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tv   Verruckt nach Meer  Deutsche Welle  January 3, 2021 9:30pm-10:29pm CET

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they want to know what makes the generals who. claim. i like the outdoors. and everyone was really. are you ready to meet the germans and join me right just do it until. sunday mass in the church of st theodore no doubt the most unusual parish in the archdiocese of cologne the sanctuary is large and open and culture plays an integral role. 2 2 2 this catholic church is located in finks one of colognes poorest districts with
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many social problems but you'd never guess that here father franz moyes has set his heart on bringing together people from diverse social religious and ethnic backgrounds. hospitality openness and diversity a generous atmosphere and mutual respect are the key values in this parish the priest's focus is on creating a lively united community. as close. concert with christian community is fundamental we celebrate communion. where 2 or 3 gather in my name there am i with them i was with us cause stores by christ is with us. and we accept each other. and all can see the dignity and value
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of the individual only become visible in the community of mine shaft. father moyer has strong views about what church means. and it's not just celebrating liturgy. underneath the church volunteers are unloading 2nd hand bicycles in the basement. they've collected them from all over town one of the volunteers is 75 year old mazhar high loon 6 years ago he and his family fled from the war in syria he's found a home away from home in the catholic parish. priest some a christian should be fed i lost many things in my life to apartment a business i think in office and beautiful all gone but thanks to god my whole family asserted as you good. he's found a new purpose in the community. on several days
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a week he checks the bikes and repairs those that are broken. it gives him a sense of belonging and of being useful. sure i would buy thieves guns i'm a volunteer. i didn't know anything about repairing bicycles i mean electrical engineer. i like the priest very much good he's like a father or brother to me. he's helped us a lot but they're feeling a lot for him and not just us and everyone here only loiter here. the bikes are given to anybody who needs one not just members of the parish. father moira insists on that. oh by the way this is my back has just brought us a wonderful bike from her grandson we also bring clothes microcell grew out of ok my here and i get my own bike repaired and that's
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a great deal unless i put something in the kitty when i can argue when you can't afford to give anything that's also. i don't now i think about this because it isn't just for the farish it's for the old dog remind it's an interesting gunton that took those reactors out you said you needed to buy 6 years old and the right that's right side ruled that this is not so i will yes he's already found solid miles if it's all right. yeah i've put a 3 year old also if the whole bit doesn't he. said ok yes of the brahim from togo is a mother of 2 and dependant on welfare and. their people are very nice. they do a good job for me. i think it's good to help everybody mention just shouldn't ever but i love how some people don't get enough help from the stands at the money are always things to buy when we can't lease things it really helps us should. she want
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to and i've been living in this district for 3 years and i'm expecting my 1st baby in march we're facing money problems right now so. so i came here for a baby carriage you know it's very helpful. when the baby carriage is an expensive i don't know and then we'll see maybe also get a cot or something when a new ones available we'll see the mission. and we have to be practical to ensure that everybody has a right if you buy a bike today then you're in section 26 percent of the households here are in serious debt you know how often they're single with it cannot ensure it on some other masonically children need a proper balance for school we should establish a children's town organize outings but all that is only good when there's a quality when people aren't looked down upon ish proctored to be.
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that's the net fashion at st theodore's many people work to make sure those who need help are treated with respect and as equals the children's clothing depot is attractive and well organized not to be see askey has been working here for more than 10 years she knows what the mothers need and she gives all of them the same attention. anybody who needs something can come here we don't check who don't ask any questions but if you have 5 children you get 5 sets of bed linen and towels at least $2.00 for each child we give what we have even does we'll see how. renate v.c. askey came here as a child from poland she and her family 1st lived in a reception center. they felt like outsiders and needed the help of others oh she's never forgotten that experience and she hopes the young mothers as much as she can . 100 s.
