Everyone loved Grandpa. But with the father and mother is not that a common language can not be found - there is generally some enmity. The death of his grandfather starts the process of searching for his own identity. Unwilling to have anything to do with her parents poisoned by France, she does a DNA test to find out where her ancestors
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Everyone loved Grandpa. But with the father and mother is not that a common language can not be found - there is generally some enmity. The death of his grandfather starts the process of searching for his own identity. Unwilling to have anything to do with her parents poisoned by France, she does a DNA test to find out where her ancestors came from - not from the same dry, individualistic country where relatives do not want to listen to each other at all. Rejecting the biological identity of the French parents and the scientific identity of the Iberian, Nage chooses the identity with a heart drawn to her Algerian grandfather, to a warm and crowded place across the sea, where, without knowing especially the local language and religion, she will somehow feel at home. . .
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