tv The Stream Al Jazeera May 10, 2021 11:30am-12:01pm +03
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where it's really a right wing nationalist sense a parade through the streets to mark what they call the reunification of jerusalem seized after the 6 day war very tense day in jerusalem we are going to keep a very close eye on developments there to keep it here on our just sirrah back after this with an updates on the top lines. so let's take you through the very latest from oakey point east jerusalem. hundreds of people have been wounded in the laces i break of violence in answer brines the some last compounds israeli security forces fired tear gas and stun grenades they have targets since palestinian protesters who hurled stones and other
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objects in retired already simmering tensions are being further inflamed by a planned march later this monday by a right wing israeli nationalists from events they call jerusalem day. i. this is the scene as israeli forces storms the mosque it's the 2nd time they've done so since last week palestinians are standing guard around the mosque to protect its during the upcoming nationalist march the palestinian red crescent says more than 215 people have been injured he says his team has been prevented from reaching their locks a compound with aides at least 8 people have been taken to hospital al jazeera has spoken exclusively with iraq's prime minister mustapha. baghdad's he says the palestinian people have a right a legal right to stay in the neighborhoods where they're facing eviction to make
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way for jewish settlers you could take heed a lot in. iraq to nonces all the crimes of the palestinian people and the prevention of the muslim community to access their holy sites and protecting the palestinian neighborhoods that historically belong to them should be protected and defended in other news protesters angry over the killing of iraq. the activists see how about was and they have set fires near a rainy and consulate supporters think iran backed fighters were behind the killing . the daily number of covert 900 factions in india has fallen below 400000 for the 1st time in 4 days this is according to official figures which sense a drop after the weekend's and fewer tests are carried out officials have recorded another 3700 covert deaths in india stay with us on al-jazeera the street is next.
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algeciras news now the biggest stories of the week delivered to your inbox. analysis and opinions of the world. subscribe out of the conversation. for me ok today we revisit the music of indigenous artists who've played our idea here on the stream stage so stand by for my moon uses also known as mimi fresh to hear how she collaborates with other indigenous artists to create a powerful mix of music and activism also on a playlist front war on the native american hip hop artist raps in the lakota language we start with a grammy nominated colombian canadian singer and songwriter lead open. ito is going
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recognized worldwide miss colombia. i was beautiful i was able to you know bring to the world the baby that was inside of me when i was there for me for a year. and now now she takes over my life everything colorful in my studio is for her this is her little modern home that i mean out of cardboard so she can help me so you just continue to resist yeah yeah i'm thinking because you we just what you perform which is 3 years ago which is about indigenous rights respecting mother nature do you see looking back at the evolution in your music do you think i've grown i've changed i'm doing something different now. i think that i am in constant motion and in constant evolution and i think that until our
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struggles and until the things that we're seeing about and in peace and in the right and in the right hands then i'm probably going to start singing about other things you know but i feel like there's an evolution in sound and that my message is only becoming stronger for sure through nomination for best latin rock or tentative album featuring traditional colombian instruments and afro colombian album what does that mean for people in colombia and also i think when canada what do they tell you about that. everyone was extremely supportive and extremely happy. you know i'm not really a person that is reading labels and things like that and i do feel like a lot of my music does come out of my heart but when it's recognized you know that the sounds come from a specific place or a specific people it gives us more strength you know which is what my
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music is about so people are very happy very proud in canada are people are in full celebration so. yeah i mean i made sure that i made my message clear i made sure that we performed we created a show in 0 and that's where we gave people so i'm very proud and very happy to have shared a stage with 2 afro indigenous artists happy that we were able to feature all latin american colombian art so yeah we did what we came to do we're looking at some of the pictures from your grammy performance and underneath i was looking at the comments this is literally the most beautiful form of 2 art i've seen in the longest time this is mesmerizing this is art tell us about how you conceptualize the look of your performance what were you trying to do.
