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00:00:00
[music]
00:00:20
[music]
00:00:40
ceremonial passage Angarsk land
00:00:47
well, in short Toguchin I can’t comfortably
00:00:53
but it doesn’t teach romantically with the
00:00:58
skin of a deer here and at the same time it’s still
00:01:04
fabulously beautiful don’t guess she’s
00:01:08
this one by Reishi snow blue sky and
00:01:13
very cheerful a
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deer that has its own instructions about
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where to go
00:01:21
[music]
00:01:28
generally crosses the
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far north of Norway
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[music]
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the origin of the name Norway is not
00:01:48
entirely clear, although most often learned
00:01:51
philologists refer to the ancient
00:01:53
Anglo-Saxon words norvig, which
00:01:57
means the way to the north
00:01:59
among the Scandinavian countries Norway
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is the northernmost and it would be strange if
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we ignored this fact by
00:02:07
going to the far north of Norway, I
00:02:10
believed that it was there, among the snow and
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ice, that I met real 100%
00:02:15
Norwegians and after talking with them I could
00:02:18
answer the question of what is
00:02:21
Norwegian, but I met not Norwegians at all
00:02:24
at least they themselves are
00:02:27
poverty
00:02:32
[music] let's
00:02:39
start cooking dinner this is one of the things
00:02:42
we were taught
00:02:44
when guests come to you feed them to
00:02:46
their fill
00:02:47
this is the most important thing in our sham culture
00:02:51
yes we think we are sure we think and guests
00:02:55
over forget it every time you are
00:02:57
invited for a wedding or somewhere else and
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the only thing we are talking about is if there is
00:03:02
enough food for everyone it is very shameful if there is
00:03:05
not enough food
00:03:06
if there is not enough food before
00:03:11
[music]
00:03:17
but they themselves live in Russia and Finland
00:03:22
distillations and that’s where we are in
00:03:25
Norway and what amazes me here is the
00:03:30
preservation of their
00:03:32
purely Sami and at the same time
00:03:37
absolutely modern play in
00:03:40
English and they use modern
00:03:43
technology
00:03:47
[music]
00:03:54
and hands, you don’t wear such clothes
00:03:56
every day, no I don’t wear them every day
00:03:59
only and occasionally these are ancient clothes
00:04:02
she sews all this herself, but could a Norwegian
00:04:05
say just by looking at the bass that you
00:04:07
yourself are Norwegians because from my
00:04:11
point of view you are indistinguishable from me
00:04:14
to your wife because she is much more beautiful
00:04:17
and yes she is more beautiful than the Norwegians that’s right
00:04:21
your wife is very pretty and your daughter is
00:04:25
beautiful and my dog ​​too
00:04:28
[music]
00:04:35
in the past, Norway tried to
00:04:38
assimilate us, well, they turned
00:04:42
us into Norwegians,
00:04:43
when all this was over, the
00:04:47
Omsk language began to be revived again, the culture itself,
00:04:50
many people simply do not know that
00:04:53
they belong to themselves or know but hides
00:04:56
one's origins, it used to be believed that
00:04:59
being oneself is very shameful,
00:05:00
the truth is, yes, in my opinion, the situation is changing,
00:05:05
many young people, having learned about their roots,
00:05:08
try, on the contrary, to emphasize their
00:05:13
origins and culture from Omsk, and sometimes
00:05:18
there are not just conflicts,
00:05:21
but disagreements with the older generation
00:05:23
because parents sometimes say
00:05:25
why do you want to put on your claws, we
00:05:28
hid it for so long, please don’t, and the
00:05:31
young people answer them, Sami culture is
00:05:33
very important, we want to return it,
00:05:37
trying to achieve complete assimilation, the
00:05:39
Norwegian authorities themselves at one time
00:05:42
banned not only their language, but also everything that they
00:05:46
themselves did in particular
00:05:48
deuces I would call her folk singing, but
00:06:01
when I said that so that the answer would be heard, that’s
00:06:03
what me and Caetani singing you can’t
00:06:08
just take and sing this yurik must
00:06:11
come from your heart you Omsk we
00:06:13
say that we cream someone for her this
00:06:16
means that it belongs to her
00:06:20
perhaps a person or perhaps a deer
00:06:24
without a deer the most that
00:06:26
[music]
00:06:43
you said that there are different ways
00:06:46
to distinguish a good deer from a bad one yes I
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was talking about males if a deer has the same
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antlered points the same one does not sag too much
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and if I like the color of
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the deer then the way it moves
00:07:00
I him I leave it to the tribe for reproduction
00:07:05
if the male deer is a bad guy I
00:07:08
probably won’t want him to stroke
00:07:11
his own kind you castrate him yes I
00:07:13
castrate him then I do it the old fashioned way
00:07:18
it’s like and like this with teeth maybe mine
00:07:22
yes we can also use the same
00:07:24
wait you bite off his testicles,
00:07:27
finish the plate, then take it with your hand and
00:07:32
make a testicle with them like this, they are similar,
00:07:35
they are similar inside like sugar, but it must
00:07:38
be very painful for you, yes, but that’s what they
00:07:41
taught me from the deer, and I didn’t ask how it felt for
00:07:44
them, I’m happy that I’m not a male deer
00:07:55
[music]
00:07:57
finally, let's go, here's boiled
00:08:00
venison meat, yes, but smoked lenin,
00:08:04
I would like you to try everything,
00:08:08
of course, but if you often don't
00:08:10
eat because of laziness, tip of the tongue tip of the tongue to
00:08:15
tip of the tongue because if you eat it you
00:08:18
will become a person who lies, really
00:08:22
[music]
00:08:28
this is also a shade of taste I
00:08:33
really like
00:08:37
[music]
00:08:46
in each of the Scandinavian countries there is a
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keyword why and an expression
00:08:52
that explains a lot about this
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people, here is Norway, this word is the film flew, I