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he mine i treat them like family i enjoy coming here it's not a strange place it's like oh i'm happy now. right. with hundreds of volunteers and benefactors the parish of st theodore is well known throughout germany people like to help and feel part of a united community and. that's what mr. bender i'm pleased that things can be used that somebody still needs them and they don't land on the trash on the. vicious the holiday already as important supporting each other to own street father moyer says community is the essence of christianity. and he were going to have it by praying the rosary and so. i was poor and homeless for i was hungry and thirsty i was in prison i wanted to die and what did you do
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solidarity is essential at the experience that we all depend on each other paying. the show the family knows what community spirit means. their farm in north rhine-westphalia has been in the family for 400 years conventional farming alone no longer pays so the family have set up an agricultural educational center. groups of children come here from spring until autumn for many it's their 1st experience of raising animals and crops. and so you can see it happen so when people ask why an educational farm is necessary we like to tell the story of the child who was asked when lookouts produce milk he said when there is none left in the supermarket and we create a space in which children can learn real things that make sense and. the experience is new for the children they can learn with their senses how plants
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and animals grow and what becomes of them. we always work as a team you know children like to do things by themselves that's easy and it's her job but also better to do things together that's what we try to teach the children one can answer from. they come from 8 different countries but social and cultural differences are irrelevant here the children or interact easily popping up often so one must shoot up. close and meet. a man and. if i miss you what are the potatoes how many to you. and me to stay up when i plant them like this one who can tell me the mistake i've made i don't wrong way around when i plant them like this you know you must bury them i must
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bury them how do you like this you know very deep then i say i'll tell you the whole must be as deep as the spade is long because a potato must be very twice as deep in the soil as it is long so we dig a hole and look. that's deep enough don't you think i mean a little bit more. are we doing this sort of potato plants grow month and not see them. yeah that's good you know each child learns something different each one comes with different needs so we reach out to them accordingly the 2nd name of the farm experience is about much more than learning how to plant potatoes it's about discovering strengths developing courage observing listening letting others take over and self control. developing a sense of fairness and respect. the cutoff. point the month actually we
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need 2 people for this project going through. farmer l. marshall that explains how to plant potatoes people would want to get involved it's still impresses me. that. it was because of the feeling that you can make a difference if you do something on the spot i think that's very important i was going to business he was 50 going with dean getting involved with the basic necessities food. that's what my human body we're doing here has a joy record to use what i do like the current as well and that makes it very interesting. the idea has international approval but. you know go has commended the educational farm as a model of sustainable development. you're not going to cut off in any athlete.
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commitment is also found in the careful handling of state of the art technologies construction of a new production plant for prior one a prospering high tech company responsibility for the environment and the common good are central to the entrepreneurs. time we plan to build and run data centers for our clients we build the shell on electricity schooling and provide the security technology a home for i.t. . data centers are extremely energy intensive so it's especially important that we make headway. if we convince only one client per year for instance to construct a cooling in their data center so it has a relatively small carbon footprint so they have the potential energy savings that i couldn't achieve with my whole family and a lifetime of the shelf. businesses like ours have a duty to take the lead to get used to not to wait for the politicians because
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there's a lot to do. in the community in the concept of a social economy we found a concept that helps us to apply sustainability across the board in our business. it helps us to make sustainable choices as. the project grew out of the 2008 economic crisis the aim was to put people and the environment to be for maximizing profits to. the common good economy which is a business model based on values enshrined in nearly every constitution pockets and pointed a business is success is measured by its contribution to the common good. the criteria are human dignity solitary injustice ecological sustainability and shared responsibility. of most money is often the driving factor in business but today we see that the deeper meaning is to benefit society money is just the means to
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achieve that goal in other words the question of meaning and purpose has changed a lot. and ethical market economy is the long term goal if economics doesn't sustain life it's meaningless that's the view of the 400 businesses that have committed to this economic model what's special about this company is the people who work here as a god irrespective of who is here what they are what they do they're valued and treated with respect. it's. back on the show that is farm in north rhine-westphalia fridays are crop picking day. actually i'm an electrician i retrained and i wanted to do something meaningful i said to myself organic farming is something meaningful.
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so we work independently and for the most part these are simply. the harvest has to be in by friday afternoon nobody orders us about that it's pleasurable work enjoy it. first of all everything is. for a shop or for the market you might pick by crates of lettuce and you sell 3 the other 2 you have to throw away at the weekend we don't have that problem everything is used. actually it's already sold everything we harvest is taken that's good those are some of the. that's the knowledge you've got of people appreciate your work pay a lot of money each month they sometimes also help out with a farming and they say that's great what you're doing.
