@@realonsi2108 i am not sure completely but it appears to be something like lalala in song. Some nations have lalala, some have hu or aha aha.. but it also can be a name for Chechens. If I do remember good during Caucasians war in 19th century that was the name for Chechens, wich Cossack used and my grandmother who's father was Slovakian , would use term Kozaci for Cossacks and osje or ojsje for Chechens when she would talk about WW2 and soviet soldiers and soldiers in general. My great grandfather fought in ww1 and left Slovakia very young and my grandmother often used very strange words, strange to us, coz she learned them from him, but when I got older and start to research some words she used (coz we always thought she used some twisted version of our language words coz she never went to school) I realised it was her version of learned Slovakian or russian words from her father, who never actually properly learned the language of country where he came.
Greetings to the slavic people from France too ! Strong and inspiring culture ! It's a shame what our country became, may you do not finish like us 🇫🇷 ❤ 🇷🇺🇷🇸
Здравый смысл и осознание того что происходит, как в интеллигенции так и в обществе есть. Не долог тот час, когда Россия вернётся на истинный путь уничтоженный совками(ссср) и евразийцами
@@Juan-qu4ojwhat if I’m related to the Scythians and my ancestors came both from the Ukraine and Rostov-on-Don but we now live in the USA? I’m not sure if I’m Cossack either but I believe I am.
@@Anatolian_grikRussian Russians do not exist, there are Cossacks and there are Russians. I think if you call a Scot an Englishman, then he will not be particularly pleased, just as we Cossacks are not pleased when we are called Russians. Cossacks are one nationality, Russians are another nationality.
J'ai fait une petite traduction en français : Sur la montagne se tenait un cosaque. Il priait Dieu, Il s'inclina pour la liberté et pour son peuple. Refrain Oh toi, oissia[1], n'aie pas peur de moi, Je ne te ferai pas de mal, ne t'inquiète pas. [x2] Il y a un grand bazar, il y a beaucoup de Tchétchènes. Une fille russe arrive, cède-lui le chemin. Refrain Donnez-moi un grand poignard, Donnez-moi un couteau finka[2] ! J'irai dans le Caucase Danser la lizginka. Refrain Ne sommes-nous pas des Cosaques ? Ne sommes-nous pas des Terets[3] ? Nous avons un sabre tranchant Et un cheval au cœur brûlant. [1] D'après Wikipédia, ce terme est utilisé pour désigner les Tchétchènes et les Ingouches. Dans d'autres versions de cette chanson, on le traduit par "Oh toi". [2] Un type de couteau. [3] Les Cosaques de Terek.
Je reprends l'article Wikipédia russe pour l'histoire de la chanson. "Oh toi, oissia" [Oysya ty oysya] est une chanson de danse cosaque sur l'air de la lezginka caucasienne. Elle a été écrite (vraisemblablement) pendant la guerre du Caucase au XIXe siècle. La mélodie de la chanson est un invariant de la Danse de Shamil. La chanson avec le refrain "Oy-sya" a été enregistrée pour la première fois en 1998 par les membres du groupe folklorique "Bratina" dans le village de Staropavlovskaya, district de Kirovsky, territoire de Stavropol et partagée par les cosaques ayant combattu dans le Caucase[2]. Dans une version, le héros du premier couplet de la chanson qui "se tenait sur une montagne" est Shamil, dans une autre - un cosaque sans nom. Le héros prie "pour la liberté, pour le peuple". Le refrain est un appel aux Vainakhs[3] pour qu'ils n'aient pas peur des Cosaques cette fois-ci, car ces derniers sont de bonne humeur : Oh toi, oissia, N'aie pas peur de moi, Je ne te ferai pas de mal, Ne t'inquiète pas. Les Cosaques appelaient les Vainakhs - Tchétchènes et Ingouches - par le mot "oissia" (oysya). Lorsqu'ils dansaient la lezginka, ils poussaient des cris gutturaux "khorsa !", d'où ce surnom[3][4]. La version sérieuse de la chanson reprend les thèmes de la prière cosaque[2]. Le cosaque demande également La vérité pour le peuple. S'il y a la vérité sur terre - Il y aura la liberté. Cette chanson est devenue une sorte d'hymne cosaque choral[2].
@@volkhovcossack merci pour vos deux réponses. C'est très aimable à vous. Et tant que j'y suis, je suis preneur de toutes informations que vous auriez : contes, légendes, faits réels ou imaginaires.. .
