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

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Transcript
00:05What's wrong with you, you foreigner, you destroyer?
00:08I'm alive, can I go please?
00:20She'll dress you then
00:26Please, teacher
00:28Control yourself, you foreigner, you destroyer
00:30What's this? Just a second
00:35You'll get up, my friend, may God bless you.
00:50Control yourself, Khawajak
00:53Hey guys, are there any English people in the country?
00:55You've fallen, you sons of bitches!
01:00The device
01:01A'ih
01:01any
01:04any
01:05any
01:05Yes
01:26any
01:27He says the answer is simple
01:29We see our story in the eyes of the Palestinians.
01:32Forced confinement, peace, and national identity
01:34A matter of doubt, denial, and discrimination
01:36And today the Irish Prime Minister is hungry
01:39I see that the story of the Irish
01:40It is very similar to the Palestinian story.
01:43Not only did the Irish people suffer from colonialism for centuries
01:45But England also has its secrets all the time.
01:48There is no such thing as Ireland.
01:50And they are, at best, British caregivers
01:52But never hide the merits of the British people.
01:55Our story, my friend, begins in the twelfth century.
01:57When the Angles and Normans take over Ireland
02:00Led by King Henry II
02:01I'm fascinated by this topic.
02:02But over time, English control over Ireland began to weaken.
02:06Which at that time consisted of garbage dumps and excavations
02:08Until he was favored again in 1535 over King Henry VIII
02:12What's going on? I want to take him back to Ireland.
02:14And annexed it as part of the united British kingdom
02:17The truth is that the British invasion was not easy.
02:19Fadl confronts violent images
02:21Especially in the northern part of Ireland
02:23In the Ulster area
02:24Which the English were never able to control
02:271594
02:28The resistance in Ulster takes on a much stronger form.
02:31When two of the tribal leaders in Ulster learn
02:34Their names are Hugh O'Neil and Hugh O'Donnell
02:36The Attan countries decided that they would teach the English armies a lesson.
02:39O'Neill and O'Donnell will achieve dazzling successes in front of the English.
02:43Their rebellion will continue for more than 9 years.
02:46Eventually, England succeeds in defeating them.
02:50Irish leaders then claim they are fleeing
02:53A long journey of escape, you'll know Bask
02:55A journey here where resistance is possible
02:57And with them, the inevitable nature and the aristocracy
03:00They went to France, Spain, and finally Italy.
03:02In one of the most important epics of tragic escape
03:05This journey will be considered for many years to come one of the saddest events in Ireland's history.
03:09The Irish resistance, after nine years of fighting, collapsed and fled their country.
03:14He told him, "No, Abu Hamad, they will not leave their country in this difficult situation."
03:16My dear, they fled to form an army in exile.
03:19They are a liter, my dear, they traveled, they are the same
03:20The truth is that despite this attempt, they were unable to
03:23The resistance fighters who went into exile died one after another
03:27And what's next for the homeland? What's next for the homeland? What's next for the homeland?
03:29Today, my dear Irish friend, the Irish are celebrating the Earl's journey and his long ordeal.
03:33My dear, after this nine-year war, she's thinking to herself.
03:36After being influenced by Bastiktahu, she contemplates
03:38Whoever created the people of Ulster to act in this way is awful.
03:41Their minds tell them that the main reason for the resistance is their Catholic religion.
03:45Here in Britain, they're finding a solution so these people don't film on it again.
03:48We are doing this for the benefit of the Prophet, so we will carry out a major transformation of the population of Ireland.
03:51Everyone, young people, will go from Catholicism to Protestantism.
03:54Is there a bus going there or what, Britain?
03:57Oh Britain, oh Britain, my dear, it is the religion of the English majority.
04:00We're going to go to the Irish and make them British like us.
04:03My dear, that doesn't work with the Irish.
04:05This is why the English are starting to think about a different policy.
