tv Eco Africa Deutsche Welle August 2, 2020 6:30pm-7:01pm CEST
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the fans are celebrating its 25th anniversary with an extra legal. team 60 minutes. i'm not laughing at the germans because sometimes i am but mostly i'm nothing with the me but i have been thinking deep into the german culture. music scene we think there's grandma you know it's all down to who they know i'm rachel join me to meet the gem of the funky the polls. up to a nature to things that go well together nature is often that he's to ration for ont but also pieces in hans' the bt i'm not sure sitting and both can play a part in supporting the environment and sustainability hello and welcome to this
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special edition of africa i am sundra to no deal here in kampala uganda and we need today is my colleague in nigeria hi new to a. year i really like this subject of nature and the projects i will be looking at today well all started before the pandemic for many of the ideas i especially powerful in this time i mean spirals to love and look after our environment let's start with everybody what's coming up on the show today. i mean german i disagree sure how often i get checked out can link up not truly with their surroundings then you design trend conquering your own natural materials are good successful new creations. and music is said to be the language of emotion and it's getting people in ga not to think environmentalists protection so hard. now in which we conduct
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arts the use of possibility based on the standing of the environmental huge someone here stanley and they do have a clear answer to this and i don't argue with basting they have this science uses creative skills to remind you money since it can for the environment with music poetry photography and paintings he speaks to the younger generations in a long way to they can relate to and proves that the art of powerful medium for conveying the message on mother earth needs to be luther let's go see this i saw. letter. i didn't go to any air for joy. all the trees trees trees trees cut. stanley i need to is an artist on a mission and paper and paint and not his only weapons in his fight to protect the
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environment. is also a singer you really need to listen to his songs focus on water and drought the felon of trees air pollution and the loss of africa's animal population. it's a cool for others to take responsibility but not everyone's a funk. favorite people we've got politicians not so much interested in these things because the actual abridged against the practice is sometimes telling them not to use force if you don't want to from stanley any to spending time in nature drawing is both relaxing and inspiring but these works are hard to sell so the artist has come up with new techniques to make his chosen subject a success the f. and animals sketched with a reflective pen when it comes to environmental protection stanley sets an example
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his way instead of brushes he uses different colored light bulbs light out and the magic begins at strands ition from green and healthy to the alarming state that it seemed today captured through the lens of a camera. usually a painting done with oil an acrylic on compass should take a couple of hours to a few days depended on the size and i'll be considerable waste this is done in just a few minutes and there is no waste. when you use things like or you paint just to dispose it to either and they do or end up in the environment so this helps us mileage are pretty tools which our actions in our environment that it's invested gives us the appeal that we expect to get from god this isn't how stanley ammeter used to work
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a graduate of fine and applied arts he painted like regular artists with oil on campus has made over 300 pieces using his new method and now sells multiple copies of each piece around the world the current virus pandemic has given the natural world some much needed rest pite stanley any to has watched the changes with the amazement the air quality improved want amazingly wonderfully and what's the music quality has improved tremendously so i think if it favors the environment that we should get locked up for what. he calls his show that we act killing ourselves by ourselves like a stanley anita once the rest of the world to pay more attention to the environment he believes in the power of art to bring about change right now i think if we have
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time we have the opportunity to make a difference let's says let's make the changes so that our children know what would be great for no said the brits for protecting this environment. stanley any 2 will not stop painting and recording new songs audiences love his music and it gets a lot of radio and t.v. airplay maybe one day people will just listen to take action to. are uncalled for i have always taken much of the ration from nature certainly paying for it sensing out what they are even and for our people groups whose culture on way of life highlights human rights dependence on the environment. let is right and that is why we are now off to south africa where the indigenous sun people going to campaign things of anie most hunters dating back 26000 he is the sun have a tremendous knowledge of nature and plant life and the sharing it with the
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visitors to the far flung culture center in south africa africa took a 2 hour. deal and antelopes are shy creatures. but my tears see bondo knows how to get up close slowly and steadily and from down when. his people the sun hunt the animals but his only checking up on the herd humans have special significance for the sun. if you look at the animal it's massive and can provide a lot of meat it can provide a lot of the same terms a blanket the students use a blanket and there is also a fence they use it for cooking they use it for and they use it for cleaning themselves the. doctors they use it also for another purpose and my t.o.s. works as a guide and to quote you son culture and education center in terms of fun time near
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cape town it's the 1st center dedicated to sun culture in south africa. the traditional hunters and gatherers are an indigenous people in southern africa their ancestors lived here when the dutch reached the shores over 300 years ago the rock art they left behind emphasizes the sons deep connection to nature. the dominance of the european colonialists massive land loss and assimilation have marginalized the group today there are only about 150000 people in southern africa who identify as sun working at the center my tears as colleague. has learned to appreciate the beliefs and traditions of her people whether it's any more it is. it is the way of living there i learned so that you
