@phamvuyvan: Cần một lời giải đáp #fyp #jff

Y Vân
Y Vân
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Region: VN
Monday 08 June 2026 13:13:25 GMT
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posi.raw
Thỏ ngọt ngào ♡ :
ko tin dc ẻm 24 tủiiii🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-09 05:04:23
1
t_dragon02
T_Dragon :
ụa acc khác rùi ha b😁
2026-06-10 07:49:37
0
hehevipro1
ZottHehe :
Ủa ủa kênh mới hả Vânnn
2026-06-08 14:11:28
1
chrisdang24
Trung Đặng :
Kênh này đăng sự dễ thương
2026-06-10 02:15:19
0
diennguyen442
Dien Nguyen :
Dễ thương 👍
2026-06-09 04:00:19
0
anhnguyenduc3102
Anh Nguyễn Đức :
xinhhhhhh thíii
2026-06-09 09:36:34
0
yakult2_38
Yakult :
Vì chị là nàng thơ trong mắt kẻ hậu đậu chứ k phải là ngược lại :))
2026-06-08 13:24:08
1
meomotech
Muddy paw :
oh kênh mới à Vân
2026-06-10 00:42:18
0
nguyen.archi
Nguyên Chăm Thiết Kế :
Cute vô tri 😂😂
2026-06-09 00:46:51
0
dinhkhanghuy
khanghuy304 :
thích chị này vãi dễ thương xĩu 🥰
2026-06-08 14:14:09
0
chuacony9669
Nam20tchuabo :
Nobita nhưng mà là tập phim tủ điện thoại yêu cầu (không nhớ tên bảo bối này) và thế giới đảo ngược giới tính (không nhớ tên tập phim)
2026-06-08 15:31:55
0
umthirinne
hehehaha :
🌷
2026-06-09 15:50:45
0
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Other Videos

May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey was called Peppe. The woman was Maria Rizzo, 26. The sleeping child was Lucia, 2. The girl smiling was Teresa, 6. The boy with the boot was Antonio, 4. The road was to the market in Cosenza. Five miles each way. The baskets held cheese, olives, and herbs. The war ended in 1945. The poverty did not. The south stayed poor. The north rebuilt. Maria’s husband was a POW in Germany. Came home in 1946. Died of TB in 1947. She took the children and the donkey. Sold what the land gave. The smile was for the photographer. An American from Life. Documenting postwar Europe. The blanket was from the UNRRA. The shoe on Antonio was from his father. Too big. The other foot was bare. In 1952, the family moved to Turin. Factory work. Peppe stayed. Died in 1955. Maria kept the photo. Told her grandchildren: “We had four legs between us. That was enough.” #PostWarItaly #1940s #Calabria #Motherhood #Donkey   May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey was called Peppe. The woman was Maria Rizzo, 26. The sleeping child was Lucia, 2. The girl smiling was Teresa, 6. The boy with the boot was Antonio, 4. The road was to the market in Cosenza. Five miles each way. The baskets held cheese, olives, and herbs. The war ended in 1945. The poverty did not. The south stayed poor. The north rebuilt. Maria’s husband was a POW in Germany. Came home in 1946. Died of TB in 1947. She took the children and the donkey. Sold what the land gave. The smile was for the photographer. An American from Life. Documenting postwar Europe. The blanket was from the UNRRA. The shoe on Antonio was from his father. Too big. The other foot was bare. In 1952, the family moved to Turin. Factory work. Peppe stayed. Died in 1955. Maria kept the photo. Told her grandchildren: “We had four legs between us. That was enough.”
May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey was called Peppe. The woman was Maria Rizzo, 26. The sleeping child was Lucia, 2. The girl smiling was Teresa, 6. The boy with the boot was Antonio, 4. The road was to the market in Cosenza. Five miles each way. The baskets held cheese, olives, and herbs. The war ended in 1945. The poverty did not. The south stayed poor. The north rebuilt. Maria’s husband was a POW in Germany. Came home in 1946. Died of TB in 1947. She took the children and the donkey. Sold what the land gave. The smile was for the photographer. An American from Life. Documenting postwar Europe. The blanket was from the UNRRA. The shoe on Antonio was from his father. Too big. The other foot was bare. In 1952, the family moved to Turin. Factory work. Peppe stayed. Died in 1955. Maria kept the photo. Told her grandchildren: “We had four legs between us. That was enough.” #PostWarItaly #1940s #Calabria #Motherhood #Donkey May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey was called Peppe. The woman was Maria Rizzo, 26. The sleeping child was Lucia, 2. The girl smiling was Teresa, 6. The boy with the boot was Antonio, 4. The road was to the market in Cosenza. Five miles each way. The baskets held cheese, olives, and herbs. The war ended in 1945. The poverty did not. The south stayed poor. The north rebuilt. Maria’s husband was a POW in Germany. Came home in 1946. Died of TB in 1947. She took the children and the donkey. Sold what the land gave. The smile was for the photographer. An American from Life. Documenting postwar Europe. The blanket was from the UNRRA. The shoe on Antonio was from his father. Too big. The other foot was bare. In 1952, the family moved to Turin. Factory work. Peppe stayed. Died in 1955. Maria kept the photo. Told her grandchildren: “We had four legs between us. That was enough.”

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