Galla Grotto discovered her innate ability to create art as an early teenager. She discovered textiles as an Interior designer and started making textile art pieces. Working in a series, female figures often appear in her work. Her art education gives her the tools to tap into a variety of techniques to create her original and unique textile art pieces.
Note: Interview has been translated from Russian and edited in English. See original Russian interview below.

How did you find yourself on the path of the artist? Have you always been there? Light bulb moment? Dragged with kicks and screams? Evolved?
My desire to become an artist came to me at the age of 13, when I drew a portrait of a friend from memory and it turned out very realistic. My mother’s friend saw the drawing, said that I have a talent and I need to study to be an artist. I had a dream! I went to study at a children’s art school, and then further, to the institute.
Why textiles? Why artistic quilts? How did you start?
As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases. Read more about our affiliate linking policy.
I became an interior designer and my first experience with textiles was to decorate a space. Textiles in the interior add warmth, comfort and originality.
When I started sewing my first textile art pieces, this kind of creativity was not yet so popular. There was no internet, special magazines or festivals. There were no special fabrics and other materials especially for textile art. My sewing machine was very primitive and performed only 2 stitches. I can say that I stood at the beginning of creating textile art pieces.
My first series was called “Red Light District – Love District” (ero laboratory) was inspired by ancient Chinese texts about love. I had a desire to sew a series, not to draw a series, which was much more familiar. This was a series of 12 large works with a predominance of red. Old curtains, items of clothing lying around in the closet, etc. were used. I worked in a 9 square meter kitchen. In order to look at my composition and correct the mistakes, I had to lay it out on the floor and climb onto the table. But when did difficulties stop the artist? The series turned out to be very effective, and later I showed it in many countries around the world. This was my debut in textile art many years ago.

Are there recurring themes in your work? What about the topic inspires you to keep exploring it?
I love working in large batches. My last series, in which there are more than 20 works, and on which I am still working, is called “Women’s Encyclopedia”. This is my appeal to world cultural traditions through the rethinking of myths, images and symbols. In the gallery of portraits of my heroines, goddesses and fairies, muses and female images in the mythology of various cultures, as well as non-existent women, but who carry certain ideas and express certain feelings. I am interested in the Woman in all its manifestations. By creating an image, I thus communicate with the world and turn my message to it.

What do you do differently? What is your hallmark that makes your work stand out as your own?
I have not met textile artists like me. This is my hallmark. My individual style. Was I looking for my style or did I come to it by searching and experimenting? Both.
My art education gives me the opportunity to be free in creativity. I can draw and do whatever I want with the form while still being convincing. Recently, I often turn to female images. These can be mythological, fantastic or real characters that give me the desire to fantasize. I do not sew portraits. I create my opinion about the character from the fabric. I convey my attitude towards her with color. Conventionally, my work is closest to the cubism movement. I am often compared to Picasso.

What motivates you creatively?
I don’t need any motivation or inspiration. I have enough ideas for several lifetimes!
Do you plan your work in advance or just dive into it with materials and start playing?
Happiness is when ideas come to you and you have the opportunity to immediately implement them. There is time, a sewing machine, fabrics and threads. You are burning with desire, you see virtually the whole picture, then โฆ how beautifully you work on individual elements!!! Sometimes you want to make a big project, a series of works on a common theme. First you look for an idea, then you fill it out, collect information, make up stories.

How do you allocate your creative time? Do you schedule start and finish times? Or do you only work when you are inspired?
I work whenever I have time. I can work all day or in between other important things. I want to work always! I don’t know what “inspiration comes” means, it’s always with me. I walk into my atelier and am immediately plunged into my creative world.

Do you have a dedicated space for creativity? If yes, what does it look like?
I am engaged in many types of creativity and for each I have a certain place. There is a painting studio where I paint pictures, draw illustrations, and decorate furniture. There are several sewing studios, a room for cutting and assembling a composition, another room with several sewing machines, a third room for sewing clothes and needlework.

There is also a large gallery where exhibitions will take place in the future and I will give master classes. Each room has everything you need to work. It is a great blessing to have a lot of space to work. In order to have such conditions, I left the big city and settled in the countryside, where I fell in love with a big Art Deco house. So far this is my favorite style.

How often do you start a new project? Are you actively working on multiple projects at the same time?
I have never started a new project before finishing the previous one. Now I’m working on several at once. It’s not easy to slow yourself down. Emotions take over the mind, which says, wait, it’s not time yet. You drop everything and go headlong into a new job, what a pleasure it is!!! Well, as a result โฆ a lot of work begun โฆ But I am confident in myself that I will finish everything! I’m used to getting things done.

Can you tell us about the inspiration and the process of creating one of your works? How is a new piece of work come about?
Very rarely do artists manage to create living works. Who can talk, ask questions and answer, using only the expression of eyes that follow you everywhere, approve or condemn, support and sympathize. You live with the character you created in your own separate life. Other works may be beautiful, of high quality, but they are silent. The most important thing in art is to create Emotion!
Perhaps it would be very naive to say that the idea of โโcreating “Mother Earth” came to me in a dream. But, that’s exactly what happened.
Five years ago there was a creative stagnation in my life, I wanted to find new forms, new themes and characters. All my thoughts were occupied with this internal search for a way out into a new creative direction. Once in a dream I saw a woman’s face with sad eyes. Then I read the legend of the Algonquins tribe, which tells that the mother of the earth lives above the clouds and sheds tears – the water of life, thereby nourishing the earth, animals and people.
I realized that the woman from my dream is she, Mother Earth. The drawing was done quickly. I deliberately deformed the face of Mother Earth, thereby making it clear that not everything is so harmonious and beautiful on our planet. As for the palette, I usually think carefully about what colors I will work in, but this time I decided not to limit myself and work with fabrics by feeling. I wanted to use more self-dyed fabrics so that they do not look new, and so that each textile fragment already has the experience of its small lived life. I wanted to have more subtle transitions and more harmonious combinations. To give my work more freedom, I also abandoned the standard rectangular shape. I came up with dangling strands of hair to further enhance the impression of freedom and infinity, like our planet.
I sewed the work โMother of the Earthโ for about three months, and for me this was a whole life.When I work with fabrics, choosing each fragment with great love, I forget about time. I talked to her all day long, adding details as I delved deeper into the topic.
I worked especially hard on the expression of the eyes. For me, her eyes express sympathy, great love, experience, support. A large number of different feelings mixed in her eyes, just like her appearance merged with fragments of architecture, houses, landscapes. She is the Earth! She cares about everything that happens. She sympathizes, but can only help with her support and love. That’s the main idea, and I think it’s great!
When the work was finished, I examined it and could not understand my attitude towards it. There was no distance between us, we were still fused organisms, we loved together and also worried together about the fate of the planet on which we live. I could not look at her detachedly, evaluatively, from the outside. Most likely it was a look into the mirror of the soul. I wanted to constantly look into her eyes and listen to her voice, which, apparently, was my inner voice. It was unlike anything I’ve done before.
When it came time to present it to the public for the first time, I was very worried. And I was surprised by the reaction of the audience and artists. They came to see it many times. Some cried or said that she had very sad eyes. Mother Earth… if you imagine that such a character exists, how can you have fun looking at what is happening today? Therefore, some sadness is quite acceptable.


What part of the quilt making process do you enjoy the most? What part is difficult for you?
I love all the steps involved in creating a quilt. In fact, they are all complex and you need to find pleasure in each. Nothing real can be produced without feelings.
How does your formal art education help you in your work? Does it bother you?
I studied at a children’s art school, then received an art education as an interior designer and later continued to study with a degree in exterior design.
In my opinion, no education can interfere with work, if you know how to use this knowledge. But nevertheless, I know many real examples when education broke the creative destiny of a person. When the process of learning and collecting information ends too quickly and the desire for self-expression comes just as quickly, and the curriculum requires a different attitude to the subjects being studied. I remember professors telling some of the students whose talent and style began to show up too early for them to do their creative work at home. My education gives me the freedom to find forms and the opportunity to realize my ideas. For many years I was engaged in academic drawing, drawing portraits. Now I am also engaged in images of people, but for me the most important thing is not to depict the eyes correctly or keep the proportions, it all comes automatically from experience and knowledge, but using the same facial features to convey emotions, mood, character, thoughts, message, etc. In order to achieve my idea, I can distort or stylize the form, but not break it, because always depicting a face, I see virtual muscles and bones.

How has your art evolved over the years? What was the impetus for the transition to new media / types of work / ways of working?
