@apoutchou_national1: Missionnaire engagé pour la gloire de Dieu ❤️

APOUTCHOU NATIONAL
APOUTCHOU NATIONAL
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Region: CI
Tuesday 18 November 2025 12:12:30 GMT
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princesse.camara.fat
Tim Tim Camara :
jai besoin d'aide pardon papa
2025-11-19 21:26:26
89
trstline
🌺Leila🌸 :
Chuis belle ??🥹
2025-11-19 21:52:59
13
morysidibe185
Réel Réel :
Longévité papa
2025-12-07 05:25:09
0
merveille282
Miss SOGOYOU🩷🌸 :
Pardon papa notre live 😭
2025-11-18 21:15:26
6
cheick.a.fatab
Cheick✨ :
Apouchou président de la côte d'ivoire un jour inchallah
2025-11-18 14:09:31
2
lbellesanoush20
Sanata😍🫶🏼❤️ :
Depuis là y’a pas live je m’ennuie comme ça j’envie de rire un peu 😂🤭
2025-11-18 20:53:50
98
cheztatasosoauxgaleries0
blackisbeauty 2 :
apoutou pardon fait nous live on s'ennui tro
2025-11-18 12:57:24
17
nachoulas.la.dern
Nachoulas💕💕 LA dernière💕💕 :
que mes jours s'ecourte pour s'ajouter au tien pr que tu sauvent plus de vie et que tes benedictions soit eternel❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
2025-11-18 12:20:25
8
user90676175732195
user90676175732195 :
Apoutchou national =netflix
2025-11-21 00:40:57
1
adomey_alphonse
ADOMEY ALPHONSE :
l'homme fort de la planète
2025-11-18 13:03:44
2
herminekgl01
Mimi🎉💞 :
Attendez Y’a pas live aujourd’hui ? 😭😭🤣
2025-11-18 21:15:18
6
leoble.bogui
JoJo Le Canadien 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦 :
Le Dieu sur la terre Apoutchou
2025-11-18 20:51:56
1
lien.investir.en.ci
INVESTIR EN CÔTE D'IVOIRE 🇨🇮 :
Apoutchou ce que tu fait là , ce n'est plus national. Ça c'est international
2025-11-21 23:00:49
1
amevileger
léger :
One love AP 🥰🥰🥰🥰
2025-11-19 18:48:45
1
annickzebili
Annick Zebili :
j'ai besoin de ton aide
2025-11-18 15:37:21
5
florentine317435827
florentine :
mon frère que dieu te bénisse
2025-11-18 19:45:03
1
lesliedg04
Leslie D&G :
Tonton je veux essayer la fondation je n’ai pas de travail à faire 🥰🥰
2025-11-20 23:48:05
1
fidellargent0
bonheur et la joie des filles :
@papa apourtchou s’il te plaît j’ai déjà un permis de conduire rouler un taxi 🚕 s’il te plaît papa ap 💔🥺 dieu écoute mes prières 🤲 pour pouvoir nourrir ma daronne 🥺💔 merci seigneur d’avoir écouté ma prière ✝️
2025-11-18 12:27:45
8
anna.olsen299
anna.olsen299 :
Qu’est ce que tu attend pour faire live mon vieux ? 😭
2025-11-18 21:54:43
2
mk.ulrich7
MD🔸ULRICH 🔥⚽ :
La bible dit : la gloire de ta seconde maison sera plus grande que celle de la premiere.
2025-11-18 13:06:41
8
lawdiariou
lawdia :
mon fils Ap que le bon dieu te protège ❤❤❤❤
2025-11-18 18:39:05
1
epaphrasriskpc
RISKE A.G.E :
salut patrons, que Dieu vous bénisse abondamment pour tout les parents que vous venez a l'aide
2025-11-19 04:23:51
2
maria.ouattara47
Maria Ouattara :
le Messi de la côte d'ivoire
2025-11-18 20:22:27
1
machkoura.machkou
love ❤️ cc :
salut 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏❤️❤️❤️❤️
2025-11-18 12:41:34
2
lafilleapapa30
La fille a papa ❤️😘 :
Dieu te bénisse pour tout tes œuvres ❤❤❤
2025-11-18 12:17:49
8
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Other Videos