00:09:01
translate this as living in the free air,
00:09:06
this is the desire to live where in in general,
00:09:10
life is not really convenient, but
00:09:13
look around, this is an extremely film, there is
00:09:16
a hall and here there are polar nights when there is no light
00:09:20
at all for two months here there is a polar day
00:09:24
when the sun does not go to sleep
00:09:26
impossible fish why live here they
00:09:30
like it
00:09:34
[music]
00:09:37
but we love it because there are such open
00:09:40
spaces here and you told me that
00:09:44
it’s split up for you when it’s winter when there’s no sun
00:09:47
Merkel’s blue period and you don’t have
00:09:51
depression no I think it’s wrong
00:09:54
to call this time a dark period for
00:09:56
me this is the most beautiful time it’s the most
00:09:59
beautiful color of the whole year you take
00:10:02
you climb a mountain and the sky is turquoise
00:10:07
pink and the northern lights overhead
00:10:11
it’s so beautiful and you’re sitting in the air of the
00:10:14
dead merit no no at this time we
00:10:16
dress warmly you know here many
00:10:20
Norwegians go to the sea and swim
00:10:23
swim but oh well the water is 6 degrees they
00:10:27
just crazy
00:10:28
[music]
00:10:32
one thing you can be sure of Norwegians
00:10:35
never go in the same direction or
00:10:37
when to me when each of us comes from
00:10:39
some small fjord and therefore
00:10:41
each of us has our own opinion that is not the same as our
00:10:43
neighbor from another fjord
00:10:48
[music ]
00:10:51
I want to show you one interesting thing,
00:10:56
well, I’m driving a Volvo car, it’s the latest
00:11:01
model, it’s very good gas to choose
00:11:06
the road and it has a lot of modern, so I
00:11:11
call it bells and whistles, but for me this is
00:11:14
what
00:11:15
I really love music and and I love
00:11:18
listening to music in the car so the car in the lion is
00:11:22
absolutely phenomenal and the audio system
00:11:26
means I won’t be unfounded,
00:11:29
my phone is in Tula, now I’ll find a
00:11:32
recording here and it will go through the
00:11:37
audio system of
00:11:38
this Volvo car and you listen to
00:11:41
what that sound is, asya I’ll find it, well,
00:11:46
listen
00:11:47
[music]
00:12:07
but for
00:12:10
you less this acoustic mode
00:12:14
is called a concert hall of God's year
00:12:17
when you turn it on, the music sounds
00:12:21
as if you are in the famous
00:12:23
concert hall geode cleaning this
00:12:26
incredible feeling
00:12:28
[music]
00:12:31
you can listen to it and you
00:12:35
have to be driving for hours careful but of course it's a
00:12:39
pleasure
00:12:41
incredibly incredible
00:12:45
[music]
00:13:06
to know I'm glad that I can show you this
00:13:08
part of Norway this fjord is
00:13:11
one of the most beautiful places in Norway yes it's
00:13:14
very beautiful if you're planning to buy a house
00:13:18
over there at the other end
00:13:20
there are a lot of small companies and you can buy
00:13:24
pretty cheap really Well, of course you
00:13:28
will need something that in our time there is almost
00:13:30
no peace of mind,
00:13:34
yes, yes, many of these farms
00:13:37
are located so far away that
00:13:40
you can’t get to them by car, living here is not easy
00:13:43
[music]
00:13:56
when we are crap in the Norwegian character, it’s
00:13:59
hard to put into words what
00:14:01
this is characteristic, I am absolutely convinced
00:14:04
that this is about
00:14:06
fitting yourself into nature, resisting
00:14:10
nature and then merging with it, loving and caring
00:14:13
for it, eating from it,
00:14:15
I think that this shapes a person and
00:14:19
here in Norway
00:14:21
we are looking for exactly what the Norwegians are like and
00:14:25
why they became what they are,
00:14:29
businessmen, today I was sitting in a street
00:14:32
cafe and there was a little girl there and she
00:14:35
asked her mother, do
00:14:36
you know this uncle, they just
00:14:39
talked to who you are and my mother said no, I don’t
00:14:41
know this uncle, this is an unfamiliar uncle,
00:14:43
he just had dog approach is like this
00:14:45
if in front of you there is
00:14:46
a stranger you need to be a little
00:14:48
distrustful the approach is formed from
00:14:51
an early age but if the stranger has both
00:14:53
then it’s probably like I say the frame is
00:14:55
what gives you a reason to start
00:14:57
communicating it’s very interesting when preparing for the
00:15:01
trip I came across the book quite by accident
00:15:03
Canadian
00:15:05
Zhmudin Agura on the social guide
00:15:07
to Norway on the cover of person 4 would run into a
00:15:10
joyfully
00:15:12
initial angry one, they are
00:15:15
no different from each other, and he’s also drunk and has a
00:15:18
wide smile on his face, well,
00:15:21
I thought, I
00:15:23
definitely need to meet the author of this book, and
00:15:26
we did
00:15:27
[music]
00:15:29
well you tell me what brought you to
00:15:32
Norway,
00:15:33
I was awarded a scholarship from the Norwegian
00:15:35
government to study in graduate school
00:15:37
in engineering and I moved
00:15:40
to the city of Trondheim in the central part of
00:15:42
Norway, but integration turned out to be a little more difficult
00:15:44
than I expected when leaving Canada and much more
00:15:47
difficult than in the countries where I lived
00:15:49
before, this is what a Canadian says, they assured that
00:15:52
he moved from a northern country to a northern one,
00:15:55
but he is integrating with difficulty, like the wife of a
00:15:58
Brazilian oil worker, good offices, and
00:16:01
it’s not about the climate, it’s about the Norwegians,
00:16:03
they are completely different, so we
00:16:11
moved from Brazil
00:16:12
about a year ago and brought with us a lot of
00:16:15
things. dishes for so many people,
00:16:18
these chairs and a table and a table so it
00:16:24
turned out to be a Norwegian house with a Brazilian
00:16:28
accent, tell me how and according to the correct ones in
00:16:31
Norway, well, let’s say it’s difficult, first of
00:16:34
all, because of the weather, I would understand you perfectly well,
00:16:36
and because of the language, too, of course,
00:16:39
of course, and from -for the culture, yes, we Brazilians are
00:16:44
more tactile, well, yes, yes, in
00:16:48
Norway you need to keep a distance of at
00:16:51
least one meter from the distance when I
00:16:55
went to work in Brazil, it turned out that I
00:16:58
hug everyone there, of course, even men, of
00:17:01
course, at first it confused me,
00:17:03
but what can I do?
00:17:05
I don’t understand something about you, but after a