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the vegetables are ready to be collected the entire crop is divided up among the subscribers the consumers themselves weigh the produce and collect their share. it's financier shoes i think it's great that all generations help beams on the solidarity principle is very important insight into offer and i pay my subscription regularly and commit to collecting the vegetables so no risk is shared by everybody of me it was written for tight. yard you can mine shaft by one for all and all for one i taste better than the food in the supermarket which make up for the cucumber taste quite different locus mccombs like meal cucumber the radishes taste like rather shares. you.
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have. 25 it's a lot. you have to cook a lot. but i will give some away. a line of can't i can't do much on my own to change the larger political picture of a few mine but i can make a small contribution and batter lies to the minds of working together taking a break and swapping recipes and eating protect i was tower she warns of everyone bring something to eat and we share it and i think it's wonderful it's been a process should.
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be. an international network of community support. and agriculture has developed. some of the communities have as many as a 1000 or more members others are small and done spectacular. and spectacular but vital is also the support given in end of life care. maria i thought you were piece of cake. rhubarb pie from the bakery. would you like some. then we'll move that so you can see the consequent us and tell us. a little piece ok comes is also right. there i'm not we have more to choose from enjoy it maria baum is nearly 99 and bedridden and she's spending her
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final days at home cared for by her daughter and the mobile hospice service odilia i think it's great and when she's receiving morphine for the breast cancer that has now spread to her skin. i rather panicked at 1st i think some disempower didn't know whether she would die quickly. what was. most she doesn't have the strength to leave her room any more. than all the time. but she manages to get lots of stimulus from outside the world comes to her. and. we enjoy every day. the hospice service sees to that. we are what they are even if maria is physically weak she's still treated with the respect
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she enjoyed when she was younger. here yeah. may i visit you again. i don't need anything. so in here may i sit down yes you may. let me know i've brought you a little something a surprise of close your eyes and guess what you did it's. nice recognize the smell. lavender exactly wonderful mommy of how are you today maria. so i'm ok that's good so you're looking good. because we have to take the path we recognize. it's not always easy. to be truly human i need somebody who cares for me kind and no child can grow up without
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somebody caring for them mentioning this birth and death other coolness stands of our life on earth this. follow. the simple things life we're developing actually we're always dying a little down to just. being surrounded by people who love and care for you makes dying easier. it'll be a while yet reached a little while right now i know that site if anybody has time that's you. know. they're told phone used to live next door and knows the old lady well they often
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communicate without words a solid relationship one of trust they aren't shy of each other. ok. look you have a really lovely scamp. hey remember that each person by your side could be a gift of grace. so this is the last thing i'm able to do is lie here and wait. i don't know how to do that. i also don't know if i'll make it to heaven wait and see so. back in cologne thinks
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a long line has formed outside st theodorus church food is distributed here every tuesday during the covert virus pandemic special precautions are necessary while giving you putting up a tent outside yes we're constructing a pavilion where we can receive the trucks and documents. i wished i was on that i must say i'm very proud of you i'm never here on tuesdays there are other things to be done. and you always have a nice cup of coffee to. go. with the help of hundreds of volunteers father friends has created a network that reaches far beyond the boundaries of his parish open to everybody. that doesn't only provide practical help but
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a feeling of solidarity and belonging irrespective of social or religious affiliation. if. the question is can a modern person also be a christian. this applies to all religions. or do i have to divide myself itself. then religion leads to schizophrenia. for medium would meet in reality i'm a mother. a worker or whatever in my religion is like a hobby hobby. like. and i'm also a christian even. know true christianity shapes your life in all its aspects you know. one thing unites the different visions of a future with more community and solidarity. they show what is possible if it is simply tackled together.
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the big.