04:08We'll call this policy the cultivation of Ireland.
04:11In another version, the settlement of Ireland
04:13The English will mobilize thousands of Protestants from southern England and Scotland
04:16They will settle on lands forcibly taken from the Irish population.
04:20The farm or settlement is established in isolation, surrounded by fortified walls to protect it from Irish attacks.
04:25Those who see their lands taken from them and given to others
04:28And once again, the Irish are trying to expel the English from their land.
04:32On October 20, 1641
04:34The Irish are angry and a new rebellion breaks out.
04:37It begins with an attempted military coup.
04:39It fails, yes, but it helps to incite acts of revenge.
04:43Irish Catholics versus Protestants
04:45Guerrilla wars begin, accompanied by acts of ethnic cleansing.
04:48Catholics do it to the Protestant minority
04:51And here the English armies are saying, "Please call us the income."
04:54I must avenge the people who died.
04:55What will you do? Will you commit genocide against some citizens?
04:59You will learn about these events later, after the 11-year war.
05:01Harba will witness brutal massacres, the most famous of which is the Doreda Rosary.
05:05More than 3,000 people were killed there.
05:07Among them were women and children, even after they surrendered.
05:09The rosary became a symbol of British brutality in Ireland.
05:13And the number, my dear, is that this happened almost 400 years ago.
05:15However, her memories of the Irish are still alive to this day.
05:18Eleven Years' War or the Confederate Wars
05:20The number of victims reached 200,000 dead.
05:22But it ended with a British victory and their complete control of the land.
05:27Will England stop here? No.
05:28Exploitation policies will begin
05:30They will begin to remove all the trees from Ireland's forests.
05:33They export the wood from these trees to the Royal Navy.
05:36Take my work, Malak.
05:37Also, Histonwa on Irish farmland
05:39They export their products and crops abroad.
05:41England prefers to try to change Ireland and enact new laws.
05:46For example, the penal code issued in 1695
05:48This law simply states that if a Catholic dies
05:51His inheritance is distributed normally among his children.
05:53But if one of the boys converts to Protestantism
05:56He is the only one who inherits, and all the wealth goes to him.
05:58Of course, the Protestantism of England.
06:00My school of thought is superior to any other, therefore I deserve the largest share of the inheritance.
06:04Furthermore, there were unique laws that restricted the Irish in many ways.
06:07For example, the laws prohibit Irish people from studying medicine and law.
06:11And they are prevented from owning horses whose value exceeds a certain percentage.
06:14Also, my dear, it warns against the original Irish language, which is Jellal.
06:18And it imposes penalties on anyone who speaks this language.
06:20And the laws also warn against Irish music.
06:23For her, England is dear to her, and she brings forth conflicting ideas.
06:25The Irish forget they are Irish
06:27This culture is a diverse and nuanced field, with all its details.
06:30That's her language, her music, Ermeli
06:32We want a new man, a new, sensible one, to put our liquids into.
06:36And Ghat is keen that Halaf is now a pretender
06:38Those who are comforted by their identity will live in terrible torment.
06:40It's amazing that the Irish didn't surrender.
06:42They don't easily give in to these plans.
06:44Ireland over three centuries, from the Earls' Voyage Clock of 1893
06:48It will go through more than 15 revolutions and rebellions
06:51The matter has even reached the point where revolutions can happen remotely.
06:54It takes place outside Ireland itself, for example, the Venem rebellion.
06:57When a group of Irish immigrants target British military interests in Canada
07:01From 1866 to 1871
07:04And they're bargaining with the English, asking us to stop wearing the hijab.
07:06When you declare Ireland's independence
07:08Enough of the part that's driven by self-interest.
07:09But my dear friend, if rebellion has shaped the course of modern Irish history
07:13There is another frightening need that will shape the features of English colonialism in Ireland.
07:17Hunger from time to time is bad for the English language.
07:19Lack of concern for the population
07:21This will cause widespread famine in Ireland.