I have a very interesting and eventful life. I can list what I had to do and in what area to work: a researcher in a museum; journalist in newspapers and magazines; author of documentaries, announcer and head of the advertising department on a television channel; writer; designer and head of the design team; professor of painting and drawing, director of the art school; illustrator of her own books and works of other authors. Impressive, right?
I was also lucky to write several scripts and stage performances based on them. All my life I have been engaged in painting and graphics, I cannot name a man-made technique in art that I would not own. And finally, we come to the most important occupation of my life – this is art textiles. This is my love, my passion!

What is the biggest challenge you have faced in your creative journey? What have you learned?
One of the most difficult periods in my creative life was the moment when I moved from one country to another. When I realized that I could not work as before, and I did not know which road to choose and where to go. There was a period of searching for oneself, one’s own themes, one’s technique – in a word, one’s own style. I was led in the right direction, namely, art textiles.

Do you think that creativity is a part of human nature or is it something that needs to be brought up and what needs to be learned?
Creativity is a part of human nature that needs to be revealed, and for this it is desirable to study. Studying is not always a diploma of an art university. You can learn by studying the work of other masters. Today there are many opportunities for this: the Internet, master classes, seminars. Today it is very easy to find your favorite artist in social networks and write to him personally, ask for advice or ask a question.
What traits, if any, do you think are inherent in creative people compared to non-creative people?
I believe that all people are creative. Some are lucky and they find out about their gift, while others are not. Their creativity is in its infancy or dormant state. Any gift needs to be developed; without development, it dies as an unnecessary vestige. Social networks play a bad role in this. When there are so many pictures, you can download it without any effort, and not invent your own project.

Do you lecture or conduct seminars? How can students/organizers contact you to schedule an event?
I conduct workshops, seminars, sometimes there are creative meetings. I receive many invitations at exhibitions and through social networks: FB, Instagram, Telegram channel.
Tell us about your blog and/or website. What do you hope people will take away when they visit your site?
I have several sites in French and will soon have a site in English. My sites are a small presentation of my work, where you can always find all the dates, where and when I give a master class or participate in various events.
https://textile.galla.fr/
https://www.galla.fr/
Interview posted July 2023
Browse through more inspiring interviews with art quilters on Create Whimsy.
Here is the original interview in Russian:
– ะะฐะบ ะฒั ะฝะฐัะปะธ ัะตะฑั ะฝะฐ ะฟััะธ ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะฐ? ะัะตะณะดะฐ ะฑัะปะธ ัะฐะผ? ะะพะผะตะฝั ั ะปะฐะผะฟะพัะบะพะน? ะขะฐัะธะปะธ ะฟะธะฝะบะฐะผะธ ะธ ะบัะธะบะฐะผะธ? ะญะฒะพะปััะธะพะฝะธัะพะฒะฐะปะธ?
ะะตะปะฐะฝะธะต ััะฐัั ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะพะผ ะฟัะธัะปะพ ะบะพ ะผะฝะต ะฒ 13 ะปะตั, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ัะปััะฐะนะฝะพ ั ะฝะฐัะธัะพะฒะฐะปะฐ ะฟะพัััะตั ะฟะพะดััะณะธ ะฟะพ ะฟะฐะผััะธ ะธ ะฟะพะปััะธะปะพัั ะพัะตะฝั ะฟะพั ะพะถะต ะฝะฐ ะพัะธะณะธะฝะฐะป. ะะฝะฐะบะพะผะฐั ะผะพะน ะผะฐะผั ัะฒะธะดะตะปะฐ ะตะณะพ ะธ ัะบะฐะทะฐะปะฐ, ััะพ ั ะผะตะฝั ะตััั ัะฐะปะฐะฝั ะธ ะผะฝะต ะฝะฐะดะพ ััะธัััั ะฝะฐ ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะฐ. ะขะฐะบ ั ะผะตะฝั ะฟะพัะฒะธะปะฐัั ะผะตััะฐ! ะฏ ะฟะพัะปะฐ ััะธัััั ะฒ ะดะตััะบัั ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝัั ัะบะพะปั, ะฐ ะทะฐัะตะผ ะดะฐะปััะต, ะฒ ะธะฝััะธััั.
– ะะพัะตะผั ัะตะบััะธะปั? ะะพัะตะผั ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝัะต ะบะฒะธะปัั? ะะฐะบ ะฒั ะฝะฐัะฐะปะธ?
ะฏ ะฟะพะปััะธะปะฐ ะฟัะพัะตััะธั ะดะธะทะฐะนะฝะตัะฐ ะฟะพ ะธะฝัะตััะตัั ะธ ะผะพะธ ะฟะตัะฒัะต ัะตะบััะธะปัะฝัะต ัะฐะฑะพัั ะฟะพัะฒะธะปะธัั ะธะผะตะฝะฝะพ ั ััะพะน ัะตะปัั โ ะดะตะบะพัะธัะพะฒะฐัั ะฟัะพัััะฐะฝััะฒะพ. ะขะตะบััะธะปั ะฒ ะธะฝัะตััะตัะต ะดะพะฑะฐะฒะปัะตั ัะตะฟะปะพัั, ะบะพะผัะพััะฐ ะธ ะพัะธะณะธะฝะฐะปัะฝะพััะธ. ะะพะณะดะฐ ั ะฝะฐัะธะฝะฐะปะฐ ัะธัั ัะฒะพะธ ะฟะตัะฒัะต ะบะพะผะฟะพะทะธัะธะธ, ััะพั ะฒะธะด ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะฐ ะตัะต ะฝะต ะฑัะป ัะฐะบ ะฟะพะฟัะปััะตะฝ. ะัะต ะฝะต ะฑัะปะพ ะธะฝัะตัะฝะตัะฐ, ัะฟะตัะธะฐะปัะฝัั ะถััะฝะฐะปะพะฒ, ัะตััะธะฒะฐะปะตะน. ะะปัั ะฝะต ะฑัะปะพ ัะบะฐะฝะตะน ะธ ะดััะณะธั ะผะฐัะตัะธะฐะปะพะฒ, ะฐ ะผะพั ัะฒะตะนะฝะฐั ะผะฐัะธะฝะฐ ะฑัะปะฐ ะพัะตะฝั ะฟัะธะผะธัะธะฒะฝะฐั ะธ ะฒัะฟะพะปะฝัะปะฐ ะฒัะตะณะพ 2 ัะฒะฐ. ะะพััะพะผั ั ะผะพะณั ัะบะฐะทะฐัั, ััะพ ั ััะพัะปะฐ ั ะธััะพะบะพะฒ. ะะตัะฒะฐั ะผะพั ัะตัะธั ะฝะฐะทัะฒะฐะปะฐัั ยซะ ะฐะนะพะฝ ะบัะฐัะฝะพะณะพ ัะฒะตัะฐ โ ัะฐะนะพะฝ ะปัะฑะฒะธยป (ััะพ ะปะฐะฑะพัะฐัะพัะธั) ะฏ ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะธะปะฐัั ะดัะตะฒะฝะธะผะธ ะบะธัะฐะนัะบะธะผะธ ัะตะบััะฐะผะธ ะพ ะปัะฑะฒะธ ะธ ั ะผะตะฝั ะฟะพัะฒะธะปะพัั ะถะตะปะฐะฝะธะต ะฝะต ัะธัะพะฒะฐัั ัะตัะธั, ััะพ ะฑัะปะพ ะฝะฐะผะฝะพะณะพ ะฟัะธะฒััะฝะตะต, ะฐ ััะธัั. ะญัะฐ ะฑัะปะธ 12 ัะฐะฑะพั ะฑะพะปััะพะณะพ ัะฐะทะผะตัะฐ ั ะฟัะตะพะฑะปะฐะดะฐะฝะธะตะผ ะบัะฐัะฝะพะณะพ ัะฒะตัะฐ. ะ ั ะพะด ัะปะธ ััะฐััะต ััะพัั, ะฟัะตะดะผะตัั ะพะดะตะถะดั, ะทะฐะฒะฐะปัะฒัะธะตัั ะฒ ัะบะฐัั ะธัะด. ะฏ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐะปะฐ ะฝะฐ ะบัั ะฝะต 9 ะผะตััะพะฒ ะบะฒะฐะดัะฐัะฝัั . ะ ััะพะฑั ะฟะพัะผะพััะตัั ะฝะฐ ัะฒะพั ะบะพะผะฟะพะทะธัะธั ะธ ะฟะพะฟัะฐะฒะธัั ะพัะธะฑะบะธ, ะผะฝะต ะฟัะธั ะพะดะธะปะพัั ัะฐัะบะปะฐะดัะฒะฐัั ะตะต ะฝะฐ ะฟะพะปั ะธ ะทะฐะฑะธัะฐัััั ะฝะฐ ััะพะป. ะะพ ะบะพะณะดะฐ ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะฐ ะพััะฐะฝะฐะฒะปะธะฒะฐะปะธ ัััะดะฝะพััะธ? ะกะตัะธั ะฟะพะปััะธะปะฐัั ะพัะตะฝั ัััะตะบัะฝะฐั, ะธ ะฟะพะทะดะฝะตะต ั ะตะต ะฟะพะบะฐะทัะฒะฐะปะฐ ะฒะพ ะผะฝะพะณะธั ัััะฐะฝะฐั ะผะธัะฐ. ะะพั ัะฐะบะพะน ะฑัะป ะผะพะน ะดะตะฑัั ะฒ ัะตะบััะธะปัะฝะพะผ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะต ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะปะตั ะฝะฐะทะฐะด.
