00:00:00
Hello, friends!
00:00:00
In November 2018, John Allen Chau,
a 26-year-old American missionary,
00:00:05
decided to go to India's North Sentinel Island illegally.
00:00:10
The natives of this island are believed to be a part of the North Sentinelese tribe.
00:00:15
And they might be the world's last uncontacted tribe.
00:00:19
It means that they know nearly nothing about the rest of the world.
00:00:21
John was a Christian
00:00:23
and was so obsessed with his religion,
00:00:25
that he wanted to teach Christianity to the people living on this island.
00:00:29
He went to a nearby island
00:00:31
and bribed a fisherman with ₹25,000
00:00:35
and convinced the fisherman to drop him off at the island.
00:00:39
They begin the journey on the night of 14th November 2018,
00:00:43
hiding from the coast guards in the darkness.
00:00:46
He was carrying his GoPro camera,
00:00:48
some scissors, a kayak for the remaining journey,
00:00:52
some dried fish, a football, and a Bible
00:00:55
which he had hoped to give them as a gift.
00:00:58
On the morning of 15th November,
00:01:00
as soon as they reach the island,
00:01:02
he tells the local fisherman to wait at a distance,
00:01:05
and goes closer to the island alone on his kayak.
00:01:07
He spots some houses and heard women talking,
00:01:11
he prepared to park his kayak on the beach,
00:01:14
when he spotted 2 Sentinelese men carrying bows and arrows approaching him
00:01:20
He greets them by saying,
00:01:22
"My name is John, I love you, and Jesus loves you.
00:01:25
Jesus Christ gave me the authority to come here to you.
00:01:27
Here is some fish for you."
00:01:30
The 2 men place their arrows in the bow,
00:01:33
and get ready to shoot at him.
00:01:35
Panicking, John turns around to leave.
00:01:38
Some hours later, he tried again.
00:01:40
He went to the north shore of the island this time.
00:01:42
From afar he could see about 6 Sentinelese people on the island
00:01:46
looking in his direction, shouting, as if trying to say something.
00:01:49
Obviously, neither group could understand the language of the other.
00:01:52
Friends, there's no one on the planet who can understand the Sentinelese language,
00:01:57
other than the Sentinelese people.
00:01:59
Whatever syllables John could identify,
00:02:01
he tried to repeat them
00:02:03
and shouts towards them.
00:02:04
The Sentinelese people laugh at him then.
00:02:07
John slowly kept on approaching them.
00:02:10
Remaining at a safe distance,
00:02:12
he starts dropping off the 'gifts' he had brought for them.
00:02:16
There was a child and a young girl near them,
00:02:19
carrying bows and arrows.
00:02:21
John got off his kayak and tried to talk with the child.
00:02:24
A Sentinelese man then steals his kayak from behind him,
00:02:28
while he tries to explain some verses of the Bible to the child.
00:02:31
A few seconds later, the child took aim at John's chest
00:02:35
and shot an arrow.
00:02:36
The arrow hits the Bible by chance
00:02:40
and John's life was spared.
00:02:42
Panicking once again, John tried to escape.
00:02:45
But since he didn't have his kayak this time,
00:02:46
he swims back to the boat somehow.
00:02:49
At night, he wrote in his diary,
00:02:52
"Lord, is this island Satan's last stronghold?"
00:02:55
"Is this island full of monsters where the natives haven't even heard Jesus's name?"
00:03:00
He continued writing in his diary,
00:03:01
"I don't want to die.
00:03:02
I should go back.
00:03:04
Lord, I don't want to die."
00:03:06
But his obsession with the Lord,
00:03:08
had turned into madness.
00:03:10
He tried to convince himself
00:03:13
That he needed to return to the island as it was the purpose of his life.
00:03:16
16th November 2018,
00:03:18
he wrote a letter to his family,
00:03:19
he tells his parents,
00:03:21
"You guys might think I'm crazy
00:03:23
but I think it's worth it to declare Jesus to these people.
00:03:28
If I get killed,
00:03:30
please, do not blame these people."
00:03:32
After writing this, he set on once again to the North Sentinel Island on his boat.
00:03:37
This time, he didn't come back.
00:03:39
The local fisherman who had driven him,
00:03:41
watched the Sentinelese burying a body from afar.