Salut @@olivierdelbreil321 , j'ai fait une vidéo sur ma chaîne qui s'appelle "Histoire Russe : Les Cosaques Zaporogues" où on étudie une lettre au Sultan ottoman qui... ne laisse pas indifférent :)
@@jordanbruno6888 how is it shameful? My family has Russian roots. I share Russian blood and that im just happy to be a part of that. I don't understand how my comment, especially when you know nothing about me. I find it even more insulting that you were quick to assume to judge a book by its cover when you don't even have the book to begin with. Early "Proto-Cossack" groups are generally reported to have come into existence within what is now Ukraine in the 13th century as the influence of Cumans grew weaker, although some have ascribed their origins to as early as the mid-8th century. Cossacks are a predominantly Eastern Slavic Orthodox (but originally Turkic) group of people originating from the steppes of Ukraine. They began to settle in the lower reaches of large rivers, such as the Dnipro and Don, after the demise of the Khazar state. So please don't im very proud and full of love for Russia and Ukraine. I never would disrespect where i came in heritage and blood
@@jordanbruno6888 The Ukrainian Cossacks came from a variety of nationalities and social groups. Their ancestors came from Ukrainian, Russian, Polish, and Tatar territories and migrated at great risk to the southern steppes to hunt, fish, gather honey, and make handicraft goods.
@@phesaris8378Cossacks did not come from Ukraine 🇺🇦 lease stop ! I am glad you feel a connection to your culture but that is a flat out lie ! I am kazak and we didn’t come from fucking Ukraine
Jakby nie było wojny ile świat by poznał takich kompozycji operowych. W całej Europie by była promocja a tak to gdzie Rosja to konflikt i mord ?? Rosja przez atak zamknęła swoją muzyczną kulturę oraz imprezy zimowe??
Yes and no in same time. Kozak is a free man, more like an "organisation" than actual ethnicity. They are russians, ukraniens,, can be in any east Slavic nation . But they mostly did live in a Russian territory. They were more like a free military tribe, living by their own rules than actual compact ethnicity. A little bit of everything. In same time they fought for russian emperor's, but in a same time were major pain in the butt for them. Coz emperors wanted to control them, like any politician ever. And they literally were free men living on their own ways, having their own set of rules.. they were russians, Tartars, polish, ukraniens, literal Slavic mix... During bolsevic era, well like many others anywhere else were subjected to reppresion, coz once again every politician ever wants to rule and control everyone and everything.. free men are hard to control...
@@boredutopia Cossacks were a social construction of peoples of different ethnic and religious groups and originated on Ukrainian lands. People here had to convert to Orthodox religion and accept Cossack culture. It's not a secret that Cossacks weren't a nationality but it doesn't mean they don't have culture. And their culture was one that formed modern Ukrainian identity. At the same time modern russian identity wasn't formed on the basis of cossackship. Russian propaganda desceibes russia as a multiethnic country where everyone lives in peace and harmony. While the truth is that russian ethnicity is dominant and other people are just the slaves of Moscow. The same thing with Cosscks. Those who migrated on the East (Don, Terek, Siberian Cosscks) became the mercenaries of a russian Tzar, then Emperor. They weren't free men, they became slaves instead. And also, when you said Cossacks were a "Slavic mix" you also were wrong, because the absolute majority of Cossack army members were Ukrainians who fled from Polish tyranny. At that time Cosacks had a very limited connections with Muscovy. It was just unlikely for a Muscovite to join a Sich. I hope i explained everything with the understandable vocabulary
@@mykytka7133 dude I am Slavic too. I know very well about communistic propaganda among Slavic countries. And I know very well what russians did during and after WW2, but like majority of Slavic nations they suffer from collective amnesia, syndrome of rewriting a history to serve them in generations to come, creating false history and raising bunch of generations on myths. Country in which I was born was no different. We learned one history in school while reality was different, how we were growing up we could start to put pieces of thruth wich slipped thru stories of our grandparents who all suffered from untreated PTSD. And then 1991 came, a strong brave country start to crumble from inside.. and pretty soon we all learn that whole country was a forced melting pot of 3 religions, 6 nations who were forced into one country never resolving issues from past, issues