European
How can we become a Master
0:15 - 1:15 (60 min)
Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Brisbane, Australia. eople have a different tradition for eating and in the toilet in the world. High educated people held their bathroom and toilet clean. In Indian tradition, the kitchen is a temple. The food is God. People first offered the food to God. Explanation of the Indian eating mantra. After the prayer the food becomes holy. We should respect God's statue as God himself. If we are faithful Gurudev cab make us Guru. Everything is within us and not outside. There are many goddesses in us. The altar also a living one.
Doctors and yogis are similar
0:30 - 1:12 (42 min)
The practice of yoga is a universal medicine for body and spirit, leading from physical movement to inner awakening.
All beings possess love and seek happiness. Humans, with greater understanding, must reflect on their daily actions and their effects. The states of waking, dreaming, and deep sleep define our consciousness. What we consume influences our future, as the body distributes it throughout. A true doctor treats all without judgment, aiming to heal regardless of a person's choices. This is the same spirit as a true yoga teacher or guru. Many schools and teachers exist, like many hospitals, but the essence of the practice is one. The specific vehicle matters less than the journey toward the destination. Physical practice is the foundation. To progress beyond the body to the astral energies and kuṇḍalinī requires proper guidance. The foundational energy system, like the body's essential elements, must be in balance. Without this balance, one cannot advance.
"Simply, in this way, we can also consider what is going on in our body."
"To go further, we have to have a guru who can meditate and lead us."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Karma yoga means serving
1:20 - 2:00 (40 min)
Karma yoga is the path of selfless service, the essence of spiritual practice. We gather in nature for sādhana, observing the world's beauty and ceremonies. The groups include those dedicated to seva, the karma yogīs. This practice is found in all religions, like nuns serving the poor, for God resides in everyone. Service is not only grand donations; it is the simple, mindful act of helping. Even in traffic, allowing another driver to pass is seva. Helping an elder with a bag or moving a creature from danger is seva. But one must serve with wisdom, understanding the true need. Action performed skillfully and selflessly is the foundation of yoga. All prayers and meditations are secondary to this. You always have time for seva in thought, word, and deed.
"Who can serve the poor people, the needy people? There is maybe God inside."
"Yogaḥ karmasu kauśalam. Yoga will be successful through the sādhanā, the karma sādhanā."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The teaching of the Saints
2:05 - 3:17 (72 min)
The mind creates problems in both activity and idleness, revealing its restless nature. A story illustrates the futility of material accumulation. A teacher gave a merchant a needle to safeguard. The merchant's wife reasoned that if the teacher died, the needle would become a karmic debt impossible to repay. The merchant, realizing he could take nothing with him after death, returned the needle. The teacher asked why he accumulated vast wealth if he could not even take a small needle. The merchant then sold his excess property, keeping only necessities, and used the wealth for social good. Another teaching concerns inner development over outer appearance. Natural hair, whether grown or shaved, presents a consistent appearance, unlike changing hairstyles. True growth comes from within, not from outward presentation. A final story tells of a learned sage who, to answer questions about worldly life, left his own body and entered a recently deceased king's body to gain experience. This demonstrates that through spiritual power and discipline, extraordinary inner feats are possible.
"If you cannot take such a small piece of a needle with you, then why are you accumulating so much stuff?"
"Try building yourself from the inside, not by focusing on how you present yourself to the outer world."
Filming location: Jadan, Rajasthan, India
Helpful techniques for our eyes
3:25 - 4:10 (45 min)
Trāṭaka is a yogic gazing technique for eye care and subtle awakening. It involves fixing the gaze on a single point like a flame or a black spot. This practice can lead to perceiving inner light, but these sensations are physiological, not spiritual revelations. The eyes are extremely sensitive. While the technique is powerful, it carries risk without proper guidance. One must first consult a qualified eye doctor to understand the condition of their eyes. Medical knowledge is essential. For general eye health, a daily wash with filtered Triphalā water is a safe and beneficial Āyurvedic practice. Simple remedies like cold compresses can relieve tiredness. Always seek a yoga teacher with deep practical experience, not just theoretical knowledge. Balance respect for yogic tradition with modern medical care.
