arabelle raphael!
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Arabelle Raphael is French born and of Jewish, Tunisian, and Persian descent. This gorgeous, curvaceous beauty packs a lot of heat on her petite 5’3, 115lb frame. From her voluminous locks, luscious lips, 32G breasts and perfectly plump derriere there’s no wonder why she captivates humans of all genders with just a glance! What’s no more surprising is how she keeps us engaged with her impassioned and legendary oral performances. If you’ve not witnessed the wonder of the world that is Arabelle’s deepthroat skill in action, you have come to the right place to remedy that! Arabelle was raised in the SF/East Bay Area in CA and began her porn career in 2010 with world famous BDSM and Fetish production company, Kink. Soon after she was noticed by Burning Angel, Evil Angel, Porn Fidelity, Sweetheart Films and performed a number of scenes spanning from group scenes, anal, Girl/Girl, and many more outrageous scenarios which have received critical acclaim, and nominations for Unsung Starlet, Best Group Scene and more at AVN. Most recently she won an AVN Award for her brilliant work as part of the Grooby Productions Film: “All My ******’s Lovers”. She has since gone on to produce her own content on her website and various clips sites that have exploded in popularity across the internet as audiences grow to know and love the honest, kinky, and truly boundary-breaking performances she has become famous for delivering. Not only does she indulge in all manner of depravity with many different types of people, she has proudly engaged in civil rights activism for many years on behalf of underrepresented communities. She is a co-founder of BAWS, Bay Area Workers Support, that advocates for the health and safety of sex workers in the SF Bay Area and beyond in order ensure that she may continue to provide a wealth of hardcore, indulgent, and sensual content for her fans in a world with more consideration for all the people that work hard to keep porn and porn performers safe and sexy. A whirlwind of a hard worker, and talented actress, her expertise ranges from a slutty sub, psychologically intriguing dominatrix, to the nasty, hardcore succubus that has beguiled members worldwide. PornHub is proud to present a plethora of her content that will get your pulse racing, have you dripping, sweating, and forever wanting more of Arabelle and her depraved fantasies as they are brought to life…
My stats
Birthday
1989-02-26
Heritage
Iranian, French, Tunisian
Languages
French, English
Orientation
fluid
Height
5'3
Hair
curly, long, black
Eyes
brown
Tattoo
many
Piercing
many
Ethnicity
Caucasian/Middle Eastern/North African
Nationality
No data
Hair Color
Black
Height
5 feet, 4 inches (163 cm)
Weight
114 lbs (52 kg)
Measurements
34DD-27-36
Tattoos
Butterfly right of navel; Butterfly under right arm/side; Flowers on upper right arm; Woman's exposed breasts (or two stick figures staring at a third) inside a picture frame on left upper arm; Scissors on left tricep; 'rite' text above left arm joint; text above pubes; locked red heart right and left outer ankles; red roses running up the back of both legs down to back of calves; inside right top finger; bird upper left back; high heel shoe right inner forearm; right inner wrist
Piercings
Multiple
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North Africa is a region encompassing the northern portion of the African continent. There is no singularly accepted scope for the region, and it is sometimes defined as stretching from the Atlantic shores of Morocco in the west, to Egypt's Suez Canal and the Red Sea in the east. Others[Like whom?] have limited it to top North-Western countries like Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia, a region that was known by the French during colonial times as “Afrique du Nord” and is known by all Arabs as the Maghreb (“West", The Western part of Arab World). The most commonly accepted definition includes Algeria, Sudan, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya and Egypt, the 6 countries that shape the top North of the African continent. Meanwhile, “North Africa”, particularly when used in the term North Africa and the Middle East, often refers only to the countries of the Maghreb and Libya. Egypt, being also part of the Middle East, is often considered separately, due to being both North African and Middle Eastern at the same time. North Africa includes a number of Spanish and Portuguese possessions, Plazas de soberanía, Ceuta and Melilla and the Canary Islands and Madeira.[2] The countries of North Africa share a common ethnic, cultural and linguistic identity that is unique to this region. Northwest Africa has been inhabited by Berbers since the beginning of recorded history, while the eastern part of North Africa has been home to the Egyptians[3]. Between the A.D. 600s and 1000s, Arabs from the Middle East swept across the region in a wave of Muslim conquest. These peoples, physically quite similar, formed a single population in many areas, as Berbers and Egyptians merged into Arabic and Muslim culture. This process of Arabization and Islamization has defined the cultural landscape of North Africa ever since.
The distinction between North Africa, the Sahel and the rest of the continent is as follows:
Nineteenth century European explorers, attracted by the accounts of Ancient geographers or Arab geographers of the classical period, followed the routes by the nomadic people of the vast “empty” space. They documented the names of the stopping places they discovered or rediscovered, described landscapes, took a few climate measurements and gathered rock samples. Gradually, a map began to fill in the white blotch.
The Sahara and the Sahel entered the geographic corpus by way of naturalist explorers because aridity is the feature that circumscribes the boundaries of the ecumene. The map details included topographical relief and location of watering holes crucial to long crossings. The Arabic word “Sahel” (shore) and “Sahara” (desert) made its entry into the vocabulary of geography.
Latitudinally, the “slopes” of the arid desert, devoid of continuous human habitation, descend in step-like fashion toward the northern and southern edges of the Mediterranean that opens to Europe and the Sahel that opens to “Trab al Sudan.” Longitudinally, a uniform grid divides the central desert then shrinks back toward the Atlantic Ocean and the Red Sea. Gradually, the Sahara-Sahel is further divided into a total of twenty sub-areas: central, northern, southern, western, eastern, etc.