00:17:08
while you realize that there’s nothing wrong with such gestures
00:17:11
nothing bad, you know,
00:17:14
it’s even nice
00:17:18
[music]
00:17:19
here’s an example of how you and I in
00:17:21
most countries of the world find friends,
00:17:23
strike up a conversation, say, in line at a
00:17:26
coffee shop I think you’re a nice person
00:17:28
and all that, then we decide to sit at the
00:17:31
same table,
00:17:32
start an intelligent conversation and maybe over
00:17:34
time we’ll decide to do something together
00:17:36
in Norway, this doesn’t happen at all, what do
00:17:39
we do in Norway, we sign up for a
00:17:41
club for some courses in group and
00:17:43
then we communicate within the framework of what I
00:17:45
call joint activity
00:17:48
and this continues for several months
00:17:50
before we leave the framework and move on
00:17:53
to freer communication.
00:18:01
Norwegians love to discuss household things,
00:18:04
places where they relax, food,
00:18:08
where are you from, what do they eat there and very they don’t
00:18:11
like to discuss problems and difficulties in
00:18:13
the family or with health, as well as
00:18:16
money issues, they prefer to hide and
00:18:19
never speak out, the
00:18:21
Norwegian has different social circles and
00:18:25
these are around and are usually tied to some kind of
00:18:28
activity,
00:18:29
there is a football club, there is a group of those with
00:18:32
whom you are I was a volunteer for example in the Red
00:18:34
Cross,
00:18:35
parents of children with whom your
00:18:37
children communicate, houses in the mountains are also a special circle of
00:18:40
friends and these circles do not intersect, and
00:18:43
so if you are friends with someone as part of
00:18:45
some activity, it
00:18:47
will be difficult for you to invite this
00:18:49
person to informal receptions. for
00:18:52
dinner with someone from another circle and
00:18:55
if being a foreigner you don’t
00:18:57
understand this, it will be very difficult for you to really get to know
00:18:59
Norwegians you have a
00:19:02
friend’s lawsuit here, well, women from
00:19:05
your environment in English to communicate yes
00:19:09
yes I have two of my best friends from
00:19:12
Brazil hint got it all I'll go thank you
00:19:16
100% Norwegian you
00:19:18
will never become
00:19:19
100% Norwegian never
00:19:21
of course no
00:19:28
we probably heard that Norwegians love
00:19:31
solitude and maybe it looks like it's all
00:19:34
chatter prove that they love
00:19:37
solitude here I am showing you
00:19:38
evidence you see this this is where
00:19:41
skills come andah parents with
00:19:46
children
00:19:47
pass here here inside the door is
00:19:51
locked now he and kendo I do
00:19:53
n’t have children with me so they don’t give me a key, but
00:19:56
if you get there there are probably wooden
00:19:59
benches of
00:20:00
some kind on which they lie
00:20:04
sleeping and besides there is a stunning
00:20:06
perfect view of the city ​​on the bay on dai
00:20:10
Norwegian and here they spend
00:20:13
time silently enjoying the solitude
00:20:18
create
00:20:21
in general I'm clearly not Norwegian I went
00:20:27
[music]
00:20:31
for example I love walking on my kayak
00:20:34
alone on the ocean you know the feeling of
00:20:38
loneliness and isolation I love this
00:20:40
feeling
00:20:41
probably the same like my grandfather and people
00:20:44
like Nansen amants
00:20:46
and also modern Norwegians follow and
00:20:49
for this I think you need to be
00:20:52
really stubborn straight ahead to
00:20:57
achieve your goal and so this is another
00:20:59
feature of the Norwegians - stubbornness probably yes
00:21:03
and you also know in our country quite a painter
00:21:08
so we like to see how the
00:21:10
big world lives travel Norwegian
00:21:12
travelers I grew up on the history of
00:21:15
kontiki my grandfather carried out expeditions to
00:21:17
kontiki and all the other expeditions
00:21:21
were not 13 years old when I heard the tour
00:21:24
hier dali and kontiki
00:21:26
and he immediately became one of of my heroes, I
00:21:29
dreamed that someday I would meet
00:21:32
him and sail into unknown distances did
00:21:34
not happen, but today the journey to
00:21:38
Kon-Tiki excites me no less
00:21:41
than then 70 years ago, this is the first
00:21:47
Kon-Tiki 1 to
00:21:52
one of the members of the
00:21:54
knot team Harlan founded this museum in
00:21:57
1952 I've been working here since I
00:22:00
was 13
00:22:02
I recently restored the kontiki I
00:22:04
had to take the whole fruit apart and
00:22:07
put it back together because you
00:22:09
know it's suspended from the ceiling
00:22:11
as a result some things fell into disrepair
00:22:15
but In 2006, I repeated the continue expedition,
00:22:21
I was responsible for all the underwater filming
00:22:25
[music] it
00:22:31
was scary there
00:22:34
[music]
00:22:36
no, no, no, no, no, because you know,
00:22:39
when you are in the open ocean, you can
00:22:41
see how the weather is changing and understand
00:22:43
that a storm is coming,
00:22:45
then it’s already there and you’re already ready for it, you
00:22:47
know, in Norway we’ve had a lot of
00:22:49
research and many successful expeditions,
00:22:52
I think the key to success is that in the beginning
00:22:54
everything is meticulously planned
00:22:56
[music]
00:23:09
it may seem that everything here is too
00:23:12
pragmatic, that the attitude may be
00:23:14
more pragmatic than emotional
00:23:16
later two years after I moved to
00:23:19
Norway, my mother came to
00:23:20
visit me, it was mid-July, it was raining, it was
00:23:23
only 12 degrees, she looked at
00:23:25
everything and asked why you live here,
00:23:28
then we went for a walk and she saw
00:23:30
girls passing by, turned to
00:23:32
me and said and now I understand everything, I
00:23:34
haven’t seen so many beautiful women in my life
00:23:36
and they are all blond and they are all blondes,
00:23:38
I kind of love blondes and who doesn’t
00:23:41
love them, yes, yes, I met us, and there are
00:23:45
many men here who are married to
00:23:48
foreigners, for example, Russian wives,
00:23:53
Brazilian Sean and that's why we fall
00:23:59
under their charm,
00:24:01
they are open, cheerful lungs, it
00:24:05
often happens that we are disappointed
00:24:10
in Norwegian strong, heroic women,
00:24:14
they are not feminine enough, men
00:24:18
prefer women to be
00:24:20
women
00:24:21
and men to be men
00:24:25
[music]
00:24:28
and you tell us I participated in a very famous
00:24:30
talk show in Norway talked about the
00:24:33
Norwegian chronology dating to Norwegians
00:24:36
to Norwegians talk shows on prime time
00:24:38