– ะััั ะปะธ ะฒ ะฒะฐัะธั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐั ะฟะพะฒัะพััััะธะตัั ัะตะผั? ะงัะพ ะฒ ัะตะผะต ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะปัะตั ะฒะฐั ะฟัะพะดะพะปะถะฐัั ะตะต ะธััะปะตะดะพะฒะฐัั?
ะฏ ะปัะฑะปั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั ะฑะพะปััะธะผะธ ัะตัะธัะผะธ. ะะพัะปะตะดะฝัั ะผะพั ัะตัะธั, ะฒ ะบะพัะพัะพะน ะฑะพะปะตะต 20 ัะฐะฑะพั, ะธ ะฝะฐะด ะบะพัะพัะพะน ั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐั ะธ ะฟะพ ัะตะน ะดะตะฝั, ะฝะฐะทัะฒะฐะตััั ยซะะตะฝัะบะฐั ัะฝัะธะบะปะพะฟะตะดะธัยป. ะญัะพ ะผะพะต ะพะฑัะฐัะตะฝะธะต ะบ ะผะธัะพะฒัะผ ะบัะปััััะฝัะผ ััะฐะดะธัะธัะผ ัะตัะตะท ะฟะตัะตะพัะผััะปะตะฝะธะต ะผะธัะพะฒ, ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒ ะธ ัะธะผะฒะพะปะพะฒ. ะ ะณะฐะปะตัะตะต ะฟะพัััะตัะพะฒ ะผะพะธั ะณะตัะพะธะฝั ะฑะพะณะธะฝะธ ะธ ัะตะธ, ะผัะทั ะธ ะถะตะฝัะบะธะต ะพะฑัะฐะทั ะฒ ะผะธัะพะปะพะณะธะธ ัะฐะทะปะธัะฝัั ะบัะปัััั, ะฐ ัะฐะบะถะต ะฝะตัััะตััะฒัััะธะต ะถะตะฝัะธะฝั, ะฝะพ ะบะพัะพััะต ะฝะตััั ะพะฟัะตะดะตะปะตะฝะฝัะต ะธะดะตะธ ะธ ะฒััะฐะถะฐัั ะพะฟัะตะดะตะปะตะฝะฝัะต ััะฒััะฒะฐ. ะะฝะต ะธะฝัะตัะตัะฝะฐ ะะตะฝัะธะฝะฐ ะฒะพ ะฒัะตั ัะฒะพะธั ะฟัะพัะฒะปะตะฝะธัั . ะกะพะทะดะฐะฒะฐั ะพะฑัะฐะท, ั ัะฐะบะธะผ ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะผ ะพะฑัะฐะตััั ั ะผะธัะพะผ ะธ ะพะฑัะฐัะฐั ะบ ะฝะตะผั ัะฒะพะต ะฟะพัะปะฐะฝะธะต.
– ะงัะพ ะฒั ะดะตะปะฐะตัะต ะฟะพ-ะดััะณะพะผั? ะงัะพ ัะฒะปัะตััั ะฒะฐัะตะน ะพัะปะธัะธัะตะปัะฝะพะน ัะตััะพะน, ััะพ ะฒัะดะตะปัะตั ะฒะฐัั ัะฐะฑะพัั ะบะฐะบ ะฒะฐัั?
ะฏ ะฝะต ะฒัััะตัะฐะปะฐ ัะตะบััะธะปัะฝัั ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะพะฒ, ะฟะพั ะพะถะธั ะฝะฐ ะผะตะฝั. ะญัะพ ะธ ะตััั ะผะพั ะพัะปะธัะธัะตะปัะฝะฐั ัะตััะฐ. ะะพะน ะธะฝะดะธะฒะธะดัะฐะปัะฝัะน ััะธะปั. ะัะบะฐะปะฐ ั ะตะณะพ ะธะปะธ ั ะฟัะธัะปะฐ ะบ ะฝะตะผั ะฟััะตะผ ะฟะพะธัะบะพะฒ ะธ ัะบัะฟะตัะธะผะตะฝัะพะฒ? ะ ัะพ ะธ ะดััะณะพะต. ะะพะต ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะต ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะดะฐะตั ะผะฝะต ะฒะพะทะผะพะถะฝะพััั ะฑััั ัะฒะพะฑะพะดะฝะพะน ะฒ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะต. ะฏ ัะผะตั ัะธัะพะฒะฐัั ะธ ะดะตะปะฐัั ั ัะพัะผะพะน ะฒัะต, ััะพ ั ั ะพัั, ะฟัะธ ััะพะผ ะพััะฐะฒะฐััั ัะฑะตะดะธัะตะปัะฝะพะน. ะ ะฟะพัะปะตะดะฝะตะต ะฒัะตะผั ั ัะฐััะพ ะพะฑัะฐัะฐััั ะบ ะถะตะฝัะบะธะผ ะพะฑัะฐะทะฐะผ, ััะพ ะผะพะณัั ะฑััั ะผะธัะพะปะพะณะธัะตัะบะธะต, ัะฐะฝัะฐััะธัะตัะบะธะต ะธะปะธ ัะตะฐะปัะฝัะต ะฟะตััะพะฝะฐะถะธ, ะดะฐะฒัะธะต ะผะฝะต ะถะตะปะฐะฝะธะต ัะฐะฝัะฐะทะธัะพะฒะฐัั. ะฏ ะฝะต ััั ะฟะพัััะตัั, ั ัะพะทะดะฐั ะธะท ัะบะฐะฝะธ ัะฒะพะต ะผะฝะตะฝะธะต ะพ ะฟะตััะพะฝะฐะถะต, ัะฒะตัะพะผ ั ะฟะตัะตะดะฐั ัะฒะพะต ะพัะฝะพัะตะฝะธะต ะบ ะฝะตะผั. ะฃัะปะพะฒะฝะพ ะผะพะต ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะพ ะฑะปะธะถะต ะฒัะตะณะพ ะบ ะบัะฑะธััะธัะตัะบะพะน ะธะดะตะต, ะฟะพััะพะผั ะผะตะฝั ัะฐััะพ ััะฐะฒะฝะธะฒะฐัั ั ะะธะบะฐััะพ.
– ะงัะพ ะผะพัะธะฒะธััะตั ะฒะฐั ะฒ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะต?
ะะฝะต ะฝะต ะฝัะถะฝะฐ ะฝะธ ะผะพัะธะฒะฐัะธั, ะฝะธ ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะตะฝะธะตโฆ ะ ะธะดะตะน ะฝะฐะบะพะฟะธะปะพัั ััะพะปัะบะพ, ััะพ ั ะฒะฐัะธะปะพ ะฑั ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะพ ะถะธะทะฝะตะน.
– ะะปะฐะฝะธััะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั ัะฒะพั ัะฐะฑะพัั ะทะฐัะฐะฝะตะต ะธะปะธ ะฟัะพััะพ ะฟะพะณััะถะฐะตัะตัั ะฒ ะฝะตะต ั ะผะฐัะตัะธะฐะปะฐะผะธ ะธ ะฝะฐัะธะฝะฐะตัะต ะธะณัะฐัั?