"If the eyes are gone, it is said life is gone."
"First speak with a good eye doctor."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
This is the time to work on our inner self
4:15 - 5:00 (45 min)
This is the time to return to our inner self. Humans work very hard externally, constructing roads and buildings, often with environmental cost. This external endeavor is great, but we work too hard outside. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours daily, that would be very good. Yoga is that inner engineering. It is not merely external exercise but acting for the whole world from within. The techniques are already within, showing how the body is continually made better. Yoga practice gives exercises for the inner body, leading to peace and harmony. The difference is we often do too much externally while neglecting the inner self.
"We humans work too hard externally. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours each day, that would be very, very good."
"Yoga is the engineer, not a human. The techniques of yoga, all that God has made, are already within."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
This is the time to work on our inner self
5:05 - 5:50 (45 min)
This is the time to return to our inner self. Humans work very hard externally, constructing roads and buildings, often with environmental cost. This external endeavor is great, but we work too hard outside. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours daily, that would be very good. Yoga is that inner engineering. It is not merely external exercise but acting for the whole world from within. The techniques are already within, showing how the body is continually made better. Yoga practice gives exercises for the inner body, leading to peace and harmony. The difference is we often do too much externally while neglecting the inner self.
"We humans work too hard externally. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours each day, that would be very, very good."
"Yoga is the engineer, not a human. The techniques of yoga, all that God has made, are already within."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The Flame of the Life
5:55 - 6:39 (44 min)
The inner flame of life is the vital energy within, distinct from physical fire. This prāṇic flame is the essence of consciousness through waking, dreaming, and deep sleep. Even in blindness, an inner light perceives through vibration and voice. When the body sleeps or tires, this light dims but retreats into the ātmā, never extinguished. The flame can appear to depart at death, yet life may linger as seen in a bird revived. One must care for this flame through practices like trāṭak and Hatha Yoga, feeding it with sustenance. Great yogis remain awake in meditation even as others sleep, navigating states of consciousness. The soul's journey continues beyond the body, like a flame moving far away.
"Where the lamp is gone. And where the flame is gone. That has gone into our ātmā."
"Others are awakened, and the yogīs are meditating. And others, they are sleeping. And the yogī is awakened."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Practice leads to the development
6:45 - 7:28 (43 min)
Evening satsang with Vishwaguruji from Jadan Ashram, Rajasthan, India. We are not connected to the time. There is only oneness in the oneness. The best way is yoga. Do not meditate on outer things. The development will come by practicing. Shiva puja gives calmness. It is very important how to worship Gurupurnima, tomorrow we are going to show it.
Try to become a real Yogi
7:35 - 8:15 (40 min)
Yoga is a complete spiritual path beyond physical exercise. We must remain vigilant and protective during this pandemic, praying for all beings. Yoga's true essence is found in ancient teachings and sāttvic living, not merely in postures. India is a sacred land of incarnations, yet every country is holy, as all earth is one Mother. We must transcend divisions, see the one God in all traditions, and live with love and forgiveness. The current times demand inner spiritual work, not external ritual. True yoga leads to the soul, confronting mortality and ethical living, like the sacredness of the body and organ donation. Become a yogī who gives and embodies this wholeness.
"Yoga is not only āsanas and prāṇāyāmas. Yes, this is gymnastics."
"Therefore, yoga leads to everyone. First, to health, and not only physical. Not only mental, but spiritualities in the soul."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Opening of inner eyes
8:20 - 8:57 (37 min)
The inner light and the practice of trāṭak reveal the soul's journey. The soul enters the body like a seed finding its place, guided by an inner light from the navel. This light is the jīva, the soul itself, present in all creation. Every seed, tree, and creature possesses inner eyes that seek their destined path through concentration. This seeking is trāṭak. The story of a guru saving a devotee at sea illustrates the power of this inner connection. The guru's astral body traveled and returned through the navel center, or nābhi, demonstrating that true sight is inward. All external vision is secondary to this inner light, which connects the individual soul to the universal.
"Every seed again gives eyes to the roots."
