tv Ashes To Ashes Al Jazeera July 6, 2020 1:32am-2:01am +03
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has benefited iran in fact they think iran has come come off worse. the number of people who have died in ethiopia since the killing of a popular singer and activist has nearly doubled to 166 officials blame the deaths on the response to the unrest by security forces and on interethnic violence singer hutch on who was a member of ethiopia's largest ethnic group there bromo and he was shot dead in addis ababa on monday. at least 34 people are believed to have been killed in southern japan and to wrench all rain and severe flooding nearly half of the victims in the kumamoto region were in a nursing home 75000 people had been warned to leave their homes before the floods japan's meteorological agency says the rainfall is the worst it has ever recorded in that particular region you have today it's what they had lines witness ashes to ashes is coming up next right here on al-jazeera. on counting the
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cost the pandemic decimates jobs pushing betty and rick stream all this week could have green recovery save the global economy senegal flagpoles but try these crews are used to overfishing but speed processing is make or for the next president. trying to call on al-jazeera. who here's my favorite of all the whole they're all be wound can you know. these nerves just so. you have the right.
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line of oh my. now there from boy ringback. you know where he if you take him out of the bomb he'll run around all over the floor and talk and you can ask him saying things in here i'll sleep i got 2 of them. he get killed. the reason i like it because i never had toys when i was growing up. the little boy in me just loved the movie and they cared to do this over and testing you know. i'm going to give them to my kids when i'm gone .
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a lot but my wife gets killed me oh you can do it you got to tell whoever you can do this and you did was you know wise concern him kind of thing you know lizzie true. woman has a true account of how we live how we survive in the south. when a patient walks into my. expect to have a seat at the meeting top of them at the history about their journey i take that information and i use it to help them heal. i need to look at history. and sometimes patients come in stores bracket discarding because i need it all to help the patient live.
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i'm a physician but i'm also an artist i see myself a little bit of both. one for it is our oddest who both from the south and i had opportunity to go to one his art shows and there he was he's had a lot of health problems hypertension diabetes a long over 40 years of stress and i think that's stress in a fear that your ability to sleep so how many hours of sleep you get a night 34 real force hours. and that's with the medicine without the medicine what you get that from as i get nothing. and this been going on for how long you have food with whenever you do one of those pitches he gets it you have to go to the doctor and she has to tell him you have to double up on that medicine you know to get some rest for years post-traumatic stress disorder so it traumatized you again
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and make you really but you have gone through exactly and the thing is that some time acknowledging the history does and some people to heal may help other people. and not mean oh no i don't think it is a different can are that feeling is mark is not healing. in the streets. you. love put hope in my heart not much says it with thing is done from the pains is not my whole being that. i can sit there i'm still a bigot and my man will go back when i was 56 years old i can remember guy gave me
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a good memory. we lived on the plantation and that was here in the 60s. it don't take long for users to realize that sun's wrong with picking cotton they are really on the way. you start out on the road that you see the spin all day you never get to any or all. at the terminal school teen i ran away from not home. but i ran away from the country. doing everything i possibly could live a different type of life. vessel sick. work she. and i go to the night 3 of 45 o'clock in the morning and when she don't hear what she's down the scale like. the trauma that is seen in the trouble you have it to go to sleep in the recess i've seen net increase as you get ill the
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dramatic stuff as well have a problem. but those that it was really need to get done sometime he wakes up completely calling whoever it is this run to me call him by name say and stop. if i am the old take my medicine and i can't sleep with passion. of the on going through if i'm jamie. i'm a punch pet. let me go back to the scar that i'm kerry by john a civil rights movement and 40 years on when you are part of the movement you make a name for yourself in all of why people know you
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and they are waiting to get their hands on you i stayed in jail over a year the no charges nothing so i took a roll toilet paper stuck it in and john flooded the jail and when the share came back he came back and he was gone through to him with the cheek me to abridge on and about the 3rd time he kicked me out of the side i would let him kick me and will grab his legs and i threw him to the ground and he went for his gun i took away from them and he they give me not to shoot him so as a will i'm not going to shoot you but i'm a lock you up so i locked him in asean and i live with that is how of civil rights workers are the womanliness of the do i told her what will happen she with the next
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room and call the police the next day ya know era white man think of the joy just then and not then and you are related the trunk of a car about a 30 minute rat and really open up a truck a saudi rope hanging from a tree loses a place designed and look like to hang people really put a rope around a beat pull me up in a tree if i'm the deputy sheriff that i locked in a seal and he's got a knife and he come up and he grabbed my private paws and he took his laughter he stuck me. they was going to castrate me and then hang me and bring me i was 90 years old and there i am bleeding like a pig singing up in a tree riddled to be slaughtered like a hole and then another white man grabbed his mom and
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told him don't do that we had better things we can do with this. i took my shirt rolled it up put to him and they're like they're. well now the jungle. is we now need to give us a massive. my mother's tell me she said you cannot internalize the pain if you internalize their pain it just chips away at you. this country no one really generate talk about the people who were alleged. sometimes they were meant to people they put them in
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the water but wait sort of family never see them again. sometime they would take the bodies and cut them up to sell the pieces some kind of a take divide at the linchpin bring it up so the families would not have any of. those are ones that were recorded what about the ones that were dot record. close to 3 to 4000 people who were next and a lot of these people and never got a few and. it was often too dangerous for the families to retrieve those bodies and sometimes there was no bodies to retrieve. is not just black history this is american history.