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deep insight into the body. chemical process makes it possible angle to the truth or dentition above down by sound trauma structure becomes visible. so researchers can understand diseases better and make artificial origins in the future to morrow today. 30 minutes on d w. o germany's world heritage sites like you've never seen them before from above. cultural treasures of incredible
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value. tourist attraction of timeless beauty. park one of our aerial dream trip. chick. 60 minutes on d w. i knew you mean our years and years we got new and how last year's german chancellor will bring you an angle our mascot as you've never had to have before the surprise yourself with what this possible who is medical really what moves that all somebody who talks to people who follows her along the way i admire those and critics alike now as the world's most powerful woman shaking her legacy joining us from echols last on. the story of prejudice and
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propaganda. they were called the rhineland bastards born after the 1st world war. their mothers were germans living in the occupied rhineland their fathers were soldiers from the french colony. after german children had a hard time because they were a reminder of the german defeat. exclusion and control culminated in forced sterilization under the nazis. this documentary examines the few traces that remain of their existence. they call them the children of shame. storage january 11th on d w above. this
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is news to live from very little in the u.s. a new session of congress convenes incoming members of the house and senate are swine and those lawmakers take their seats for the 1st time since one of the most of bitterly fought election since watergate in u.s. history the latest from a washington. and india approves 2 different vaccines against the coronavirus decision allows an ambitious inoculation program to get underway in a country that has suffered one of the highest 1000 death tolls in the clubs.
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and i'm sorry richardson welcome to the show 2 months after elections in the united states the new session of congress is convening for its opening day and the 1st order of business has been swearing in hundreds of new lawmakers as well as choosing the next speaker of the house of representatives meanwhile it's still not clear which party will control the senate will go live to our correspondent in washington for analysis in just a moment but 1st here's a look at some of the new faces on capitol hill. the class of 2021 some of the new lawmakers like this one from texas or brought their entire families with them to washington for the ceremonial opening the new congress places some big challenges. we've got to defeat called it so that's sort of what carter made their society the welfare the help the people depend upon that certainly we've got to improve our international relationships droppers just destroyed our alliances germany being one of the key alliances that we have to work on. this time
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around lawmakers was sworn in in small groups due to the coronavirus both chambers a finely balanced democrats will have a small majority in the house but control of the senate won't be decided on 2 cheesed that's when 2 special elections will be held in georgia we gavel in today like a $116.00 prior should it be have abandoned for. with plenty of disagreement can polish your derby tomorrow. but all were going to support. then on wednesday congress who made to certify november's election. supporters want to challenge dr barnes when then. for more on this i'm joined by our washington correspondent carolyn carol you know what have we seen since this new congress started beating. the 117th congress of this
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country and it's a it's has come together today to adopt mostly a minister for solutions but they're also to vote their new speaker of the voting already started but due to the special regulations because of the pen they make they're not allowed to vote all together at the same time in the house floor they have to vote in person there are 7 different groups of $72.00 lawmakers each group and they have to appear in person on the floor and this groups out one by one they have to speak out loud the name of who they want to be their speaker pelosi is going to win only if the majority of the lawmakers who are now in washington d.c. speak out loud her name on the floor republican candidate's name is mccarthy we know there are 427 lawmakers in washington d.c. today and this means they would need the winner would need at least $240.00 votes in order to be the next speaker of the house of representatives the winner will
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then traditionally give a speech thanks for that update on the house as you say it's also an unusual way to start a new session of congress because it's still unclear whether democrats or republicans will control the senate what's the story there. the story is georgia it's a run of in georgia this is going to happen in 2 days and generally 5th we're going to see 2 democrats and 2 republicans running for 2 different seats in the senate if the democrats win the old 2 seats they would control the senate because they would have half of the seats in the senate that means 50 of 100 seeds and this would if the vice president come out a harry is a democrat the last ward we know that a lot of people have already cast their mail in ballots and we also know that come out to harry's is that they're in georgia today supporting of course the democrat candidate carolina we also have some news today about trump's ongoing efforts to