"Trāṭak of the nābhi and Gurujī came."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The work of Hatha Yoga
9:05 - 9:41 (36 min)
Haṭha Yoga is the purification of body, mind, and soul. This purification permeates the entire human being. Every creature has its own connection to God. A purified yogī attracts animals and birds, as described in ancient songs. This practice also represents cosmic principles. There are two kinds of Haṭha Yoga: one is the inner purification, and the other is the external conflict seen in fighting. The elements and deities are all part of this understanding. The goal is to give up force and join in union. The impermanent self is like a candle flame, but the true light within is Brahman. The living guru embodies the divine principle for guidance.
"Haṭha Yoga is the purification of our body, mind, and ātmā."
"Give up that kind of forceful striving. And this light is not our physical light."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The value of the satsang
9:45 - 10:20 (35 min)
Satsaṅg and a sacred morning routine create a divine atmosphere for spiritual life. The environment of an ashram provides peace, which is the result of true satsaṅg. In genuine satsaṅg, there should not be excessive singing or instrumental music, as this creates business and distracts from the teaching. A single saint can provide satsaṅg for all, just as the sun's light dispels darkness. The purest atmosphere is one hour before sunrise. Upon waking, one should cleanse the body with water, which brings purification and awakening. Sleep is crucial for restoring the body and mind, like repairing a machine, but it must be natural and not induced by substances. The first hours of the morning, used for personal practice and offering respect to family and the divine, constitute your own life and spiritual foundation. The rest of the day's work is for others. A Guru exists in a divine state beyond ordinary sleep, demonstrating perfect spiritual awareness and guidance for the disciple.
"Peace and bliss are the result of satsaṅg."
"One sādhu, one saint, is for all."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The Radiation of Holy Places
10:25 - 10:57 (32 min)
A pilgrimage is a journey of the heart to purify oneself at a holy place. I have been here for three months, observing the great atmosphere and disciplined bhaktas. We welcome you to this beautiful day at our āśram. Many came from various countries, all respectful and healthy. Our programs and satsaṅgs were successful, with space for hundreds while maintaining distance. I feel great devotion and recall our pilgrimage to the Himalayas. We traveled with hearts full of longing to step on India's holy soil, to see the Gaṅgā, which is more than a river—it is a mother. We journeyed to Badrinath and toward Alakpurījī's cave, where the terrain was harsh but the bhaktas' feeling was pure love and unity, beyond comfort or facility. The essence is bhakti—devotion is all one needs, not material wealth. We ask our Gurudev to be with us as we make our prayer.
"One who goes to the holy place... they are going from the heart, and they are making their heart pure."
"Dear Gurudev, give me only devotion... Money is nothing, money goes out of the hands, it will come again, but in the heart... I need the bhakti."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Prayer is the first step to the Cosmic Self
11:05 - 11:36 (31 min)
The tradition of prayer and reverence sustains all life. We live by the grace of saints, prayers, and sacred places. This practice comes from the divine and is universal, expressed in greetings like "Namaste." Prayer is essential, whether directed toward a form or the formless. Respect begins with mother and father, extends to elders and teachers, and culminates in reverence for the spiritual guide. This sequence is the first step toward the Cosmic Self. All creatures seek to give and receive; this exchange is yoga. Life is fleeting, so we must act, purify ourselves, and practice diligently. Yoga in daily life means consistent practice, which brings health, happiness, and longevity.
"Both are good, but while we are in this world, we need all these objects."
"Guru is Brahmā, Guru is Viṣṇu, Guru is Deva Maheśvara, and Guru is everything."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Yoga is for all creatures
11:40 - 12:09 (29 min)
Our journey is a spiritual ascent and return toward the Cosmic Self.
