tv The Stream Al Jazeera September 28, 2022 7:30am-8:01am AST
7:30 am
men after just one move wow. speechless m, a world champion has never withdrawn from a trust. heard of it before the us in the history of the game of chess. so it's really unprecedented. now the norwegian champion has issued a statement online saying in part, i believe that niemen has cheated more and more recently than he has publicly admitted. niemen did recently confess. he had cheated in tournaments when he was 12 and 16 years old. carlson went on cheating and chess is a big deal and an existential threat to the game. adding that chess organizers should increase security measures and cheating detection methods. he said he would not play niemen again. demon denied any wrong doing. in my dream can true. i live my dream for a day, beating magnus and then all this happened. carlson said neiman seemed unnaturally calm and not to be really paying attention during matches. he questioned the american teenagers meteoric ascent to grand master status. but chess federation
7:31 am
officials, chided carlson for the way he handled the situation, and some observers have gotten behind niemen, accusing carlson of being a sore loser and of trying to ruin his opponents career. rob reynolds al jazeera. ah, and let's take you through some of the headlines here on al jazeera, now. moscow, back to officials in occupied parts of ukraine, say people there voted overwhelmingly to join russia. they say the results of a 5 day referendum show up to 98 percent of people are in favor of annexation. the senior russian official has issued the biggest nuclear threat so far in the wool form of president debates in madrid have says, he believes nato won't intervene if russia decides to attack your crime with nuclear weapons. european commission president are sort of on the lions describe the disruption at 2 major gas pipelines between russia and europe is sabotaged.
7:32 am
denmark and sweden reported leaks in the old stream one and 2 pipelines earlier on wednesday. how can they in is intensifying as it moves towards the u. s. 2 and a half 1000000 people are under evacuation orders in the state of florida. the category for store is expected to make land full later on wednesday. it's already back to the parts of the caribbean, including cuba. when you look at storm surge of this nature, that is a very life threatening hazard. when you're talking about 10 feet, 12 feet of storm surge, which you could see in certain parts of this when it makes landfall, it's also going to produce a massive amount of rain. it is going to produce major, major flooding. more than a $100000.00 people in vietnam are evacuating coastal areas is typhoon no true approaches is said to be one of the most powerful storms to hit the country into
7:33 am
decades. thousands of flights and trains into stone saudi arabians, crown friends, mohammed ben sel. man has been named as the kingdoms prime minister. the saudi king ordered the cabinet, re shuffle. it's the stream next and talked to al jazeera. we also do believe that women of afghanistan were somehow abandoned by the international community. we listen, we are in a huge price for the war against terrorism. what's going on and so money we meet with global news makers. i'm talk about the stories that matter. one out, you 03, i'm sorry. ok. today on the stream, i'm going to take you into the world of the heart cat, the movie, the south african phil. what is the story of a family getting ready for the muslim festival of aid?
7:34 am
a revolves around mum and widow ayesha who is about to introduce a new love interest to her sons, said in the cate flats spoken in a cape town dialect. and that is what makes the film so special. have a look a a leave me to be grateful is very important. families, our fathers and mothers are sisters and brothers. those are all gifts in even all is what i was so and if a lot of companies in italy, i mean we forget what we have been given is really
7:35 am
a boon. the belief that you and i have to buy for me. how many of you have tasted that? ah, what is your name? ah, ah, ah. hello amy ha from hello vanessa. nice to see you. i read all of these amazing people to introduce myself to you in the context of the film who they are, what they do. i mean you start the, i'm image after and i am the co writer with prime and the directive. but yeah, that's my role on the so i had i am if i'm gordon and i'm the go
7:36 am
to go to with amy and produce overhaul. oh, south africans are going to be yelling at the screen anyway. right now i live in. it's introduced yourself. i'm renee bray here and i paid the mother role of i am in the movie barter cut and i'm also mother to everybody understands cuz i happen every 3 of you barracka. even if you're wondering balcony, it's a blessing to bless 3 times over. if you would like to speak to any of i guess today, youtube is open. the comment section is right here. comments, questions about backup? the maybe you're very welcome. be part of today's discussion. there's a sense of the film just starts guess and it doesn't give you explanations. it's a family drama. and just going to come along for the plot. there are a couple of things that i want to just make very clear for our international audience. when we talk about colored people i from,
7:37 am