07:24For example, the famine of 1040
07:25Those killed represent between 13% and 20% of Ireland's population.
07:29The people died, Shaykal
07:31Or the Irish potato famine
07:33The great famine that began due to the spoilage of the potato crop
07:36Oh Abu Ahmed, this pampering
07:37It means we're not going to eat potatoes when we're hungry anymore.
07:39enough
07:40Oh, you seven, don't snore at the Irish people.
07:41In the north, potatoes are a staple food.
07:44Abu Ahmed, please excuse me for getting into this topic.
07:46The famine lasted 8 years, from 1845 to 1852.
07:51And you killed how much, from 20% to 25% of the population?
07:54A quarter of the country died
07:55Famine killed one million people
07:57My dear, one of the greatest famines
08:00Which caused human losses in the modern era
08:02If we go back to the documents
08:03We find a terrifying reaction from the English to this famine.
08:06For example, Sir Charles Trevelyan
08:08The person whom the British government tasked with intervening at that time to resolve the crisis
08:11He wrote that this famine was nothing but a direct blow from divine punishment.
08:15Wise and merciful
08:16He claimed a sharp and effective connection from God to the Irish people.
08:19To get rid of them, he filled them with useless people.
08:22God bless you, Abu Ahmad
08:23The leg did that spiritual man
08:25We named him Abu Ahmed hungry
08:26The right-wing British government at the time favored the idea of ​​non-intervention.
08:29Or even providing alternatives or assistance
08:31That's why this great famine lasts for seven years
08:34I wish it had come down to them letting them go.
08:35The British government will contribute to worsening the famine.
08:38Because it will take the other crops that the Irish grow.
08:49This famine will create what is known as the Irish diaspora.
08:52Around 1.5 million Irish people are facing hunger and death
08:56They will board the planes and emigrate to Canada and America
08:59Because they constitute a large and overwhelming percentage of immigrants to the New World
09:03They were raised by the face of famine as migrants
09:04This, of course, had a negative social impact.
09:06Because that's why most of the workforce has emigrated and the country is stagnant
09:09And behind it lies division and the scattering of families.
09:11I have a surprise for you, my dear.
09:19And life in a new land, the process of confiscating the lands of the Catholic population, was still ongoing.
09:23To such an extent that, after a century of settlement policy, there is no preference for the Catholic population in Ireland.
09:28Only 14% of the land was changed
09:30Zaben, my dear, of the twentieth century
09:32Ireland is in a very tight market position
09:33Many of its inhabitants emigrated, mostly educated and cultured, and trained in religious matters.
09:38Under its rule, the English Polish governor governs Ireland with an iron dome.
09:42Almost everything is quiet and resigned.
09:44Until Easter Sunday, April 24, 1916
09:48When a group called itself the Irish Brotherhood
09:51They suddenly spread through the streets of the capital, Dublin
09:531250 of its men control the government headquarters in the capital.
09:57And since then, they have been declaring the establishment of the Irish Free State.
10:00So that the next day the English cannons would not name a word and would bombard Dublin.
10:04Thousands of British troops enter the capital
10:06He adopted a complete operation of indiscriminate bombing and sniping
10:09It kills 500 people, mostly civilians
10:12In seven days, the Irish Brotherhood swept through this heat.
10:15After the Dubliners decided to surrender in order to protect civilian lives
10:19The British army is telling you, "Come, we'll hold a surrender march for you in the heart of Dublin."
10:22So that all the boycotters can see the fate of the rebels
10:26May 3rd, following a military trial of 15 members of the rebellion line.
10:29They are informed by gunfire
10:31Then the British government launched a massive crackdown, arresting around 3,500 Irish people from all over the country.
10:36Of course, most of them have no connection to the events.
10:38But they all get taken, and most of them go to a detention camp called Fringo Foels.
10:42Oh Muhammad, thank God things are calming down now and Britain is focusing on the First Labor War.