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and don't survive a move to use the units you did i just happened to be one that was say. here hurt me. had kept me from being maybe what i could've been yes hannity of the that because drew and no one wants to talk about 1st time i saw you i was trying to medically speaking i was trying to figure out why does he have these oh he's here and over chang marks one more than the other why this one and this one comes to my conscience i hope i didn't advance for a minute. working on the highways and byways and when you hear them all and.
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you hear somebody. don't you know that's just. me and work and. here we he. and i like to talk. as you. made me cry out when you. have a beautiful morning and you get along just ok good. when i walk into georgia but you think. you can lean against me i'm far and we've got it i got it. i just sat on what's on the straw in georgia river that right. i'm going to become given oh. well. supported and to do that all. you pre-crime before you know it. we used to hold water in there with great vigor hit the oh really on
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the prairie way more put a brick in you do you. reckon it got i don't know that i never bought a. new . thing if. it had a foot to mar the 20 and i try to pull it all together hey thank you. you know that painting idea with the with the k.k.k. . could you bring it to me in springfield. amat decided to have a few who for the over $4000.00 african-americans would mention in the united states to close that chapter and move for. america has to do the same thing
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good evening to you. and dr shirley jackson would occur and the question we asked the night is why do we need to be here we need to be here because our country needs to heal and some bad things happen in this country we americans talk shit other americans due to the color of their skin that went on so long in america what are you going to do about it
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because i remember as a little girl when we went to a funeral and in law that casket in the ground the minister was say ashes to ashes . a lot of people never get. so we're looking back in history so this patient can live but looking back in history so this patient can thrive looking back in history so this patient can become very strong. but this patient can only live and get stronger if build willing to look back. so tonight we stop. there's an african proverb to say as you speak my name and i will live forever. so tonight we will speak some things. my name is in this. room listen to. him. my name is mary turner i was the 19 year old pregnant wife
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of the wonderful hayes turning. on him as long as holmes and i'm representing a memory. but when i confronted his murderous they lynched me and burned my body i mean just kind of phony you know reverend you represent the. bear ripped my unborn baby out of my belly. and sharing his death along with my i am james howard and they told me i had a choice either i could die with my son or i could watch him die and live to tell the story i don't trust i why are not the children to look at to live for now as my son cried and
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begged and pleaded for his life they bound his hands and feet and forced him into the river. and as i stood trembling with tears running down my face watching my son sent to the bottom of the river. now to rise again. you know how to rouse again. so in unison whenever you're representing speak that name. on.
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then lynch. is. back and is dragging me down even today that been for some years ago even today now is dragging me down. again us and they in my beer and i gave us. running for my live in that. a mud exam. and i don't know what to do. a man about what happened. and then soon regular low budget data say this is wrong don't think it hurt me to see him in that kind of pain.
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that pain. is the need to be erased. we commit to the ground these bodies and these souls and let us forever remember and reflect upon the lives. that have been nameless and unknown for many. ashes to ashes dust to dust. has a fuel is a healing for those that are alive give respect to those that have the body. i think they wanted to be remembered. and to have their right of passage the right. to move a. body.
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that is resistance. in akra people are grabbing social and political issues by the horns. and time to sing creativity parity and protest to challenge a change id is. gonna controversial a witness documentary on al-jazeera when the news breaks children here say they're excited to be back at school but also nervous when people need to be heard while cops are certainly has one here poet if the pregnancy on board in part had its limitations and that pushed the country focus on it the method of production al-jazeera has teams on the ground just because it's more doesn't mean it cannot be
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crushed what about the guy that can't afford it to bring you more room would win documentaries and life. in the bars against code the 19 malaysian authorities are targeting moderate work is what i want to east cost if this is the fictive bars control or discrimination. frank assessments tourism but income stream is dead in the water what's been the result in poaching significantly informed opinions there has been a very aggressive political rhetoric that has become very normal and it really is society in depth analysis of the day school ople headlines it's time for new policy it's safe on the street i think not all the disintegrating but he's written in this the really deep we all continue inside story on al-jazeera. rewind continues to care bring your people back to life i'm sorry with updates on the best
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of all jews use documentary. the struggle continues from part d. to now use districts revisiting this suv of friends we're going back to a poor south african neighborhood where music and tradition come together in an annual competition with the people of the only reward. iran confirm significant damage to an underground nuclear facility after a fire it had tried to downplay. play watching al-jazeera live from our world headquarters in doha fully back people also coming out mexico rethink some of its reopening plans as it joins the list of countries suffering a surge in coronavirus. al-jazeera gains exclude.
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