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can keep your culture so that you can. so that the one thing you can tell. from that community. not far from the museum materials continues is trek across the shrub land the south africans call fine bows it's out in nature that he can best illustrate the sounds immense knowledge of medicinal plants like congo bus cancer bush and wild mint. he explains to the group how an infusion made from the leaves can be used as a remedy to treat a cold the flu and a host of other elements. the guide and his colleagues have been working for years to realize the 900 hector site improving conditions for native medicinal plants like wild garlic and wild cannabis around quad to. today native animal species like zebras springboks and leopard
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tortoises graze on fields that in the 1990 s. were dominated by monocultures. my teoh's and his colleagues have already achieved a lot his message about the environment is clear use it sustainable or keep it for the next generation this is what we want to lead and. sustainability and environmental protection a message that has been passed down by the sun for generations. well another way artists can help protect the environment and send a message to others of the same time is by taking trash on to beautiful works of art that is want done after growing angry about the extent of pollution in his homeland of kenya he decided to repurpose tons of waste he is this week's doing a bit. this
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lion sculpture is made from animal snares once used by poaching in the national parks. these works were created by kenyan artists kyoko. he works with waste from factories. years ago he started off as a welder. in his spare time he fashioned artistic objects. one day and broker bought them and displayed them in a nairobi gallery. about swimwear cheeky realized he could make a living with his art his works now fetch up to $10000.00 apiece he also trains younger artists he says that over the years he's turned thousands of tonnes of scrap metal into alt. and how about you if you're
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also doing your bit tell us about it visit our website or send us a tweet. hash tag doing your bit. we share your stories. very nice those lifelike sculptures will inspire people to protect the lions living in the wild in fact there could be an idea in there maybe if we bring more of the natural world into our homes one have more incentive to take care of it it turns out there quite a few designers out there walking with that goal in mind they make every day job. in most homes using materials but very own mother nature let's have a look at what some of them have come up with. there is something of the sea in the air these lampshades are made of dr seaweed stretched over wire frames. and fish scales have been worked into the top of this
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small table. people think it might smell but it doesn't because once it's dry so we close on the smell and just look like fish scared london based designer. sand for his desert storm lamp red cabbage for the intricate things of his veggie lights and seaweed for the marine light lamp shade. the native israeli has been experimenting with natural materials for years you find some of his materials at the produce market i grew up close to the sea in israel and they love like a love going to the sea as i was a child and i was trying to experiment in different materials coming from the sea and seaweed was always something that those things can be interesting to work with . and i just started spearman thing in towns up into doing denmark.
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and then. started his design studio in london strangely so how kariya. he sells his pieces and limited editions to private clients around the world. i think people are more willing to accept the fact that you can have like lamps or other products made of this kind of material we think what's happening in this world is making people understand that we need to start using this kind of material instead of artificial material plastics i hope so that this kind of material. and become something very common as i don't want to very much benefit to the environment. designers the world over experiment with natural materials. is really dutch design or eddie's navy patna coats his objects with soft deposits from the dead sea he dips to walls and other objects into the highly ceiling content when it dries the
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furniture is in frosted with sparkling salt crystals. berlin designer honest. uses burj park familiar from her native siberia for her creations traditionally the bark's outer layer is harvested once a year this way the trees don't have to be felt and the left. victoria from ukraine draws upon the. land for her luxury furniture pieces she's been revitalising and reinterpreting the traditional handicraft techniques her furniture line is coated with claim. is a. great craft and. for me as mature always a leader and i'm just going. to stabilize to clean furniture the
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metal frame is wrapped in organic cellulose and flax that makes the tables and chairs durable and suitable for daily use and recyclable is reading in harmony with nature and a respect for ecological cycles the sources of creative and sustainable design ideas are by no means exhausted. yes that is definitely true but is very much what we about here. all of you to live in ways that are more sustainable sometimes it can be. helpful to go to places that highlight what we stand to lose somewhere the showcases the environment and i know it's just the play sondra it's a museum in ethiopia its capital addis ababa there's the money is there green or serious in the middle of all that we city of concrete and glass visitors will discover traditional the theory of architecture and the rich over
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a of plant life all with the aim of learning from major. the rainy season has started and the zouma garden is rejoicing this lush oasis is a recent addition to addis ababa cultural spaces and the creation of mesquite him and her friend ileus here architecture and nature are celebrated together these ecological huts turned into works of art were built using an ancient construction technique. process where you actually get the subsoil you have to be about half a metre before you get the soil the only thing you add is water and straw for about a month and it lasts for hundreds and hundreds of years. for more control so in so many ways it's one of the best i think sustainable houses surrounded by a labyrinth of plants most of which are endemic a dream come true for mesquite i am the diggers underneath but this is what it looks like tenet is often dipped into coffee and this plant has strong medicinal