10:47Blood is one of the important needs
10:48No, my dear, Britain was making a big mistake.
10:51Imagine gathering 3500 people united by their hatred of England
10:55And you're doing them a lifetime of service by bringing them all together under one roof.
10:58These people, you should know, came from all over Ireland.
11:00Instead of thinking about forming a revolutionary organization, he just takes public transportation and becomes lazy.
11:05No, come here, my love, come here, you're from here, come from Dablad, come, I don't know where from
11:09Let's gather them all together and put them in one place, like a conference.
11:12And indeed, my dear, this English prison is being transformed into a permanent meeting place.
11:15And an ongoing conference of the England Carre Club
11:17He improves his attitude towards hating England.
11:19After a few months, most prisoners are released.
11:22In order to implement the first idea they agreed upon inside the prison
11:24They will cross over to a political party called Shinfin
11:27The word "Shinfin" translates to "We ourselves" in Arabic.
11:30This party will take the English elections in a very normal way.
11:32And behind the scenes of these elections, he will spread his ideas about independence.
11:36In its first test in 2017, the Shinfen party won elections in four provinces.
11:41And suddenly, a powerful force that will hold them all accountable.
11:43And that's when England started to pay attention.
11:44Then it begins to take proactive steps.
11:46For example, we stand with the Jarariyah party.
11:48We arrest its members on charges of understanding
11:50For example, the trouble of opposition songs
11:51Or chanting uplifting slogans
11:53But one of the party figures that Thomas A. met
11:55He decided to imprison him in a rather strange way.
11:58He announces one of the first hunger strikes in history
12:02Within a few days of his hunger strike, he died in prison.
12:05A large number of people gather at his funeral.
12:06They fired 21 shots into the air to bid him farewell.
12:09And then Michael Collins, one of the icons of the Sheem Finn, steps forward.
12:12He says that from now on
12:13These statements will be the party's way of responding to everything.
12:16The First World War ends in 1818
12:19Ahmed, I swear I didn't catch up
12:20Why don't you leave her with us for a little while?
12:21And you are organizing general elections in Ireland
12:24For the first time, women over 30 and men over 21
12:27It remains to give the illusion of the right to vote.
12:28And then the big surprise happens
12:30Where is the Shin party that is less than two years old?
12:32Bick wins an absolute majority in Ireland
12:35But that's not the only surprise.
12:36In the first session of the Irish Parliament
12:38Members of parliament from Shin Fen refuse
12:40They are traveling to London and will attend the meeting.
12:42At the English Parliament
12:44Instead, they decide to go to Dublin City Hall.
12:47From there they declare the establishment of the independent Irish Republic
12:51And it is launched throughout the country
12:53To form a national army to expel the English from Ireland
12:56So that one of the most famous military organizations in history could be born
13:00IRA
13:02Irish Republican Army
13:04People's Army
13:06Upon his birth, more than 100,000 Irish volunteers
13:09Most of the educated classes
13:11They are joined by more than 20,000 women in the largest female participation in armed struggle in history.
13:16In 2019, the Irish Republican Army began its first military operations.
13:21Guerrilla warfare against the British army
13:22The principle was simple
13:23Ah, we don't have the power to equal England.
13:25Or even enough to make them leave our country
13:27But we can be very painful for them
13:29I feel that being away from us would be better for them.
13:31The Republican Army of Aziz was not a disciplined army.
13:33It is simply a group of armed men who wage a guerrilla war.
13:36They have the simplicity of a hundred thousand volunteers in the army, all of whom have three thousand rifles.
13:40That's why Principal was Sibley
13:42A simple principle
13:42I was deprived quickly
13:43Make your move and disappear
13:44And live to conquer a new day
13:46This whole thing is a mistake that makes you forget the last step
13:48By the end of 2020, 700 British-style seating areas had been created in Ireland.