can you explain that to our international audience? well, color people are, in my opinion, a bunch of fortunate or unfortunate people who couldn't fit into any of the racial care. so we can make people, r o d n a that ends wide and deep across as continents. and you know, no 2 colored people have the same genetic makeup as so well, maybe if you have a twin or brother. but yeah, we are mix of people, but we are forged the community over the years and over the decades to the point that we can see ourselves as a people. but our, our gene pool is wide and a category to set up just jenny. ok, last a era aly i me go ahead, but don't you, i didn't actually create a new ownership of it right now. right? yeah, i just wanna add that it is a racial category that was created during
7:38 am
a party by an a puppet government. and so it was a race of racial classification at the time of the population registration act where people were divided into groups a white black indian hallad. so as much as we identify ourselves politically as black south africans valid was an imposed racial category. and that was for bureaucracy and also for the part of government. and i think now is this a facial wave of, of young filmmakers and an activist. what claiming back that word and we're kind of taking away that has a lot of loaded political meaning from the past and turning it into something that we can celebrate and be proud of and create a heritage around. even if that heritage isn't a hedge, a monic, that's not one idea, is no singular colored identity. but out of this way, creating and celebrating ourselves for the 1st time. i think i just add to that, sorry, if i may am sorry, sweet died i,
7:39 am
i just went to add to that also that am, you know, as amy says we are not in homogenous group. we're made up of all people. busy and of brown skin and you know, and some people find it offensive to be pulled colored because of the label which was given to us by the nationalist government. and, but you know, just just this weekend or 2 weekends ago. i listen to wonderful speech by doctor and in boost tech, who again just affirmed for us that we have to kind of let go of the shackles and, and it's, it doesn't matter. you know who you are, whether you turn yourself colored or people of the come mysa, or whether you and you know, whatever you call yourself. it's a, it's a question of a mind shift. you know, so yeah, i think that people of color in this country are really it's, it's a celebration of,
7:40 am
of who you are and that is where we are. i think at the moment it's melting pot. let me just bring in here and house stanford. she's an actor singer and right to efram, how many fusions, how and i want you efram to respond to her comment. here it is. one of my favorite parts of the movie was obviously seen the culture in history represented sort of positive light. but also caroline with her mom relatively small cameo by somebody in the same industry know very well, but the character selling his faces and his ways in our cups, but also using those idioms. then when came town? no so well it's so going to cecily. a class that is so difficult to describe what it means to see there. i'm screen was beautiful. well
7:41 am
if you, if you look specific, eric eric the like with them on like john dal just said now he as an actor is completely truthful to the point that if he doesn't want to speak to the word, he doesn't stick to the words. and i think that's why that sound goes, says what comes in the moment. if it's those new as they're going across the room, that's fine because it keeps you on your toe as well, on your toes. so i think that's what makes that character. so spatial and so free and so relate to bill because it really was a real, he wasn't acting, i mean, he's name in the real life. everyone calls him a man. you know, and it's a thing with actors in cape town, generally at such it we, we are such a performers, people or performing people that things feel natural because people just are they don't try to. and i think part of the spoke with that sense and
7:42 am
reality because of that name here. just following something else ish that shantelle picked up after caps. yes. a dialect and i want a whole some. i know i added the very beginning. this is a very special film because the film is in africa. i mean, you start and thing that you pick up. yeah, i mean i think of it. what's so great about the scary to like it, in my mind, he's a, he's an older man, and he speaks a very beautiful poetic kind of africans. i think what was very important fires to with this foam, was to legitimize that language, whether you want to call it a language or a dialect. that or shoot of africans that, that realised version of the language that was 1st spoken by slaves who were brought to the cape. a way of speaking a language that the slave monsters could not understand. and so to create that, this fusion of languages, that is a mix between dash and english and arabic, woods and malay woods. and so we have this like that, this lexicon,
7:43 am
that is brimming with metaphor and poetry and image and borrowed words from many continents. and so when you speak that your mouth is like a spice spice mix. yeah. and on her some, some computer full lines that i don't know it can. you remember some of the lighting 9 told me with how beautiful it sounds without giving us of africa. got as it so when i was on your spectrum now. yeah. was hoping that gave you that a smart so it could and it might the job, but it would have heat. i also need a body shop in jr, and we're in a condo for non of excel. no, i'm more than meta lady a. yeah, a what are you saying to us?