00:03:46
Judging by the clothes, he gets to know
00:03:48
that it was John Allen Chau's body.
00:03:53
"The Sentinelese were first contacted by the government in 1991.
00:03:57
The contact party, under the administration, was accompanied by security.
00:04:01
The arrow-shooting Sentinelese are a constant fear."
00:04:04
"Are these bows and arrows sending us an ancient message?
00:04:09
That has now been forgotten by the people."
00:04:15
Friends, North Sentinel Island is a part of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
00:04:19
There are 572 islands in total in the Andaman and Nicobar archipelago.
00:04:23
Only 38 of these are inhabited.
00:04:25
Of which, only 12 are open to tourists.
00:04:28
The islands have been divided into 3 districts.
00:04:31
North and Middle Andaman,
South Andaman, and Nicobar.
00:04:34
The capital is Port Blair in South Andaman.
00:04:37
North Sentinel Island is only about 50 km from here.
00:04:40
It is a small island of 60 km².
00:04:44
And is covered by a dense forest.
00:04:46
The people living there are called the North Sentinelese.
00:04:48
But that's the name we gave them.
00:04:50
We don't know how the tribe refers to themselves.
00:04:53
What's the name they have for themselves?
00:04:55
It's believed that about 70,000 years ago,
00:04:58
some people migrated out of Africa.
00:05:00
This is known as the 'Out of Africa' theory.
00:05:02
That the first modern human beings,
00:05:04
were from Africa.
00:05:05
And the people living on Sentinel Island now,
00:05:09
are the direct descendant of the people who migrated out of Africa.
00:05:13
These first group of humans
00:05:14
went to Yemen from East Africa.
00:05:16
From there, they walked to the Indian subcontinent eventually reaching Myanmar,
00:05:20
South-East Asia, East Asia,
00:05:22
and eventually spread across these islands,
00:05:24
and reached Australia as well.
00:05:26
During these thousands of years,
00:05:27
the humans who decided to live in the middle east, India, south-east Asia, etc.
00:05:31
mixed in with each other,
00:05:33
because they had similar terrain
00:05:35
it was easy to go from one place to another on land.
00:05:37
But the humans who settled on the remote islands,
00:05:40
couldn't mix in with the other humans,
00:05:43
and remained isolated from the rest of the world.
00:05:45
It's said that the North Sentinelese tribe
00:05:47
about 10,000 - 30,000 years ago,
00:05:50
came on this island,
00:05:52
and since then, they have been isolated and cut off from the rest of the world.
00:05:55
It also means that
00:05:57
they never learned agriculture.
00:05:59
Agriculture was discovered about 12,000 years ago.
00:06:03
You might say that while living on this island,
00:06:06
they never felt the need for agriculture.
00:06:08
Or they don't even know that something like agriculture even exists.
00:06:11
But this means that this is the last Stone Age tribe.
00:06:14
People who still live like they are in the Stone Age.
00:06:18
They have a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.
00:06:20
They don't grow their food,
00:06:23
Instead, they pick fruits from the trees,
00:06:25
hunt animals, and fish for food.
00:06:29
They are the most isolated tribe in the world because
00:06:32
they want to remain isolated.
00:06:33
Every time the outside world has tried to establish contact with them,
00:06:38
there has been violence most of the time.
00:06:40
Historically speaking,
00:06:42
the oldest written record of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands with us is
00:06:45
from the 2nd century AD.
00:06:47
When a Roman mathematician, Claudius Ptolemy
00:06:50
described the Andaman and Nicobar Islands
00:06:52
as the 'Islands of Cannibals'.
00:06:55
This description wasn't limited to North Sentinel Island only.
00:06:58
Rather it was for the entire Andaman and Nicobar Island.
00:07:01
So we don't know which tribe was being referred here.
00:07:04
After this, in 673 AD,
00:07:06
a Chinese traveller, travelling from Sumatra to India,
00:07:09
said that the people living on the islands were cannibals.
00:07:13
Meaning that they eat human meat.
00:07:16
The Arab travellers who visited the Andaman Islands during the 8th and 9th centuries,
00:07:19
said the same thing.
00:07:21
In the 11th century,
00:07:22
a temple was built during Raja Raja Chola I's reign, which contained inscriptions,
00:07:26
claiming the same things that they consider these islands impure,
00:07:30
and that they believe cannibals live there.