13:52They were afraid they would prefer to be beaten
13:53Despite repeated promises from British military leaders
13:56It will wipe out the Irish Republican Army.
13:58It will take us at most two or three weeks, the strongest of them.
14:00It will start to appear in Britain or to us over time
14:02The army is a father to a thousand grandfathers
14:04And the twenty thousand six in it
14:05And the three thousand weapons that they have are a force
14:07It is very difficult to eradicate.
14:08At that point, my dear Winston Churchill, he would devise a plan.
14:11Plan says he is recruiting veterans into the British police force.
14:14From the First World War
14:15Bahish can benefit from their military experience.
14:17And here, my dear, is formed a unit
14:19The Irish moles are more brutal
14:21Known as Black Intense
14:23And my dear, the strategies of the months are laid down
14:24Power against power, and terrorism against terrorism.
14:27Hewzed's instructions were to kill him and his master.
14:30As much as you can
14:30But my dear, there is one problem
14:32Those who came from the First World War
14:34Their entire approach was a clear step of symmetry
14:36The enemy is the second side.
14:37He hits him, he hits him, he hits him
14:38But in Ireland, you're not seeing an enemy.
14:39I don't know who he is.
14:41Is it the man who's wearing this, or the man who's wearing this, or the woman who's wearing this?
14:43Today he might be holding a gun and shooting at you
14:45Tomorrow he might be standing next to you in Tabrou al-Aish
14:47They were very good citizens
14:49British police to search for members of the Irish Republican Army
14:52He had a near-impossible task.
14:53He searches Irish houses one by one
14:55In search of weapons and ammunition
14:57This further fueled the wave of hostility towards the British.
15:00And they are violating the sanctity of homes and searching them piece by piece.
15:03Over time, the British realize they are in a big mess.
15:06Their workers are becoming weaker and weaker
15:08Up to the fourth anniversary of the Easter uprising
15:11My dear friend, the world is witnessing its first mass hunger strike.
15:14Fifty-one Irish Republican Army prisoners
15:17They are on a hunger strike
15:18The British government says it will not negotiate.
15:20And the crowds descended to besiege the prison
15:21They are peacefully blockading the area just to express their solidarity.
15:24With regard to the prisoners, many of whom were specifically peaceful civilian women.
15:28They have no weapons and they gather around the prison.
15:30They get down on their knees and reach the striking prisoners.
15:33The British administration saw this as a model for a social revolution.
15:36Similar to what happened in Russia in 2017
15:39She will be forced to back down and release the striking prisoners.
15:43Unfortunately, this is a belated plan because the demands are being embellished.
15:46My dear friend, the railway workers are announcing a strike.
15:48And the merchants are offering to stop paying taxes to the British.
15:51And they gave it a boost to the Irish Republican Army.
15:54Simply put, we are an Irish nation and you can't stop us.
15:57At that time, Churchill would appoint one of Britain's most notoriously cruel generals.
16:01He will lead a new force whose goal is to restore order to Ireland.
16:05General Hugh Tudor
16:06The Ragda group consists of members of the British police.
16:09Her mission is to walk the streets of Ireland
16:11When they see civilians, they order them to raise their headscarves and submit to inspection.
16:15And the cities that refuse to listen to orders are simple brothers
16:18A shot that kills him, that ruins him, he's the one who chooses
16:20At that point, the streets of Ireland will turn into a scene of disparate bodies.
16:24Any part of Ireland has become a target
16:26Animal farms, rural homes
16:28At that time, the Irish public and army would not remain silent.
16:30Bird in a formation known as Flynn Colmes
16:32Volunteers will form groups
16:34They leave the cities and settle in the mountains.
16:36These people have only one goal.
16:38Waiting for the new force as it moves between cities
16:40The Irish were defeated and killed in ambushes.
16:42Do them too
16:43You prefer, my friend, that this guerrilla warfare is widespread in Ireland.