in many countries of the world it is more
00:24:41
romantic usually at the first stage
00:24:43
you say hi to the girl then
00:24:44
you ask her out on a second
00:24:46
date then to dinner and then maybe you
00:24:49
will end up in bed with her in Norway for
00:24:51
the first time you meet at a bar then in
00:24:53
fast forward you are in bed
00:24:55
after that you can ask her out
00:24:57
then back to bed then
00:24:59
you can say hi if you bump into someone
00:25:01
not in the hallway and then a second date and
00:25:03
only then you invite her to dinner really that’s how it’s
00:25:05
accepted, it’s
00:25:06
egalitarianism for both men and women they themselves
00:25:09
decide how to dispose of their body
00:25:12
there are very important words that
00:25:16
unfortunately set people’s teeth on edge such a word
00:25:19
is, for example, equality and all its
00:25:21
derivatives
00:25:22
too often politicians of all
00:25:26
stripes proclaim equality and equal rights and
00:25:29
promise to provide them to
00:25:31
all those in need, but more often this is just
00:25:34
chatter,
00:25:35
this is how things are almost always in all countries
00:25:37
but not in Norway
00:25:40
in many famous cities the
00:25:44
opera publication at risk is especially famous opera
00:25:47
Bolshoi Theater metropolitan New York
00:25:51
well, this boss opera is completely
00:25:56
special not only buildings but it is a symbol it is
00:26:00
like these it will seem strange a symbol
00:26:05
equality egalitarian with it
00:26:10
emphasizing that everything all
00:26:13
Norwegians are equal to the roof of the opera, it’s still
00:26:18
like the pinnacle of something special, and opera
00:26:21
in general, not everyone goes to it or tarna,
00:26:24
and not everyone can, but here it’s poorly
00:26:28
done so that on the one hand it
00:26:29
resembles a guru because on the version
00:26:33
they love to go to mountains and resembles something
00:26:37
absolutely modern, very precisely
00:26:39
made, very well calculated
00:26:42
and most importantly accessible, look how many
00:26:45
people are walking,
00:26:46
maybe the most important thing that
00:26:49
Norway is is this feeling, we are all equal,
00:26:52
we are all equal and don’t try to prove
00:26:57
that you are better than others like
00:27:00
this
00:27:02
[music]
00:27:08
I really like it in Norway until
00:27:12
maybe some of the things I say
00:27:14
smack of criticism
00:27:16
but remember Norway is the best 5 other countries
00:27:19
where I lived before in Norway you
00:27:21
feel happy with life here everything
00:27:23
is nice, everything is well organized the people are calm and
00:27:26
polite low crime rate and
00:27:29
you have opportunities for prosperity,
00:27:31
while listening to the drills, I involuntarily remembered the
00:27:35
American proverb, the more you melt,
00:27:38
the more painful it is to fall. On July 22, 2011,
00:27:43
the myth of general Norwegian prosperity
00:27:46
was blown up and shot in the literal
00:27:49
sense of the word. On
00:27:57
July 22, 2011, at approximately this place, a
00:28:02
Volkswagen Crafter car exploded
00:28:06
filled with explosives, it was the work of
00:28:08
Anders Breivik died here, eight
00:28:11
people were injured, about 120 were wounded, and while
00:28:15
all this was happening here, Breivik
00:28:17
headed to the island where the
00:28:19
activists of the youth wing of the Norwegian
00:28:22
Workers' Party were there, he shot another 69
00:28:26
people, a
00:28:27
total of 77 killed for Norway, it was an
00:28:32
absolute shock, people asked themselves the question of
00:28:35
how this could have happened We are Norwegians, one of
00:28:40
us did this, the
00:28:51
king cried, the prime minister cried for
00:28:55
Norway, it was a great shock
00:28:57
because nothing bad ever happens to us,
00:29:00
bad things happen to
00:29:02
others, not to us,
00:29:08
I actually lived on our street, who is
00:29:11
Anders Breivik
00:29:12
and him wrote me letters from prison after the
00:29:16
book was published,
00:29:17
yes, it’s understandable and included in the list of the 10
00:29:21
best books of the year according to the New York
00:29:23
Times. Moral monsters, scum killers are
00:29:27
usually classified as marginalized, but since they are
00:29:30
marginalized,
00:29:31
then there is no need to attach much importance to their
00:29:34
actions, however, I named sharp cheese 100
00:29:37
his book and Brady Key is one of us,
00:29:41
thereby emphasizing that Breivik is quite a
00:29:43
Norwegian jumper,
00:29:50
this was an attempt to find out what kind of
00:29:53
person he was and how this became possible he
00:29:56
was one of us decided to attack us on
00:29:59
Norway on the political system on our
00:30:02
democracy I had to look him up
00:30:05
the past to find out why this
00:30:07
man found himself outside of our society, I
00:30:11
began to delve into his childhood, his mother
00:30:14
was a contradictory nature,
00:30:17
that is, in one second she hugs him,
00:30:21
they slept in an embrace when he was
00:30:24
little, and the very next second she
00:30:28
tells him I hate you, it would be better if you
00:30:31
died. if you had never been born and
00:30:33
as one girl said,
00:30:35
you know, he always tried to be cool but
00:30:38
it was not cool at all, then he is a tiger
00:30:42
who is a hip-hopper,
00:30:43
then he is something like a neo-Nazi and then a
00:30:46
businessman, then suddenly he is with
00:30:48
Muslim guys because they the
00:30:49
coolest in his area
00:30:51
but they completely reject him and he starts
00:30:54
playing video games, he plays warlike games and
00:30:59
games non-stop 18 hours a day and
00:31:03
he has the idea of
00:31:05
becoming someone through the power of destruction, he
00:31:09
will write in his manifesto this is what he
00:31:13
said in court that he was figuring out how many people he
00:31:16
needed kill to become famous and of course
00:31:20
he blames society, he argues for his
00:31:23
action, I supposedly had to do
00:31:25
this so that Norway would wake up from hibernation
00:31:28
because it is obvious that the
00:31:31
Islamization of Europe is happening,
00:31:32
and of course someone will say that he did
00:31:35
it in response to the
00:31:36
current situation, Norway not only
00:31:40
accepted there are far fewer refugees than the
00:31:42
spices of Denmark,
00:31:43
it annually expels about
00:31:46
one and a half thousand refuseniks from the country, for which neighbors
00:31:50
sometimes call Norwegians adherents of the
00:31:52
Ku Klux Klan colleagues, or many people
00:31:56
talk about this, you can read on
00:31:59
Facebook there are a lot of immigrants, they have
