tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle April 10, 2022 9:30am-10:01am CEST
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will you, these places in europe are smashing the wreckers step into a bold adventure. it's the treasure map for modern globetrotters. discover some of europe's record breaking sites on google maps. you to know also in book form. oh, it's listening to this is when kids have to run through the basement that you can't . yukon billeted from his brain, yukon blooded from the, his memory, the music and of your use of lights to help the sole survivor who i leave today. again, she is still alive, was not that long ago, and it shapes or society to this day. that would be what this melinda situation. the only thing that can give hope is love and i'm older
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who the war in ukraine grinds on. shocking images are beamed around the world. what impact does war have on people now and in the future? what can offer reassurance when everything's in ruins? answers, and questions from a well known russian writer and a young poet from spain. but 1st, we had to hi keith in eastern ukraine where music brings a glimmer of hope in desperate times m. o, the hockey, the music fist. in the midst of war, russian bombs turned all the planning on its head. now a musician and the audience gather in
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a place where people have been seeking refuge, even living for weeks. a subway station, ah, literally alexi noch is the festivals artistic director. he lives in germany, so he had to leave the local organization to others. the mac invite of early will carry on somehow and us. so i know the festival will be quite different now. absolutely. is it something special for all of us? it's because, despite the bombs all will continue to play music in varden hockey ukraine. second largest city has suffered devastating damage even during the festival. it's come under missile and artillery fire. but down here, people experience moments of peace and relaxation via kitten or strongly may originally had more orchestral works in our festival. with hundreds of people in the audience mentioned in public, on our but,
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but at the moment we're staging the festival with musicians who stayed behind when for people who are in relative safety, somewhere in bunkers and in the sub wagons in born come on in their obama and the people of hockey are coming to the concerts, despite the danger additional performances. a planned for is, is this vindicate service, which is hard to talk about. and i don't have a program concept in place for the coming weeks in each of us. morgan for sale, we don't know what's going to happen to morrow or even today, but won't bombs fall there each night. not reducing the city to ruin it, but we're still trying to do something that has opened up with watson organ festival. ah, for example, a concert in a maternity hospital in the audience, young mothers, nurses and doctors vitalia. lexi knock takes us along to the trinity church in bon. he organizes projects here for refugee musicians from ukraine and
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galleries together with his friend olga purchase. ah, both come from bella ruth, where they took to the streets of means to protest against the lucas jenko regime with another agent. now they're stepping in to help people from ukraine with us 30 and what's on that as i to be, as far as the emotional side is concerned, there wasn't really time to cry or anything. i can see it swine, or does he need to react back in? there isn't a time for reflection. it's a time for action on this. if it's i people need help now on man. most. yeah, we didn't dwell on it to come gun. if we had, it would have been unbearable through market octets and us done very strong on it. i was curious since the war began. alexi knock has driven several times to the ukranian border. it's almost a 1000 kilometers away. more than 10 hours at the wheel. his photo showed that many bus packed with donations here at the border, he meets ukrainian refugees,
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often exhausted and traumatized after days on the road. and brings them to safety. in berlin, shut off within kingdom, gifts call. i've also spoken to many children. oh, who? vast, innocent questions such as, why aren't we at home diffract come or does this mean? we'll never go back a high success v it's nick, met through comb. then another child said on the oh, i know that our house is being bombed right now. owns a house, it's got to run by the children are having to experience these things it's, it's really terrible a leaving on this is not a freakish of wasteful. valentin sylvester is perhaps ukraine's most famous composer of contemporary music. he managed to get to berlin from kiev. also. thanks to vitale. alexey knock ah, it us be so kind to she wanted to reach the border. i picked him up there, his family, a few other people and a cat ins under femina, on knocking palm. and that was the 1st time i met him shopping just before he got
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in the van and glance him auto. whether or not fordham auto says i never would have imagined that a conductor would get to know a composer fleeing war. in a many less in a man that they then have to drive a 1000 kilometers together. so you might some fun. miss lou, give us a shot. he was extremely exhausted, but he helped well the here. how can they say he's 84 years old after all? and he still composing at this. ok then the if he even did it during the journey, he heard the music in his head short owns by the company. and once we brought him to berlin, he played it for us right away. um, thus got there and it was really very moving pads on the service. they say i ruined many other musicians. a still in ukraine from bon alexi. knock is in constant contact with his colleagues in hockey. ah, there,
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the constant in a supply station provides a brief moment of home for the children to the events like this are ray of hope. they help us to believe in the best to hope it'll all be overseen and things will be all right. but us good that life goes on because music and art are part of life there, the rays of light that help the soul survive the soon lose it organizes plan to stage more concerts until the war comes to an end. ah, in russia to many are risking everything by calling for an end to the war. a growing number of artists and intellectuals are leaving the country in protest among them russian prima ballerina august mir nova. she's just performed in
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a benefit gala in naples, along with ukrainian dancers and ballet stars like anastasio. gus kaya, one of russia's greatest literary voices is now living in exile too. will lose leila lit sky. our stay in berlin forever. will she never be able to return to moscow? can she start a new life at the age of 79? possibly russia's most important living writer. she left her country in mid march. her oldest son who lives in london, convinced her to let it necessarily feel threatened in others good thought and couldn't entirely understand my son's decision that i agreed. yeah. because i think he might be able to assess for the current situation a bit better than i do garcia. and i still remember when i sent my sons to the us when they were old enough to be drafted into the army only resemble it. i knew i had to act fast for food that was during the war in afghanistan. a branch of his