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overturn the election results the washington post has published an extraordinary phone call in which trump is heard pressuring a top republican official in georgia to come up with nearly 12000 votes that would have been needed for him to win that state are there legal repercussions for this sort of thing. care there probably no legal repercussions for this is but this is not the 1st time that donald trump reaches out to a leader in a state claiming that there has been fraud also and this is very important say this is and and presented situation in the in the united states that the sitting u.s. president asked a state official to find votes these were his words in that recording and again this clearly hurts him 1st place that democracy in this country in a country that was for a long time a model example in a democratic political system of checks and balances and this goes together of course with the initiative of 12 senators and more than 100 congress men who are
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trying to move their republican people to not accept joe biden's victory and it's going to be quite a dramatic week in congress because there's also about a dozen republican lawmakers are saying bay will object to the formal certification of the presidential election how big of a threat is that to joe biden. it's not really a big talking about troughs and they are going along with more than 100 tallis members were planning to object this formal certification of the presidential election and joe by this victory is probably not going to be hurt by this but it is most definitely hurting the democracy in this country and this seems to be a test of triumphal orders the question behind it is who supports and who doesn't but we're talking about an election that has already are resolved donald trump has
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already claimed fraud on several judges have already said that there is no evidence for this claims so the real hurting here the real person of the rethink heard here is that the states currently enjoy in washington d.c. thank you very much for that. india has formally approved the emergency use of 2 coronavirus vaccines as it prepares for a huge inoculation campaign the country has recorded the 2nd highest number of infections in the world 2nd only to the u.s. and now the work begins in earnest as authorities gear up to roll out free shots to 300000000 of india's 1300000000 people within the next 8 months. or even years even the way to one of the world's biggest inoculation drives distemper coronavirus pandemic one of 2 vaccines authorized by indies drugs regulators was developed by astra zeneca with oxford university the other by the indian company biotech. i think where they have
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a mention. the food in your proud of the fact they're going to come and thought they were coming and according to the top level of the you know and bought up by a lot of the more horrific there's inordinate amount of movement the reach of india's prime minister near and remote he hailed it as a decisive turning point in the fight against the coronavirus. but health experts have raised concerns over the vaccine developed by biotech it's been approved without data on its efficiency being published and is yet to undergo large scale trials. nevertheless many indians welcome to the new sub vaccines would soon be available yeah that makes cylinder the playfield and when you hear the right feeling that it will. get back to a normal life form. i'll go as soon as the to arrives at safety it's safety for us
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that's nation is safe for our body and if i don't get it because other people say things and i contract covered 19 whom is the defects it's affects me. india has already held nationwide drills to prepare its health workers for brit's vaccine rollout it plans to inoculate around 300000000 people on a priority list this year but with a population of 1300000000 the country has its work cut out. earlier we spoke to correspondent. in delhi we asked her how realistic it is to deliver the vaccine to 300000000 people by the end of the summer. you know why do you think that battle again how do you know candy did. not actually do this the last $30000000.00 to be clear to me that she will be trying to lead with it which is going to cost health care and then sagacious marker security personnel it is actually the good sending really you've got a crowding list which could be
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a challenge these include everybody about 50 years of relief as well it will be a lot of us with equality it's not extensive. it's actually people does not i don't really exist an elite complied do really inspired lists there was a challenge and i didn't find such a massive vaccination program either doesn't have the it's the university connection for the billions of dollars and everything but i'm good at what's happened right in such a massive operation the what and this mission. our correspondent there let's turn now to some other stories making news around the world police in norway say the death toll has risen to 7 people following a landslide in ask more east of oslo rescuers are still searching for 3 others a still missing since wednesday when the ground under the villages suddenly gave way the landslide is the worst in modern norwegian history. thousands have
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turned out in baghdad iraq for a mass rally marking one here since a top iranian commander was killed there general hossam so the money and iraqi allies were killed by a u.s. drone strike on january 3rd at 2020 escalating tensions between washington and teheran and its supporters in the middle east. clerics from pakistan's a shiite minority are calling for further protests following the killing of 11 miners from their community police say the workers were kidnapped from their whole mine and then executed the so-called islamic state has claimed responsibility for the attack. a spanish humanitarian vessels says it has rescued 265 migrants from the mediterranean in 2 separate missions activists from open arms i said most of the migrants are from eritrea they were plucked from the sea on thursday and on saturday open arms is now seeking permission to dock from the italian authorities.