ะกัะฐัััะต โ ััะพ ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะบ ัะตะฑะต ะฟัะธั ะพะดัั ะธะดะตะธ ะธ ั ัะตะฑั ะตััั ะฒะพะทะผะพะถะฝะพััั ััั ะถะต ะธั ัะตะฐะปะธะทะพะฒะฐัั. ะััั ะฒัะตะผั, ัะฒะตะนะฝะฐั ะผะฐัะธะฝะฐ, ัะบะฐะฝะธ ะธ ะฝะธัะบะธโฆ ะขั ะณะพัะธัั ะถะตะปะฐะฝะธะตะผ, ัั ะฒะธะดะธัั ะฒะธัััะฐะปัะฝะพ ะฒัั ะบะฐััะธะฝั, ะทะฐัะตะผโฆ ะบะฐะบ ะบัะฐัะธะฒะพ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐะตัั ะฝะฐะด ะพัะดะตะปัะฝัะผะธ ััะฐะณะผะตะฝัะฐะผะธ!!! ะ ะธะฝะพะณะดะฐ ั ะพัะตััั ัะดะตะปะฐัั ะฑะพะปััะพะน ะฟัะพะตะบั, ัะตัะธั ัะฐะฑะพั ะฝะฐ ะพะฑััั ัะตะผั. ะกะฝะฐัะฐะปะฐ ัั ะธัะตัั ะธะดะตั, ะทะฐัะตะผ ะตะต ะทะฐะฟะพะปะฝะตะฝะธะต, ัะพะฑะธัะฐะตัั ะธะฝัะพัะผะฐัะธั, ะฟัะธะดัะผัะฒะฐะตัั ะธััะพัะธะธ.
– ะะฐะบ ะฒั ัะฐัะฟัะตะดะตะปัะตัะต ัะฒะพะต ัะฒะพััะตัะบะพะต ะฒัะตะผั? ะะปะฐะฝะธััะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั ะฒัะตะผั ะฝะฐัะฐะปะฐ ะธ ะพะบะพะฝัะฐะฝะธั ัะฐะฑะพัั? ะะปะธ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐะตัะต ัะพะปัะบะพ ัะพะณะดะฐ, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะตััั ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะตะฝะธะต?
ะฏ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐั ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะตััั ะฒัะตะผั. ะฏ ะผะพะณั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั ัะตะปัะน ะดะตะฝั ะธะปะธ ะฒ ะฟะตัะตััะฒะฐั ะผะตะถะดั ะดััะณะธะผะธ ะฒะฐะถะฝัะผะธ ะดะตะปะฐะผะธ. ะฏ ั ะพัั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ! ะฏ ะฝะต ะทะฝะฐั, ััะพ ะทะฝะฐัะธั ยซะฟัะธั ะพะดะธั ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะตะฝะธะตยป, ะพะฝะพ ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ ัะพ ะผะฝะพะน. ะฏ ะทะฐัะปะฐ ะฒ ัะฒะพะต ะฐัะตะปัะต ะธ ะฝะตะผะตะดะปะตะฝะฝะพ ะฟะพะณััะทะธะปะฐัั ะฒ ัะฒะพะน ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะน ะผะธั.
– ะััั ะปะธ ั ะฒะฐั ัะฟะตัะธะฐะปัะฝะพะต ะผะตััะพ ะดะปั ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะฐ? ะัะปะธ ะดะฐ, ัะพ ะบะฐะบ ะพะฝะพ ะฒัะณะปัะดะธั?
ะฏ ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐััั ะผะฝะพะณะธะผะธ ะฒะธะดะฐะผะธ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะฐ ะธ ะดะปั ะบะฐะถะดะพะณะพ ั ะผะตะฝั ะตััั ะพะฟัะตะดะตะปะตะฝะฝะพะต ะผะตััะพ. ะััั ะฐัะตะปัะต ะถะธะฒะพะฟะธัะธ, ะณะดะต ั ะฟะธัั ะบะฐััะธะฝั, ัะธััั ะธะปะปััััะฐัะธะธ, ะดะตะบะพัะธััั ะผะตะฑะตะปั. ะััั ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะพ ะฐัะตะปัะต ะดะปั ัะธััั, ะบะพะผะฝะฐัะฐ ะดะปั ัะฐัะบัะพั ะธ ัะฑะพัะบะธ ะบะพะผะฟะพะทะธัะธะธ, ะดััะณะฐั ะบะพะผะฝะฐัะฐ ั ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะธะผะธ ัะฒะตะนะฝัะผะธ ะผะฐัะธะฝะฐะผะธ, ััะตััั ะบะพะผะฝะฐัะฐ ะดะปั ัะธััั ะพะดะตะถะดั ะธ ััะบะพะดะตะปะธั. ะััั ัะฐะบะถะต ะฑะพะปััะฐั ะณะฐะปะตัะตั, ะณะดะต ะฒ ะฑัะดััะตะผ ะฑัะดัั ะฟัะพั ะพะดะธัั ะฒัััะฐะฒะบะธ, ะธ ั ะฑัะดั ะฟัะพะฒะพะดะธัั ะผะฐััะตั-ะบะปะฐััั. ะ ะบะฐะถะดะพะผ ะฟะพะผะตัะตะฝะธะธ ะตััั ะฒัะต ะฝะตะพะฑั ะพะดะธะผะพะต ะดะปั ัะฐะฑะพัั, ััะพ ะฑะพะปััะฐั ัะดะฐัะฐ ะธะผะตัั ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะผะตััะฐ ะดะปั ัะฐะฑะพัั. ะงัะพะฑั ะธะผะตัั ัะฐะบะธะต ััะปะพะฒะธั, ั ะฟะพะบะธะฝัะปะฐ ะฑะพะปััะพะน ะณะพัะพะด ะธ ะฟะพัะตะปะธะปะฐัั ะฒ ัะตะปััะบะพะน ะผะตััะฝะพััะธ, ะณะดะต ะฒะปัะฑะธะปะฐัั ะฒ ะฑะพะปััะพะน ะดะพะผ ัะฟะพั ะธ ะฐัั-ะดะตะบะพ. ะะพ ัะธั ะฟะพั ััะพ ะผะพะน ะปัะฑะธะผัะน ััะธะปั.
– ะะฐะบ ัะฐััะพ ะฒั ะฝะฐัะธะฝะฐะตัะต ะฝะพะฒัะน ะฟัะพะตะบั? ะ ะฐะฑะพัะฐะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั ะฐะบัะธะฒะฝะพ ะฝะฐะด ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะธะผะธ ะฟัะพะตะบัะฐะผะธ ะพะดะฝะพะฒัะตะผะตะฝะฝะพ?
ะ ะฐะฝััะต ั ะฝะธะบะพะณะดะฐ ะฝะต ะฝะฐัะธะฝะฐะปะฐ ะฝะพะฒัะน ะฟัะพะตะบั, ะฝะต ะทะฐะบะพะฝัะธะฒ ะฟัะตะดัะดััะธะน. ะะพ ัะตะนัะฐั ั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐั ะฝะฐะด ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะธะผะธ ััะฐะทั, ะฝะตะปะตะณะบะพ ัะพัะผะพะทะธัั ัะตะฑั. ะญะผะพัะธะธ ะฑะตััั ะฒะฒะตัั ะฝะฐะด ัะฐะทัะผะพะผ, ะบะพัะพััะน ะณะพะฒะพัะธั, ะถะดะธ, ะตัะต ะฝะต ะฒัะตะผัโฆ ะขั ะฑัะพัะฐะตัั ะฒัะต ะธ ัั ะพะดะธัั ั ะณะพะปะพะฒะพะน ะฒ ะฝะพะฒัั ัะฐะฑะพัั, ะบะฐะบะพะต ะถะต ััะพ ะฝะฐัะปะฐะถะดะตะฝะธะต!!! ะั ะธ ะบะฐะบ ัะตะทัะปััะฐัโฆะผะฝะพะณะพ ะฝะฐัะฐััั ัะฐะฑะพัโฆ ะะพ ั ัะฒะตัะตะฝะฐ ะฒ ัะตะฑะต, ััะพ ั ะฒัะต ะทะฐะบะพะฝัั! ะฏ ะฟัะธะฒัะบะปะฐ ะฒัะต ะดะพะฒะพะดะธัั ะดะพ ะบะพะฝัะฐ.
– ะะพะถะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั ัะฐััะบะฐะทะฐัั ะฝะฐะผ ะพ ะฒะดะพั ะฝะพะฒะตะฝะธะธ ะธ ะฟัะพัะตััะต ัะพะทะดะฐะฝะธั ะพะดะฝะพะน ะธะท ะฒะฐัะธั ัะฐะฑะพั? ะะฐะบ ัะพะถะดะฐะตััั ะฝะพะฒะฐั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐ?