00:32:02
good cars and everything else for They are
00:32:04
all for free,
00:32:06
we have to work all our lives to
00:32:08
get the same thing and they just get everything
00:32:12
[music]
00:32:17
we also see that all these new arrivals,
00:32:20
a lot of people from different countries who came
00:32:23
here, they consider us very naive
00:32:26
because we don’t lock the doors when leaving
00:32:28
the house and our gardens are not fenced,
00:32:30
you can easily go to these houses in the mountains,
00:32:34
some of the houses had to be closed because
00:32:36
they are too close to the chassis,
00:32:38
migrants come from there, they take everything out of there; the main
00:32:41
enemy for Breivik was not the workers’
00:32:44
party, which he attacked, but the Muslims, but he did
00:32:48
not attack the Muslims, he explains his
00:32:51
position so if you have a leak in the bathroom
00:32:54
you must first fix the leak and
00:32:57
then bail out the water, first you need to
00:33:00
fix the leak by hitting the workers'
00:33:02
party and then scoop it out and pour out the
00:33:05
Muslims, he believed that if he
00:33:09
attacked the mosque it would be
00:33:11
counterproductive because people would
00:33:13
probably sympathize If only Muslims
00:33:16
understood and they would have received even more
00:33:18
rights, the brevi cam ship lasted from
00:33:22
April 16 to June 22, 2012 and was
00:33:26
broadcast live in front of
00:33:29
television screens, the whole country gathered, the whole country would
00:33:31
come, he was found guilty of
00:33:35
committing two terrorist attacks and was
00:33:37
sentenced to capital punishment. a
00:33:40
year of imprisonment in
00:33:44
other countries in Russia, for example, people would
00:33:47
say, the son of a [ __ ], why
00:33:50
after everything he did he is being treated
00:33:52
like this, many people would say
00:33:55
just get rid of him,
00:33:57
but we don’t have the death penalty even for
00:33:59
such an exceptional case, but
00:34:01
this is would mean that he, in some sense,
00:34:03
won because even if he were
00:34:06
deprived of his life, he would have won, it would have turned out
00:34:08
that he changed society, hardened
00:34:11
society and even the support group, that is, the
00:34:14
mothers and fathers of
00:34:16
these children, before these children, even they
00:34:19
say we want that with he was treated
00:34:21
like any other prisoner, no better
00:34:24
or worse. When I asked Greg to interview me, I
00:34:28
received a categorical refusal.
00:34:30
Then I asked for permission to film the
00:34:32
prison in which he is located and again
00:34:35
received a refusal.
00:34:36
I was told that he was being moved from
00:34:39
prison to prison
00:34:40
so that he could not get close to the staff
00:34:42
and carry out victories; his place of detention is
00:34:46
known to only a few; however,
00:34:50
after the verdict was announced, he was
00:34:53
placed here in the Hilo prison where
00:34:55
we were allowed to film;
00:34:59
photographs of a
00:35:00
cell
00:35:01
specially built for him were published on the prison website; 3-8
00:35:05
meter rooms and instead of the usual 1
00:35:07
this was done to compensate for the
00:35:09
ban on visiting the brevi cam library
00:35:13
and the gym.
00:35:16
These are living quarters for 13 prisoners in the
00:35:20
morning and until three o’clock they work and at
00:35:24
3:00 they come here for lunch or dinner,
00:35:27
whatever you want to call it, then they can
00:35:31
visit
00:35:32
the sports ground to do laundry watch
00:35:36
TV play cards they can
00:35:39
study in their cells in the
00:35:42
cells well, this is a typical, that is, a
00:35:47
standard cell a person has a TV
00:35:52
washbasin bed chair you have a good
00:35:58
window there is a lot of light by the way this is an old
00:36:04
building so in the cells there is only a
00:36:06
washbasin in the new buildings in the cells and the
00:36:09
shower and I'm the toilet
00:36:16
this is an der down here in the case it's turned on
00:36:20
they can lock their cells when
00:36:23
when to drink when it comes out and but of course the
00:36:29
prison officers can
00:36:31
unlock these doors I once gave an
00:36:39
interview to an American reporter, he
00:36:42
came here and he asked
00:36:43
what you control rest home for
00:36:46
criminals bots he was the one who was
00:36:49
shocked and then I said listen
00:36:52
let's see what the
00:36:54
recidivism rate is if you really want to
00:36:56
understand what we are doing here and how many
00:36:59
people are changing as a result of this
00:37:02
maybe this will push you to a new
00:37:05
opinion
00:37:09
[music]
00:37:12
and we We often talk about who you want to see as
00:37:16
your new neighbor: will it be a person
00:37:19
who spent many years locked up in
00:37:22
a cell to which they threw the key
00:37:24
away and then released him and
00:37:26
allowed him to live next to you, or would you
00:37:29
prefer a neighbor
00:37:31
who was taught and prepared to be a
00:37:33
law-abiding citizen and that means
00:37:36
that while a person is serving a sentence, his life
00:37:38
should be as similar as possible to life
00:37:41
outside prison, and many who did not receive a
00:37:47
normal education before they
00:37:49
got there
00:37:50
leave here with a diploma, most
00:37:53
students did not graduate from high school and
00:37:56
some elementary school,
00:37:58
we even have a few people
00:38:02
who study in university on the
00:38:06
Internet in prison as such there is no
00:38:09
access to the Internet
00:38:11
but at school there is it and we always check
00:38:15
what sites they visited on the Internet
00:38:18
[music]
00:38:28
[music]
00:38:40
you can now go to the carpentry
00:38:43
room
00:38:44
where they teach to be carpenters one of the
00:38:46
prisoners does not want him filmed the
00:38:49
rest don’t mind
00:38:58
hello hello hello
00:39:01
how do you like this kind of work yes
00:39:03
he wants it well interesting when you find out their
00:39:14
story you understand that there are very few
00:39:17
who consciously decided to become
00:39:19
a criminal they just didn’t
00:39:21
get their bearings and they are people and I
00:39:25
respect them and try to understand them to accept them
00:39:31
as good They are definitely
00:39:35
good people, I try to explain that the bad
00:39:38
deeds they committed are not
00:39:41
all that they have this same workshop
00:39:48
and what they do here works with metal with
00:39:52
all types of materials
00:39:54
well they have access to metal I might be
00:39:57
able to do it well then what could they
00:40:00