Life is a journey from the womb toward the Supreme. We accumulate experiences as we grow. Reaching a peak is like a Himalayan summit, a point of clarity before the descent back down. This cycle mirrors life: we learn to stand, then in age, we return downward. The body and elements are temporary; only the soul continues. God, who is singular and pervasive like the sky, provides our time and space. The ultimate destination is merging with the ocean of Brahman, becoming the endless Cosmic Self. Therefore, consistent practice is essential. Yoga is the paramount path for this union, and it is inherent in all life. Animals instinctively perform their own yoga through movement and cleansing. Humans learn postures from observing animals, proving yoga is for all creatures. Our daily work and exercises are also forms of yoga. The goal is for all expanded existence to melt back into oneness, like elements in a volcano. Through disciplined practice and techniques like Agnisāra, we progress.
"One in all and all in one."
"Yoga is for all creatures."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Respect God
12:15 - 12:44 (29 min)
The divine principle is immanent within the natural order and our own being. The sun is a constant divine presence, essential for life; without its balance with the moon, earthly stability would fail. This cosmic balance mirrors the delicate equilibrium within our own bodies, where each organ is vital. To deny the divine nature of these elements is a form of blindness. The divine is not a separate, distant figure but is present in all things—the sun, moon, earth, and within ourselves. Argument over the form or name of God is futile and leads only to spiritual disease. Realization comes from understanding this inherent divinity in everything, returning fully to the sacred earth that supports all life without judgment. All names point to the same one reality.
"Within two days, if the sun does not rise, we will be finished. And if we are not balancing this moon, then everything will fall down."
"Therefore, let all go as they are going, but those who have the realization, they understand again, come completely down to the earth."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
We should not have duality
12:50 - 13:01 (11 min)
The divine lineage is eternal, manifesting across all ages. From the Satya Yuga through to the present, this sacred tradition continues. Great saints perpetually appear, representing a twofold divine expression: one is the singular incarnation of God for an era, and the other is the everlasting succession of saintly Gurus. This is not about a single individual; there are many Gurus, just as there are many parents. All are manifestations of the one divine reality. Your parents are your gods, yet we respect all elders as such. The soul is one, though forms differ. Other traditions are good, yet they often speak of a God from the past, not a living, ever-present God. Without a living God, it is like a child whose mother has died; where does one find that direct love? We must transcend duality, for God is everywhere.
"One is as God, what we call, appearing once in that time... the second is called the saint, known as the Guru Bhagat... there is another who is forever coming."
"Other religions are also very good, but they have no God—not a living God. Once they have a God, and that’s all."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
What means destiny?
13:05 - 13:52 (47 min)
The practice of Aum moves through the chakras with prāṇa. Chanting extends beyond three repetitions. The numeral system uses nine digits and the essential zero, invented in India. The sound for the number nine often relates to 'N' across languages. The Earth is a globe, first lifted from the ocean by the Varāha avatāra. Destiny is pre-written by Vidhātā, a divine power, for every being at birth. This script is immutable; life events, including survival, follow its decree. Ancient scriptures, primarily in India, contain this knowledge. An extended story illustrates that even the powerful Rāvaṇa could not alter the destined marriage for his daughter. Therefore, one should not worry excessively. Perform your sādhanā and duties. Destiny ultimately rests with God and may be transcended through yoga practice over time.
"Destiny is yours, mine, anyone's—your dog, your cow... What is in the destiny is already written therein."
"What she writes, no one can change. Yes, no one can run from it."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Śaṅkha Prakṣālana and Kunjal Kriyā: Purification of the Intestine and Stomach
14:00 - 14:40 (40 min)
This lecture details the Śaṅkha Prakṣālana and Kunjal Kriyā purification techniques. Śaṅkha Prakṣālana is the cleansing of the entire intestine using warm, lightly salted water, performed early in the morning on an empty stomach. It involves drinking water and performing specific movements and postures to guide the water through the system. This practice is beneficial for conditions like high blood pressure and digestive issues but is not advised for those under 15, individuals with active ulcers or hernias, or pregnant women. Preparation includes a light diet the prior evening. The process continues until the expelled water runs clear. A strict diet must follow for at least one week, avoiding alcohol, meat, fish, eggs, and raw foods. Kunjal Kriyā is the cleansing of the stomach, performed after Śaṅkha Prakṣālana by drinking unsalted water to the point of fullness and then voluntarily expelling it. This practice helps purify the stomach and can aid those with bronchial asthma. The session concludes with rest and a meal of specially prepared kicharī.