Sharmarke Ali Saleh rose out of the desert winds like a figure carved from legend, a man whose shadow stretched from the dunes of the coast of Somaliland to the restless waters of the Gulf of Aden. To understand the weight of his name over Zeila, one must begin centuries earlier—back in 1557, when the weakened Adal Sultanate staggered under the final blows of war. Sensing its falter, the Ottomans swept in and claimed Zeila, raising their crescent banner over the ancient port. For nearly three centuries, Zeila lived under Istanbul’s distant rule: a garrisoned city, fading, its brilliance dimmed by neglect and shifting trade. But history does not stay silent forever. In 1841, Sharmarke Ali Saleh—merchant, commander, statesman, and iron-willed son of the Ishaaq—laid siege to Zeila with a precision that shocked even his rivals. Cannon thunder shook the coral-stone walls. Smoke wrapped the minarets like a shroud. When the gates finally splintered, the entire Ottoman garrison fell into his hands. And at the heart of the storm stood the captured governor, Sayyid Mohamed Al Barr, staring at the man who had undone centuries of imperial authority. Sharmarke stepped through the rubble, raised his hand, and declared in a voice that rolled like thunder over the sea: “Zeila is mine.” And from that moment, it was. From 1841 to 1861, he ruled the city not as a caretaker but as a rebuilder of destiny. Under his command, Zeila—once slipping into obscurity—roared back to life. Caravans from the interior flowed into its markets. Ships from Arabia and India crowded its harbour. Diplomats knew his name; merchants feared his refusal to bow; rivals whispered of his brilliance and ruthlessness in equal measure. Zeila became a powerhouse of the Horn—alive, defiant, and unmistakably under Sharmarke’s hand. But great men rarely die quietly. In 1861, the Franco-Ottoman alliance seized him, accusing him of the murder of a Frenchman. Shackled and forced aboard the ship Le Somme, he began his final journey—toward Paris or Constantinople, no one is entirely certain—where a trial awaited. Yet the sea claimed him before any empire could. Sharmarke Ali Saleh died on the waves, leaving behind a legend that refused to sink. Zeila remembers him still. A conqueror. A builder. A storm wearing human form.   #darkedit #epicedit #History #fyp #somalilandtiktok💚🤍❤
Sharmarke Ali Saleh rose out of the desert winds like a figure carved from legend, a man whose shadow stretched from the dunes of the coast of Somaliland to the restless waters of the Gulf of Aden. To understand the weight of his name over Zeila, one must begin centuries earlier—back in 1557, when the weakened Adal Sultanate staggered under the final blows of war. Sensing its falter, the Ottomans swept in and claimed Zeila, raising their crescent banner over the ancient port. For nearly three centuries, Zeila lived under Istanbul’s distant rule: a garrisoned city, fading, its brilliance dimmed by neglect and shifting trade. But history does not stay silent forever. In 1841, Sharmarke Ali Saleh—merchant, commander, statesman, and iron-willed son of the Ishaaq—laid siege to Zeila with a precision that shocked even his rivals. Cannon thunder shook the coral-stone walls. Smoke wrapped the minarets like a shroud. When the gates finally splintered, the entire Ottoman garrison fell into his hands. And at the heart of the storm stood the captured governor, Sayyid Mohamed Al Barr, staring at the man who had undone centuries of imperial authority. Sharmarke stepped through the rubble, raised his hand, and declared in a voice that rolled like thunder over the sea: “Zeila is mine.” And from that moment, it was. From 1841 to 1861, he ruled the city not as a caretaker but as a rebuilder of destiny. Under his command, Zeila—once slipping into obscurity—roared back to life. Caravans from the interior flowed into its markets. Ships from Arabia and India crowded its harbour. Diplomats knew his name; merchants feared his refusal to bow; rivals whispered of his brilliance and ruthlessness in equal measure. Zeila became a powerhouse of the Horn—alive, defiant, and unmistakably under Sharmarke’s hand. But great men rarely die quietly. In 1861, the Franco-Ottoman alliance seized him, accusing him of the murder of a Frenchman. Shackled and forced aboard the ship Le Somme, he began his final journey—toward Paris or Constantinople, no one is entirely certain—where a trial awaited. Yet the sea claimed him before any empire could. Sharmarke Ali Saleh died on the waves, leaving behind a legend that refused to sink. Zeila remembers him still. A conqueror. A builder. A storm wearing human form. #darkedit #epicedit #History #fyp #somalilandtiktok💚🤍❤

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