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everything that i do. comes with intention everything that i do everything that i put out i have already thought about it some of the imagery come see me in trimix some of the imagery i collaborate with visual artists that are like minded. this collaboration for the grammys idea with art is orally anon and she is a colombian artist based in mexico city and that we have a beautiful friendship and she also did our direction for the cover of my album so it only made sense that i work with her again we've done music videos together and i work with an all crew of indigenous black diasporic artists and that's why you can really see one with the reaction is so true because that's exactly where all of the art came from from memory from. all of our struggles and the love that we have for color and nature that's what that song
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is about and that's what the performance was about the grammys are expanding how much space they have a latino artist and i remember when you were on the stream 3 years ago you talked about why he's saying in spanish why that's important let me just remind our audience what he said well here 1st i will ask who can speak spanish and then there's like 2 people now here and then and then i like well this is the perfect time to download your reset a stone app or. you know like i don't know that app exists but i do know that there are a set of stone multi-lingual programs that were really hot so i'm like there should be an app for that you should download it because i am not about to translate this i'll contextualize a little bit. and it's a good. but i thought people coming round to your way of thinking because the performance at the grammys the thought you were nominated the reception of miss
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colombia how do you feel people are now looking at indigenous artists where they may not be performing in english which was if you want to be successful you kind of have to sing in english. yeah i think that the dominating people into music industry the majority are people of color and that a big branch of the mainstream. music industry are you know caribbean descendant. colombia and you know that are making a sort of makes between pop and. yeah caribbean sounds you know what i do still is art and it's not something that is readily. sold to the masses like some of the pop that's out there but i do feel like because music in spanish has been more s.f.
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. i don't really because you know 2nd and 3rd generation people my age and like the youth are listening to the music you know their culture and their country to represent them so i feel like the music industry simply reflecting what the audience wants you know and because it's still an industry and because it's still a business a business they're realizing that they have to make space for other languages and other cultures and we still have ways to go but you know i embrace any kind of change in the right direction nido put me into bach on the stream after a 3 year hiatus over a scoring always fascinating. class yes. gas yes amy.
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use this aka move fresh when she appeared on the stream she shared a story that made my eyes a roll by muna native american and african american but was told by the t.v. show american idol that she wasn't american idol to compete they said i was too ethnic i was too afaik and if they have an ethnic idol they'll be sure to give me a call yeah so. what insight even. even me i mean if you are the values. you know.
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'd that you have a unique backstory i guarantee no one else has a back story like yours to prove i'm going to show our audience some pictures that he let's start with this one here have a look at my laptop this is stunning i'm going to show a picture of your grandmother and your mother this is where your musical inspiration the musical education started would you explain because a lot of people we look at these but just say what. tell us. what. i learned was being at home with my mother and my grandmother in the kitchen a lot of times people were x. my mother was a little vocal coast to train of this thing and they think that she's going to you know sit up at a piano and teach them notes and she'll make them come you know shop corn and pick
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greens and because traditional people singing is. like reading is like praying it is a part of what you do as as a. a person as a part of the community you know as. social have you come feel the song breathe the song do chores you know it's a part of life a living part of expression when i was a small girl i would always see my mother my grandmother people would call them and they would travel all around. people to take their bodies to sing into their bodies you know later on you may look at it doctors use the vibration of sound to move matter inside of bodies and they were doing this with their voices you know not educated in the western but they knew the power of sound and vibrations so that's kind of how i started both my parents i mean my parents and my grandparents had already converted to islam but my grandmother was a choir director from chicago so you know we were muslim she was still teach me.
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spiritual from slavery and she would teach me traditional native songs. that we had to really learn after the freedom of religion act was passed from native americans that was until the seventy's we couldn't practice our culture into the seventy's so you know a lot of the culture that was lost because of indian boarding schools and natives being forced to forget who we were we had to go back and read learn those things so by the time i was born you know my grandmother was just starting to really learn the language because we couldn't even talk about it you could even talk about being indian people she was mexican you know and. and i mean and you know mexicans are indigenous to that's why you see so many similarities from the southern tribes coming in it's an imaginary border you know they're indigenous as well and so people didn't know she was choctaw so later on she went back to learn the traditional ways and she was able to teach that i mean.