which left as a result of hundreds of years of bloody genocidal history. Same thing is in Russia, from being German allies and splitting Poland, to massive rap%s in former Yugoslavia on their way to and from Berlin who was their allay, over the systematic starvation of ukraniens and relocation of Crimean tartars to genocide of Armenia's and Chechens.. all of that is same sh%t different package from where I come, just the name of country was different, politicians were different and in 1945 bunch of small countries were forced into federation, ruling by oppression for first 20 years and fear so that thruth is forgotten and historical propaganda was served to new born generations for decades. It worked for 45 years and crashed down in genocidal wars in 2 different countries, lasted for 6 years and 30 years later politicians on all sides doing same thing all over again thru education of kids born after 1991. Coz on anyone born before that time it can't work. We survived thru it. I have a status of ethnical cleansing survivor and what is going on in Russia for last 15 years is same thing wich happened in a country I was born and which does not exist anymore.. and I know how it will end and what awaits after.. Btw I never said caussacs have no culture. Every nation, tribe, comunity in history have culture. Cossacks were mostly military orientated when it comes raising boys, their way of life was a free men way of life. Their own set of rules, culture and values and they were more like tribes than actual ethnicity and they could be found in mostly russian territory, coz of Russian empire spreading. They are not 100 years old, they are hundreds of years old when it comes to history. What caussacs were in east Europe, mostly Russia and Ukraine in some other countries you had tribes who lived on a same way but were called differen from border men( graničari) in central Europe to free men in west Europe..and every emperor and politician wanted to control them and use them for their agenda. When it did not work methods of oppression and cleansing were always used. Even the kidnapping and relocation of children... history always repeats over and over again, but human kind is too stupid to learn from it and continuously allows that history is twisted and turned into false myths and served to new generations as a brainwashing....
Cossacks forever ❤
How all Slavic languages are so similar.. dont even know the language and yet I actually do understand whole song...
Сould you help me? I can't find the answer. What does in mean "Oisya"?
@@realonsi2108 i am not sure completely but it appears to be something like lalala in song. Some nations have lalala, some have hu or aha aha.. but it also can be a name for Chechens.
If I do remember good during Caucasians war in 19th century that was the name for Chechens, wich Cossack used and my grandmother who's father was Slovakian , would use term Kozaci for Cossacks and osje or ojsje for Chechens when she would talk about WW2 and soviet soldiers and soldiers in general.
My great grandfather fought in ww1 and left Slovakia very young and my grandmother often used very strange words, strange to us, coz she learned them from him, but when I got older and start to research some words she used (coz we always thought she used some twisted version of our language words coz she never went to school) I realised it was her version of learned Slovakian or russian words from her father, who never actually properly learned the language of country where he came.
@@realonsi2108 Oisya is a nickname for chechen and ingush people.
@@skotnica93 funny joke) But no
@@realonsi2108 when hes saying ojsa ty ojsa ty miena ne boysa
he means you oh you don't be afraid of me
Прекрасна песма!!!
Поздрав из Србије
Поздрав из Казана
i love it
Yes
👍🏼
Love it
What an absolute banger.
Greetings from France 🇫🇷❤🇷🇺
Greetings to the slavic people from France too ! Strong and inspiring culture ! It's a shame what our country became, may you do not finish like us 🇫🇷 ❤ 🇷🇺🇷🇸
Здравый смысл и осознание того что происходит, как в интеллигенции так и в обществе есть. Не долог тот час, когда Россия вернётся на истинный путь уничтоженный совками(ссср) и евразийцами
@@aderz3619 Cossacks are not Slavs
@@Pl.astilin never said they were
@@aderz3619 bien
Viva la Russia ❤
👍
Love this song too...I now find I have Slavic ancestors..a mix of faiths...but not sure if any were Cossacks...maybe❤
Привет из России❤. Многие казаки сегодня сами не уверены в своей принадлежности - это нормально.
Possibly they were if they came from the south but not guaranteed
@@Juan-qu4ojwhat if I’m related to the Scythians and my ancestors came both from the Ukraine and Rostov-on-Don but we now live in the USA? I’m not sure if I’m Cossack either but I believe I am.
Slava Rusi!!! The Donbas shall never be taken.