ะัะตะฝั ัะตะดะบะพ ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะฐะผ ัะดะฐะตััั ัะพะทะดะฐัั ะถะธะฒัะต ะฟัะพะธะทะฒะตะดะตะฝะธั. ะะพัะพััะต ะผะพะณัั ัะฐะทะณะพะฒะฐัะธะฒะฐัั, ะทะฐะดะฐะฒะฐัั ะฒะพะฟัะพัั ะธ ะพัะฒะตัะฐัั, ะธัะฟะพะปัะทัั ะฟัะธ ััะพะผ ะปะธัั ะฒััะฐะถะตะฝะธะต ะณะปะฐะท, ะบะพัะพััะต ัะปะตะดััั ะทะฐ ะฒะฐะผะธ ะฟะพะฒััะดั, ะพะดะพะฑัััั ะธะปะธ ะพััะถะดะฐัั, ะฟะพะดะดะตัะถะธะฒะฐัั ะธ ัะพััะฒััะฒััั. ะขั ะถะธะฒะตัั ั ัะพะทะดะฐะฝะฝัะผ ัะพะฑะพะน ะฟะตััะพะฝะฐะถะตะผ ัะฒะพั ะพัะดะตะปัะฝัั ะะธะทะฝั. ะััะณะธะต ะฟัะพะธะทะฒะตะดะตะฝะธั ะผะพะณัั ะฑััั ะบัะฐัะธะฒั, ะบะฐัะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพ, ะฝะพ ะพะฝะธ ะผะพะปัะฐั. ะกะฐะผะพะต ะฒะฐะถะฝะพะต ะฒ ะธัะบััััะฒะต โ ัะพะทะดะฐัั ะญะผะพัะธั!
ะะพะทะผะพะถะฝะพ, ััะพ ะฑัะดะตั ะพัะตะฝั ะฝะฐะธะฒะฝะพ, ัะบะฐะทะฐัั, ััะพ ะธะดะตั ัะพะทะดะฐะฝะธั ยซะะฐัั-ะทะตะผะปัยป ะฟัะธัะปะฐ ะบะพ ะผะฝะต ะฒะพ ัะฝะต. ะะพ, ะธะผะตะฝะฝะพ ัะฐะบ ะธ ะฑัะปะพ. ะััั ะปะตั ะฝะฐะทะฐะด ะฒ ะผะพะตะน ะถะธะทะฝะธ ัะปััะธะปัั ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะน ะทะฐััะพะน, ะทะฐั ะพัะตะปะพัั ะฝะฐะนัะธ ะฝะพะฒัะต ัะพัะผั, ะฝะพะฒัะต ัะตะผั ะธ ะฟะตััะพะฝะฐะถะธ. ะัะต ะผะพะธ ะผััะปะธ ะฑัะปะธ ะทะฐะฝััั ััะธะผ ะฒะฝัััะตะฝะฝะธะผ ะฟะพะธัะบะพะผ ะฒัั ะพะดะฐ ะฒ ะฝะพะฒะพะต ัะฒะพััะตัะบะพะต ัััะปะพ. ะ ะพะดะฝะฐะถะดั ะฒะพ ัะฝะต ั ัะฒะธะดะตะปะฐ ะถะตะฝัะบะพะต ะปะธัะพ ั ะณััััะฝัะผะธ ะณะปะฐะทะฐะผะธ. ะะฐัะตะผ ั ะฟัะพัะธัะฐะปะฐ ะปะตะณะตะฝะดั ะฟะปะตะผะตะฝะธ Algonquins, ะบะพัะพัะฐั ัะฐััะบะฐะทัะฒะฐะตั ะพ ัะพะผ, ััะพ ะฝะฐะด ะพะฑะปะฐะบะฐะผะธ ะถะธะฒะตั ะผะฐัั ะทะตะผะปะธ ะธ ะฟัะพะปะธะฒะฐะตั ัะปะตะทั – ะฒะพะดั ะถะธะทะฝะธ, ัะตะผ ัะฐะผัะผ ะฟะธัะฐั ะทะตะผะปั, ะถะธะฒะพัะฝัั ะธ ะปัะดะตะน. ะฏ ะฟะพะฝัะปะฐ, ััะพ ะถะตะฝัะธะฝะฐ ะธะท ะผะพะตะณะพ ัะฝะฐ, ััะพ ะพะฝะฐ, ะะฐัั-ะะตะผะปั. ะ ะธััะฝะพะบ ะฑัะป ัะดะตะปะฐะฝ ะฑััััะพ. ะฃะผััะปะตะฝะฝะพ ั ะดะตัะพัะผะธัะพะฒะฐะปะฐ ะปะธัะพ ะะฐัะตัะธ ะะตะผะปะธ, ัะตะผ ัะฐะผัะผ ะดะฐะฒะฐัั ะฟะพะฝััั, ััะพ ะฝะต ะฒัะต ัะฐะบ ะณะฐัะผะพะฝะธัะฝะพ ะธ ะฟัะตะบัะฐัะฝะพ ะฝะฐ ะฝะฐัะตะน ะฟะปะฐะฝะตัะต. ะงัะพ ะบะฐัะฐะตััั ะฟะฐะปะธััั, ะพะฑััะฝะพ ั ััะฐัะตะปัะฝะพ ะฟัะพะดัะผัะฒะฐั, ะฒ ะบะฐะบะพะน ัะฒะตัะพะฒะพะน ะณะฐะผะผะต ะฑัะดั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั, ะฝะพ ะฒ ััะพั ัะฐะท ั ัะตัะธะปะฐ ัะตะฑั ะฝะต ะพะณัะฐะฝะธัะธะฒะฐัั ะธ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั ั ัะบะฐะฝัะผะธ ะฟะพ ะพัััะตะฝะธั. ะะฝะต ะทะฐั ะพัะตะปะพัั ะธัะฟะพะปัะทะพะฒะฐัั ะฑะพะปััะต ัะฐะผะพะพะบัะฐัะตะฝะฝัั ัะบะฐะฝะตะน, ััะพะฑั ะพะฝะธ ะฝะต ัะผะพััะตะปะธัั ะฝะพะฒัะผะธ, ะฐ ััะพะฑั ะบะฐะถะดัะน ัะตะบััะธะปัะฝัะน ััะฐะณะผะตะฝั ะธะผะตะป ัะถะต ะพะฟัั ัะฒะพะตะน ะผะฐะปะตะฝัะบะพะน ะฟัะพะถะธัะพะน ะถะธะทะฝะธ, ั ะพัะตะปะพัั ะธะผะตัั ะฑะพะปััะต ัะพะฝะบะธั ะฟะตัะตั ะพะดะพะฒ ะธ ะฑะพะปะตะต ะณะฐัะผะพะฝะธัะฝัั ัะพัะตัะฐะฝะธะน. ะงัะพะฑั ะฟัะธะดะฐัั ะผะพะตะน ัะฐะฑะพัะต ะฑะพะปััะต ัะฒะพะฑะพะดั, ะธ ั ะพัะบะฐะทะฐะปะฐัั ะพั ััะฐะฝะดะฐััะฝะพะน ะฟััะผะพัะณะพะปัะฝะพะน ัะพัะผั. ะฏ ะฟัะธะดัะผะฐะปะฐ ัะฒะธัะฐััะธะต ะฟััะดะธ ะฒะพะปะพั, ััะพะฑั ะตัะต ะฑะพะปััะต ััะธะปะธัั ะฒะฟะตัะฐัะปะตะฝะธะต ัะฒะพะฑะพะดั ะธ ะฑะตะทะณัะฐะฝะธัะฝะพััะธ, ะบะฐะบ ะฝะฐัะฐ ะฟะปะฐะฝะตัะฐ.
ะ ะฐะฑะพัั ยซะะฐัั ะทะตะผะปะธยป ั ัะธะปะฐ ะพะบะพะปะพ ััะตั ะผะตัััะตะฒ, ะธ ะดะปั ะผะตะฝั ััะฐ ะฑัะปะฐ ัะตะปะฐั ะถะธะทะฝั.
ะะพะณะดะฐ ั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐั ั ัะบะฐะฝัะผะธ, ะฟะพะดะฑะธัะฐั ั ะพะณัะพะผะฝะพะน ะปัะฑะพะฒัั ะบะฐะถะดัะน ััะฐะณะผะตะฝั, ั ะทะฐะฑัะฒะฐั ะพ ะฒัะตะผะตะฝะธ. ะฏ ะพะฑัะฐะปะฐัั ั ะฝะตะน ัะตะปัะผะธ ะดะฝัะผะธ, ั ะดะพะฑะฐะฒะปัะปะฐ ะดะตัะฐะปะธ, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะณะปัะฑะถะต ะฟะพะณััะถะฐะปะฐัั ะฒ ัะตะผั.