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and a swedish environmental activist a great america has turned 18 and means the teenager who inspired the world to sit up and take notice of climate change can now vote and potentially stand for office she could even run in sweden's 2022 elections let's turn back the clock and take a look at how her story unfolded. the world go to know her as the 15 year old teenager sitting outside the swedish parliament protesting for action on climate change with the slogan school strike for the climate's to vote. classmates to join her and skip school on fridays to protest. the message went viral and global. ultimately her protest inspired the fridays for future demonstrations which gained major traction with young people around the world. but the movement also hit home with a lot of older people people concerned that they had seen too little climate action
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in their lifetimes the message was clear and simple. many of you people say that we are wasting valuable lesson time but i assure you we will go back to school the moment you stop this into the science and give us the future is that it is too much. in 2019 the environmental activist sailed 2 weeks across the atlantic on a 0 carbon yacht to new york to deliver a message to the un's climate action summit there she reminded the world that she was still just a child and her thoughts should be elsewhere you are failing us. this is all wrong. i shouldn't be up here. i should be back in school on the other side of the ocean. just so you'll come to us young people for hope.
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but now to god is turning 18 making her an adult in the eyes of swedish law she will finally be able to vote and hold to account politicians she accuses of possibly climate book onto children. she says for her nothing has changed the world needs to treat the climate crisis as the true crisis that is here and now. and sunday's late bundesliga game has finished so let's take a look at results from match day 14 to round off the weekend in that late match of byron thrashed minds to reclaim top spot earlier on sunday men to beat on saturday they were when's shaka frankfurt when you're on by then and glad both frybread and also took all 3 points. as your news update at this hour stay tuned for reporter on location the new production of dr carmen under threat from the crown of iris condemning geoffrey that you can always get the latest on our website that
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stephanie dot com follow us on social media at the pianist and every chance an imbalance mean a whole teen thanks for joining us. what secrets lie behind things one. discover new adventures in 360 degree. and explore fascinating world heritage sites. p.w. world heritage 316 get kidnapped now. don't move on immigrants. you know the police will stop. there because the solution to their flight could be fatal but going back is not an option. it's money i'm on and gravity are stuck in the spanish border area where they're
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waiting for a chance that will probably never come shattered dreams starts january 18th on t w. common and corona. yeah great opera with an orchestra son who is sick and acquired in the time of the pandemic. the starts to answer in court for sirius taking quite a risk. but what about the audience. we have to protect people but also are only going to feel we have to sing like this it's better than not singing at all and.
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starting from the overture we're rather the whole piece there again cutting wherever courses and singers in question are not here. saying anything so let's begin if i'm from november mario van zandt takes up the baton. as we're still scaled down to less reduced our cousin dr make it more subtle the other gets here. when the rehearsals began germany was under semi lockdown businesses were open schools and while other fantasies were closed rehearsals were allowed of a corona version of shorts the same opera common the orchestra for it is only half the usual songs which. find.
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the son who wastes don't wear masks but they sing from behind plexiglass to prevent transmission of the virus singing is thought to be especially infectious. thank you cover everything is a bit too heavy a breeze. especially for 10 in the morning get all the trial out of persia ok fuss until. the singer cast for the role of common is prevented from traveling by for coronavirus so here the understudy sings how are years of love and passion subject to the current hygiene regulations. was. the thing to dance all it can to ensure rehearsals can go on.
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it does this and this is an air purifier. i don't know what the professionals call it. this cure of the air so we can sing god bless risk. without wearing masks muskets it's a fox mice and smith mustn't we mostly were hearse with masks on anyway. and we don't know yet for sure how it'll be when we eventually sing on the stage with masks on v.m. it must you know we won't have the purifier so we can get ourselves tested before the performance and it doesn't solve the problem it's just an extra precaution that will be working with masks and distancing anyway so we don't know which passages will be doing it was done this in the office assistant a food is a terrible situation arises and i just. yes of course i'm afraid it would be and i protect myself the best i can sophie and i get tested as often as i can. but it weighs on your soul of the city that it weighs like
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a black dog on your cell says you need of. why i think even subjecting themselves to eat there. but at this time the performance was still hoping that be able to play to an audience in december. where they had no intention of being upstaged by the virus some collective fortunately i already had grown up a few months ago not want my doctors say i've still got the antibodies but of course you always have to be careful out. of it but i know what you go through with this tyrus. how was it for you awful i'm still tired. at least she's content voice back.