"The best time to do Śaṅkha Prakṣālana is in March, the beginning of September, the end of May, and before the winter."
"After Śaṅkha Prakṣālana, you have to keep a diet for at least, strictly, seven days, one week, and up to one month."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Tratak and the inner meditation
14:45 - 15:38 (53 min)
The practice of Trāṭaka extends beyond external gaze to the awakening of inner vision. We clean the physical eyes with Triphalā to prepare. Yet true sight is internal. Most practitioners sit for meditation with closed eyes but lack the technique to see inwardly, like a blind person missing a door while distracted. This inner Trāṭaka is not theoretical; it requires a guru's practical guidance on the subtle channels—Iḍā, Piṅgalā, Suṣumnā—and centers like the trikuṭī. It is a disciplined focus, akin to a pilot flying by instruments or an archer hitting a target by looking at its reflection. The guru's gaze upon the disciple and the disciple's focused gaze upon the teaching are one. Mastery comes from prolonged practice, not mere intellectual knowledge.
"Almost all yoga practitioners do inner Trāṭaka without knowing it."
"If you can shoot your arrow, then you are perfect in your Trāṭaka."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Let be as it is
15:45 - 16:46 (61 min)
The ātmā's journey seeks peace beyond the temporary body. All beings, in any body, search for peace and harmony. We attach to this form, believing it to be permanent, working hard for it and fearing its end. Yet, upon leaving, nothing material accompanies the soul—not house, property, or family. The separation is absolute. Great beings demonstrate rising above bodily pain, understanding the ātmā is distinct. The soul departs swiftly, like a falling star. Ultimately, we are not this body; the true self is a spotless, awakened consciousness within the heart, present in all movable and immovable life. This inner truth is the only reality.
"When we go out of the body, nothing. We cannot even touch anything."
"Our soul goes like that; it goes out. He doesn't want, my God, how much I was suffering in this body."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Helpful techniques for our eyes
16:50 - 17:35 (45 min)
Trāṭaka is a yogic gazing technique for eye care and subtle awakening. It involves fixing the gaze on a single point like a flame or a black spot. This practice can lead to perceiving inner light, but these sensations are physiological, not spiritual revelations. The eyes are extremely sensitive. While the technique is powerful, it carries risk without proper guidance. One must first consult a qualified eye doctor to understand the condition of their eyes. Medical knowledge is essential. For general eye health, a daily wash with filtered Triphalā water is a safe and beneficial Āyurvedic practice. Simple remedies like cold compresses can relieve tiredness. Always seek a yoga teacher with deep practical experience, not just theoretical knowledge. Balance respect for yogic tradition with modern medical care.
"If the eyes are gone, it is said life is gone."
"First speak with a good eye doctor."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
This is the time to work on our inner self
17:40 - 18:25 (45 min)
This is the time to return to our inner self. Humans work very hard externally, constructing roads and buildings, often with environmental cost. This external endeavor is great, but we work too hard outside. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours daily, that would be very good. Yoga is that inner engineering. It is not merely external exercise but acting for the whole world from within. The techniques are already within, showing how the body is continually made better. Yoga practice gives exercises for the inner body, leading to peace and harmony. The difference is we often do too much externally while neglecting the inner self.
"We humans work too hard externally. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours each day, that would be very, very good."
"Yoga is the engineer, not a human. The techniques of yoga, all that God has made, are already within."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Save your health in every way
18:30 - 19:27 (57 min)
A message of health, harmony, and yogic practice for all. This is a time of global concern regarding health and impurity in the environment. Maintain cleanliness and personal hygiene. The practice of Yoga in Daily Life, including Sarvahitāsana, offers simple exercises for all, performed gently to awaken the body and improve circulation. These subtle movements can be done anywhere to regain and preserve good health. Respect all people and care for the health of family and community. Follow health guidelines and use Ayurvedic preparations like kaḍā for protection. Practice prāṇāyāma alone. Commemorate spiritual teachers and lineages through personal observance at this time.
"We should all remain as one, in peace and harmony."