7:44 am
so what i'm saying is that i am going to make curry and rice and i, i've got all the leak stir that i need the mother john, that i've got all the mixture. but i don't have fennel and tillman, so i'm going to the shops to morrow to get some. are you going to go along with me? all right there on uci. right now. we have michigan willa from cape town, south africa, michigan says it's so great to see a small community on the world stage. that is why i think barack is, has taken off because people are seeing communities, a language that they haven't seen on film either very often or ever at all or in a stereotype. let some, i wanna show a click. this is a, one of our forms favorite clip and i love this, which was the family that were following. i, shes family. you see the family growing up and gathering around this very easy,
7:45 am
7:46 am
7:47 am
smashing stereotype. can you tell i international? yes. in what way you're doing not i think it's in such a small way, not in the usual way that i think a, you know, activism is seen to be a lot more sort of performance of a lot more expressive. this form. i think our a was always to do it in a very delicate way and that was just by for grounding the humanity of a people, a culture, a community. we might not have seen that humanity foreground of before with about telling a story that can just be simple. that's just about family relationships. and it's about nothing more than that. it's not about um the part wide or politics of the country. it's not about wearing those politics on your sleeve. we're telling the story of a family hoping with grief after the loss of a father, a feeling that is really universal. and i think for grounding that humanity was always the key for us. can i add for that before you jump in?
7:48 am
this is justin. he's watching us right now. thanks. justin is from los angeles. i think what so powerful about barrack justice says is even for those who don't know the culture, the themes of family and moving on are universal both specific, but still white banning venette pickup priests. precisely. this is exactly what i was gonna say. even though we might think that at a small movie that it a slice of life, and yes it is. but it as a slice of everybody's life, it, you know, and it, it to be it what everybody can relate to it. ringback whether you were slim, christian, mexican, english, you name, it doesn't matter. it, it, you know, it's, it's everybody's life. and this, this movie just is such a depiction of that. i'm going to bring in one other voice here from and you can respond to adam. he's from the center for film and media studies. he's
7:49 am
a director and professor at the university of cape town. home. this is what he had to say about barrack for this particular genre. i think that the psalm is mostly interesting to me as a scholar in she is a copse of each treated by history mean far validating math and english expression . and what this can pay does image use of cops, events happens from, from care on from the flats as nuanced characters, not cardboard carts and cops. it has been used beautifully. i think a catcher might just be, you know, in the narrative. that intimacy and anger conflicts, i recycle, things like that, i think in ph characters from the k flats as much as card. ready carter carter isn't just the language of conflict in mind. mcglatian was ology. i think this
7:50 am
phone is all say, effective in the existing interest. so stop news from communities. i think what's interesting away, what he says is it takes us back to what amy's comment was. just the comments and be about humanity for too long. cubs was associated with the and the classes. it was a comment somehow, on our legends and bed made as 2 dimensional, even one dimensional get it does. and i think what caps now has done and what this form and funds before this have done is do legitimize. i'm legitimize us as a people who feel who i intelligent and you know, will operate in the world at large and not just in a certain corner of the world. so i think crap's has been legitimized in this film and by forms before this and the more we say it, the more we give dignity to the people who say oh, i'm resolutely,
7:51 am
i really gotta said that because christ channels watch law says after caps is in a language if the lack of language filled by different languages from actual culture. i mean you want to pick up on that. i introduced as a diet. yeah. count, dialect. guy. i think at this point it's disingenuous to say that it is a lack of language. so that it's full, like when they get the space, i think there's a reclamation that has been done and that rick information is up to know the people who speak it to, to take ownership off. it's not anymore about validating whether it's a language or not, or a cultural di they will not from the outside where i don't think looking for that stamp of approval from anyone else anymore. so i think the initiative that's been
7:52 am
taken of the language and the dialect recently by phone makers like us is like, we don't need gazes, we don't need any other gazes on our, on our cells. and i think there's a beauty and the poetry to it. it is our mother tongue, it's the time that we were born into that time that our grandmother spoke the language that we inherited and that's kind of the same as our own as well. and yeah, at some point i feel like we don't need validation from anyway with those fears, be from academics or from outside is or from people who think, but who you who call themselves pure africans. because whatever means, i think it's exceptionally important that africa is part of the growth and there's bondsman of africans as the language. i feel like it's one of the only way that africans is language is being to move forward is to be in collaboration with africa
7:53 am
. because it's a, it's, it's something you know, it's a, it's a language that is spoken by a very large majority of african speakers and it is our time now for that language to be on the world stage. and i think it's proven that, look at the discussion we're having about africa up on al jazeera, on an international network. you did that, the net go ahead. yeah. and, and i also would just like to add that to and, you know, it's, it's actually becoming accepted. and even by academics we, we are at this while we speak, there is a dictionary being brought out an end, you know, and, and, and it's, it's, it's great to, i think it's gonna be fabulous because people are actually going to be learning to speak after cups and, and it's been, you know, it's there even for academics to learn and people are and you know, they are accepting of the fact that an average cups has become an accepted.