ะัะพะฑะตะฝะฝะพ ััะฐัะตะปัะฝะพ ั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐะปะฐ ะฝะฐะด ะฒััะฐะถะตะฝะธะตะผ ะณะปะฐะท. ะะปั ะผะตะฝั ะตะต ะณะปะฐะทะฐ ะฒััะฐะถะฐัั ัะพััะฒััะฒะธะต, ะพะณัะพะผะฝัั ะปัะฑะพะฒั, ะฟะตัะตะถะธะฒะฐะฝะธะต, ะฟะพะดะดะตัะถะบั… ะะพะปััะพะต ะบะพะปะธัะตััะฒะพ ัะฐะทะปะธัะฝัั ััะฒััะฒ, ัะผะตัะฐะฝะฝัั ะฒะพ ะฒะทะณะปัะดะต, ัะพัะฝะพ ัะฐะบ ะถะต ะบะฐะบ ะตะต ะพะฑะปะธะบ ัะปะธะปัั ั ััะฐะณะผะตะฝัะฐะผะธ ะฐัั ะธัะตะบัััั, ะดะพะผะฐะผะธ, ะฟะตะนะทะฐะถะฐะผะธ. ะะฝะฐ ะตััั ะะตะผะปั! ะะฝะฐ ะฟะตัะตะถะธะฒะฐะตั ะทะฐ ะฒัะต, ััะพ ะฟัะพะธัั ะพะดะธั. ะะฝะฐ ัะพััะฒััะฒัะตั, ะฝะพ ะฟะพะผะพัั ะผะพะถะตั ัะพะปัะบะพ ัะฒะพะตะน ะฟะพะดะดะตัะถะบะพะน ะธ ะปัะฑะพะฒัั. ะ ััะพะผ ะณะปะฐะฒะฝะฐั ะธะดะตั, ะธ ะผะฝะต ะบะฐะถะตััั, ะพะฝะฐ ะฟัะตะบัะฐัะฝะฐ!
ะะพะณะดะฐ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐ ะฑัะปะฐ ะทะฐะบะพะฝัะตะฝะฐ, ั ัะฐััะผะฐััะธะฒะฐะปะฐ ะตะต ะธ ะฝะต ะผะพะณะปะฐ ะฟะพะฝััั ัะฒะพะตะณะพ ะพัะฝะพัะตะฝะธั ะบ ะฝะตะน. ะะตะถะดั ะฝะฐะผะธ ะฝะต ะฑัะปะพ ะดะธััะฐะฝัะธะธ, ะผั ะฑัะปะธ ะตัะต ััะพััะธะผะธัั ะพัะณะฐะฝะธะทะผะฐะผะธ, ะผั ะฒะผะตััะต ะปัะฑะธะปะธ ะธ ัะฐะบะถะต ะฒะผะตััะต ะฟะตัะตะถะธะฒะฐะปะธ ะทะฐ ััะดัะฑั ะฟะปะฐะฝะตัั, ะฝะฐ ะบะพัะพัะพะน ะผั ะถะธะฒะตะผ. ะะพััะพะผั ั ะฝะต ะผะพะณะปะฐ ะฟะพัะผะพััะตัั ะฝะฐ ะฝะตะต ะพััััะฐะฝะตะฝะฝะพ, ะพัะตะฝะพัะฝะพ, ัะพ ััะพัะพะฝั. ะกะบะพัะตะต ะฒัะตะณะพ ััะพ ะฑัะป ะฒะทะณะปัะด ะฒ ะทะตัะบะฐะปะพ ะดััะธ. ะฅะพัะตะปะพัั ะฟะพััะพัะฝะฝะพ ัะผะพััะตัั ะฒ ะตะต ะณะปะฐะทะฐ ะธ ัะปััะฐัั ะตะต ะณะพะปะพั, ะบะพัะพััะน, ะฒะธะดะธะผะพ, ะฑัะป ะผะพะธะผ ะฒะฝัััะตะฝะฝะธะผ ะณะพะปะพัะพะผ. ะะฝะฐ ะฑัะปะฐ ะฝะต ะฟะพั ะพะถะฐ ะฝะฐ ะฒัะต, ััะพ ั ะดะตะปะฐะปะฐ ัะฐะฝััะต.
ะะพะณะดะฐ ะฟัะธัะปะพ ะฒัะตะผั ะฒ ะฟะตัะฒัะน ัะฐะท ะฟัะตะดััะฐะฒะธัั ะตะต ะฟัะฑะปะธะบะต, ั ะพัะตะฝั ะฒะพะปะฝะพะฒะฐะปะฐัั. ะ ั ะฑัะปะฐ ัะดะธะฒะปะตะฝะฐ ัะตะฐะบัะธะตะน ะทัะธัะตะปะตะน ะธ ะฐััะธััะพะฒ. ะะต ะฟัะธั ะพะดะธะปะธ ัะผะพััะตัั ะฟะพ ะผะฝะพะณั ัะฐะท. ะะตะบะพัะพััะต ะฟะปะฐะบะฐะปะธ ะธะปะธ ะณะพะฒะพัะธะปะธ, ััะพ ั ะฝะตะต ะพัะตะฝั ะณััััะฝัะต ะณะปะฐะทะฐ.
ะะฐัั ะทะตะผะปะธ… ะตัะปะธ ะฟัะตะดััะฐะฒะธัั, ััะพ ัะฐะบะพะน ะฟะตััะพะฝะฐะถ ัััะตััะฒัะตั, ัะฐะทะฒะต ะผะพะถะฝะพ ะฒะตัะตะปะธัััั, ะณะปัะดั ะฝะฐ ัะพ, ััะพ ะฟัะพะธัั ะพะดะธั ัะตะณะพะดะฝั? ะะพััะพะผั ะฝะตะบะพัะพัะฐั ะณััััั ะฒะฟะพะปะฝะต ะดะพะฟัััะธะผะฐ.
– ะะฐะบะฐั ัะฐััั ะฟัะพัะตััะฐ ัะพะทะดะฐะฝะธั ะบะฒะธะปัะฐ ะฒะฐะผ ะฝัะฐะฒะธััั ะฑะพะปััะต ะฒัะตะณะพ? ะะฐะบะฐั ัะฐััั ัะฒะปัะตััั ะดะปั ะฒะฐั ัะปะพะถะฝะพะน?
ะะฝะต ะฝัะฐะฒัััั ะฒัะต ััะฐะฟั ัะพะทะดะฐะฝะธั ะบะฒะธะปัะฐ. ะะพ ัััะธ, ะพะฝะธ ะฒัะต ัะปะพะถะฝัะต ะธ ะฒ ะบะฐะถะดะพะผ ะฝัะถะฝะพ ะฝะฐะนัะธ ัะดะพะฒะพะปัััะฒะธะต. ะะตะท ััะฒััะฒ ะฝะตะปัะทั ะฟัะพะธะทะฒะตััะธ ะฝะธัะตะณะพ ะฝะฐััะพััะตะณะพ.
– ะะฐะบ ะะฐัะต ัะพัะผะฐะปัะฝะพะต ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะต ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะฟะพะผะพะณะฐะตั ะะฐะผ ะฒ ัะฐะฑะพัะต? ะะตัะฐะตั ะปะธ ะพะฝะพ ะฒะฐะผ?