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the orchestra is relatively small some of the instruments have the potential to blow the virus into the air others don't. know if there's a brass players pose the least danger because we blow in here and the air goes through 2 meters of tubes before it comes out back here no aerosols come out. exponent so tested this and confirmed that the brass bias on the cleanest members of the orchestra. that's the real problem is with the singers they really project and it's ok it's not. an entirely different kind of problem is that many of the orchestra members set up a subsidized student to corpus are under contract but others are not freelance
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musicians many of whom haven't performed in months. then did it do you want to put the government in the freezers don't support those freelance performers we might just wind up living under a bridge by the time the pandemics over the good. we want to be around because we have to survive somehow when done via the not quite a if you want to keep having opera you're going to have to help us now to screw up . the theater managers in coppers no doubt to. the whisper downslope now become louder voices after this time. we put. this into the laboratories only i don't believe it in a stage anyway to be honest but you never know what's coming how does it make you feel when you say the production might not make it on stage in this form. this in the given for our use to toss in our plans from one day to the next and making 2 of
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us and feel that we are pieces that might ever be performed or will get done differently or the other stuff if it is then it is an enormous challenge for the efficiency to make no mistake this is an occupational therapy. every time we are completely committed to the concept and only for it to be overturned by events is it in so we're all season biog this up people can adapt in ourselves our imaginations to something different every time then corrupt and still for believing in it for a few hours afterwards came the next sent back in time opera choir was supposed to rehearse together but the latest figures for new infections are alarming the choir had to be cancelled for today it puts mario vans argo and director stefan mackie in a difficult situation coordinating the. other much as the figures rise so do the
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individual fears and questions we have to deal with on a daily basis. i take those fears quite seriously and i believe we should take them seriously because it's hard to rehearse with fear they wouldn't and that's why we said ok not today. hard to morrow we'll discuss how we can deal with it we're in the middle. again current instead of the choir their house commons pot by itself. very tenderly. but that's missing with the other lasted a bit too trivial closeness so client. in phrase death told musically he called it . death when as a mosque it's the only way the dancer winston ricardo amorim can bring common under his spell. there is.
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now the choreography is sad but the big question remains. when is the premier. well that's a really difficult question. 2 weeks later than ready for a dress rehearsal the singer cast in the role of carmen has finally been able to make the trip. but the audience has not with cases of covert 19 rising in coppers the lockdown was extended and the theaters remain closed. it's up to the theaters to make things happen in the film because there's no
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shortage of reasons not to do something in these carona times. if all goes well they can hold a real premiere once the pandemics over whenever that maybe even in the face of all these uncertainties they giving it their all. this is that this is the job we have to deal. from musicians since you are singer singer for the entire theater and everyone involved it that it is that's a sign of either of so they can perform to the best of their ability and with the greatest dedication and their own this may be one of the most important jobs in my life by magnus libyans. eventually they even rehearsed with the choir. to help calm the singers fears the director didn't stand on the shoulder to shoulder on the stage but while spaced throughout the gallery. and then would stop with one let down of course is that we're not allowed to dance fees or you can't
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put the choreography on the stage the way they worked it out and often. eat. if i feel like it if i didn't mother waiting for her baby to arrive but not allowed to give birth. the. common and how love a don't force a will never even dance at that point. was. the. in this oprah about love and passion hygiene regulations prohibit so much as in light case it may be heartless but at least it's healthful.
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common doesn't die of the pandemic but of a crime of passion. at a distance. mario do you have anything young yes i think you've all set an example for how to make music in spite of home and above it all and much more thank you for it and wish you all the best and most importantly that you stay healthy is a. deep insight into the body. of a new chemical process makes it possible to see your dentist.
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down by sound in the tunnel structure becomes visible. so researchers can understand diseases better and make artificial organs in the future tomorrow today . next on d w. germany's world heritage sites like you've never seen them before from above. cultural treasures of incredible value. tourist attraction of timeless beauty. part one of our aerial dream trip. check in. 30 minutes on d w. w's crime fighters are back with the africa's most successful radio drama series continues all of us odes are available online of course you can share
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and discuss song t w africa's facebook page and other social media platforms crime fighter 2 minnow. how do bees know which blossom to not. and on for the past nectar scientists studying flower to insect communication have an electrifying answer. animal testing is very controversial how viable are the alternatives. researchers are using a fresh method to study organ tissue in a new life.

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