if only you wouldn’t have known, it seems we
00:40:03
had a serious serious incident about 10 years
00:40:06
ago, oh that’s how yes, well, and that’s all,
00:40:10
for a long time there has been an idea
00:40:13
that, for example, if I’m the director of a prison with
00:40:17
all the stars on uniform in uniform,
00:40:19
you have to respect me and not you will
00:40:22
respect me, but many of those
00:40:26
who end up behind bars
00:40:28
know almost nothing about what
00:40:31
respect is,
00:40:33
they must go through this and then they will
00:40:36
gradually begin to discover
00:40:38
something new in themselves, they will begin to respect themselves as a
00:40:42
person and then they will understand yes I I’m a
00:40:45
person, I’m a person and not a criminal,
00:40:49
changes can only come from within,
00:40:51
never from without, but I emphasize that this
00:40:55
has nothing to do with a soft
00:40:57
attitude towards crime. speeches about
00:40:59
teaching prisoners to be responsible for
00:41:02
their actions and respect themselves
00:41:06
[music]
00:41:11
he is 21 years old and the highest the measure of punishment before
00:41:15
our judge does not have the opportunity to say whether
00:41:18
life is given for life, but we have
00:41:22
such a measure of preventive detention,
00:41:24
you were in or where most of
00:41:26
these people are sitting, theoretically they can
00:41:29
sit there until the end of their days
00:41:32
because when 10 years expire it seems that’s exactly
00:41:36
how long it is necessary to decide whether it is safe
00:41:38
for the court to decide to
00:41:40
release this man of the pond or give
00:41:43
him another sentence, of course, maybe this
00:41:47
will be the case of Breivik or you don’t know,
00:41:50
well, I don’t know because this should be
00:41:53
decided by the judge,
00:41:54
well, it’s not my decision so I would I
00:41:57
didn’t comment anything you won’t
00:41:59
talk about this I would say no
00:42:01
comments this building it’s called
00:42:05
onyx
00:42:06
see yes there are 1415 prisoners they are
00:42:11
separately
00:42:12
to separately according to our data the Brady
00:42:15
K cell is located here in this building but
00:42:19
no comments about any shooting in it
00:42:22
management prison is out of the question
00:42:23
as if there was
00:42:25
no Anders Breivik no
00:42:29
mention of anything that could arouse
00:42:32
his interest complete oblivion it’s probably
00:42:37
difficult to think of more terrible
00:42:40
punishments it struck me this is where the
00:42:44
most dangerous criminals serve their sentences
00:42:49
I don’t know if this exists in
00:42:52
any another country, but the example of
00:42:55
a prison is how everything is set up at home,
00:43:00
it is emphasized that we are not taking revenge on you for your
00:43:05
behavior, we are not trying to
00:43:07
further
00:43:08
punish you, humiliate you,
00:43:13
on the contrary, we are trying to arouse in you
00:43:18
the qualities that are necessary to live in a
00:43:21
civilized society, I tell you that he is
00:43:24
jumping and the manufacturer is this.
00:43:29
if you want, well, for me at least
00:43:32
this is the key to understanding the state of
00:43:36
society in which Norway is now
00:43:41
[music]
00:43:47
I was walking along the boulevard admiring this
00:43:51
May Day demonstration and suddenly
00:43:54
I saw advertising but which
00:43:55
completely amazed me, but this is it,
00:43:59
but you see for yourself the man is clearly not Norwegian
00:44:05
the woman is clearly both Norwegian and their child and there is
00:44:09
no need to say anything, the idea is completely
00:44:12
clear and for everyone else for me this is
00:44:14
a guarantee that Anders Breivik
00:44:16
lost to Tomsk love no Norway
00:44:20
at least I
00:44:24
love no one tried to imitate him
00:44:27
there were two small imitators
00:44:29
but they were caught before committing the
00:44:32
crime the police captured them, they
00:44:34
said that they were inspired by Breivik, but
00:44:36
maybe he managed to carry out a
00:44:38
successful terrorist attack because he planned everything very
00:44:41
well; most of the
00:44:42
terrorists are lone wolf if they do not
00:44:44
belong to some organization, nothing
00:44:46
works out, but we can say that
00:44:48
Mr. Breivik was in some kind of hey, you led
00:44:51
himself in a very Norwegian way, he carefully
00:44:52
planned this for many months and
00:44:56
maybe that’s why he achieved success
00:45:00
[music]
00:45:03
you probably know Peer Gynt of course
00:45:07
Ibson’s play according to my feelings I have never
00:45:13
seen before a more accurate description of the
00:45:17
Norwegian mentality
00:45:20
inexperienced cabin boys in the great ocean of the world
00:45:25
Heinrich Ibsen says about his hero
00:45:28
Peer Gunter that he is the most Norwegian of the
00:45:31
Norwegians,
00:45:32
if you have not read this work, then
00:45:35
these are stories about how a person searches for
00:45:37
happiness and how, in the process of this search,
00:45:40
his ideas about what
00:45:43
happiness is changes and maybe the main thing is
00:45:46
that he refuses from the dream of
00:45:48
wealth from the belief that happiness is in
00:45:51
money, and although today Norwegians are the
00:45:54
richest in the world, when communicating with them
00:45:57
you are convinced that wealth
00:46:00
has not changed them, it
00:46:06
seems to me that our future is bright, we have
00:46:10
plenty of opportunities not
00:46:12
to bother you at all with immigration problems, we need
00:46:15
foreigners to succeed where I live
00:46:19
we are very happy with them their children go to school and
00:46:22
now integration is much better we have a lot of
00:46:25
work there are no unemployed at all and the
00:46:28
people the atmosphere is all positive
00:46:35
I suck at sleeping then it’s very beautiful then there
00:46:38
will be more narrow sections incredibly
00:46:42
little music and also
00:46:46
[music]
00:46:55
In general, I’m happy in the morning when I have
00:47:00
breakfast and look at
00:47:02
the ships passing by and you know I feel
00:47:04
great my life is ideal
00:47:10
what distinguishes our life I think
00:47:13
equality
00:47:14
is what distinguishes Norway from the
00:47:17
egalitarian societies of Sweden before it for
00:47:20
example I think first of all trust is the
00:47:22
key word that determines our life
00:47:25
my country is a very small part of the world
00:47:29
but many look at us and try to
00:47:32
learn what an
00:47:34
ideal society should look like and of course being
00:47:37
Norwegian means being rich and a little
00:47:41
lazy or relaxed as we say
00:47:44
[music]