In this way, “standard” geography has determined aridity to be the boundary of the ecumene. It identifies settlements based on visible activity without regard for social or political organizations of space in vast, purportedly “empty” areas. It gives only cursory acknowledgement to what makes Saharan geography, and for that matter, world geography unique: mobility and the routes by which it flows.
— An atlas of the Sahara-Sahel : geography, economics and security[4]
The Sahel or “African Transition Zone” has been affected by many formative epochs in North African history ranging from Ottoman occupation to the Arab-Berber control of the Andalus.[5][6] As a result, many modern African nation-states that are included in the Sahel evidence cultural similarities and historical overlap with their North African neighbours.[7] In the present day, North Africa is associated with West Asia in the realm of geopolitics to form a Middle East-North Africa region.[8] The Islamic influence in the area is also significant and North Africa is a major part of the Muslim world.
Some researchers have postulated that North Africa rather than East Africa served as the exit point for the modern humans who first trekked out of the continent in the Out of Africa migration.[9][10][11]
The Maghreb (/ˈmʌɡrəb/; Arabic: المغرب, translit. al-Maɣréb, lit. 'The West'), also known as Northwest Africa[1] or Northern Africa, Greater Arab Maghreb (Arabic: المغرب العربي الكبير, translit. al-Maghrib al-ʿArabi al-Kabir), Arab Maghreb (Arabic: المغرب العربي, translit. al-Maghrib al-ʿArabi) or Greater Maghreb (Arabic: المغرب الكبير, translit. al-Maghrib al-Kabīr),[2][3][4] or by some sources the Berber world,[5][6] Barbary[7][8][9] and Berbery,[10][11] is a major region of North Africa that consists primarily of the countries Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia, Libya and Mauritania. It additionally includes the disputed territories of Western Sahara (mostly controlled by Morocco) and the cities of Melilla and Ceuta (both controlled by Spain and claimed by Morocco). As of 2018, the region has a population of over 100 million people.
In historical English and European literature, the region was known as the Barbary Coast or the Barbary States, derived from the native Berbers.[12][13] Sometimes it was referred to as the Land of the Atlas, derived from the Atlas Mountains.[14] In current Berber language media and literature, the region is part of what is known as Tamazgha.
The region is usually defined as much or most of northern Africa, including a large portion of Africa's Sahara Desert, and excluding Egypt, which is part of Mashriq. The traditional definition of the region that restricted it to the Atlas Mountains and the coastal plains of Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia, and Libya was expanded by the inclusion of Mauritania and of the disputed territory of Western Sahara.
During the era of Al-Andalus in the Iberian Peninsula (711–1492), the Maghreb's inhabitants, the Muslim Berbers or Maghrebis, were known by Europeans as "Moors",[15] or as "Afariqah" (Roman Africans).[16][need quotation to verify] Morocco transliterates into Arabic as "al-Maghreb" (The Maghreb).
Before the establishment of modern nation states in the region during the 20th century, Maghreb most commonly referred to a smaller area, between the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlas Mountains in the south. It often also included the territory of eastern Libya, but not modern Mauritania. As recently as the late 19th century, Maghreb was used to refer to the Western Mediterranean region of coastal North Africa in general, and to Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia, in particular.[17]
The region was somewhat unified as an independent political entity during the rule of the Berber kingdom of Numidia, which was followed by the Roman Empire's rule or influence. That was followed by the brief invasion of the Germanic Vandals, the equally brief re-establishment of a weak Roman rule by the Byzantine Empire, the rule of the Islamic Caliphates under the Umayyad Caliphate, the Abbasid Caliphate and the Fatimid Caliphate. The most enduring rule was that of the local Berber empires of the Almoravid dynasty, Almohad Caliphate, Hammadid dynasty, Zirid dynasty, Marinid dynasty, Zayyanid dynasty, and Wattasid dynasty - from the 8th to 13th centuries. The Ottoman Empire for a period also controlled parts of the region.
Mauritania, Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, and Libya established the Arab Maghreb Union in 1989 to promote cooperation and economic integration in a common market. It was envisioned initially by Muammar Gaddafi as a superstate.[citation needed] The union included Western Sahara implicitly under Morocco's membership,[18] putting Morocco's long cold war with Algeria to a rest. However, this progress was short-lived, and the union is now dormant. Tensions between Algeria and Morocco over Western Sahara re-emerged, reinforced by the unsolved border dispute between the two countries. These two main conflicts have hindered progress on the union's joint goals and practically made it inactive as a whole.[19] However, the instability in the region and growing cross-border security threats revived the calls for regional cooperation, with foreign ministers of the Arab Maghreb Union declaring a need for coordinated security policy in May 2015 at the 33rd session of the follow-up committee meeting, which revived hope of some form of cooperation.[20]
The Mediterranean countries are those that surround the Mediterranean Sea.[1] Twenty sovereign countries in Southern Europe, the Levant and North Africa regions border the Mediterranean, in addition to two island nations completely located in it (Malta and Cyprus). Below is the list of the countries and territories bordering the Mediterranean:
Southern European coast, from west to east
Gibraltar[2] (a British Overseas Territory)
Spain[2]
France[2]
Monaco[2]
Italy[2]
Malta[2] (island nation)
Slovenia[2]
Croatia[2]
Bosnia and Herzegovina[2]
Montenegro[2]
Albania[2]
Greece[2]
Turkey[2]
Levantine coast, from north to south
Syria[2]
Cyprus[2] (island nation; includes the British Overseas Territory of Akrotiri and Dhekelia, and Northern Cyprus)
Lebanon[2]
Israel[2]
Palestine (Gaza Strip)
Northern African coast, from east to west
Egypt[2]
Libya[2]
Tunisia[2]
Algeria[2]
Morocco [2]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Mediterranean
Ivana Stanković / evestankovic! cumbussable