00:07:32
If we talk specifically about North Sentinel Island,
00:07:35
the first record of it was mentioned in 1771.
00:07:38
When an East India Company ship
00:07:40
passed by this island
00:07:42
and the surveyor spotted light on this island.
00:07:46
The next account of it was in 1867,
00:07:49
when an Indian merchant ship
00:07:51
with around 100 passengers,
00:07:53
met with an accident on the shore of this island.
00:07:56
The survivors of the accident were attacked by the Sentinelese.
00:08:00
Fortunately, they could escape
00:08:02
with the help of the British Royal Navy.
00:08:04
This was the first case
00:08:07
of the North Sentinelese people
00:08:09
attacking and driving out outsiders from their island.
00:08:13
Then in 1880,
00:08:14
a British office, Maurice Vidal Portman,
00:08:17
decided to meet with the Sentinelese people
00:08:21
to establish contact and try to 'civilise' them.
00:08:25
By this time, the Britishers had established contact with the other tribes in Andaman.
00:08:29
They had been friendly contact,
00:08:31
and they could communicate with them as well.
00:08:33
When Portman went to the North Sentinel Island,
00:08:36
he brought with him people from the other Andamanese tribes.
00:08:40
So that the North Sentinelese could communicate with the other tribesmen.
00:08:44
Once there, he found that
00:08:46
the tribesmen of the other tribes in Andaman,
00:08:48
spoke in a language so different from the North Sentinelese language,
00:08:51
that they couldn't communicate with each other.
00:08:54
It was impossible to communicate.
00:08:56
On his journey, Portman met an old couple on the North Sentinel Island,
00:09:00
and four children.
00:09:02
He decided to kidnap them.
00:09:04
And to take them back with him to Port Blair.
00:09:07
He discovered that the North Sentinelese people
00:09:09
were cut off from the rest of the world for so long
00:09:12
that after reaching Port Blair, the old couple passed away within a few days.
00:09:18
Portman felt bad for the kids after this,
00:09:20
and so he returned the children to the island.
00:09:23
Handing them some gifts.
00:09:25
It is very likely that the children took back germs and bacterium
00:09:30
which were completely foreign to the island.
00:09:33
It would've infected more people there
00:09:35
killing many.
00:09:36
It's possible.
00:09:37
the diseases that we see in modern times,
00:09:40
our bodies have developed immunity against them
00:09:43
because year on year our ancestors were exposed to these diseases
00:09:48
and had developed immunity against them.
00:09:49
But the people living on the North Sentinel Island
00:09:52
had been cut off from the entire world.
00:09:53
Cut off from all the new diseases.
00:09:56
So their bodies had not developed immunity.
00:09:58
This Portman incident is believed to have been
00:10:01
a major reason why the North Sentinelese people
00:10:03
are violent towards outsiders.
00:10:10
conducted several expeditions to the North Sentinel Island.
00:10:12
In 1967,
00:10:14
Triloknath Pandit became the first official anthropologist
00:10:17
to visit this island.
00:10:18
He had taken a team of 20 members
00:10:21
including scientists, members of the Armed Forces,
00:10:23
unarmed navy personnel, and the governor.
00:10:26
On the island, their team followed the footprints of the Sentinelese,
00:10:30
for about 1 km.
00:10:31
But they couldn't find any humans.
00:10:33
So the team returned
00:10:35
leaving behind some gifts for them.
00:10:37
Such as coconuts, pots, pans, and other iron tools.
00:10:41
In 1970, an official research team went to this island,
00:10:44
and set up a stone tablet declaring that
00:10:47
the North Sentinel Island is a part of the Indian Territory.
00:10:50
In 1974, an Indian film crew went to this island,
00:10:53
who made a documentary on the tribes of Andaman and Nicobar Islands.
00:10:57
Triloknath Pandit was there with the film crew
00:11:00
as well as some armed forces.
00:11:02
Once again, as gifts, they left behind some coconuts.
00:11:06
They had even taken a live pig,
00:11:08
to present as a gift.
00:11:10
They left these things on the shore
00:11:12
and moved back to see how
00:11:14
the locals would react to them.
00:11:16
After some time, some tribal people came out to the shore
00:11:20
and started attacking them with bows and arrows.
00:11:22
One of the arrows hit the director of the film, Prem Vaidya, on his thigh.