16:46And it continues, but the truth is that the real change that happens in the war
16:49It doesn't come from ambushes and rifles
16:50But through a poet and intellectual
16:52He is Terence McSweeney
16:54This Irish poet and politician fought for the British forces.
16:56I met with him on charges of incitement
16:58On the armed rebels
16:59McSweeney was a playwright whose fame is worldwide.
17:02After he is sentenced, McSweeney will decide
17:04He is also on a hunger strike
17:06The Glasgow government said, "O people!"
17:07And every pulse beats
17:09Don't tell me there's no playing around, we won't go beyond the limits.
17:11Britain completed its decision and completed
17:13McSweeney's hunger strike
17:14So that his case becomes a global issue
17:16It is specifically exploited by the Irish community.
17:19In America, to spread the word and make people aware
17:21The world is in the chair I hear it
17:23British rule of Ireland
17:24Every day, McSweeney's wife stands in front of the prison.
17:26Thousands of supporters are gathering next to her.
17:28They are silent and do nothing except pray.
17:30Dozens of journalists are gathering with them.
17:33So they can follow up on the case.
17:34The McSweeney case became famous all over the world.
17:36Newspapers around the world held their breath.
17:38And what is he following that has broken this man's heart?
17:40Will he prevail, will his demands be met, and will he be released?
17:43England won't let him go like that until he dies.
17:45The answer will come on October 25, 1920
17:47After 74 days of hunger strike
17:50McSweeney is dying
17:51And the scene of his image in the open coffin
17:53The remains of a man who went on a hunger strike
17:56A scene, my dear, that shocked the whole world
17:58Tens of thousands lust after McSweeney's body
18:00The one who became a symbol for the world
18:01What is England doing in Ireland?
18:03The army is reaching the Irish public.
18:05And the Sinnife party through the McSweeney affair
18:07To conclude a very important point
18:08Images and stories are the best ways to compress
18:11On the English government
18:12Then a second phase of counter-propaganda begins.
18:15The stage of publishing spy photos
18:17Every crime committed by British forces
18:18The bodies of the dead are being photographed
18:20Or the tortured, and we explain about the world
18:22Pictures of people who were burned or shot
18:25It captivated the entire world and was featured in newspapers
18:27And the whole world was shocked
18:28How could Britain do this? How could the biggest football club in the world commit such evil?
18:32Action, my dear! The first to be shocked were
18:34The British themselves
18:36When they saw the true face of their governments
18:38Here, my dear Britain, is beginning to realize that this is the end.
18:40Sir Alfred Cobb says
18:42Minister for Irish Affairs in the British Government
18:44There is no solution to this problem.
18:45If we want to reach the middle of the war, we need to recruit 400,000 soldiers.
18:48And that he wanted the entire Irish people
18:50And that, of course, meant an impossible situation.
18:52Under pressure from English public opinion
18:54Those who remain sympathetic to the Irish
18:56On July 15, 1921
18:58By providing the Irish public with the army
19:00The British army is on a truce
19:02So that, my dear, this war can come to an end.
19:04Winston Churchill presents the peace treaty
19:06With Ireland, Britain
19:08It will recognize 26 Irish counties
19:11They will be Ireland
19:12As part of the British Conwele
19:14Australia is like that, dividing loyalties
19:16For the British Crown, but at the same time
19:18It governs itself without British interference.
19:20But the king of Ireland
19:22There are 6 provinces
19:24They will remain under the British crown
19:25The counties that make up the Ulster region
19:28And which will form Northern Ireland
19:30Those who have been following up to this day
19:31Directly to England
19:32The provinces have no connection to me whatsoever.
19:34With the new Ireland, because, my friend
19:36Enjoy the new cherry, and it might be even sadder.
19:39From all the behind-the-scenes things that came before
19:40Sinn Féin and the Irish Republican Army are divided.
19:43For what part? A part that completely rejects
19:45The agreement, and he says in a question about my father, that's it.
