00:43:04¡Toma la frontera!
00:43:08¡Toma la frontera!
00:43:11The Russian Revolution
00:43:13and Trotsky had many
00:43:15sympathizers in Turkey.
00:43:20Although early
00:43:21during the War of Independence
00:43:23Mustafa Kemal
00:43:24reflecting on the Revolution
00:43:26wrote,
00:43:28Our friendship with Russia continues.
00:43:33However, the state of our country,
00:43:35the domestic situation of the nation
00:43:37and the vigor of our national traditions
00:43:40make it clear that communism
00:43:42cannot be an option for Turkey.
00:43:56Trotsky continued to search for a visa.
00:43:58He applied to Germany,
00:44:00to England and to France.
00:44:02All of the applications were rejected.
00:44:05No government would accept him.
00:44:07He applied for an American visa
00:44:09and wrote to the U.S. consulate in Istanbul.
00:44:14Leaving aside the question of medical consultation
00:44:17necessary for my wife
00:44:19and for myself,
00:44:20the aim of my voyage
00:44:22is of a purely scientific nature.
00:44:24I recently published
00:44:26in the United States
00:44:27a work in three volumes
00:44:28on the history of the Russian Revolution,
00:44:31which I noted with satisfaction
00:44:34met with a favorable reception
00:44:35on the part of almost the entire American press.
00:44:40The fourth volume will be devoted
00:44:42to the history of the Red Army
00:44:44and the Civil War.
00:44:45While studying in connection with this theme,
00:44:48the history of the wars of Cromwell in England
00:44:51and the war between the northern
00:44:52and southern states in America,
00:44:54I was struck by the extraordinary resemblance
00:44:58in point of form and method
00:44:59between the Civil War in the United States
00:45:02and the Civil War in Russia.
00:45:05The consul never applied.
00:45:07The first official U.S. communication he received
00:45:11was from the Internal Revenue Service.
00:45:14The records of this office disclose
00:45:17that you have received income
00:45:19from sources within the United States.
00:45:22It is requested that you advise
00:45:24whether you filed returns
00:45:26with any collector of Internal Revenue
00:45:27in the United States
00:45:29for the year 1932.
00:45:40While Trotsky pursued his quest for a visa,
00:45:43Turkey organized its first beauty pageant
00:45:46with all Turkish contestants.
00:45:51Hundreds of young women applied.
00:45:53Trotsky and other problems were forgotten
00:45:55for a few months as the secluded, veiled women
00:45:58of a decade earlier appeared before the world
00:46:01clad in bathing suits.
00:46:03Farija Tevfik became the first Miss Turkey.
00:46:07Her successor two years later,
00:46:10Keriman Halis, was crowned
00:46:12the most beautiful woman in the world.
00:46:14He was such a godly
00:46:25The préfended women
00:46:26sftar
00:46:27sftar
00:46:29sftar
00:46:31sftar
00:46:32sftar
00:46:32sftar
00:46:32sftar
00:46:34sftar
00:46:37sftar
00:46:52¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:47:07¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:47:42¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:47:46¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:47:54¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:48:20¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:05¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:09¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:17¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:21¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:25¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:27¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:49:57¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:05¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:11¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:26¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:31¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:32¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:35¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:42¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:53¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:55¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:58¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:50:59¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:51:01¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:51:19¡Suscríbete al canal!
00:52:25¡Sino!
00:52:26¡Sino!
00:52:28¡Sino!
00:52:28¡Papá!
00:52:29¡Sino!
00:52:32¡Sino!
00:52:37Ты смотришь на меня, как в семнадцатом, когда я в Петрограде держал речь,
00:52:42ты нисколько не изменилась.
00:52:45Я очень рад!
00:52:52No puedo olvidar Nino.
00:52:54En Moscú me fue tan solo.
00:52:56Quiero estar рядом con vosotros.
00:52:59No quiero romperse.
00:53:08Zina fue una de dos hijas que Trotsky tuvo desde su primer marrilla con Alexandra Sokolovskaya,
00:53:15una compañera revolucionaria de los años 90.
00:53:28Trotsky had left her when he fled his first Siberian exile for Europe in 1902.
00:53:34When he returned to Russia in 1905, it was with Natalia, whom he had met in Paris.
00:53:45Zina was not well.
00:53:47The death at a young age of tuberculosis of her sister Nina had depressed her,
00:53:54and she suffered from depression in addition to serious respiratory problems.
00:54:00Trotsky wanted her to come to Turkey first and immediately travel on to Germany for treatment.
00:54:06Again, Trotsky faced a visa problem.
00:54:09In a telegram he sent to Tefiq Rushtu Aras, the foreign minister.