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were constantly having walls like that when a sunny show didn't sit him yesterday and i did my lincoln. for 40 years collette sky had been married to sculptor and painter, andre crossman, who also came with her to berlin. she was one of the 1st in russia to speak out publicly against the war in ukraine. it is necessary to stop the war that is flaring off every minute and resist. the propaganda lies fed to us by all media. bullitt sky has never been sparing in her criticism of russia's leaders and says, she's in good company. through my, among my acquaintances, i'm not even talking of close friends, but my why to circle. i've never met a single person who would have agreed to this russian war in ukraine. not one that is given. all right. and any of these days though,
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those who dare take to the streets to protest risk being beaten up or arrested. few are as courageous as the writer vladimir sir rockin, who's fiercely criticized the war. more elaina co vasqua who resigned his artistic director of moscow's meyer, whole theatre after the invasion. around the same time, many artists and intellectual signed an open letter of protest. but the letter and names of the signatories were quickly removed from the internet. the risks were just too high. the muslim, near the chena, i don't have the feeling that russian intellectual support the war. but it's a very difficult to hear voices, amelia, out legs have been shocked down soon. but for example, radio echo of moscow i do and many other channels and platforms have been shut down . there is a voice of protest, but it's very difficult to hear it. ah, born into a jewish family, the little guy, i worked as
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a geneticist before starting to write her books have been translated into some 30 languages. in short stories and novels, she is depicted the great terror under stalin and the holocaust as well as everyday life in post soviet russia. her protagonists are mainly women. in this recent collection of stories, she writes about their daily struggles in the power of female friendships guleski of russia is the country of very strong women everywhere. but in power. of course, when if this war is stopped dead the more than it will only be because of women at the boot, the son overland. if it isn't the word, it will mean that those in power don't care. one iota about what women think about all this fluid, so my adventure. but when bold lipsky knows that the impact of this war will be
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terrible and poison relations between russia and ukraine for generations to come. but she warns against ostracizing rush and artists who have not distance themselves from vladimir putin such as world renown, conductor valeri garrity, of and acclaimed opera star on in the trap co, criticized in the west for saying nothing at 1st. she then became persona non grata in russia when she spoke out against the war. yes, she does the pollutant. i believe that every artist like every person that really has a right to their opinion, their political one to a some dinner. an artist should be judged by, they look if it's was presenting or live and the artist should be worked with, though otherwise, then there is no need to know this number, but a person's political views are their own business is good at the ciocca. they were lynch snellville, she says many russians only discuss politics and private behind closed doors. but
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that doesn't mean the majority is pro war o fiduciary and the wars missed the words very important that people here in germany understand that opinion in russia is not as unanimous as the government would like to present at my failure. gloria i am what i see is of so when it comes to the war a little now got a large part of the population including bullshit, ordinary people and educated sectors were for this and find it up horan turn him. ah, you got the and it would be willing to go out on to the streets to stop it with us from out here in berlin. lydia is constantly asked how she views the situation in russia now left him in versa, airport, which level which, but i don't like this role at all. no, that'll improve. i would prefer to be a writer for an observer of life. and if so,
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a right to function is to observe and to right and your flip, i've never seen myself as an active participant in a process. your food, certainly not a political wanna come over, but life is now pulling me into politics north of against my will. don't believe me . jaeger, with political. oh, the susan puts me, was a learner by it. ludmilla lit sky is certain that she'll be able to write during her self imposed exile, but she hoped to return to her home in moscow one day when the war is over. but what if your homeland lies in ruins like parts of ukraine? can sanctuaries be re dated for those who needed most children, traumatized by conflict, even before this latest war? a documentary about a children's home in eastern ukraine that had to be evacuated in late february. ah, december test regions of eastern ukraine,
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which have been contested for years now, are only a few kilometers from the missy chanst children's home. lazy b. a child. hoods of the youngsters who lived here were fractured . the children's home was their home when they had lost both parents or was their sanctuary from parents who had abused them. 11 year old koya was given shelter here with his younger siblings. their mother is an alcoholic. ah, i know mine. when will i live, going to live on? in the documentary, a housemaid of splinters is a portrait of the home and the love and care it provided. people say children are
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the future. but what kind of future can there be in a region where peace, all too often gives way to warm mm. in the wall that has been going on for almost more than 7 years now in this region it's, it's made the social problems gets out of control with unemployment. and if you don't have the resources to leave your stock there, and then you start to seek a little bit of comfort in a drink. and that's what interest me, not the tragedy, but actually, you know, where is the hope in, you know, in the hot circumstances. ringback ringback in late january, the film's danish director simons rang wilmont won the world cinema documentary directing award at the sundance film festival. but what his film cannot tell us is that 4 weeks after its world premiere, the home no longer existed for its children. 2 it was evacuated on february 24th.