Take it back from cumminsm
♥️🇷🇸🇷🇺🇬🇷❤
🇧🇦🇺🇦🇽🇰
@@hattorihaso2579🇭🇷🇺🇦🇵🇱
@@aryanpugilist UA - 💩🐷
Forward Cossacks!⚫🔵🔴
⚪🔵🔴
@@realonsi2108🇷🇺
🩵💙❤️🤝🖤💙❤️🤝🤍💙❤️
"Cosacos de Moscú",me encantan
Cossacks are not from moscow
yo tambien
Great song
Based russians
You mean Moskvan or Cossac ?
@@falatchuja1745 russian cossacs
@@falatchuja1745ur are a brainwashed idiot, it’s like us king NeyYork American or Alabama American! Idiot
I can’t keep track of all the ethnicities and nationalities. So I’ll just leave a like because you said based.
@@Anatolian_grikRussian Russians do not exist, there are Cossacks and there are Russians. I think if you call a Scot an Englishman, then he will not be particularly pleased, just as we Cossacks are not pleased when we are called Russians. Cossacks are one nationality, Russians are another nationality.
Слава Руси 🇷🇺
weak useless country. Start behaving better
With my A2 Russian just chugging and signing along ☝️
based
👏👏👏👏😍😍😍😍
❤❤❤❤🙏🌞🍀
Κοζακοι ❤❤❤🇬🇷😊
❤️
Weird blend of Caucasus nathional music and Russian one.
Это песня терских казаков времён кавказских войн...
@@15425rfggdfc Так терские казаки из какой части РИ? На одежду даже их посмотри. Они многое переняли от трюкачей, и в этом нет ничего плохого.
Respect ✊
За Русь!🇺🇦🇷🇺🇧🇾💪
Could I have the lyrics, even in english, And perhaps a little history of the songs. Thanks from France.
J'ai fait une petite traduction en français :
Sur la montagne se tenait un cosaque. Il priait Dieu,
Il s'inclina pour la liberté et pour son peuple.
Refrain
Oh toi, oissia[1], n'aie pas peur de moi,
Je ne te ferai pas de mal, ne t'inquiète pas. [x2]
Il y a un grand bazar, il y a beaucoup de Tchétchènes.
Une fille russe arrive, cède-lui le chemin.
Refrain
Donnez-moi un grand poignard,
Donnez-moi un couteau finka[2] !
J'irai dans le Caucase
Danser la lizginka.
Refrain
Ne sommes-nous pas des Cosaques ?
Ne sommes-nous pas des Terets[3] ?
Nous avons un sabre tranchant
Et un cheval au cœur brûlant.
[1] D'après Wikipédia, ce terme est utilisé pour désigner les Tchétchènes et les Ingouches. Dans d'autres versions de cette chanson, on le traduit par "Oh toi".
[2] Un type de couteau.
[3] Les Cosaques de Terek.
Je reprends l'article Wikipédia russe pour l'histoire de la chanson.
"Oh toi, oissia" [Oysya ty oysya] est une chanson de danse cosaque sur l'air de la lezginka caucasienne. Elle a été écrite (vraisemblablement) pendant la guerre du Caucase au XIXe siècle. La mélodie de la chanson est un invariant de la Danse de Shamil. La chanson avec le refrain "Oy-sya" a été enregistrée pour la première fois en 1998 par les membres du groupe folklorique "Bratina" dans le village de Staropavlovskaya, district de Kirovsky, territoire de Stavropol et partagée par les cosaques ayant combattu dans le Caucase[2].
Dans une version, le héros du premier couplet de la chanson qui "se tenait sur une montagne" est Shamil, dans une autre - un cosaque sans nom. Le héros prie "pour la liberté, pour le peuple". Le refrain est un appel aux Vainakhs[3] pour qu'ils n'aient pas peur des Cosaques cette fois-ci, car ces derniers sont de bonne humeur :
Oh toi, oissia,
N'aie pas peur de moi,
Je ne te ferai pas de mal,
Ne t'inquiète pas.
Les Cosaques appelaient les Vainakhs - Tchétchènes et Ingouches - par le mot "oissia" (oysya). Lorsqu'ils dansaient la lezginka, ils poussaient des cris gutturaux "khorsa !", d'où ce surnom[3][4].
La version sérieuse de la chanson reprend les thèmes de la prière cosaque[2].
Le cosaque demande également
La vérité pour le peuple.
S'il y a la vérité sur terre -
Il y aura la liberté.
Cette chanson est devenue une sorte d'hymne cosaque choral[2].
@@volkhovcossack merci
@@volkhovcossack merci pour vos deux réponses. C'est très aimable à vous. Et tant que j'y suis, je suis preneur de toutes informations que vous auriez : contes, légendes, faits réels ou imaginaires.. .
