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tv   The 77 Percent  Deutsche Welle  March 10, 2024 10:30am-11:01am CET

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let's see chris live behind these discovered mileage benches and 360 degrees and explore fascinating boats. heritage selling dw world heritage 360 now hello, and welcome to the san francisco memphis sense. my name is edith kimani and we are in the beautiful city of jerusalem here in pennsylvania. we're here to bring you another additional of the show for you africa view. this week we're focusing on the topic that's out because we're always aware of. but don't always discuss in detail. we're talking about the impact of colonialism with a special focus on german colonial rule. this is what we've prepared for you. it sounds on. yeah, we'll look at the atrocities committed by germany. i'm here. why? so find me, leave us to in morning during our streets,
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the base will find out how colonial history is that young people says maybe as will show us around to assist you with silver as some of the 20th century genocide. most parts of africa, except you'll see a library of what's taken over by your opinion, pure in these by the early 20th century. the incident must breland conference in 1885 divided africa of often in straight lines between the colonial powers. germany held more than they tons and the ones up were ruined the media to go and come a route. but the germans face, fee us resistance is have a look fighter and colonialism. it's a story of african resistance. germany came territories, introduced tanzania. the one died in putting this in 80, a 5 the enforce 15th of a so called german east africa with find that several locators like, appreciate it, important to have a business to against colonial penetration. at this point, you need of german forces corresponded with hang race and planned by
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1891. the east coast was fully under german control. many africans living inland, resisted as well among them. so why here need to smoke? while he was a crate military technician, in the way, his even defeated kitchen is 18. by the way, most of human remains of those african freedom fighters taken by colonialists over a 100 years ago, a suit languishing in european collections. maggie mandy was a which has a ruler around monkey room and charles in 1900. she was forced to submit and killed . finally in 19 o 5 over 20 communities united and the spiritual leader conducted kelly wiley. and for the harsh german in what is now known as the g, but you will get lost it 2 years and cost the lives of over a $120000.00 applicants. the much and much war is a big part of 10. sonya is identity today, and the resistance is
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a source of the national prize. so that was just a short overview. if you want to see more, you'll find more videos like this, a broadcast and information from. i'll a series of shadows of german colonialism in the link below. so will same time send me up for now and on x ray will take us to moshi, which is at the foot of mounts. can you montero and you might have guesstimates. we're taking a closer look at the history of monkey many a chief and lead that into place. i guess the german colonialist. who is this? send us a still a life today. the toners moshi, when the slips of mount kingdom in general is home to the child. that's right. the serial man is going for that was monkey many need of the jungle. when the for jim on economies bought last several years later, they do most hon. demanding and others thinking they were going to the bill again. they took civil schools back to germany, but mainly the bundle i load the bear was the see me what was done to mind you may
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lead to me and my family. we are not such aside, leave it to people who would be the ones that fit into our lives. well, but they agree, lucille, there's the, wasn't normally that dental. now. high school was an extra of great violence douglas done to ask me if i do, i do a minor. and that is why we have not lived in peace all these years because these museum tells mind humanities story is leadership of the chunk of tribe and his rebellion against the gems. the fact that the gym i was not on the excluded him, but to be headed him and took his quote to berlin. in the graph will not be an option. even if this cool is returned. 1000000 use to own all of these land here. as he was chief of the cha good shape, it is not owned by his grandson and he's generations that said there was where the
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gym and coordinators is high him and 18 others like me to lose one for that was him on those killed here. he's cool, he's also in germany. the natives has confirmed their relationship fuel once more than just this cool. he also wants compensation wire to and on back to the cabinet, we request that the 10s indian government take a firm stance to ensure that the german government pays us if the government maintains both and some of we could be paid even today. i do. i think i that you sent me. i went to gym. i need to take it in a test, but sees officials they're not signed is cool. are we sending? he's 50 year old site to find his grandfather's remains and bring them home continues. i can't imagine what it's like not to be able to bury your dead, especially with the importance of the past because assigned to putting those who passed to rest. maybe some of you have similar histories. if you do let us know. so