ะฏ ััะธะปะฐัั ะฒ ะดะตััะบะพะน ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะน ัะบะพะปะต, ะทะฐัะตะผ ะฟะพะปััะธะปะฐ ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะต ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะฟะพ ัะฟะตัะธะฐะปัะฝะพััะธ ะดะธะทะฐะนะฝะตั ะธะฝัะตััะตัะฐ ะธ ะฟะพะทะดะฝะตะต ะฟัะพะดะพะปะถะธะปะฐ ััะธัััั, ะฟะพะปััะธะฒ ะดะธะฟะปะพะผ ะดะธะทะฐะนะฝะตัะฐ ัะบััะตััะตัะฐ. ะะฐ ะผะพะน ะฒะทะณะปัะด ะฝะธะบะฐะบะพะต ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะฝะต ะผะพะถะตั ะฟะพะผะตัะฐัั ะฒ ัะฐะฑะพัะต, ะตัะปะธ ัะผะตัั ะธัะฟะพะปัะทะพะฒะฐัั ััะธ ะทะฝะฐะฝะธั. ะะพ ัะตะผ ะฝะต ะผะตะฝะตะต ั ะทะฝะฐั ะผะฝะพะณะพ ัะตะฐะปัะฝัั ะฟัะธะผะตัะพะฒ, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะปะพะผะฐะปะพ ัะฒะพััะตัะบัั ััะดัะฑั ัะตะปะพะฒะตะบะฐ. ะะพะณะดะฐ ะฟัะพัะตัั ะฟะพะทะฝะฐะฝะธั ะธ ัะฑะพัะฐ ะธะฝัะพัะผะฐัะธะธ ะทะฐะบะฐะฝัะธะฒะฐะตััั ัะปะธัะบะพะผ ะฑััััะพ ะธ ัะฐะบะถะต ะฑััััะพ ะฟัะธั ะพะดะธั ะถะตะปะฐะฝะธะต ัะฐะผะพะฒััะฐะถะตะฝะธั, ะฐ ััะตะฑะฝะฐั ะฟัะพะณัะฐะผะผะฐ ััะตะฑัะตั ะดััะณะพะณะพ ะพัะฝะพัะตะฝะธั ะบ ะธะทััะฐะตะผัะผ ะฟัะตะดะผะตัะฐะผ. ะฏ ะฒัะฟะพะผะธะฝะฐั, ะบะฐะบ ะฟัะพัะตััะพัะฐ ะณะพะฒะพัะธะปะธ ะฝะตะบะพัะพััะผ ัััะดะตะฝัะฐะผ, ัะฐะปะฐะฝั ะธ ัะพะฑััะฒะตะฝะฝัะน ััะธะปั ะบะพัะพััั ะฝะฐัะฐะป ะฟัะพัะฒะปััััั ัะปะธัะบะพะผ ัะฐะฝะพ, ััะพะฑั ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะพะผ ะพะฝะธ ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐะปะธัั ะดะพะผะฐ. ะะพะต ะพะฑัะฐะทะพะฒะฐะฝะธะต ะดะฐะตั ะผะฝะต ัะฒะพะฑะพะดั ะฒ ะฟะพะธัะบะต ัะพัะผ ะธ ะฒะพะทะผะพะถะฝะพััั ัะตะฐะปะธะทะพะฒัะฒะฐัั ัะฒะพะธ ะธะดะตะธ. ะฏ ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะปะตั ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐะปะฐัั ะฐะบะฐะดะตะผะธัะตัะบะธะผ ัะธััะฝะบะพะผ, ัะธัะพะฒะฐะปะฐ ะฟะพัััะตัั. ะกะตะนัะฐั ั ัะฐะบะถะต ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐััั ะธะทะพะฑัะฐะถะตะฝะธัะผะธ ะปัะดะตะน, ัะพะปัะบะพ ะดะปั ะผะตะฝั ัะฐะผะพะต ะณะปะฐะฒะฝะพะต ะฝะต ะธะทะพะฑัะฐะทะธัั ะฟัะฐะฒะธะปัะฝะพ ะณะปะฐะทะฐ ะธะปะธ ัะพะฑะปัััะธ ะฟัะพะฟะพััะธะธ, ััะพ ะฒัะต ะฟัะพะธัั ะพะดะธั ะฐะฒัะพะผะฐัะธัะตัะบะธ ะธะท ะพะฟััะฐ ะธ ะทะฝะฐะฝะธะน, ะฐ ั ะฟะพะผะพััั ัะตั ะถะต ัะตัั ะปะธัะฐ ะฟะตัะตะดะฐัั ัะผะพัะธะธ, ะฝะฐัััะพะตะฝะธะต, ั ะฐัะฐะบัะตั, ะผััะปะธ, ะฟะพัะปะฐะฝะธะต ะธัะด. ะะปั ะดะพััะธะถะตะฝะธั ะผะพะตะน ะธะดะตะธ ั ะผะพะณั ะธัะบะฐะทะธัั ะธะปะธ ััะธะปะธะทะพะฒะฐัั ัะพัะผั, ะฝะพ ะฝะต ัะปะพะผะฐัั ะตะต, ัะฐะบ ะบะฐะบ ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ ะธะทะพะฑัะฐะถะฐั ะปะธัะพ, ั ะฒะธะถั ะฒะธัััะฐะปัะฝะพ ะผัััั ะธ ะบะพััะธ.
– ะะฐะบ ัะฐะทะฒะธะฒะฐะปะพัั ะฒะฐัะต ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะพ ะฝะฐ ะฟัะพััะถะตะฝะธะธ ะผะฝะพะณะธั ะปะตั? ะงัะพ ะฟะพัะปัะถะธะปะพ ัะพะปัะบะพะผ ะดะปั ะฟะตัะตั ะพะดะฐ ะบ ะฝะพะฒัะผ ะผะตะดะธะฐ/ะฒะธะดะฐะผ ัะฐะฑะพั/ัะฟะพัะพะฑะฐะผ ัะฐะฑะพัั?
ะฃ ะผะตะฝั ะพัะตะฝั ะธะฝัะตัะตัะฝะฐั ะธ ะฝะฐัััะตะฝะฝะฐั ะถะธะทะฝั. ะฏ ะผะพะณั ะฟะตัะตัะธัะปะธัั, ัะตะผ ะผะฝะต ะฟัะธั ะพะดะธะปะพัั ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐัััั ะธ ะฒ ะบะฐะบะพะน ะพะฑะปะฐััะธ ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั: ะฝะฐััะฝัะน ัะพัััะดะฝะธะบ ะฒ ะผัะทะตะต; ะถััะฝะฐะปะธัั ะฒ ะณะฐะทะตัะฐั ะธ ะถััะฝะฐะปะฐั ; ะฐะฒัะพั ะดะพะบัะผะตะฝัะฐะปัะฝัั ัะธะปัะผะพะฒ, ะดะธะบัะพั ะธ ััะบะพะฒะพะดะธัะตะปั ัะตะบะปะฐะผะฝะพะณะพ ะพัะดะตะปะฐ ะฝะฐ ัะตะปะตะฒะธะทะธะพะฝะฝะพะผ ะบะฐะฝะฐะปะต; ะฟะธัะฐัะตะปั; ะดะธะทะฐะนะฝะตั ะธ ััะบะพะฒะพะดะธัะตะปั ะดะธะทะฐะนะฝะตััะบะพะน ะณััะฟะฟั; ะฟัะพัะตััะพั ะถะธะฒะพะฟะธัะธ ะธ ัะธััะฝะบะฐ, ะดะธัะตะบัะพั ัะบะพะปั ะธัะบััััะฒ; ะธะปะปััััะฐัะพั ัะพะฑััะฒะตะฝะฝัั ะบะฝะธะณ ะธ ะฟัะพะธะทะฒะตะดะตะฝะธะน ะดััะณะธั ะฐะฒัะพัะพะฒ. ะะฟะตัะฐัะปัะตั, ะฟัะฐะฒะดะฐ? ะขะฐะบะถะต ะผะฝะต ะฟะพะฒะตะทะปะพ ะฝะฐะฟะธัะฐัั ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะพ ััะตะฝะฐัะธะตะฒ ะธ ะฟะพััะฐะฒะธัั ะฟะพ ะฝะธะผ ัะฟะตะบัะฐะบะปะธ. ะัั ะถะธะทะฝั ั ะทะฐะฝะธะผะฐะปะฐัั ะถะธะฒะพะฟะธััั ะธ ะณัะฐัะธะบะพะน, ั ะฝะต ะผะพะณั ะฝะฐะทะฒะฐัั ััะบะพัะฒะพัะฝะพะน ัะตั ะฝะธะบะธ ะฒ ะธัะบััััะฒะต, ะบะพัะพัะพะน ะฑั ั ะฝะต ะฒะปะฐะดะตะปะฐ. ะ ะฝะฐะบะพะฝะตั, ะผั ะฟะพะดะพัะปะธ ะบ ัะฐะผะพะผั ะฒะฐะถะฝะพะผั ะทะฐะฝััะธั ะผะพะตะน ะถะธะทะฝะธ โ ััะพ ะฐัั ัะตะบััะธะปั. ะญัะพ ะผะพั ะปัะฑะพะฒั, ะผะพั ัััะฐััั!
– ะก ะบะฐะบะพะน ัะฐะผะพะน ะฑะพะปััะพะน ะฟัะพะฑะปะตะผะพะน ะฒั ััะพะปะบะฝัะปะธัั ะฝะฐ ัะฒะพะตะผ ัะฒะพััะตัะบะพะผ ะฟััะธ? ะงะตะผั ะฒั ะฝะฐััะธะปะธัั?
