@laras.sterni: GRWM🩷🌸🫰🏻

Lara 🌸
Lara 🌸
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Region: DE
Wednesday 10 June 2026 19:37:55 GMT
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taromocha21
Yase :
das gibt mir so 2016 vibes
2026-06-11 10:59:56
2
user49468662742713
ธีระชัย ฤทธิช่วยรอด :
my love lara to Thailand and you
2026-06-11 04:57:07
0
mrtknapydn
Mertkan :
Sehr Hübsch ❤
2026-06-10 19:40:13
3
valdivino_01
Mundo_animado :
2026-06-11 10:19:44
2
mustafaazab921
Mustafa Azab921 :
2026-06-11 14:10:42
1
andreas.stivaktak74
Andreas Stivaktakis :
me gusta babylona🌹
2026-06-10 19:41:47
2
theresomething221
thereIsSomething :
hab ich nicht kommen sehen
2026-06-10 20:59:31
2
toreto2778
toreto :
2026-06-11 10:24:12
0
metin.ylmaz242
Metin Yılmaz :
2026-06-10 20:39:02
1
user49468662742713
ธีระชัย ฤทธิช่วยรอด :
thank you very much and lara
2026-06-11 04:09:05
1
valdivino_01
Mundo_animado :
2026-06-11 10:19:51
0
user337411579
𝑨𝒅𝒂𝒎 𝑨𝒅𝒂𝒎 💔 :
2026-06-11 07:57:09
0
wio19911
wio19911 :
2026-06-11 03:15:45
0
sana.ullah8565
Sana Ullah85 :
SanaUllah
2026-06-11 09:25:11
0
user4612076522760
dimitrisx :
αγ🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥άπη μου όλα σου εινε ειπεροχα 💋💋💋💋💋💋💋❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️🔥
2026-06-11 08:25:55
0
ufo.pilot.03
ufo.pilot.03 :
ohaa😍😍
2026-06-11 17:12:00
0
gstoyanov260
Georgi Stoyanov26 :
🔥🔥🔥🤪🤪🤪🤪🥰🥰🥰
2026-06-11 08:25:51
0
d1e_alicia_
d1e_alicia_🩶🪽 :
2026-06-10 19:39:17
1
To see more videos from user @laras.sterni, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey’s name was Bruno. The woman was Elena Marino, twenty-seven years old. The sleeping child in her arms was Sofia, age two. The smiling barefoot girl beside the road was Rosa, six. The boy carrying the basket was Marco, four. The dusty road led toward the market outside Crotone, nearly five miles away. The baskets hanging from the donkey carried cheese, olives, herbs, and vegetables gathered from small hillside plots. Although the war had officially ended three years earlier, poverty still gripped much of southern Italy. While northern cities slowly rebuilt factories and industry, many rural southern families survived through farming, market trade, and whatever work could still be found in the countryside. Elena’s husband had spent the war years imprisoned in Germany and returned home weakened and ill shortly after the fighting ended. He died from tuberculosis in 1947, leaving Elena alone with three small children, a few acres of rocky land, and the family donkey. From that point forward, the road to market became part of daily survival. The photograph was reportedly taken by a visiting foreign photojournalist documenting conditions across postwar Europe. The blanket wrapped around the sleeping child came from international relief supplies distributed throughout the region after the war. One of Marco’s boots had belonged to his father, several sizes too large, while his other foot remained bare against the dirt road. A few years later, the family left Calabria and moved north searching for factory work near Turin. But Elena kept the photograph for the rest of her life. Relatives later remembered her pointing toward the donkey in the picture and quietly saying: “We only had a few feet carrying all of us forward, but somehow it was enough.”
May 1948, Calabria, Southern Italy. The donkey’s name was Bruno. The woman was Elena Marino, twenty-seven years old. The sleeping child in her arms was Sofia, age two. The smiling barefoot girl beside the road was Rosa, six. The boy carrying the basket was Marco, four. The dusty road led toward the market outside Crotone, nearly five miles away. The baskets hanging from the donkey carried cheese, olives, herbs, and vegetables gathered from small hillside plots. Although the war had officially ended three years earlier, poverty still gripped much of southern Italy. While northern cities slowly rebuilt factories and industry, many rural southern families survived through farming, market trade, and whatever work could still be found in the countryside. Elena’s husband had spent the war years imprisoned in Germany and returned home weakened and ill shortly after the fighting ended. He died from tuberculosis in 1947, leaving Elena alone with three small children, a few acres of rocky land, and the family donkey. From that point forward, the road to market became part of daily survival. The photograph was reportedly taken by a visiting foreign photojournalist documenting conditions across postwar Europe. The blanket wrapped around the sleeping child came from international relief supplies distributed throughout the region after the war. One of Marco’s boots had belonged to his father, several sizes too large, while his other foot remained bare against the dirt road. A few years later, the family left Calabria and moved north searching for factory work near Turin. But Elena kept the photograph for the rest of her life. Relatives later remembered her pointing toward the donkey in the picture and quietly saying: “We only had a few feet carrying all of us forward, but somehow it was enough.”

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