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i actually had the chance to talk to a defendant of chief, still getting bundled, who was also executed during the month to month visit. so john bundle was kind enough to join us for us rebates. and of course, we wanted to know why the younger generation assume impacted by colonial history. the hello and welcome back to the submit to set up a set street debate. this week we are intends on you and this country. if you know a little bit about your history, what's kinda nice 1st by the germans before the british took over after world war one. but so many years later, the scourge of colonization is still felt in contemporary tanzania. today we want to find out how that had re is its head, and who better to answer this question for me. then turns on is we have you, it's like you who's an assistant professor of history. do you think that's tons then? yeah, i mean the, the rest of africa is truly independent. it doesn't. yeah. and if it is stuff, because it is not to do an independent because that we've been little cornelius and
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ended, but you know, we have a vehicle now the zip, where everything we do is somehow, is, is determined by the west. so before we move into new colonialism, which for sure will be touching on, i want to come to join bundle who is an ancestor of one of the freedom fighters. i would say of this country. your great grandfather was unfortunately murdered in a horrendous way. he was home and parts of his remains. what taken with the former colonial mast as so tell me a little bit about why searching for his remains is so important. we offer guns. we, we end morning, all right. and when we, we battery each and every part of the body for the password. yeah. um and this such has taken you as far as berlin, where you've been able to speak to the state minister and most recently, when president funk photo each time i came, you spoke with him. do you think you will be successful? his visit? the glass was just as booked and go for an hour. healy and we took the review friendly in
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a very private room. and you promised us that she's going to during the us fence and to bring back later minutes. okay. uh, speaking of stolen things, an odd to fox nicholas, he is working on a project to do. does that re touched some of the student works? that's well, sometimes in the, again, the trauma and being separated from things of value. do you feel that to contemporary tons on your society? one of the most important things that the german colonialism did to the country is taking out a lot of material from the country to germany, to museums in germany. and the taking out of these material with just a sickness is more of a symbol of what the color in your system did at large, which is do you cannot make a social and political plunder of local systems. so we're speaking here from a conceptual point of view, about lots of folks, but again, coming back to you, your family, this is real, right? so how's it affected you from an emotional point of view as when you think about
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your children and your father, how does it make you feel and do great grandfather? oh for me now, because we have looked at a lot there for me. relist, i'm not waiting, the head was dropped and the dad factor we had taken so we had nothing a real lift intended no one was there to do that. and the story of what was special for those efforts which we have taken. so we have those through the, our culture fee, you're doing a film actually that's following bundle street and another one as well. and as you were doing it anything that jumped out to, to which you weren't aware of about colonial history. i think speaking to the question of law, so it's also the last of the importance of the spaces that we still occupied as a nation. so in most of these cases, you have to understand that communities had to watch when their freedom fighters, their fathers, their uncles were being hanged in public spaces. some of the spaces of the chose
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for example, were like market spaces, where obviously this is where the community came together, right? things happens, they're the one life events that attach them to those spaces. and so then by making these points where the people had to be there to actually watch something traumatic happen, you, it's like you've detonated something within that space in the community will never be able to exist around it in the same way ever again, let me come to introduce you because the 2 of you, a students of history, a, c, c has said things have been lost. we've been, you, of human beings. do you identify with the statement and to that? so i did tap to, you know, i have to because it was the car to it to be easy to be feed without. it was the cards over to out of 4 or 4 out of 4 custom. you know, i, the chinese a good because you have replaced them. they've got you the same as the same as to, to in depth and gather. okay. but you know what you're saying is absolutely sports
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on, but i just want to find out, do you think that's tons and e, as in general and africans, are we traumatized from colonization? would you say that we are? we can say that everything is fine with us. uh, it looked fine, but what i see is like we are just not bill springs of our great grandfathers into our grandfathers. but yes, we just continuing what was blown by the gentleman. we just keeping the tradition which they wanted to impose in us. we're not keeping what our grandfathers and great grandfather i told my dad we'd grandfathers. all right. let me hear from you . the fact that you're trying to bring back what we lost from the essence of course, are not easy. we need to change our systems because that's what we're leaving for. we're not leaving for all those goals. we are leaving for the folks that for taking . so the front that they government and other people are making a lot of efforts to preserve these things to be as the essence of our history. but