Salut @@olivierdelbreil321 , j'ai fait une vidéo sur ma chaîne qui s'appelle "Histoire Russe : Les Cosaques Zaporogues" où on étudie une lettre au Sultan ottoman qui... ne laisse pas indifférent :)
nice ai art
SLAVA ROSSII FROM ITALY 🇮🇹🇷🇺
🙏👏🏇💜
Казаки,как думаете,если я чехам одноклассникам включу так они оценят?
врубай) главное чтоб ещё вырубить смог под пляски😂☦️🗡️
Nevers forget them.
1×25 speed
Something awoken in my soul like my ancestors energy is within my soul🇺🇦
For Mother Russia!
Think they might of been Russian Cossacks then, never to late to change sides, правда или нет?
@@jordanbruno6888 how is it shameful? My family has Russian roots. I share Russian blood and that im just happy to be a part of that. I don't understand how my comment, especially when you know nothing about me. I find it even more insulting that you were quick to assume to judge a book by its cover when you don't even have the book to begin with.
Early "Proto-Cossack" groups are generally reported to have come into existence within what is now Ukraine in the 13th century as the influence of Cumans grew weaker, although some have ascribed their origins to as early as the mid-8th century.
Cossacks are a predominantly Eastern Slavic Orthodox (but originally Turkic) group of people originating from the steppes of Ukraine. They began to settle in the lower reaches of large rivers, such as the Dnipro and Don, after the demise of the Khazar state.
So please don't im very proud and full of love for Russia and Ukraine. I never would disrespect where i came in heritage and blood
@@jordanbruno6888 The Ukrainian Cossacks came from a variety of nationalities and social groups. Their ancestors came from Ukrainian, Russian, Polish, and Tatar territories and migrated at great risk to the southern steppes to hunt, fish, gather honey, and make handicraft goods.
@@phesaris8378Cossacks did not come from Ukraine 🇺🇦 lease stop ! I am glad you feel a connection to your culture but that is a flat out lie ! I am kazak and we didn’t come from fucking Ukraine
❤🇦🇺🤝🇷🇺❤
The picture is wrong.
Why?
Why is it wrong?
Perché? Non capisco, si spieghi. Grazie.
Да, это вообще не козак, а богатый поляк какой-то
thanks for uploading, but don't use AI shit next time
Christ is King ✝️👑🙏🗿🔥
Вы больного покажите.
Jakby nie było wojny ile świat by poznał takich kompozycji operowych. W całej Europie by była promocja a tak to gdzie Rosja to konflikt i mord ?? Rosja przez atak zamknęła swoją muzyczną kulturę oraz imprezy zimowe??
No it was sanctioned by the West
Poslušaj "TAM ŠLI DVA BRATA"Там шли два брата=>za Poljake pesma idealna🙏a ja volim 🅿️ravoslavce i ☦🍀
Сам то понял что наблювал?
Живео Путин! Живела Русија! Пољаци дозовите се памети!
А нафиг тебе русские песни слушать, иди лучше слушать музыку твоих американских хозяев, Лях!
Ses russe de moscouviche, les cosaques ne chante pas sa.
Le cosaques chante une musique russo cosaques et cette chanson n'en n'a pas.
Это терские казаки пели во времена кавказских войн...
Абсолютно неверное мнение. Если песню исполняет хор из Москвы, это не значит, что она не казачья.
Уступи дорога.
Не знает падежей
Это обращение
"Уступи, дорога"
"Ойся"
ой блин, во дурак, не знает что такого слова нет! Глупость а не песня. Я передал смысл вашей логики или мне ещё сильнее гиперболизировать?
Finnish and muslims and Ukrainians, too. Sorry
Was?
Was ist dein Problem?
Sorry for what?
Cossacks are not Russians...
Это русские казаки, далбаеб. Не запорожский
Dumbest comment I've seen in weeks....
Yes and no in same time. Kozak is a free man, more like an "organisation" than actual ethnicity. They are russians, ukraniens,, can be in any east Slavic nation . But they mostly did live in a Russian territory. They were more like a free military tribe, living by their own rules than actual compact ethnicity. A little bit of everything. In same time they fought for russian emperor's, but in a same time were major pain in the butt for them. Coz emperors wanted to control them, like any politician ever. And they literally were free men living on their own ways, having their own set of rules.. they were russians, Tartars, polish, ukraniens, literal Slavic mix...