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from the daughter of freedom fighters and bombers leave bootleggers another run. place where to live an indian summer. that gorgeous song is called in a song in the lakota language i know that melody is going to be going around in your head oday since appearing on the stream my mooney uses has continued to blend activism music most recently joining other indigenous musicians to make the protest song no more pipeline blues it was released on state support the protests against the construction of minnesota's 9th grade tall science pipeline. i find autistic day is frank warner who doesn't sing in the lakota language he raps in it genocide the suffering of native americans and their fight to protect that allowed a things that runs through frank's music as through this number my people come from
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when frank. wanted to find out how he. to change perceptions of americans his full. exploding so you sampled a disney song from the animated feature the 1983 animated movie peter pan and turned it on its head so tell us about that so i produced music that was the 1st time i ever actually sample all vinyl i found a record in a children's. in minneapolis for a dollar and i've always wanted to do something with that song just because disney has a pretty horrible history of. in my people and it's there in the music and so i always look for creative ways to foot things like that on their head like and i just want to point out that the song is full of racial slurs for indigenous people but it came off of a children's record and you know so i just by doing that alone it kind of shows you where we're at in this country as far as how we look at aintree indigenous people you have
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a line in there where you say what made you think the red man was dead or someone paraphrasing you a little bit and i know you have a story where that actually happened but what is surprise yes so it was my 1st week in a so i graduated from columbia college in chicago i got my bachelor of arts and audio arts in acoustics and the 1st week i was there i was living in a dorm room in a dorm building in downtown chicago and i got in the elevator and this girl about on the elevator with me and she was non-native she commented on my hair she would get really pretty hair on you and i was like you know thank you and she didn't know what that meant and so i had to be more general and i was like a native american and she looked at me confused and she was like you guys are still alive you know and just think about that we've got college educated adults living on stolen call and i was glad to think we don't even exist.
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well we all are calling nice people so i think that's why as an indigenous person i resonate with it because it was created by calling nice people and it's drawing from indigenous traditions. and that's it for our show today. and passouts. next time. i'll be chopped up by now chop chop chop. chop chop. chop. chop. chop. chop. chop one. yeah.
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not exactly. preaching. oh say one now. being comfortable in one's own skin is a birthright or at least it should be a black filmmaker raised by white parents in east berlin in the 1960 s. embarks on a stunning journey of self discovery. a touching tale of family identity lifelong secrecy and reconciliation. becoming black eye witness documentary on al-jazeera. i'm russell bait in southern england where 2 farmers turn safari park pioneers of that's the tract is good mates is in the driving seat just absolutely astonishing the life that poor back even not very fast so much and i'm
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a good sophia and sent the i would t.v. one by ear in companies revolutionizing the split 5050 funds and 57 billionth human sigh you have science you have they wanted to surprise. after days of rare freezing temperatures blanket in the 2nd largest state in the u.s. power stations are all back on line that after unusually high demand led to rolling blackouts texas hasn't seen a storm system like this in 35 years and it's clear that system simply weren't up to the task transmission lines taken down by ice still have left nearly 200000 without power but now texans face a new crisis 7000000 people of quarter of the state or being asked to boil their water if they haven't at all because the cold weather has left broken pipes and taken water treatment plants offline grocery store shelves are largely bare leaving
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residents lined up in their cars for food and water. president joe biden says he's declaring the entire state the disaster zone the courage there is hope sustained temperatures above freezing beginning saturday. i am i am. israeli security forces foreign palestinians with stun grenades and tear gas exploding inside some mosque. i. am how my he's in and this is al jazeera life from doha with coverage of the events unfold and you know key point is jerusalem. is the latest on restaurant flashpoint religious sites but to.
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