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we need to change our systems from our leadership styles and other things because that's what we are leaving for. i know you spoke about and you colonialism. you'll be to how is it still money festing associated in quinette. quinette isn't ended, but new orleans go to the audience that did and that people, uh, what are you looking at? are they taking gaming and losing the same people? local nice and the same people gaming now? so you coordinate is it so they would just change the system? what do we do then about that class? because how long for, how long will we be talking about colonialism and colonialism, ways, or agency ways or right to tell me who we want to be as africans. this is not the story necessarily of only being a victim. it is the story of resilience because the, regardless of everything that has been done, we're still here. we are still planning. we have so creating, we have still telling stories, and i think there is the power in owning that space in which you tell your own
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stories is for us as are these as creators to re imagined to say how can we be to say, how, what can we tap within ourselves and continue to create that process of change and speaking of change. secondly, the german government seems to be willing of these for now to apologize for that. first it is, it could be said in africa a re sent to you. folks also signed by the president of the country. as i mentioned earlier, did come to the country and issued the very strongly worded apology for your family . you want, obviously the remains of your family members back for the government. it could be reparations. i what i hear all the time. you know? so if we add me to this, it will doings then the ask because we want money. truthful? well, reparations, i think is an important word because it's a word that is demanding something for the loss. and that's because these things are crude over time. the, the things that they took, the people that they took, they took with intention to destroy any intention to gain also because it was worth
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it did build the well, so that went away from these communities from our countries. and so when we talk about the operations, what we're talking about is a restoration of that. well, it does not necessarily means that it is only something that can be acquired to paying people back in terms of cash. but you were talking about imagining how reparations can at least add to either cultural, building, infrastructural building. there's so many ways is people who answer stories and needs to come home or go to these countries to look for their people. how is that being facilitated? all of these things just need to be made and reparations is something that is done on our terms. nobody else's. uh, well, i thank you for your comments and i thank you all for your contribution. and i thank you for viewing the if you'd
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like to watch a longer version of this debate, you can find its own all youtube channel. that's no take a show due to a tagano where we meet a young artist who wanted to reconnect with her cultural heritage which was disrupted by colonial rule through how it will find out the history of gun as royal umbrellas. a key pupils of an umbrella is to shoot a pest and from harsh weather conditions. but in gunnar, using an umbrella for a king or queen in a traditional space, goes beyond that function. so there's many stories that helps the importance of why the umbrellas came or already settled in gonna um, many of our teams in clean mother is already used to umbrellas. but during the early 1700, the umbrella for gifted by the dutch. but they all have different imagery, different sizes, different colors and fabrications. with that, when not, benson was born to coming in parents and grew up in the united states. she later
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relocated to grandma and set up to see him the foundation that offers the platform where demi is coming to rest with a historical past to present the day. so say honey and my connection to the royal umbrellas were away from me. so be reconnected to my call to a heritage and to also to my check and see legacy that my parents you to tell me about when i was younger. i mean, as far but my grandfather and being able to see that a lot of his information wasn't assessable and gonna, and even to our family. it may be realized. a lot of individuals like myself, who are in gonna, or even outside, are dealing with the same thing where they know about their lives. they know about this history, but they don't have any photos or artifacts to bring it back or reconnected. rick to inbox on the 4 hour journey from the capital city across to meet one of the
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royal umbrella mika's income i see in the ocean to region. as i go for the people say we are the mission to region. i predominantly umbrella, make it the one who felt to me this craft is cold. we have to supplement his knowledge. the number of the king is divine. for me, this craft to provide the means to look up to my from the umbrellas. there used to be an identical tater for a lot of the individuals are coming towards the ceremonies and festivals. many times as you can have multiple umbrella as even if it's large or small. but they're never gonna have the same design. and even when the, maybe the ashanti king is in front of other kings or like sub sieves, his umbrella will always be the largest, or he'll be surrounded by multiple umbrellas. not just one, where many of the subsidies will be under maybe a medium sized umbrella to show that at the end of the day,
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the socket king is the king of all of the other chiefs. when there is a white umbrella, it might not have any design, it would just be a plain white umbrella. the so cases that a chief has some religious context, or he is represented by a church, but usually don't means no special events or maybe for that special ceremony that you'll see a white umbrella before my residency started, i was part of the group exhibitions, bells curated by my ones i can, there was a great opportunity for me to so case my umbrellas and a gallery space. usually my umbrellas, i've seen and the museum exhibitions. but it was the 1st time for me to really see how a new audience will interact with my work and also to be able to re introduce myself and a new light where now i'm bringing the historical archives and the importance of the roy umbrellas and a gallery space. surely who we are. i've gotten in and africans, i flies is 6 move down memory lead. when i see this ray actually fax only on
