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tv   Zu Tisch  Deutsche Welle  March 6, 2021 9:30pm-10:00pm CET

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for. 60 minutes. first group who could have a. lot of us are. in support of. the civil guard over. the debris of. it's very important that we build some of that would see beyond the borders. i hope will remain to be a record be a good energy and. a. little and when we come together there's nothing we can not change.
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their rebellious smart and they use the arts to do cry injustice they fight against sexual violence and for equal rights to mark international women's day our correspondents present women who've impressed them with their courage and creativity. in some time ago. jelly. berlin and nairobi but 1st to turkey. hi from istanbul this is a handy w's correspondent in turkey and i would like you to get to know a musician who is rebelling against the ordinary with her unique sound and her outspokenness on women's rights issues here in the country now meets turkey's psychedelic rock star guy. watch on.
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a mini bus ride through a parallel universe and a woman who actual is in the driver's seat. she loves to bring together traditions and modernity that sounds she revived psychedelic rock a sound that was lost truly popular in turkey in the 1970 s. . guyon isn't patty curry on the asian side of istanbul. it's a district known for its many bars and clubs at least when there is no pandemic. this is where she grew up. some of them most of my childhood memories are about music and when i dreamt about my future the music was always there.
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today the 36 year old writes composes and co produces most of her songs herself. the fans love the unique mix of turkish music rock and post-punk. and many search gaius abstract lyrics for messages about the situation in techie. the whole country is a shisha cafe and we a suffocating in its smoke she sings and bottom is that tosh. left us all work and used it's really become more and more difficult to breathe in this country because there's a lack of justice and rule of law. if. that is deeply wounded the society.
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i feel very injured to. it's time for us to stand up for and support each other here in turkey and elsewhere in the world the. guy is most concerned about the situation of women in turkey right schools warned that domestic violence is on the rise and that the number of women murdered has dramatically increased in recent years. activists regularly organize protests although the turkish government bans most of them but guy is proud that women still dare to be loud and demand their rights. to kill the code. when we talk about women in turkey the word oppression automatically comes to mind . it's an uphill battle for every woman who wants to live according to her own ideas. but we won't be afraid we will stick together draw attention to ourselves
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and organize organize always our lord. for the sands guy is a role model in terms of self-determination and when it comes to speaking one's mind can tell. the story i don't ask for anyone's permission i am who i always wanted to be she sings on her latest record the song is called it's young money festool saw rebellion money festival. and gal you can't wait to play her music life again after the pandemic in one of the clubs in her home city. music hall so if my music where city it would definitely be istanbul the city has many sounds and forces it's a melting pot where everyone and everything comes together. so i really like to be
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compared to the city of course we're about to. keep. the. i'm a pretty touchy muddied obvious correspondent and danny using comics and graphic knowledge of school impoundment that's what feeds on material try dogs challenging convention forms of patriarchy let's meet this remarkable visual artist who's breaking barriers in india. i don't think we and we need to ask those often stop us this show all the seeming all peak and feeling fear release imagining what we can make of those who are beautiful conversations that need to be had and or
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being in this country they still come in the woods fixed i mean expectations o'grady if you make good social structure. you're if you're calm and cool all over the city you have a baby boy you go eat you i think piece of it to be revealed the stage you would go to continue to be happy to tap into hindi with prior to the results of. booking with allows it to best expresses ideas and her perspective on life. she's inspired by feminist leaders and people's movements this is reflected in her drawings and the issues on which she's chosen to focus. it does have to challenge gender stereotypes and attempts to stifle her voice even at school i have to call to the record these late professors who came who feel that
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you really you don't shout you down they can just go down to you and forgave dealing with asthma and on campus and all these issues that are happening but you know everybody knows the student was agassi yesterday but you're going to have to sit in creeping being afraid of flour court is just insane. but in early twenty's either i was captivated but something entirely new what she called the magic of bringing text and images together to create powerful narratives like this book on an eco feminist who led a movement against the forestation in india that in it's meant often you were a city built in part of the story is something that i don't want to produce quote that's just standard you know our faith in you i wanted to be a conversation. and that's why if you're going to do work i need good comics and graphic magnets. that engages with women from marginalized
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communities. she's traveling to remote regions to day she saw the transformative potential of ott. before sanity said no no i was the have the room painted of. in-city sitting through all faculty of the ministers in their communities to see if they can create life to be the one. over there to see you know you need to you can experience for your abs are your dreams are just to do that is a 4 stage is really really important to be able to have that chance to form and think this through e.c.v. we came together to look at what it means to team of assets is as is seen markets as people who are defying i did. last eat i was drawn to
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a mass movement led by been in delhi. the shaheen bank sit in protest at a major public highway was against the government citizenship amendment act critics said the legislation was discriminatory against muslims. it was absolutely unbelievable to be on a new public high read blocking that piece of glass but having really speaks so strong be up honesty years and so clearly about who are democratic they are and what citizenship meet the only real friend i could express what they're hearing through and drawing that would then come back to my studio and me close to school systems both in hindi and english. sponsors and drawings on this piece for protests have now been compiled into a book. a powerful graphic narrative of women at the forefront of a mass movement. i've just seen paying we see what the government of the