00:54:14He indicated that Zina was waiting sick in Odessa,
00:54:18and he asked for an urgent visa to have her brought to Turkey.
00:54:23Trotsky also said he was ready to pay all telegraph and visa fees.
00:54:29The next day, the foreign minister sent him a telegraph.
00:54:33Order given to our Odessa consulate to issue visa for Miss Zina Volkova.
00:54:37Stop.
00:54:41No need for a telegraph fee.
00:54:43Stop.
00:54:44Tefiq Rushtu.
00:54:49But Zina was happy on Boyukada.
00:54:53She didn't want to leave her father's side.
00:54:56The pine-rich air of the island was good for her lungs,
00:54:59and being with Trotsky and Natalia and helping around the house was good for her soul.
00:55:06Trotsky was convinced she needed treatment in Germany.
00:55:18Trotsky was good for her son.
00:55:40It was a small négative service.
00:55:41Turkish police took a long time she needed to make it legal.
00:55:46And, finally, the police毛 told us that Zina was playing with a bolt and did a jackpot.
00:55:54As the age of it, we call him a Little Gitu punct .
00:56:00So would it be, it would be a convenient to leave with us,
00:56:05but they would like to leave Germany.
00:56:14Zina felt unwanted and went into a severe depression.
00:56:19She wrote to her mother, complaining of her father's aloofness.
00:56:23She felt that he did not want her around.
00:56:44Zina finally accepted her father's wishes and went to Germany in 1932, where the Nazis were growing in strength.
00:56:56Zina had intensive treatment for pneumonia and depression, but her health was not improving,
00:57:03and the situation in Germany with the Nazis frightened her, for she was Jewish.
00:57:10Ljewovo wrote to his father on January the 5th, 1933, informing him that Zina had killed herself.
00:57:18The final words on her suicide note were thoughts for her little son,
00:57:23who had joined her in Germany from Boyukada just before she took her own life.
00:57:29I feel my end approaching. I don't think I can take care of my child.
00:57:35He doesn't speak a word of German. Call my brother.
00:57:41She then locked herself in the kitchen and turned on the gas.
00:57:56Trotsky was shocked and riddled with feelings of guilt.
00:58:06Pierre Franck, his secretary, recounted that Trotsky locked himself up in his room
00:58:12and would not talk to anyone for five days.
00:58:23When he emerged, his hair had grown whiter than before.
00:58:46To escape the sorrow and the agony of Zina's death, Trotsky returned to fishing.
00:58:54He could be seen every day with his fisherman friend, Haralambos, who only spoke Turkish and Greek.
00:59:00They communicated only with gestures, but Trotsky soon became expert at handling the hooks, the lines, and the nets.
00:59:15News of his prowess as a fisherman was heard even in Russia.
00:59:23A few days ago, Haralambos had been in Russia.
00:59:31A few days later, Haralambos told us,
00:59:36That's what a story of Trotsky was saying.
00:59:42The insiders did notsome with his wounds, but the truth is not true.
00:59:43If you were by the thought of Trotsky, you were now in Kremlin.
00:59:47¡Ale, a Trotsky responde,
00:59:51que si Leni era vivo,
00:59:54en este regime,
00:59:56se hubiera aquí, en Turcia,
00:59:59en Turcia.
01:00:20Arrasadí...
01:00:21...¡Ahh!
01:00:21A tú, возьme'y una...
01:00:22...¡¿ЖАБРЫ U Nieّ?!
01:00:24...¡¿NAS JANJIVNI, Y, Y, Y, Y...
01:00:26...¡BRASA!
01:00:26¡HORSO CLIVATE BUETE!
01:00:29¡Unaz, en Odesa, lo veden na en ¡Jabra!
01:00:34¡Da!
01:00:40¡Ahh!
01:01:03En 1933, Turkey prepared to celebrate its 10th anniversary as a republic.
01:01:11Atatürk wanted to show the world how far Turkey had gone in one short decade.
01:01:16Countrywide gala events, balls and ceremonies lasted throughout the year.
01:01:36Stalin, aware of Turkey's growing role in the Balkans, began keeping a close watch on
01:01:42Turkey, and started to develop relations from 1932 onwards.
01:01:48There was a non-stop exchange of delegations between the two countries, and when the Turkish
01:01:53Prime Minister, Ismet İnönü, returned from a visit to Moscow with a credit line of $8
01:01:58million, the Istanbul newspapers were full of Stalin's praise.
01:02:07Trotsky was anxious.
01:02:09He was convinced Stalin was putting pressure on Turkey to expel him.
01:02:13Once again, it was time to leave.
01:02:22By early summer 1933, Trotsky knew his days on Buyukada were numbered.
01:02:28He contacted a number of European countries, asking them to urgently reactivate his earlier
01:02:34visa applications.