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festival cases. where it's, i've done a very good job and i wish to all the best and all hand davis, the younger generation likes me, get to have a few of our rich cold sauce. and also out of $106.00 ask for con, additional asked to fax, the unable to re imagine and reclaim occupancy archives, to photos, artifacts, videos for them. within my art as process, i'm able to uphold the roy umbrellas, which was a historical object, but now and able to use it as a way to tell our traditional stories and a more modern way. nivia is the country that most people associates german colonial rule, and that's because of the genocide committed against the nama and headed to people and the massive lands grubbs that went along with it's. it's known as the 1st genocide of the 20th century. we can fast gemma new only apologize, points, crime,
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but 100 years later. here's a shot to overview of what to please. 34 years of german clooney who in the media was especially brutal. when do you mind doing rhodes or for to add to what school? monday, 19 or 4 things were already pretty, but they have been in my literally i put them in your costs please step test which destined me to the customer. so show to the river and manage your mindset best took advantage, you know, out of this ration that the hero, people who don't send a tech tuning over pointed german says that in rest funds fund totes as well on. so just so rounded. however, one of those at the bus hubbard, he's in the same, was extra munition or to execute. a jeremiah salt met the man and children chased into the battery on my head. up to 70000 died of service and service short cuts wherever a number of people who are joined,
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the fights were headed into so called quinton troops on counts on the fed full by worked and exposed many more. died in the condition about 75 percent of the entire population and some $0.50 of all that must be a night due today on the last weekend of august to me that you guys did we and that's the traumatic events right to them. yes. history and also process them. how do you come to terms with such a brutal past? well, in this next piece, let me be a musician, robin 96 us around 2 phones out of soccer phones and shows us how he and the young that may be as lived their lives today. well, be very aware of this, which is history. everybody, my name is robin illinois and i'm on the west side. the best side we're in so
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community. so let's take a ride to my city, my ra, vanilla unique herb, and a k, a 121 is and it may be as dawn sole superstar, and a rab loves his tone, which locals cooler walker. it's maybe is a boot, the largest city and his home of choice, not just because of the vibrant local music scene, but also because the world's largest sand dunes all just a 5 minute drive away. this is freedom maintenance best and having the best of all for us with the ocean and news, right decided to add to so we're having the pressures to you know, so basically soccer phone for me. rab and his crew are assigned to boarding prose. those still in the making, they even hope to represents walk up in international tournaments one day.
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but talk to her a bad full, a rap has her to shoulder. i need some tlc. c. this may head to my desk. the big township on the outskirts of walk up, most people live here. and this is also where my, my oldest has to practice. the traditional see the takes care of all kinds of pains and stores from sports injuries to connecting with your ancestors or to humble doctor has a solution for everything to get some of the equations of we don't really stress our sales with um, wisdom medicines and all that stuff to know because we know like we go back to the roots cuz that's where we're very spiritual and very rude to me. they're going to turn the stuff the skill user or the average. i'm going to try and get it to the legacy of gym and colonial rule and swap them and still plays a huge role here today. in the 1st few years of the 20th century,
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a german soldier has moved to thousands of indigenous people right here and walk them on. as part of the genocide in the maybe up rubbing nearly takes us to a mass grave that serves as a painful reminder to those that were killed. the low we have the printer in the brow house which is all pretty and suckled one. these are very pretty and holiday town. we also have this part of our history and this is actually um on, on i did on, on that side. and i would like to us to share this part of the history of my town with you off to visiting the jews, the township and the mass cemetery,
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rapids to the old colonial saint, helps walk up to meet up with his friends. the beach is one of their favorite places in town, a perfect spot to end the day. and think about the menu streams of the city. when you live in odessa and when you come to the center of town, like you come to a different town, it's like you're in a different city. man. is completely 2 different words. yeah. this is basically like a little island. there's 2 different words that depend on the one that we've come to. the end of our show of german colonial rule lasted about 35 years as they had to give up the colonies to the british and french after world war one. and yet both here and other countries, people still struggle with the consequences of colonization. i'd love to hear your thoughts on this, you know, where to find us as well as social media. well, in youtube, it's around sick talk select, but that's what we have for you today. the,
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by the way, i can afford to cover the the
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