00:11:28
They even attacked the pig that was left behind as a gift to them.
00:11:31
Killed the pig and buried it in the sand.
00:11:34
Friends, this was the first time the North Sentinelese people were captured on camera.
00:11:39
After this, Triloknath Pandit made several attempts over the course of the 1970s, 80s, and 90s.
00:11:44
But it was the same story every time.
00:11:45
He would go to the island with small teams,
00:11:47
would leave behind pigs and gifts,
00:11:49
the tribe would kill the pigs each time
00:11:51
and bury it in the sand.
00:11:53
Once they gave them a doll as a gift.
00:11:55
They shot an arrow at it too,
00:11:58
and buried it in the sand.
00:12:00
In 1981, a merchant ship Primrose,
00:12:04
going from Bangladesh to Australia,
00:12:06
met with a storm and got stranded on this island.
00:12:09
Once again, the people of the Sentinelese tribe
00:12:12
came to attack these passengers
00:12:14
but because of the weather conditions, their arrows could not hit them thankfully.
00:12:19
They sent out distressed calls,
00:12:21
and somehow managed to survive near the ship.
00:12:24
One week later, they were rescued by a helicopter.
00:12:27
But this is a major incident in the history of the North Sentinelese people.
00:12:31
Because it was the time when
00:12:33
this tribe had seen iron for the first time in their lives.
00:12:36
They discovered iron then.
00:12:39
Because friends, after this,
00:12:40
whenever contact was established with the North Sentinelese people
00:12:43
it was found that these people had started using iron in their bows and arrows.
00:12:48
The iron they had scavenged from this ship.
00:12:50
They had managed to use the iron.
00:12:53
This shipwreck can be seen on Google Maps.
00:12:56
You'll find it in the north of North Sentinel Island.
00:13:00
The next big historical event took place in 1991.
00:13:03
This was the first time when the North Sentinelese people made the first friendly contact.
00:13:09
It was the first time when someone had gone to visit them,
00:13:11
and they weren't violent.
00:13:12
In January, an expedition was led by Indian anthropologist, Madhumala Chattopadhyay.
00:13:18
She went with her small team without any weapons
00:13:20
offered coconuts,
00:13:22
and this time, the Sentinelese people actually took the coconuts.
00:13:26
Was it because it was different because
00:13:28
a woman had gone to meet them,
00:13:30
while all expeditions before it
00:13:32
were by men?
00:13:33
There was something quite shocking in this friendly contact.
00:13:36
This team had returned and when they went to meet them again the next day,
00:13:39
a Sentinelese man had his bow and arrow aimed at them.
00:13:44
He would have shot at them any moment.
00:13:46
But a Sentinelese woman came forward,
00:13:48
and pushed down the arrow,
00:13:51
gesturing that he shouldn't shoot the outsiders.
00:13:54
The man listened to the woman
00:13:56
and buried his weapon under the sand.
00:13:59
This way the members of the expedition could go on the land for the first time.
00:14:04
And could give the coconuts to the Sentinelese people with their own hands.
00:14:08
There was another expedition about a month later.
00:14:10
Triloknath Pandit and Madhumala went on it together,
00:14:13
and once again, the Sentinelese people didn't use any weapons.
00:14:16
They got off their boats and the Sentinelese people collected the coconuts in a friendly way.
00:14:20
But it was the last time
00:14:22
when the Sentinelese people were so friendly towards the rest of the world.
00:14:26
The expeditions after 1991,
00:14:29
every effort to contact the Sentinelese people,
00:14:32
saw only violence.
00:14:34
We don't know why it happened.
00:14:36
Why during the small time period,
00:14:38
the Sentinelese people became so friendly,
00:14:40
and later turned violent once again.
00:14:41
As a result, after 1997,
00:14:44
The Indian government banned people from going to the island.
00:14:47
The government realised that
00:14:48
there is no point in trying to communicate with them again and again
00:14:51
when they do not want any communication.
00:14:53
They are living peacefully on the island
00:14:56
and they should be allowed to do so.
00:14:58
The government had an Eyes-On, Hands-Off policy towards them.
00:15:01
In a way, we will monitor the tribe.
00:15:03
If they need any assistance, we will give them that.
00:15:06
but we will keep our hands off them.
00:15:07
In 2004, there was a devastating Tsunami in the Indian Ocean.