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state is doing to young women who speak go behind our voice to say so we've seen these creative quantic so we mean being at the forefront of people's movements and steve that status catching it were big she expected anything to be saying it is a moment that i would think we can heave me or b.'s what we want. in. the. room. and. this is a free a body bag did aves correspondent in to i'm going to present to a group of women that dances with great masses on the streets of santiago to raise awareness of gender violence and the power goes of women to fight for their rights to meet the demands collected by look up which i wish i had to push ever has in a new dogs but international women's day. over 50 women have turned up including
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dominate. even the up by 4 means the collective and dancing as part of a collective means liberation enjoyment pleasure friendship this is a space where i feel safe and i can be myself the name of the dons group is linked to the headgear the women fest dotted wearing balaclavas in hoods during demonstrations both to protect themselves from police tear gas and to ensure they want recognised they became a symbol. to make. even unite as one of the 4 women who founded by. i love it which i love and i bet you $1019.00 during a wave of protests against social inequality in chile. it was that you and
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we don't want to conceal their identity but we do want to protect it because there's a lot of political persecution in chile that long predates the uprising and we wanted to form a collective and to present a common front that when i protest i am not more not the kind of a collective. is the 1st time since the start of the fund and the related restrictions that they have matched her house like this and i believe we are a feminist dance collective we want to make art less a leader start to bring down to the streets and to show that our body is our 1st territory of struggle we're not dancing for others but for ourselves but our choreography is always based on urban down styles such as dancehall work and hip hop last year on international women's day 300 members of the collective dance on the street so sontag go where in red by the clubbers 2000000 people in total
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protested nationwide social inequality sparked an uprising against chile's neoliberal economic and social system in october 2019 it was feminist from the start of. the walls of santiago tell the story of the protests of the struggle against patriarchy and machismo. the dance collective members want to draw attention to violence against women in their performances. religiously to me that's as soon as i leave my home i'm exposed to harass there's abuse during childbirth there are always forms of violence against women at work in the health care system the family it's never ending. but i want to believe that it will be all . advocated but it's an evolving process to. get over it we're in the middle of a paradigm shift than you are seeing. this collective is about
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so much more than dance it's about solidarity and mutual empowerment many say that the group dancing and the protests have to change their lives. come up in the end though if they mean more really learning from feminism in the learning to love each other when you know not to compete against one another but to actually create a nuclear family where we can express ourselves dominic says she has learned to accept her body through dancing in the group. even ranging. even in the. mean look i can see all that i've changed my way of showing myself to the world to my environment and to myself. on international women's day by like a bridge of my level once more be dancing in the heart of santiago.
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i'm peter king money coming to you from kenya's capital nairobi and despite the fact that the person we're about to meet was not actually born here she does thrive in creative institutes such as the one that we're standing next to but it's actually how literature that she hopes will be able to cut across boundaries reaching young girls across the continent and challenging young women such as myself. one of the pins that really gets my goat. when i get referred to a black african woman right there i'm like how. why must i have business or what you call it was what i did i want to be
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a good writer. who keeps well vanner knows her own mind and isn't afraid to speak it the south african arthur was born in zambia and then studied and lived abroad for a long time today she lives in kenya and is a publisher editorial writer and children's author during the pandemic she has become the curator of a pan african on line literature festival combining well known names with new talent she wonders between worlds with boundless energy. the books she writes are always political in her 1st novel the madams which was published in 2006 she describes the lives of middle class women in south africa who are appalled between tradition and modernity between a career and being the perfect african mother. i am essentially prawle. who very proffer very pro women and i think the generally
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comes out in my books what those 3 or have in common is about identity. i'm writing for readers but more importantly i'm writing for people or reading is boring enough there are i've got a book for you finish once i finish one period and told me that boring her novels always carry a message she writes literature with added to. this one of them is particularly committed to young readers and writers i don't want my generation to be the last generation of writers you know i always to myself to be able to hold on and bring in generation of writers and give them voice and give them the platform in her writings to piece one of than or uses all of the linguistic richness of the continent including street slang you can't. different dialects. my readers should be able to understand the context you know if they don't get the context then it
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means i have failed it's not that the language has failed i have failed as a writer. zuki suave vanner is active on the international circuit in 29 teams she was invited by the getting institute to speak at the frankfurt book fair she is a citizen of the world with many contacts for the outspoken feminist this comes naturally i think i'm an itinerant by nature in a way i have always been an outsider looking in if you were but i also give a insider's perspective in 2022 piece while banner was the 1st african woman to be awarded the good to medal making her a role model for an entire generation when you're an artist you want to be just speaking to one people it means a lot where it can resonate with it with somebody in berlin or with somebody in munich with somebody in brazil but her main commitment is to her
