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tv   Frag den Lesch  Deutsche Welle  July 5, 2021 6:15am-6:30am CEST

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is arrest a head of stage 10 earlier last years. runner up. pretty much ra glitch had pulled out after falling well behind the main contenders. lavine and had been struggling after he was hurt in a crash earlier in the week watching t w news. that's it for me. remember, you can always get all the latest news on our website as c, w dot com. i'm here until berlin. thanks for watching. the gold was right in front of them. then suddenly we agreed to postpone the or olympic games that took your 2020. from course, during the qualifying ground for sports heroes helped down during lockdown starts july 19th on d, w. ah,
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and every day jewish life in europe that's rarely shown away from politics. the middle east and anti semitism, it was important for us to continuously go over and capture what's going on. ah, alice bona is one of the most significant jewish film produces in europe. i felt it was important to have this perspective to tell the story of europe, jewish community as we traveled across the continent. ah, eve kugal mind has always played a big role in our family, editor in chief of the swift magazine talk list. and he's written so many articles that we've discussed together over mealtimes. so i was really key to work with the o
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the it might come as a surprise that our journey of judaism in europe starts in time. there are many branches of judaism, sephardic, judaism that started in spain, was a key part of mark graham. and morocco was the center for many, many centrist the it's incredible that there was once more than 300000 jews living in morocco, but still surprising to me. oh the the me
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amazingly beautiful. judiasm is very heterogeneous and has many different influences. the 2 big ones are politic judaism, that most becomes from north africa and spain and europe in judaism, ash canarvy i since holland. and here we're looking across a key part of jewish history movement across the beach, head from europe to africa, and from africa to europe. but jews and also muslims were expound from spain in 1492 by non sick. and then after the 2nd world war, many hundreds of thousands of jews travelled from north africa back to europe. and also israel, not putting it on the file. it goes back to the old testament, if you want to look at, it meant the logically and this whole aspect of judaism in central europe is something we're not really conscious on, not in the general community,
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either in the ultimate to manage it. and that's why i, especially since clearly had such a major impact on europe, migration, clothing, both directions and now thing, another migration movement here in the same place they've been happening for centuries. and that's the reason we're starting our journey through europe, from social open, your beginning time the ah ah
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ah. i've never been to mars say, but i'm excited to see what jewish life is like hear the news. it's a typical pause city with lots of influences and immigration, and that's why it's a city that's always been open to the jewish community. the life is obviously changed since the attacks on charlie abdul. it's now considered necessary for the press and prompts to have security and guard. the issues is hello, you're listening to radio g m. they will be playing
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a selection of the most beautiful songs by shall know who who passed away yesterday . it was known for his love of israel and the jewish community, jerusalem in double hills, that m g m a jewish radio, and marcia was established in 1982 shortly after the election of concert mid term on when many radio stations were created, they called that it was extraordinary for the development of jewish culture, your jewish music on the radio, music from a israel. and teachings from rabbis was miraculous, wonderful than the other. you were you ever threatened with the demand? ask them what are usually if i was going to come to, you've received threats as have many jewish institutions. unfortunately, sometimes the threats are serious. sometimes they're more comical, but we have to take precaution,
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those will be 70 people. then they sat there. we now have bullet proof windows here and the security gate, like in the bank. we've been able to secure our premises with help from the government. the ministry of the interior and the community council. france is a country that make sure that june of living here feels safe africa with this affordable people in march. they are very open about their religion, aren't they? select event support culture, marcia culture. there's something magical about him or say magic my face. it's like a washing machine and you put everything in together but piece keeps its individual color piece. we're all washed together, but we retain our identity and that works about 95 percent of the time open. just as marcia is still as exceptional as ever, it's a city that's open to the mediterranean. so i mean, that's welcomed all waves of ation with open arms up to the to the event you,
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me gosh. that was a very confident and nuanced discussion. he mentioned the good, but also the problematic aspect. i feel like you've looking at the picture of jewish life here, 3 rose tinted spectacle. i don't quite believe it's all sunshine and rainbow. well then let's meet a woman who grew up here and has been jewish lives develop here over many years. the because i need all these years ago, mostly in the 1970 s. it was less each to their own. people lived together. take my the why, you know, there was a neighborhood where you'd find jewish youth centers, eastern bakeries and kosher butcher. it was more mix,
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not more side by side. it is almost then at some point people started to separate from one another in the city. below me, and today most of the jewish businesses and jewish schools are all close to the big synagogue will be going on because there are, there are kosher restaurants, jewish doors, and youth centers. if i one that sort of cluster has formed partly because it makes it safer and more convenient for the people who practice or their own key. gotcha. so do you think the attacks have played apart blow it? i don't say that this close knit lifestyle existed before, but it's true that the tendency to keep to oneself has intensified because of that, especially after the attacks and to lose and elsewhere in france. i think he's also there wasn't much solidarity when we protested. we were on our own,
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it was only after the attacks in paris and nice that people started protesting in bigger numbers when everyone felt effective, talk to often feel excluded. also people say it's the muslims and the jews with the problem, but it's not, it's all of society. it's not muslims versus jews. that's what worries me the populism of the far right, right. somebody more nasty or now formerly the from nasty and it grows year on here, especially in the south. all of this affects me as a jew, and as a french person, the shoes are very religious, so we're happy. there's a place right next to the school where we can get kosher read itself perpetuating
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the more we huddled together, the more scared we become more scared, we become more we teach you feel okay here. yeah. this, you still have a good life here, but there's always the fear when we take our children to school, that's something might happen. there are soldiers outside the school, and that scares us. the resume is the college. it's astounding that there are $48.00 synagogues and places of worship that are barely guarded. yes, it's very different to parents where they need a lot more security and can't, especially since the attacks things look very different in other french stages.
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often i used to live in paris. i lived there for 10 years with my family, including my children. about e. m is off all i can tell you there's a fundamental difference in parents. my kids didn't dan to go out onto the streets wearing the kid up is certainly not onto the metro community. and if they ever did, they would almost certainly get attacked verbally or sometimes even worse. it's different here. they can, where the keep an eye out on the street. another factor is must say, if they're wrong, hope my say you get a body that brings together the religious leaders of all religious communities. and the mayor of my say is your thought, catholics, protestants, buddhists, jews, muslims, when every one of the the ship,
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what do you want to pay back in the field of these meetings have a collective uncommon message that based on all religion, problem massage, collective a coma human last and once a year we organize a huge event that attracts maybe 5 or $6000.00 people from the same. he told you, man, if everyone can see all the different religious leaders there and it gives the community a sense of cohesion, a desire to live well together. then who is your your stuff and you need something to be on the news .
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the the the good news the news the news . 2 2 news
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shoes i am on the national my computer. at some point, i just wanted to discover my culture with my musical interest led me to my religion because there are very interesting aspects of jewish culture image that is, if my mother is ash canarsie, and my father is 40 boots, those kids i don't, and they went to israel, but not because they felt jewish not at all reset it, but it was because at the time they were of a certain political persuasion and wanted to practice in a kid boots. my brother is israeli. i'm the only french one in my family. and i ended up in my thing which isn't really friends, is sort of separate to the country. i feel like a true.

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