00:15:11
The officials of the Indian coast guard,
00:15:13
went to monitor the situation on the island from a helicopter,
00:15:16
to ensure that the island was not damaged and the people living there were safe.
00:15:19
In return, the helicopter was showered with arrows.
00:15:22
And the officials in the helicopter realised that
00:15:24
since they were being attacked, the Sentinelese people must be alright.
00:15:26
Because of the Tsunami, this island was lifted up by 1.5 meters.
00:15:30
The people of the tribe seemed quite healthy,
00:15:32
so there was no need to worry.
00:15:33
In 2006, there was an unfortunate incident.
00:15:35
two local fishermen got quite close to the island by mistake,
00:15:39
and the Sentinelese people started attacking them and eventually they were killed.
00:15:42
After this, the government decided that
00:15:44
there needs to be a 5 km radius,
00:15:46
so that no one gets even as close as 5 km from this island.
00:15:50
The 2018 incident of John Allen Chau was the latest incident
00:15:55
as I told you at the beginning of the video.
00:15:57
This man was madly obsessed with Christianity,
00:16:01
knowingly went to the island and was killed.
00:16:04
The question arises, what do we know about these people?
00:16:07
About the North Sentinelese people.
00:16:10
It is interesting to know this.
00:16:11
According to the diary written by John about his experiences,
00:16:14
their height is not more than 5'3" to 5'5".
00:16:18
Additionally, the video footage that we have,
00:16:20
shows that the Sentinelese people have short hair,
00:16:24
they have shining dark skin,
00:16:26
well-defined muscles,
00:16:28
there were no signs of obesity or malnutrition.
00:16:31
According to John's diary, some of the people had yellow paste on their faces.
00:16:35
They don't wear clothes,
00:16:37
But wear some fibre stings on their head, neck, and loins.
00:16:41
Women wear thinner fibre strings
00:16:44
and men wear thicker bands.
00:16:46
Men carry weapons like bows and arrows and spears.
00:16:50
Apart from these, the Sentinelese people know how to build boats.
00:16:52
They build small, narrow canoes with wood.
00:16:56
They are so narrow that
00:16:58
they aren't even 2 feet wide.
00:17:00
Surprisingly, they are not very curious about their surroundings.
00:17:03
Normally, humans have this 'quality',
00:17:07
at least in some humans,
00:17:09
which makes them want to explore new places.
00:17:11
The nearest island to the North Sentinel Island
00:17:13
is merely 36 km from it.
00:17:15
It is inhabited.
00:17:16
Even so, the Sentinelese people never tried to go to the island
00:17:21
or to explore places outside their island.
00:17:24
In terms of food, we know that they cannot farm.
00:17:27
They survive by hunting for animals.
00:17:29
Such as wild boars.
00:17:32
The fish and harvest turtle eggs as well.
00:17:36
Apart from these, they eat fruits, flowers, and such things.
00:17:38
They even use honey.
00:17:40
Language is one of the most interesting things about the North Sentinelese people.
00:17:44
Because they cannot communicate with any outsiders.
00:17:47
On one expedition, Triloknath Pandit
00:17:49
took along a member from another tribe in Andaman,
00:17:51
from the Onge Tribe.
00:17:53
He couldn't communicate with the Sentinelese at all.
00:17:55
Not only this, Triloknath Pandit revealed that
00:17:58
when the member of the Onge tribe approached them,
00:18:00
the Sentinelese people were infuriated by it.
00:18:03
Regarding the language, John wrote in his diary that
00:18:05
their language contains a lot of high-pitched sounds.
00:18:09
Such as ba, pa, la, and sa.
00:18:11
With regard to their lifestyle, the Sentinelese
00:18:13
live in 2 different types of houses.
00:18:15
A big hut for multiple families to live together,
00:18:18
and a small hut for single families.
00:18:21
According to John's diary,
00:18:23
there are about 250 Sentinelese on this island.
00:18:25
While the estimates of the Indian government
00:18:27
ranges from 50 to 500.
00:18:30
Because no one has been able to count the exact number of people living there.
00:18:33
So that's the estimate.
00:18:35
We know this about their behaviour
00:18:37
that they do not take dead bodies back into the jungle,
00:18:40
they don't cremate the dead,
00:18:41
they bury the dead on the beach, under the sand.