7:54 am
well, let, i'm still not sure where there are we call it dilate or language. i think we still, you know, sort of there still a discrepancy about that, but um, yeah let's, let's claim a demit celebrate it. i would like to play one more clip from bar caught the movie cuz he can't see it everywhere. right now he could see on t s t v. so if he only african continent, a dentist. right. because he can see it elsewhere. we talked talked to amy and efram and finance about where you might be able to see it elsewhere and when, but i'm going to take you to master it. this is a beautiful scene. there's grasping of it. j mascot. embark at the movie. take a look. it was a which is go stand there for prod, order back i lean weilacher that owns cookery. it allows leaving. it is
7:55 am
incumbent on us to lead conscious of allows of a 100 girl at all times. to me. gratefully is really important. we should be grateful because all things that we have been granted come from our creator allows. so the $100.00 rob will allow me, our families, our fathers and mothers, those of us were still fortunate to have them. our grandparents, our sisters and brothers own children. those of you are married. those are all gifts said we were given offered to we take things for granted. this is sweetness to the man. they believe that you and i have. my question is how many of you have tasted that she
7:56 am
can says i can't wait to see this film. kenny's on you cheve johnny fan, i am so pleased or caps to see these stories been given a global platform or a c in terms the plot and the story is also reflected behind the scenes with behind the scenes cru. amy, we caught herself an activist, the film activist. tell me about the activism needed behind the camera with the cri . yeah, for sure, i think. and we wanted to make sure that the people who were working on that and contributing and were collaborators where people who were from this community. so our crew was or back at some point like from united states for st. khaled, like majority khaled, a lot of them were muslims themselves. we made a conscious decision, not to, of course, full mon friday, which is,
7:57 am
are you my here in case on as well. and so be, were you? we observed that miss nym, sabbath day. and so yeah, i think it was very intentional for us to also make the, the journey of the foam one that was in service to the story. any frame had like a big hand in that as the producer. i think it be being, am quite intentional with how we chose our crew. as some people are asking, where can we see this film like we'll see power caught and we have an international audience that people are eager to see it. how are they going to see it? currently you can, it's an, a paypal pay to view platform called event of you gang chicken out there. ah, there's 2 different ways to see it for when you on the african continent or outside are so be, be careful which, which link to go into. it's very clearly mod, but also if you're in south africa and on the african continent, you can get it on d. s. d box office. it's been placed back on box office yesterday so it should be
7:58 am
back there. so those are the 2 avenues at the month and half and be looking and you can tell f from is that for days that he knows even back they are at hand from jeanette. amy, what a pleasure. thank you for sharing baraka with us. we wish you every success with the film and you chivas, appreciate your comments and your questions. i'll see you next time. thanks for watching history. ah. october on al jazeera, in an election set to define a nation brazilians would choose between the radically different current hard line, conservative presidents and the former socialist president. a sense of community delves into full unique communities revealing how they're adapting to the 21st century. china holds its national congress of communist party members with
7:59 am
president g likely to be re elected as its head. what does this mean for china and the world? only with dreams takes you beyond the glitz and glamour, revealing the stories of those seeking fame and fortune in the world's largest film industry. bosnia goes to the poles in an election that will be what closely by both you and russia. october on al jazeera, i am very delighted to beth's feet and they're all african works. they are the continents brightest legal students. putting our minds against the best means in africa would really be interesting to see how when missouri gathered together for tournament, unlike any other conflict from what is happening limits, but to mean all right, that as we can cut on human and people's rights is now in fest in witness africa on al jazeera, the chuckle region of paragon, one of south america's toughest. we follow to man who seemed to thrive on his
8:00 am
challenges. a veteran truck driver who answers every course, whatever the web to provide for his growing family. and the cowboy who enjoys his rock lonely life, briskin an old paragraph on al jazeera we understand the differences of cultures across the world. so no matter what moves with the news and kind of follows that matter to you with moscow, the class victory, separatist official se 9095 percent of people in ukraine's occupied areas of vote is enjoy.
20 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on