19:47Not after hundreds of years in the war against the English
19:49We will swear allegiance to the British Crown
19:51And we remain a country with a history of them.
19:52And after all this struggle, we won't accept the English.
19:55They take a part of the country and destroy it for themselves.
19:56The second group supports the agreement.
19:59But guys, the agreement isn't the best thing.
20:01But at the same time, it is a first step
20:03To achieve our demands
20:04The division is increasing significantly at all leadership levels.
20:06For example, Arthur Griffiths, the founder of the Sinnife party
20:09He supports the agreement.
20:11While the party leader, Emondi Valeria, rejects it
20:13For example, you have Michael Collins
20:15Irish Republican Army leader
20:17He supports the agreement.
20:19While men and senior officials reject it
20:21The shenfen is divided
20:23The Republican Army is splitting
20:25To a slightly lesser extent, but it is divided
20:26Among the 16 commands of the Irish Republican Army
20:29Only five of them I found, the unified one
20:30The majority of the forces rejected it.
20:32All this, my dear, and England is just watching the scene.
20:34And she quietly withdrew, then came back with a sigh and sat watching.
20:36It continues to hand over its military bases
20:38For the new government and its agents, we see
20:40The dispute between the two parties is growing bigger and bigger
20:42On April 14, 1922
20:44A group of 140 is offered
20:46From the wing opposing the agreement
20:48They occupy four major courts.
20:50In Dublin, they are demanding the government's resignation.
20:52And away from Dublin, in the countryside, he continues
20:54IRA men, war is normal
21:02In the House of Commons, he says
21:03Well, if the new government in Ireland is unable to impose order...
21:07So, what is the British government ready to do?
21:09And the regime was re-established
21:10Under British pressure, the Irish government begins
21:12She moves to try to regain control
21:14On the country, and indeed on June 28th
21:161922 Government forces advance
21:18The one that calls itself the National Army
21:20Irish Republican Army
21:22They go towards the four courts
21:24And they fire cannons at former teammates
21:26From the Irish Republican Army, opponents of the Latvian Accords
21:28And here, my dear, begins the verl fatty civil war
21:32For 9 months, the Irish National Army fought with weapons and service from Britain.
21:37Adam's comrades from the Irish Republican Army
21:40They are who they are, just as we said
21:40Opponents of the agreement
21:41And in the favor of the strength of the English army
21:43And because of this, your enemy
21:44He is Qakshli, your old friend
21:46Those who know your secrets appreciate the Irish Republican Army.
21:49It strikes Republican Army strongholds
21:51He attacks and executes opponents.
21:53And in a sad tragic drama
21:55Irish Republican Army soldiers
21:57Opponents of the agreement are proud of their former leader.
22:00and the leader of their current opponents
22:01Michael Collins after 9 months of fighting
22:03The intensity decreases slightly
22:05Especially after the capture of more than 12,000 Irish Republican Army (IRA) fighters.
22:10Whoever decides to back down, his men will do so and things will return to calm.
22:13To give the other side, which supports the agreement, a fairer view
22:15With the end of World War II
22:18The Republic of Ireland is declared an independent republic.
22:21She graduates from the British Commonwealth
22:23We have no connection to the British Crown.
22:24At most, I'd say to her, "Good morning, Hajja."
22:26The most important thing is in Northern Ireland.
22:27Those areas that remained under English sovereignty continued as they were.
22:30Despite the British Crown's permission
22:32By establishing an independent parliament in Ireland
22:34And the beginning of self-rule in Northern Ireland
22:36But the laws limited those who have the right to vote.
22:38But those who have land for sale
22:40Since you've been with us here since the first episode, my dear
22:42Do you remember who used to take the land from the village?
22:44If they were Protestants
22:45O Protestants
22:46Therefore, the Protestants gained control of Northern Ireland.