00:18:44
As for the accounts of the ancient historians,
00:18:47
the oldest written records,
00:18:49
that the people living there are cannibals,
00:18:51
eating humans,
00:18:52
it is not true.
00:18:53
We also know that
00:18:55
if the people coming to visit them
00:18:57
are in small groups, they would attack them,
00:18:59
but if the visiting party is large,
00:19:01
as was with Triloknath,
00:19:03
they hide in the forest instead of attacking them.
00:19:05
Many expeditions have spotted pregnant women and children
00:19:08
which tells us that
00:19:10
the population on this island can sustain itself.
00:19:13
And perhaps the most interesting thing that we get to know about them,
00:19:17
is that the North Sentinelese people
00:19:19
can live sustainably.
00:19:20
They live on one small island
00:19:23
without cutting down the forest,
00:19:25
living harmoniously with nature,
00:19:27
without any overpopulation.
00:19:29
It is very interesting because
00:19:30
in most of the human communities, we have seen,
00:19:33
it is often overpopulated.
00:19:35
It often happens that
00:19:36
if they are on a small island and they hunt an animal for food,
00:19:40
the animal often goes extinct on the island.
00:19:42
But amazingly,
00:19:44
they are living with nature so sustainably,
00:19:47
that humans don't overpower nature.
00:19:50
Nowadays, many people believe that
00:19:52
we should continue our efforts to establish contact with them.
00:19:55
That we need to introduce the rest of the world to them.
00:19:57
The technologies that we've invented,
00:20:00
we should show it to them,
00:20:01
so that they can benefit from them too.
00:20:03
That we need to bring development and modernisation to them.
00:20:06
On the other hand, some people claim that
00:20:08
we need to protect them from the outside world.
00:20:10
Since they are living peacefully, they should be allowed to remain isolated.
00:20:15
What do you think?
00:20:16
Comment below to let me know.
00:20:17
In my opinion,
00:20:19
I would choose the second option.
00:20:21
There are some major reasons why it is better to keep them isolated.
00:20:25
First: whenever they are in contact with the outside world,
00:20:28
the diseases that we carry unknowingly,
00:20:31
they have no immunity against them.
00:20:33
Chances are that they wouldn't be able to survive the onslaught.
00:20:35
Second, and even bigger problem:
00:20:36
we have already tried to do so with other tribes
00:20:39
and the result hasn't always been good.
00:20:42
For example the Jarawa tribe in the Andaman,
00:20:45
remained isolated for a long time, without anyone trying to contact them,
00:20:48
but when the Indian government tried to establish friendly contact with them in the 1970s,
00:20:53
it was successful.
00:20:54
After that, they found out about the rest of the world.
00:20:57
They tried to fit in with the modern times,
00:21:00
Some did fit in,
00:21:02
but most of them aren't happy with it.
00:21:04
The packaged food that we consume,
00:21:06
some tribe members couldn't even digest it.
00:21:08
Some who did, went on to become obese,
00:21:11
because they didn't know how to control themselves.
00:21:13
They had seen so much food at once where they had to hunt for their meal earlier.
00:21:16
When substances such as tobacco and alcohol were introduced to them,
00:21:19
they instantly became addicted to it.
00:21:21
Because they hadn't grown up understanding that they need to stay away from those goods.
00:21:26
That it's harmful.
00:21:27
As soon as they tried the new things,
00:21:29
they became addicted to it.
00:21:31
Apart from this, their culture
00:21:32
their lifestyle, languages, their traditions,
00:21:35
things they've been holding on to for generations,
00:21:37
would be lost when they integrate into modern society.
00:21:40
The other tribes in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands,
00:21:43
are facing this.
00:21:45
When the British went to these islands for the first time in the 1800s, to colonise them,
00:21:48
there were around 5,000 individuals of the Great Andamanese Tribe,
00:21:52
today, there are only 41 remaining members.
00:21:54
Perhaps our efforts to maintain and strengthen our contact with them,
00:21:58
may prove to be dangerous for them.
00:22:01
And it may eradicate their entire community forever.
00:22:04
I hope this video was informative as always.
00:22:07
If you liked this, you can check out similar videos in this playlist,
00:22:10
I would especially recommend the videos on the Bermuda Triangle and Time Travel.
00:22:14
Thank you very much!