01:02:45He pressed his friends in France in particular into action, but weeks passed and there was
01:02:51no reply.
01:02:52His hopes were raised when he was allowed to Denmark to deliver a lecture.
01:02:57But the Communist parties protested his trip through Europe, and he returned to Principaux.
01:03:05His finances were dwindling, and money started to become a serious problem for the first time
01:03:11since his arrival in Turkey.
01:03:13He wrote to Henri Molinier on June the 7th.
01:03:16I could even live in Corsica, if only France would open its doors.
01:03:23Finally, four and a half years after his initial request, the French government granted him
01:03:29a visa, but there were strict conditions.
01:03:33Trotsky would not be allowed into Paris, and would have to live in a southern suburb under
01:03:38constant police supervision and the threat of immediate expulsion if he failed to obey
01:03:44any of the conditions put forth by the French government.
01:03:48Trotsky accepted and started packing.
01:03:52Isaac Deutscher wrote,
01:03:54It was not without a tug of emotion that he took leave of the splendor of the Sea of Marmara
01:04:00and the fishing expeditions, and that he thought of his faithful fishermen, some of whom their
01:04:05bones saturated through with the salt of the sea, had recently found their rest in the village
01:04:11cemetery, while others had, in these years of depression, to struggle harder and harder
01:04:17to sell their catch.
01:04:23Trotsky and Natalia left Bouygoukada on June the 25th, 1933, to board the ship Bulgaria bound
01:04:32for France.
01:04:54He wrote one final letter to the government in Ankara.
01:04:57A letter of thanks for the hospitality and the security they provided during the past four
01:05:03and a half years.
01:05:21But there was also emotion in his memoirs he wrote of his last moments in the villa in Bouygoukada.
01:05:29The house is already empty.
01:05:32The wooden cases are already downstairs.
01:05:36Young hands are driving in the nails.
01:05:39The floor of our old and dilapidated villa was painted with such queer paint in the spring,
01:05:45that even now, four months later, tables, chairs and our feet keep sticking to it.
01:05:52Oddly, I feel as if my feet had gotten somewhat rooted in the soil of Prinkiburg.
01:06:10Trotsky's French visa expired in 1935.
01:06:15He was forced to leave Norway, where the government was under pressure,
01:06:20and finally traveled to his last place of exile, Mexico,
01:06:24where he had been invited by the artist couple of Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo.
01:06:32There, he would suffer another blow.
01:06:35His son, Ljavovo, whom he'd sent to Germany in 1931,
01:06:40had fled to France after Hitler came to power in 1933,
01:06:45and was leading a happy life there with Jeanne,
01:06:48now his wife, and continuing his father's work.
01:06:52With a new but trusted French supporter, Etienne,
01:06:57Ljavovo was organizing the left opposition in Paris.
01:07:00Etienne had access to Ljavovo's private letters
01:07:04and read all the instructions Trotsky sent his son.
01:07:07Ljavovo died mysteriously in 1938.
01:07:12According to the official hospital report,
01:07:14he fell from his bed and died in the hospital
01:07:17where he had just undergone an operation for appendicitis.
01:07:21In 1958, Etienne was arrested under his true identity of Mark Sporowski, GPU agent.
01:07:32Mark Sporowski said that the accident in the Paris clinic
01:07:35was arranged on Stalin's orders.
01:07:42All of Trotsky's children were now dead.
01:07:46Trotsky devoted himself full-time to writing,
01:07:49producing a flood of books including My Life,
01:07:53a matchless autobiographical history of the Russian Revolution.
01:08:06He survived at least one assassination attempt.
01:08:10But on August the 20th, 1940,
01:08:14seven years after he left Boyukada,
01:08:17Stalin's GPU finally caught up with Trotsky.
01:08:24Ramon Mercader, a Stalinist agent
01:08:27who'd made his way into Trotsky's household in Mexico,
01:08:30fatally wounded him with an ice axe.
01:08:38Trotsky died the following day.
01:08:41He was 61 years old.
01:09:01Years later, Isaac Deutscher wrote,
01:09:04Despite all the adversities,
01:09:06the years Trotsky had spent on Prinkipo
01:09:09were the calmest, the most creative,
01:09:13and the least unhappy time of his exile.
01:09:43And she certainly became the veulent's grappling
01:09:43but her김 trước…
01:09:47almost fainted from the other side
01:09:49and her
01:09:49because of Herzog had a hard time,
01:09:49over the last few years.
01:09:49And am I .
01:09:54Now…
01:10:21Gracias por ver el video.
01:10:51Gracias por ver el video.
01:11:21Gracias por ver el video.
01:11:51Gracias por ver el video.
01:11:54Gracias.
01:11:54Gracias.
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