Description:

"Самые. Самые. Самые" — документальный сериал Владимира Познера и Ивана Урганта о странах Скандинавии и Финляндии. Название «Норвегия» происходит от древнескандинавского слова Norðrvegr, что означает «путь на Север». Это самая северная страна Европы, и все черты так называемого северного менталитета присутствуют в норвежском национальном характере в концентрированном виде. Владимир Познер решил выяснить, что же это за характер. Отправившись на крайний север Норвегии, журналист полагал, что именно там, среди снегов и холода, встретит настоящих, стопроцентных норвежцев и, пообщавшись с ними, сможет ответить на вопрос: что есть норвежское? Но, оказывается, исконными хозяевами этой земли были вовсе не норвежцы, а коренной народ саами. Чем отличаются саами от норвежцев, северяне от южан, норвежцы в целом от остальных скандинавов? Третья часть трилогии о Норвегии рассказывает об особенностях норвежского менталитета, а также о принципах построения процветающего норвежского общества, которое можно было бы назвать почти идеальным. Однако 22 июля 2011 года Андерс Брейвик, совершивший бесчеловечный теракт, разделил налаженную, спокойную жизнь норвежцев на «до» и «после». Осне Сейерстад, автор книги «Один из нас», анализирует причины, побудившие этого молодого человека пойти на преступление, раскрывает подробности его биографии и детали судебного процесса. Брейвик был признан вменяемым, виновным в совершении двух терактов и был приговорен к высшей мере наказания – 21 году тюремного заключения. Получить разрешение на интервью с террористом или узнать о точном месте заключения невозможно. Норвежское общество сочло самым страшным наказанием для него полное забвение. Познер побывал в одной из тюрем, где содержался Брейвик. В тюрьме Ила журналист ознакомился с норвежской системой наказания. И то, как она устроена, стало ключом к пониманию состояния общества, в котором находится Норвегия. По мнению самих норвежцев, их главными ценностями являются равенство и доверие.