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virtues. in a city where cement towers are growing like mushrooms zome a museum is a space for humans to breathe and for nature to grow in cities going fast i think. not in the right direction many of the trees are. dying out. of the air is polluted or even completely poisoned we're all affected one way or another we're all connected through the environment reconnecting humans to the environment is precisely the aim of this all my school when i was in here. several times a week these kindergarten children come out in small groups and take care of the zone the garden and its farm the school is open to all but only the most privileged can afford the feel of this alternative teaching. the student when this age they
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have to learn about their gardens this way surely about the foods it's organic they can pay it they can see and that can even paste it so they know about it and it's getting to the. these facets of the zona museum had attracted hundreds of people a day since the grand opening in march 29000 until the coronavirus pandemic began but the idea of creating artistic green spaces in the city has gained ground prime minister matt asked the museum team to build a huge garden at his residency. the prestige project called unity park has also become a tourist attraction for ethiopians and foreigners alike. so listen up everyone announce my big moment rap music has traditionally been used to convey a message so how about rapping for their environment this is what it could sound like gary garbage everywhere why don't people seem to care that's what we have
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trash cans for so let's learn to love. more ok you know i may not get a record contract but it's clear. i'm a couple of musicians. and the best way to effect change is to change the way people think so they wrote some rap lyrics and designed it just stick in people's mind. how it seems. like. a full coming. home village and he's from where he goes bananas maize and he's no longer producing music he sees these movements on the boat teaching people about the advantages of farming
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pesticides. in the music business. just out of my way back east you have a big take the subway but because of so i've been polluted. we have lost a lot of new changing the farm much so listen folks listen i'm about to rock i can drop what i still have a subform yeah i'm trying to change our mission but i also have to do something after feed myself some beef something small small to feed my own 7 my family by look at this man with a sack and i grew up and i had family i mean feed my family get plastic the rubbish everywhere is polluting the land is destroying our right thailand do something about 3. safer seas it's important to reach out to everyone all gonna. go back out he's known for his very direct approach. open
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dumping like this has been a call to action for the tsunami according to recent studies ghana's capital accra generates more than $30000.00 metric tons of waste by you and it's to method 60 percent is collected during the rainy season on the rubbish gets carried out to sea in the gulf of guinea. one of beaches one of the most polluted beaches in accra when fisherman patrick throws out his fishing nets after a big down pole it's not fish he holds in but all kinds of plastic report. sometimes the trash pushes the net into the rocks and past the end of the net you can't go out there to free it because it's a report so you need to find money to make a new one that it's really tough. value they also known african gypsy has come to see patrick he was born in from india and grew up in ga now assume
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musician and artist he addresses the problems gun of yeses with trucks like refuse . reuse recycle sound. we've been with us. oh. boy. ray feeds me news recycle. trying to hide your plans to call this what our bodies are we are taking care of rescuing the life in the end what has happened because there's no fish no frogs no i doubt creatures in the water the only thing tribe in india what are now almost it will be mostly to love. and sudan vironment is becoming more dangerous for us to live in.
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and if i'm coming i'm reaching out to the countries where the 2 musicians are attending a street academy event at a privately run school for kids living on the street they aim to influence the way students think on painful moment. those fish i messed that moment i think to cause them all sickness to love this wall of plastic and. says he will go rob i was sure i knew that he also wrote about just something i was excited to make time so just didn't kill our country so that's how i come to become their most beautiful one 0 well these sunni have been one of if a comedian's last performances but he and i have clearly got the message across they're trying their best to fight governments pollution program f a comedian
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a single guy. with. and the best of luck to them looks like they're doing a great job there so on balance musical note it is time for us to wrap up this special edition of it's off we go nature and the art it is a goodbye from me to nobody else here in kampala uganda and of course i'll be looking forward to having your company once again next week. a sagger i'm already looking forward so our next show i hope you all enjoyed our stories today if you want to know more about the environment and its issues go to our web site also
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25th anniversary with an extra few moments. in 30 minutes. far more posters from nigeria who we are as a people you know that's what money would stands for their unique. point don't cool. off and take. the tour fast moving because of a long. and successful beyond belief. that going to it this is the way we do it. nollywood starts august 7th on d w. how does
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a virus spread. why do we panic and when we'll all miss him. just through the tax cover and the weekly radio show is called spectrum if you like and the information on the krona larysa or any other science topic you should really check out our podcast you can get it wherever you get your podcast you can also find us at dot com and slash science. the time and place captured in pictures. images of comes out. of photos studios our congress documents lives in bygone eras. and leads to those living today. they are guarding guns as pastor in a box. can see in black and white. memories
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of aug 14th own d w. this is beautifully unused live from berlin a state of disaster is declared in the australian state of victoria after a 2nd lockdown fails to contain a spike in corona virus cases. we can no longer have played visiting all those which is no longer have people simply the day off the state premier says all outdoor activities will.
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