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continent africa but maybe we need more voices that are more visible a lot of african countries are only going to 60 years from colonialism we're still growing we are still young. kenya has been battling the pandemic for more than a year and like everywhere else in the world it is women who have been hit particularly hard by the crisis. of than there has a message for women but also for men this is a message we all have the sky. when we get the recognition we deserve cold and suddenly we do. and maybe we and our allies and learned the pachuco habits that allow us to celebrate mediocre contributions by men over excellent contributions by women i wish you all
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a reflective and heart in 365 days this women's day. hi there karen helm said here reporting from berlin and i'd like you to meet unlike friends she's a polish artist and activist who now lives here in germany and she never misses a chance to fight for the rights of women in her home country and after poland's recent near total ban on abortion she now feels their voices more than ever need to be amplified well beyond their own borders oh i. barricaded so. many feel their bodies have become a political battleground a global scream expresses their collective outrage it's an initiative of honor
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kinds a tireless leader in the fight for women's reproductive rights and the stakes just got higher things have changed as well because it's war now since last year in poland it's a war of women against the government. and last october poland's constitutional court voted to clamp down even further on one of europe's most restrictive abortion laws the ruling from to tens of thousands to take to the streets in protest here in the capital warsaw. in late january 2021 the ruling was abruptly published into law abortion is now illegal even in the case of severe fetal defects . mounting to a de facto ban in the predominantly catholic country. in berlin and a krentz turned up the volume on behalf of her countrywomen. yeah. it's just an imperative you have to do something you cannot really sit on your so far but
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that's why that's why we stand on the streets we think it's important we want to show their solidarity with polish women we are polish women as well and we are angry at the same besides what happens in poland it also it has. influence on sings in other countries. and i came to berlin in 222016 growing outrage over the proposed abortion bill in poland prompted her to found. an inclusive feminist collective that also advocates for l.g.b. t.q. rights. with fellow member or sheila bair teen she staking out a protest action for international women's day symbols are a vital part of her work whether graphic or performance. late in general is a very feminine material it's very it can cover but it can also reveal
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things and if you talk about abortion exactly abortion this bill or the regulation of abortion is one of the very few maybe the only one which regulates your very private life your body deep in your body your heart soul whatever but it's very very private like the dress or with a curtain that covers you from the outside world but you can also look through it and you see the world differently. one of the. goals of our actions is that we can be the voice of polish women abroad. from poznan where she trained as an architect she later studied environmental design and now works mainly as a freelance graphic artist but currently activist causes are nearly all consuming. we cannot stop fighting we really have to keep fighting because it's not only about
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abortion. all of this happening in poland it happens on many other levels abortion is one of them and it's very serious but we cannot stop because every day we see something else is really falling apart i think this country disappeared so we really have to still stand on the streets and never give up never give up. drawing and the urge to comment on the world through art remain a constant need. both my parents were artists they are now gone but both of them they did art and art was always present in our house it was like the most important thing the reality and baby things are not important. for the time being her private art has had to take a back seat she's currently working on an activist diary a document the women of poland may 1 day look back on with gratitude.
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but for now the battle continues. to spend together in the fight let's keep fighting perseverance stay strong stay safe. britain women's courage and creativity on international women's day see you next time. police are rushing home from the storm are long.
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africa. the last 2 northern white rhinos in the world are grazing here in kenya but wait this lady this is your last chance to reproduce so be hey. scientists are trying to train the species and they have a lot of ideas about how to do it. for.
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30 minutes on d w. loops the last return of the am for the people. doing churches in berlin and brandon brandon. their massive walls are a safe haven for a new generation of worshippers. their doors are open for a. new law used in the old walls. in 60 minutes on d w. by 2050 more than half the world will be living with limited water resources we haven't had to think about our war or worry about. i think that era is over this is
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the crisis of our time it's a financial product like any other from a. we live in a competitive world there's a cold it's cold it's been cold war seems to be free but the world is changing to most important the moment you hit. the freezing. water the city or commodity starts march 22nd on d w. different. violence of the south. here women are in charge. archipelago has had a retreat or cool system for centuries and. the rare form of society. women differently than. what they. were. and how sustainable this culture. the republicans over.
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starts more change on w. . this is daily news live from berlin pope francis delivers a message of unity on the 2nd day of his historic visit to iraq he met with the country's top shiite cleric grand ayatollah ali al sistani and host it and interface meeting where he condemned the religious extremism the pontiff hopes to encourage iraq's christian and muslim communities to.

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