ะะดะธะฝ ะธะท ัะฐะผัั ัััะดะฝัั ะฟะตัะธะพะดะพะฒ ะฒ ะผะพะตะน ัะฒะพััะตัะบะพะน ะถะธะทะฝะธ ะฑัะป ะผะพะผะตะฝั, ะบะพะณะดะฐ ะธะท ะพะดะฝะพะน ัััะฐะฝั ั ะฟะตัะตะตั ะฐะปะฐ ะฒ ะดััะณัั. ะะพะณะดะฐ ั ะฟะพะฝัะปะฐ, ััะพ ั ะฝะต ะผะพะณั ัะฐะฑะพัะฐัั ะบะฐะบ ัะฐะฝััะต, ะธ ะฝะต ะทะฝะฐั, ะบะฐะบัั ะดะพัะพะณั ะฒัะฑัะฐัั ะธ ะบัะดะฐ ะธะดัะธ. ะัะป ะฟะตัะธะพะด ะฟะพะธัะบะพะฒ ัะตะฑั, ัะฒะพะธั ัะตะผ, ัะฒะพะตะน ัะตั ะฝะธะบะธ โ ะพะดะฝะธะผ ัะปะพะฒะพะผ, ัะพะฑััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะณะพ ััะธะปั. ะ ะฟะพะบะฐะทะฐะป ะฒะตัะฝะพะต ะฝะฐะฟัะฐะฒะปะตะฝะธะต ะผะฝะต, ะธะผะตะฝะฝะพ, ะฐัั ัะตะบััะธะปั.
– ะกัะธัะฐะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั, ััะพ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะพ โ ััะพ ัะฐััั ัะตะปะพะฒะตัะตัะบะพะน ะฟัะธัะพะดั ะธะปะธ ััะพ ัะพ, ััะพ ะฝัะถะฝะพ ะฒะพัะฟะธััะฒะฐัั ะธ ัะตะผั ะฝัะถะฝะพ ััะธัััั?
ะขะฒะพััะตััะฒะพ โ ััะพ ัะฐััั ัะตะปะพะฒะตัะตัะบะพะน ะฟัะธัะพะดั, ะบะพัะพััั ะฝัะถะฝะพ ัะฐัะบัััั, ะฐ ะดะปั ััะพะณะพ ะถะตะปะฐัะตะปัะฝะพ ััะธัััั. ะฃัะตะฑะฐ โ ััะพ ะฒะตะดั ะฝะต ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ ะดะธะฟะปะพะผ ั ัะดะพะถะตััะฒะตะฝะฝะพะณะพ ะฒัะทะฐ. ะะพะถะฝะพ ััะธัััั, ะธะทััะฐั ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะพ ะดััะณะธั ะผะฐััะตัะพะฒ. ะกะตะณะพะดะฝั ะดะปั ััะพะณะพ ะตััั ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะฒะพะทะผะพะถะฝะพััะตะน: ะธะฝัะตัะฝะตั, ะผะฐััะตั-ะบะปะฐััั, ัะตะผะธะฝะฐัั. ะกะตะณะพะดะฝั ะผะพะถะฝะพ ะพัะตะฝั ะปะตะณะบะพ ะฝะฐะนัะธ ะปัะฑะธะผะพะณะพ ั ัะดะพะถะฝะธะบะฐ ะฒ ัะพััะตััั ะธ ะฝะฐะฟะธัะฐัั ะตะผั ะปะธัะฝะพ, ัะฟัะพัะธัั ัะพะฒะตัะฐ ะธะปะธ ะทะฐะดะฐัั ะฒะพะฟัะพั. ะฏ ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะฟะพะปััะฐั ัะฐะบะธั ัะพะพะฑัะตะฝะธะน.
– ะะฐะบะธะต ัะตััั, ะตัะปะธ ัะฐะบะพะฒัะต ะธะผะตัััั, ะฟะพ ะฒะฐัะตะผั ะผะฝะตะฝะธั, ะฟัะธัััะธ ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะผ ะปัะดัะผ ะฟะพ ััะฐะฒะฝะตะฝะธั ั ะปัะดัะผะธ ะฝะต ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะผะธ?
ะฏ ััะธัะฐั, ััะพ ะฒัะต ะปัะดะธ ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะต, ัะพะปัะบะพ ะพะดะฝะธะผ ะฟะพะฒะตะทะปะพ ะธ ะพะฝะธ ัะทะฝะฐะปะธ ะฟัะพ ัะฒะพะน ะดะฐั, ะฐ ะดััะณะธะผ – ะฝะตั ะธ ะพะฝ ั ะฝะธั ะฝะฐั ะพะดะธััั ะฒ ะทะฐัะฐัะพัะฝะพะผ ะธะปะธ ัะฟััะตะผ ัะพััะพัะฝะธะธ. ะัะฑะพะน ะดะฐั ะฝัะถะฝะพ ัะฐะทะฒะธะฒะฐัั, ะฑะตะท ัะฐะทะฒะธัะธั ะพะฝ ัะผะธัะฐะตั ะบะฐะบ ะฝะตะฝัะถะฝัะน ััะดะธะผะตะฝั. ะ ััะพะผ ะฟะปะพั ัั ัะพะปั ะธะณัะฐัั ัะต ะถะต ัะพััะตัะธ. ะะพะณะดะฐ ััะพะปัะบะพ ะบะฐััะธะฝะพะบ ัะพะฒะตััะตะฝะฝะพ ะฑะตะท ััะธะปะธะน ะผะพะถะฝะพ ัะบะฐัะฐัั, ะฐ ะฝะต ะฟัะธะดัะผัะฒะฐัั ัะฒะพะน ะฟัะพะตะบั.
– ะงะธัะฐะตัะต ะปะธ ะฒั ะปะตะบัะธะธ ะธะปะธ ะฟัะพะฒะพะดะธัะต ัะตะผะธะฝะฐัั? ะะฐะบ ัััะดะตะฝัั/ะพัะณะฐะฝะธะทะฐัะพัั ะผะพะณัั ัะฒัะทะฐัััั ั ะฒะฐะผะธ, ััะพะฑั ะทะฐะฟะปะฐะฝะธัะพะฒะฐัั ะผะตัะพะฟัะธััะธะต?
ะฏ ะฟัะพะฒะพะถั ะฒะพัะบัะพะฟั, ัะตะผะธะฝะฐัั, ะธะฝะพะณะดะฐ ะฑัะฒะฐัั ัะฒะพััะตัะบะธะต ะฒัััะตัะธ. ะฏ ะฟะพะปััะฐั ะผะฝะพะณะพ ะฟัะธะณะปะฐัะตะฝะธะน ะฝะฐ ะฒัััะฐะฒะบะฐั ะธ ัะตัะตะท ัะพััะตัะธ: ะคะ, ะะฝััะฐะณัะฐะผ, ะขะตะปะตะณัะฐะผ-ะบะฐะฝะฐะป.
– ะ ะฐััะบะฐะถะธัะต ะพ ัะฒะพะตะผ ะฑะปะพะณะต ะธ/ะธะปะธ ะฒะตะฑ-ัะฐะนัะต. ะงัะพ, ะบะฐะบ ะฒั ะฝะฐะดะตะตัะตัั, ะปัะดะธ ะฟะพะปััะฐั, ะฟะพัะตัะธะฒ ะฒะฐั ัะฐะนั?
ะฃ ะผะตะฝั ะฝะตัะบะพะปัะบะพ ัะฐะนัะพะฒ ะฝะฐ ััะฐะฝััะทัะบะพะผ ะธ ัะบะพัะพ ะฑัะดะตั ะณะพัะพะฒ ัะฐะนั ะฝะฐ ะฐะฝะณะปะธะนัะบะพะผ ัะทัะบะต. ะะพะธ ัะฐะนัั โ ััะพ ะผะฐะปะตะฝัะบะฐั ะฟัะตะทะตะฝัะฐัะธั ะผะพะตะณะพ ัะฒะพััะตััะฒะฐ, ัะฐะผ ะฒัะตะณะดะฐ ะผะพะถะฝะพ ะฝะฐะนัะธ ะฒัะต ะดะฐัั, ะณะดะต ะธ ะบะพะณะดะฐ ั ะดะฐั ะผะฐััะตั-ะบะปะฐัั ะธะปะธ ััะฐััะฒัั ะฒ ัะฐะทะปะธัะฝัั ะผะตัะพะฟัะธััะธัั .