"Every day, practice yoga. That’s called yoga, which is Yoga in Daily Life."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
This is the time to work on our inner self
19:35 - 20:20 (45 min)
This is the time to return to our inner self. Humans work very hard externally, constructing roads and buildings, often with environmental cost. This external endeavor is great, but we work too hard outside. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours daily, that would be very good. Yoga is that inner engineering. It is not merely external exercise but acting for the whole world from within. The techniques are already within, showing how the body is continually made better. Yoga practice gives exercises for the inner body, leading to peace and harmony. The difference is we often do too much externally while neglecting the inner self.
"We humans work too hard externally. If we worked on our inner body for one or two hours each day, that would be very, very good."
"Yoga is the engineer, not a human. The techniques of yoga, all that God has made, are already within."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
The Divine Union of Śiva and Śakti
20:25 - 21:34 (69 min)
The divine union of Śiva and Śakti is the fundamental principle of creation. Everything originates from the endless space, containing all five elements. From this emerged Śiva, who then manifested Śakti, the dynamic power. All existence contains both these principles within; the male holds the female energy and the female holds the male. This inner Śakti is our vital prāṇa. Through yoga, born from Śiva's movements, one can raise and unite this energy. If this power is not preserved, it dissipates. The story of Śiva's mala of skulls illustrates the consequence of separation. He guards the remains of those śaktis who were lost due to error and duality. The power must be maintained within, for Śiva and Śakti are ultimately one.
"Everything, everything that is on our earth is divided into two principles."
"In our body, we have the Śiva. And we have the Śakti in our body too."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
We don't know our destiny
21:40 - 22:32 (52 min)
The divine path encompasses human destiny and the nature of existence. All beings are connected to the Supreme. Divine incarnations appear to guide creation. God is present within every element and creature. The human body contains the five elements, animated by divine energy. Life continues through cycles of rebirth. One's actions and consciousness determine the future birth. Destiny operates, as illustrated by ancient stories. Unfulfilled desires, or vāsanā, can pull the consciousness back into worldly life. Spiritual training under a master is the path to transcendence. The relationship with the divine persists regardless of physical distance. The goal is to realize one's true nature beyond these cycles.
"God is everywhere. In each and every cell in our body, and in every creature, is God."
"Destiny is there, and so many times, your destiny will be, can turn back again."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
Try to become a real Yogi
22:40 - 23:20 (40 min)
Yoga is a complete spiritual path beyond physical exercise. We must remain vigilant and protective during this pandemic, praying for all beings. Yoga's true essence is found in ancient teachings and sāttvic living, not merely in postures. India is a sacred land of incarnations, yet every country is holy, as all earth is one Mother. We must transcend divisions, see the one God in all traditions, and live with love and forgiveness. The current times demand inner spiritual work, not external ritual. True yoga leads to the soul, confronting mortality and ethical living, like the sacredness of the body and organ donation. Become a yogī who gives and embodies this wholeness.
"Yoga is not only āsanas and prāṇāyāmas. Yes, this is gymnastics."
"Therefore, yoga leads to everyone. First, to health, and not only physical. Not only mental, but spiritualities in the soul."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
We are eternal
23:25 - 0:25 (60 min)
The essence is oneness, knowledge, and the guru's grace.
Separate drops of rain fall, yet they unite to form flowing water, creeks, rivers, and finally the ocean. The drop and the ocean are not different; we are that oneness. Knowledge is endless, and the cosmic Self is realized beyond the temporary body and its elements like anger or jealousy. These are like air in a balloon; when the body bursts, the air—the space of consciousness—remains. Humans possess knowledge and speech to understand this. A story illustrates this: a professor criticized a meditating yogi, denying God. The yogi noted that a small cherry falling from a tree is harmless, whereas a large melon from such height would injure. This shows divine arrangement is good. The guru's grace is paramount, transcending physical distance. The disciple's connection is in the heart, closer than family. One should not ask the guru for things, as asking creates distance; grace is given spontaneously like a mother's milk.
"All drops unite to become the water that flows. Not one drop alone; all must come together again."
"God has done everything good."
Filming location: Strilky, Czech Republic
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