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mobile menu iconHow can I download "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3" video?mobile menu icon

  • http://unidownloader.com/ website is the best way to download a video or a separate audio track if you want to do without installing programs and extensions.

  • The UDL Helper extension is a convenient button that is seamlessly integrated into YouTube, Instagram and OK.ru sites for fast content download.

  • UDL Client program (for Windows) is the most powerful solution that supports more than 900 websites, social networks and video hosting sites, as well as any video quality that is available in the source.

  • UDL Lite is a really convenient way to access a website from your mobile device. With its help, you can easily download videos directly to your smartphone.

mobile menu iconWhich format of "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3" video should I choose?mobile menu icon

  • The best quality formats are FullHD (1080p), 2K (1440p), 4K (2160p) and 8K (4320p). The higher the resolution of your screen, the higher the video quality should be. However, there are other factors to consider: download speed, amount of free space, and device performance during playback.

mobile menu iconWhy does my computer freeze when loading a "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3" video?mobile menu icon

  • The browser/computer should not freeze completely! If this happens, please report it with a link to the video. Sometimes videos cannot be downloaded directly in a suitable format, so we have added the ability to convert the file to the desired format. In some cases, this process may actively use computer resources.

mobile menu iconHow can I download "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3" video to my phone?mobile menu icon

  • You can download a video to your smartphone using the website or the PWA application UDL Lite. It is also possible to send a download link via QR code using the UDL Helper extension.

mobile menu iconHow can I download an audio track (music) to MP3 "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3"?mobile menu icon

  • The most convenient way is to use the UDL Client program, which supports converting video to MP3 format. In some cases, MP3 can also be downloaded through the UDL Helper extension.

mobile menu iconHow can I save a frame from a video "Самые. Самые. Самые. Норвегия. Самые богатые. Что есть норвежское. Серия 3"?mobile menu icon

  • This feature is available in the UDL Helper extension. Make sure that "Show the video snapshot button" is checked in the settings. A camera icon should appear in the lower right corner of the player to the left of the "Settings" icon. When you click on it, the current frame from the video will be saved to your computer in JPEG format.

mobile menu iconWhat's the price of all this stuff?mobile menu icon

  • It costs nothing. Our services are absolutely free for all users. There are no PRO subscriptions, no restrictions on the number or maximum length of downloaded videos.