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  • 7/2/2025
Through moving and detailed testimonies, the documentary explores the significant Chilote heritage in the architecture o | dG1fVUtvM3lOdVFJeHc
Transcript
00:00Music
00:15Prácticamente, como que algo de ellos
00:18hizo que esta ciudad
00:20hubiera lo que hay, la casa.
00:25Gente muy práctica para trabajar
00:27con muchas ideas.
00:29They did wonderful things.
00:38In Chiloé, all my brothers, including my grandparents,
00:42were dedicated to agricultural work.
00:45They stayed in Punta Arenas for forever.
00:48Investigating in the city today is like entering a library.
01:00There is no great information written.
01:06The architecture here is mainly made of wood,
01:09which is a living element that also has its cycle.
01:13These hard records are going to disappear.
01:20And that is the most painful thing,
01:23because there is no record of that with respect to these old ones,
01:27these knowledge,
01:28these stories of life that each one of them has,
01:31and they are going to be very little.
01:39She was an anonymous person,
01:41but for the family history, it resalte a lot.
01:45I've learned to look with other eyes
01:47the architecture of the city.
01:55People knew how to work,
01:56because the teacher of Calmittero has to know how to work.
01:59No one who wants to work.
02:02Swim is one of those some wonderful people to know how...
02:04not even harder...
02:07...and the jakby of this connection
02:08line forld Parkinson graham.
02:12First of all,
02:14the Hae-ihoong is prettyался.
02:16Have you ever lost everything?
02:18I've learned this completely different.
02:20If you were trying to make emison...
02:21I stay within the ranks.
02:22You haven't lost all of them.
02:24It wasn't stored all along,
02:25and I saw in theingenet,
02:28if you didn't make emine,

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