During bolsevic era, well like many others anywhere else were subjected to reppresion, coz once again every politician ever wants to rule and control everyone and everything.. free men are hard to control...
@@boredutopia Cossacks were a social construction of peoples of different ethnic and religious groups and originated on Ukrainian lands. People here had to convert to Orthodox religion and accept Cossack culture. It's not a secret that Cossacks weren't a nationality but it doesn't mean they don't have culture. And their culture was one that formed modern Ukrainian identity. At the same time modern russian identity wasn't formed on the basis of cossackship. Russian propaganda desceibes russia as a multiethnic country where everyone lives in peace and harmony. While the truth is that russian ethnicity is dominant and other people are just the slaves of Moscow. The same thing with Cosscks. Those who migrated on the East (Don, Terek, Siberian Cosscks) became the mercenaries of a russian Tzar, then Emperor. They weren't free men, they became slaves instead.
And also, when you said Cossacks were a "Slavic mix" you also were wrong, because the absolute majority of Cossack army members were Ukrainians who fled from Polish tyranny. At that time Cosacks had a very limited connections with Muscovy. It was just unlikely for a Muscovite to join a Sich. I hope i explained everything with the understandable vocabulary
@@mykytka7133 dude I am Slavic too. I know very well about communistic propaganda among Slavic countries. And I know very well what russians did during and after WW2, but like majority of Slavic nations they suffer from collective amnesia, syndrome of rewriting a history to serve them in generations to come, creating false history and raising bunch of generations on myths. Country in which I was born was no different.
We learned one history in school while reality was different, how we were growing up we could start to put pieces of thruth wich slipped thru stories of our grandparents who all suffered from untreated PTSD. And then 1991 came, a strong brave country start to crumble from inside.. and pretty soon we all learn that whole country was a forced melting pot of 3 religions, 6 nations who were forced into one country never resolving issues from past, issues which left as a result of hundreds of years of bloody genocidal history.
Same thing is in Russia, from being German allies and splitting Poland, to massive rap%s in former Yugoslavia on their way to and from Berlin who was their allay, over the systematic starvation of ukraniens and relocation of Crimean tartars to genocide of Armenia's and Chechens.. all of that is same sh%t different package from where I come, just the name of country was different, politicians were different and in 1945 bunch of small countries were forced into federation, ruling by oppression for first 20 years and fear so that thruth is forgotten and historical propaganda was served to new born generations for decades. It worked for 45 years and crashed down in genocidal wars in 2 different countries, lasted for 6 years and 30 years later politicians on all sides doing same thing all over again thru education of kids born after 1991. Coz on anyone born before that time it can't work. We survived thru it. I have a status of ethnical cleansing survivor and what is going on in Russia for last 15 years is same thing wich happened in a country I was born and which does not exist anymore.. and I know how it will end and what awaits after..
Btw I never said caussacs have no culture. Every nation, tribe, comunity in history have culture. Cossacks were mostly military orientated when it comes raising boys, their way of life was a free men way of life. Their own set of rules, culture and values and they were more like tribes than actual ethnicity and they could be found in mostly russian territory, coz of Russian empire spreading. They are not 100 years old, they are hundreds of years old when it comes to history. What caussacs were in east Europe, mostly Russia and Ukraine in some other countries you had tribes who lived on a same way but were called differen from border men( graničari) in central Europe to free men in west Europe..and every emperor and politician wanted to control them and use them for their agenda. When it did not work methods of oppression and cleansing were always used. Even the kidnapping and relocation of children... history always repeats over and over again, but human kind is too stupid to learn from it and continuously allows that history is twisted and turned into false myths and served to new generations as a brainwashing....
Putin, why you let Finland suffer your selfishnesh
And lead you to Ukraina? We will absolutely destroy Russia.
Por que Fintlandia sufre el egoísmo de Rusia.?
@@mariadoloresmartinezmartin7866 ALL the Finnish history was created by the Russians. And after all that they left nothing but HATE.
You haven't started to suffer yet. You have everything ahead. We will explain to you why there are holes in the cheese.
Финляндия пусть сидит тихо, если не хочет по настоящему узнать страдания. Не буди лихо, пока оно тихо...
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похрюкай
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Pozdrav braco iz Republike Srpske
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