tv Museums- Check Deutsche Welle December 25, 2020 7:30pm-8:00pm CET
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and you knew you were in no mood to see the picture you. even denied it needs to be ok for you to believe that many we've got to make. how will climate change affect us and our children. were w dot com slash water. around half of all stars are made from cotton and although it's a natural product the wasps killer which we call it and they love us some also for water they often means that it's in bad mentally on sustainable and yet we need to cotton at least with pink we do and unsustainable textiles too so how do you make them better for the body but that's what we've discussed to the hello welcome to
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equal india. coming to you from my neighborhood by india is a main thing. 60 years ago the. government in exile. in the state of hue marching for the bush but globalization had the same effect as in the rest of a sustainable fashion beeban is now working to everybody a lot to mollenhauer new ones that reflect the mix of cultural skills and creative talents of moths to bit. designer tenzin in vivo share their love for traditional local and indigenous textiles tenzin is visiting his weaving workshop makes a traditional fabric but it's slowly disappearing and unseen. wants to revive it
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i'm so. interested about. all this and now when you go out you don't see this. and an ideologue such a nice normal you want a man you don't get in the market. scene was 5 years old as he was shuffled into a large group of tibetans heading towards india he was part of a 2nd wave of tibetan refugees fleeing chinese persecution. his parents a stayed behind while he was scattered across the himalayas. arrived in mag loaded guns down on the indian border with the region led by the dead but then buddhists were granted political asylum here in 1959 my glowed gunge became their largest settlement in india. grew up he watched the town cross for a cheap textiles began flooding the market at that time you know the new good.
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whole street is like a very interesting every shop is different they have a wood and crowd they have. anyway so many hand and made things happen here and now if you go up you see all this things that we import from china. everything is chinese now. to bring back the mcclure guns of his childhood unseen found a child a shop selling sustainable handmade clothes. they used only locally so roma did award environmental pollution and promote traditional grafting design the company employs mostly indian artists from the surrounding montana screeching. shashikumar is a god who works. and is from the community a nomadic store will cry native to the predations state. the good
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deeds the struggle against radio will ability of cheaper syntactic alternatives in a fast urbanizing region. they need a bit earlier that got these bad entirely dependent on their herds for their livelihood including my own grandparents but it is much less now. in ordinary times the good the community would tend to livestock they wore clothes made out of their seats this fabric was god but. but. integrating with tipper and other minorities has deepened his connection with his own and other cultures in the region. tell me logan is your life and i started interacting with there but i did not know much about them their culture and traditions. but now i feel like we are like
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a family that works together. we have slowly started to learn more about each other's lives. through this brown says he has learned lessons not just about the n one mental benefit of going to look but the social and cultural benefits too. in the beginning a little bit different because different language has been but i do. i mean it's nice to having a different background different culture. is. created more. you know will and bloom and to the local people it's very satisfactory. as well as. dawn depends on the big companies. hopes that more people will eventually move
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away from cheap imports and learn to appreciate clothes made locally that bring together cultures and. across india. drive cv fish skills and sound can you imagine using these materials in your furniture while a designer. and he's doing just that and he's not the only one looking for inspiration in nature to make unique creations that also has to be about let's take it. there's something of the sea in the air these lampshades are made of dried seed stretched over the wire frames. and fish scales have been worked into the top of this small table. think it might smell but it doesn't because once it's dry so it closes on just look like.