22:49And on most public jobs
22:51Unemployment was widespread among the Catholics
22:53Things continued steadily.
22:55But stability will be completely destroyed.
22:57With the arrival of the sixties
22:58Why in Northern Ireland
23:00It will be established over time
23:01Its name is Northern Ireland Civil Rights
23:03These people will have a simple demand
23:05One man, one vote
23:06We have nothing to do with the Land Party and the Landowners.
23:08Human beings with the voice of election
23:10And the obstacle of the federal government in Northern Ireland
23:12Among the objections
23:13The signs of violence begin, my dear.
23:15A group is formed that calls itself
23:17Irish Republican Army
23:19In our delusion of the ancient power
23:20The one who liberated Ireland 50 years ago
23:22And a phase known as begins
23:24The Troubles
23:24or peers
23:25Harem was not a traditional harem
23:27But an act of violence
23:29Like the explosion of the burqa
23:29Or successive assassination operations
23:31Which escalated at the beginning of the seventies
23:33In 1972 alone
23:35The Irish Republican Army is killing
23:37No fewer than 100 security personnel
23:39In Northern Ireland
23:45At least 3,500 people were killed
23:48That's a very large number, my dear.
23:49Because you have a country with a population
23:51It doesn't exceed one and a half million.
23:53Although the civil war
23:54It was a low-casualty war
23:55But the countries of the world at that time stipulated
23:57How is it a First World country?
23:59He boasts about rights and freedoms
24:01It is escalating in a highly violent war in this manner.
24:04After 30 years of violence
24:05The Irish Republican Army signs
24:07and the federalist government in Northern Ireland
24:09Our agreement
24:10In 1998
24:11Both sides agree to a peace deal
24:13The agreement known as Good Friday
24:16The collection is good
24:16Which finally ended the violence in Northern Ireland
24:19And when, my dear, we reach the year 2022
24:22In a huge surprise
24:23Shinfin Northern Ireland
24:24He wins the elections and takes a majority of the seats.
24:27Its leader is Achille O'Neill
24:28First Minister position in Northern Ireland
24:31So that they remain waiting for one to be implemented
24:33From the Chinfin election promises
24:43After many years of freshness and pain
24:46Ireland stood by the Palestinian cause
24:48Due to the similarity of the two cases to each other
24:51Ireland today considers Israeli settlements
24:53I am illegal
24:54Because it reminds her of England's settlements on its lands
24:57Ireland is the world's most interested country
25:00Regarding the Palestinian refugee issue
25:02It is also high on the Irish Foreign Ministry's list of priorities
25:05From 1967
25:06Ireland is not only demanding the return of Palestinian refugees, but it is also demanding their return.
25:10This also requires him to be made accustomed to his period of displacement.
25:12Because of the simplicity of the Palestinian diaspora
25:14It is a model similar to the Irish diaspora.
25:16Why are millions of Irish people older?
25:18If they leave their country to emigrate
25:19As a result of famine and ongoing persecution by the English
25:22Even a symbolic discount is a single discount.
25:24By the same to my dear Lord Arthur Belford
25:26The owner of the famous Belford Promise
25:28He is also a historical adversary of the Irish.
25:31He was the one who issued the orders to confront the demonstrations.
25:33Beechtown Lead
25:35And the killing of innocent civilians in it
25:37That's why the Irish call it Bloody Belford
25:39Also from 1980
25:41Ireland is calling for the establishment and recognition of a Palestinian state.
25:44This is because she simply kept denying her own strength.
25:47And recently we saw Ireland announce its recognition of the State of Palestine
25:52And its prime minister says in statements directed at the Palestinians
25:55Their confession is not the end, but the beginning.
25:57That's all, my dear
25:58It's "khina" and not "ya khina".
25:58Let's look at the previous sharp one
25:59Check out the new sharp one
26:00We'll see you'll only look at the sources.
26:01If we're on YouTube, we'll subscribe to the channel.

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