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london based designer near me getting you stand for his desert storm lamp red cabbage for the intricate veins of his invention of light and seaweed for the marine light lamp shade. the native israeli has been experimenting with natural materials for years to find some of his materials at the produce market in 2010 year by year he started his design studio in london's trendy soho area he sells his pieces and limited editions to private clients around the world. and. created the marine life by. stretching wet seaweed over the shades wireframe. being prepared 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
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making people understand that we need to start using this kind of material instead of artificial material plastics i hope so that these kinds of materials can become something very common as are going materials that are not very much benefit to the environment. designers the world over experiment with natural materials berlin designer. uses birch bark 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 felled and they're left on harms. waste products from industrial soft wood production become raw materials in the hands of latvian designer tomorrow. she turns furniture a needle into old walleye fabric to create stools and products. from ukraine draws upon the fabrics of her homeland for her furniture pieces she's been
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revitalising and be interpreting the traditional handicraft technique since 2014. her furniture lines the stuff it's coated claim. to stabilize the clay furniture the metal frame is wrapped in organic cellulose and flax that makes the tables and chairs durable and suitable for daily use both inside and out. me. stores used in religious to construction of simple household. and just use the chair. recyclable. in the ground. in several here. will help contribute to the development of a uniquely ukrainian design it becomes just a recognizable scandinavian for japanese creations. in london. with
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a protective coating made of especially mixed varnish. and the. feel of underwater seaweed forests kind of like a very beautiful light. living in harmony with nature and a respect for ecological sources of creative and sustainable design ideas are by no means exhausted and. now did you know that on 60 percent of our schools globally are made from trades that come from plastics these clothes when washed. but some companies are looking for natural turnips like this business. yarn made from recycled wood and used to make clothes. the idea was michelle shawcross uproot rose 1st step toward sustainable production protects our company uses
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tensile type of rail and fiber made of beach or eucalyptus would she even uses it for indonesia's popular but chic textiles which are normally only fashioned from cotton or silk. and so it's actually showing us more shine which actually in the nations like more information it's. how we can be more sustainable. the wood comes from sustainable forestry to create a fine thread from the hard material is 1st turned into chips. they are then mixed with an organic solvent finally the resulting pulp is turned into long strands of fiber. this requires just a fraction of the 2700 liters of water needed to make a cotton t. shirt. 10 years ago
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a more sustainable production branch was on think about that down there as the textile company in central java was on the brink of collapse the company belonged to michelle chalk such a boutros father after his death she took over the reins she was still only in her mid twenty's and experienced that nearest. that get situations because of the 98 crisis so led by my local fire it was still in the house like that that's the place and so it was that we couldn't pay. install windows fans we call it category 5 winds in smoke liquid it was challenging and then but it also set the course of my journey. the young business woman took decisive action she took on loans and invested in modern technology significantly increasing the factories efficiency and reducing its impact on the environment. i think will be
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partly responsible for what happened with you know climate change and all the ways that. at least from my part how can i be more sustainable. she has also made changes in the company's culture and production all of the material waste is now repurposed being turned into everything from baskets to furniture the upcycling is done by older members of the community as well as disabled people from the region. it enables them to supplement their income. there are some ploys about $8000.00 workers they work about 40 hours a week get overtime pay and health insurance which is far from standard practice in indonesia. show talk wants to motivate people and provide new impetus a businesswoman who takes an active interest in the wellbeing of her stuff including training and career opportunities. 25 year old he has been working here
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for 7 years she performs quality control. interviews and i love the company has supported me. they've been really helpful. to finance my studies at university. and the pain here is better than at other similar companies. before i started working here i had a job somewhere else. that's how i can appreciate the difference. but only for the sound to feel. the still a long road ahead to achieve completely sustainable production but the boss is confident that she can succeed. with change. but the people are still. out there is how we do things the onset of the corona virus has also led to changes that down there as the company is now making protective masks from production waste even in
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a pandemic sustainability remains an important issue. now we turn to pile and when like in india farmers often blow in the lift a was too often they harvest billows of smoke since side and other chemicals into the atmosphere contributing to the greenhouse gases wasn't climate change but one young woman has had an enterprising. idea about how to make that practice go up in smoke. after every harvest thailand's rice farmers burn off the remaining rice straw and stubble to clear the land. the acrid smoke carries far and wide on the wind. in the northern province of lampung the harvest is underway since early in the morning women have been out in the fields cutting the sheaves with their sickles.
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if there's a lot of straw left on the field typically a kilogram a kilogram of rice if it's left to rot it will release me fame a potent greenhouse gas but burning the straw emits a c o 2 and creates fine particulate matter that's harmful to people and the environment. yeah one come one wants to change things after completing her studies in bangkok she decided to return to her home village and develop an alternative meaning of it. i mean if we're going to. get patients it's very hard to. grow rice and. it's a so long time and the. saw it's been it's very nice that when i come to my hometown i don't share. will rise much i find solutions far off for food for the entrepreneur rice troy's not waste to be disposed of
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but a valuable resource and i want she pays the farmers the equivalent of $0.03 a kilo. the golden stalks abroad by the truckload 200 nearby factory. here straw is. chopped up because the air is full of fine straw particles everyone has to wear a face mask. then the small pieces of straw a mixed with hot water no chemicals are added but the mixture has to boil for 4 hours. that produces a pulpy mess which is then cleaned and dried. on the factory floor we meet up again with the farmers from the rice field.
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this is a very good thing. it used to be that we had no work after the rice harvest. but with this factory job i can improve my income whether you want to even go to. the pope is used to make biodegradable paper and packaging but machines to process the pulp are expensive so the entrepreneur exports the raw material to india we have the customer because. that ass and watch off. and. off the raw material and contact us and they add very interesting you know our product because. of our product and the special feature of the table way is a fin coating of rice starch which helps the product resist grease heat and liquids in a 2 hour test with a salad the dish stayed leakproof. the
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next day she pays a visit to the city of chiang mai the economic and cultural heart of northern thailand. at chiang mai university they also conduct research into rice the auditorium is designed to resemble a grain of rice. here scientists support thai startups with their expertise. the other one coming one would like to manufacture takeaway food packaging made of rice straw in her own factory she hopes it will become financially feasible but she's especially interested in the research as work on improving the rice starch film say that it takes longer to dissolve. but do people here actually need tableware made of rice straw. as in most cities in thailand life here is largely outdoors the hundreds of street vendors and food
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stands all use disposable containers. if you want to start up your own production one vendor says and pay attention to the sizes of the bulbs shouldn't be too large or the customers will think the portions are too small and the price is important one baht per piece would be ok but. that up to one baht is the equivalent of $0.03. that is a lot off the shelf that costs us about the entire field is our high speed of light at 40 feet up it's moscow last to you let's ask the encourage how to respond to small restaurants. but if they make it to. the back of her home village yellow one coming one is visiting her grandparents. and that then yes.
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this is where she started her business a few years ago. she carried out of 1st experiments with rice straw pulp and have. my mother's cooking pots. at 1st her grandparents were far from thrilled is this why they had sent my grandchild to study at great expense in the capital. i don't know i did to her but meanwhile they have ample reason to be proud of her. and as the saying goes the rice farmers of lum punk have loved how to turn straw into gold. because burning it would be a terrible waste. now millions of children are employed in the textile sector in india this is just one of the many sick as will be made to work immediately to help sustain their families from one day to the next among profit organization in mumbai is making sure some of the
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city's poorest children have the right and the chance to play and not to get what are you about the realities of life. the palette of it is not is not just did a lead it stimulating the mind but it's also very powerful in a way that it's breaking so many baddiel is that. and kids are allowed to be kids again just plain simple enjoy their childhood. i just believe that working with these kids in the you know what the. it truly needed it's not about dissolved the truly needed this again shin. i very young ages you likely you can mourn them we keep dreaming about why the
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world is such a bad season is filled with such bad elements and you know why is somebody a criminal and all of that in this world but if you trace it back it always goes back to their childhood. with kindness and love and empathy i think we can relieve you he changed the way this whole war in functions. became more challenging for us still dead people about. the power to believe what is right to play what's meant give a being a child to levels all of these things of any concept still to people who are old and because it has for many of the problems old soldiers still have all the keys either you never then i mean who would talk about leaving a child is going on we saw it became it becomes even now really challenging for us to articulate this but having said that i mean hunger of the mind is even worse if
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you ask me because it can be good of a dolphin he says. it's like climate change or you can clearly see it but it's happening all around us mental health and mental well being is very similar beat the can't see it so if you don't see if you don't think it's a problem you suddenly want to in a bad mood you fight with your husband mother father whatever whatever and all you pretty much in a bad mood or destiny just imagine that v is your life many of these kids have had a backstop to life and it just goes on for the rest of their lives. and then you bellow in my life and. i don't believe in the mention of you. things that are people believe in is. just full of belief systems. it wasn't that how lucky for me they allowed me to be you i am as long as i was financially independent. judging kamal on you when you realize
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that you don't have any money because you are a liberal nobody finds all that he does. is a very easy. that's the one word god step is one even. so it becomes a big game and it becomes very challenging for us. we walk with almost 55000 kids every day and unless and until these kids are mentally not. even to understand was right from wrong by themselves. and nothing is going to change. that's inspiring i hope to be as episode has encouraged you to examine your choices when it comes to your belongings of all the clothes you wear on the floor in a chair you buy a review with a porter and see you next week until then stay safe and be good care of yourself and your loved ones goodbye.
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man animal living together and unspoiled nature nelson only rain cofounded national life the only african wildlife conservation center run by the mass my community but since the coronavirus pandemic they have faced many more challenges than usual need a part time shipped in their conservation movement to find old. alternatives eco now for go. 13 on the.
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shore 1st anality stories that. really. looks like the best of our g.w. reporters the most subtle the best of the sun. most. people would like to me to audition. and you hear me know yes yes we can hear you and how last year's german sauce and i want to bring your uncle our mascot idea of a hard time before the surprise yourself with what is possible and who is magical for me what moves are also up. who talked to people who followed her along the way i admire those and critics alive now as the world's most powerful woman seeking her legacy telling us the magical class that.
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imagine being born there's. you're a liar the can prove it since you want to look for no school. you want to be useful but i'm allowed to go. when you're sick the doctors know when you fall in love they won't. you don't have children for fear they'll be invisible to. have no human. when you die there's no proof of ever exist. every 10 minutes. someone this is. $10000000.00 people in the world the stake they have no nationality and the total made up along and. so that everyone has the right. everyone has the right to say firearm.
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this is the age of the news live from the huge blast hits downtown nashville a christmas morning explosion blows out windows and damages buildings police call it a deliberate act we'll bring you the latest also on the program there's been union nation stuff assessing the post trade deal with the u.k. a 2000 page document still needs to be ratified pretty.
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