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the day vladimir putin sent his troops into ukraine. it was disbelief and shock. i couldn't understand, and that he actually decided to in bate or all of ukraine. i was just there, like a week before the invasion happened. the local authorities whole made these be actually made the decision from the 1st day to dig them out. they were traveling from the east of ukraine in their train in the compartments like which, which originally should be for people in this one compartment. but they were like, 12 fold them in one compartment you can imagine how was their reaction and they said that in the half of the way they were told to sit down on the floor and to turn off all the lights, you know, because they were, ah, they have a fear, i mean them, adults had the fear that their train could be, ah, shot by a russian army. some of the children were 1st housed in the vive,
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in western ukraine. in mid march, we met as at suffer off there. he's the co founder of the ukranian organization, voices of children. he took us to the temporary lodgings of the children who had been evacuated from the former home. here, he's working to get them the counseling many of them need. when the kids listening to the says when kids have to run to the basement, that you can't, yukon billeted from his brain, you conducted from the his memory subway kid with the teacher daily traumas of the 2014 war are resurfacing in the children of 2022, with some children are suffering from depression, others from hard, but that there's my depression, all about what i said at that by they cut themselves id as they stopped them. so she fired or they break their fingernails. so with the regular ridge in words that . ringback they are a house of splinters,
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say the homestead of a house of broken dreams. shattered hopes shattered faith in the world. fragments that they with the children are now trying to piece back together. 2 ah xannon that when you choose the most important things for them to feel safe to night to meet fatty are slowly starting to make plans, you mentioned they are beginning to feel safer, double and more stable as they been easier of us. so when the trembling in their hands, as he sang, directed old you meanwhile, all of the children had been brought out of ukraine. 2 in ukraine, deaths are mounting among civilians to lithuanian documentary filmmaker montage better. it's lush, was killed at the start of april. his films focused on victims of russian
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aggression from chechnya to ukraine. his tribute to the long suffering port, city of money you poor, was screened at berlin's international film festival. he died in my you pull in a russian rocket attack not long before the well known ukrainian documentary filmmaker and photographer mux livin was found dead in a suburb of keith. he documented the invasion from the start wars, shape, generations. the survivors have to live with their losses and memories forever. what helps their descendant is to talk about them or write about them like spanish poet evita saturday. oh, you wouldn't know amy. luckily i've never experienced war or civil war. lima. it's the worst thing that can happen to
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a country. how terrible that neighbors and friends suddenly become enemies. money on the law is horrendous situation. the only thing that can give hope is love now because i am very frustrated is a writer, slum poets, and feminist. and the new voice in spain's literary scene, her debut novel is about the spanish civil war, which her grandparents lived through. she's one of many artists exploring this repressed trauma from the past. i mean, member of the history of my country is i horton to me because the civil war was not that long ago that when it shapes our society to this day i'm and then other so, i mean my grandmother is still alive, lasso she suffer greatly. also from the fact that much was repressed, are forgotten savvy and major,
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i will tell him to guess will fidela lose that has yet to heal no guns common i dilemma? would allah duster uses flashbacks to tell a tale of undying love from the perspective of an elderly woman in days without you door as a teacher in 1930 spain galas, her student both are fervent supporters of democracy on the 2nd spanish republic. the spanish civil war broke out in 1936 after general francisco franco participated in a nationalist qu against a republican government. the nationalist declared victory in 1939, and franco was appointed generally simone. in the book, dora gilles love helps them resist the frank lists. but in 1940 gail is executed and buried in a mass grave. hundreds of thousands of people were killed and disappeared in franco spain. after the dictator's death in 1975 and the transition to democracy,
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there was not so much reconciliation a silence. many are still searching for their disappeared relatives today. it's important and it's important to see these old people. so, i mean, to imagine what they lived through. okay, again, my name's me, ronald. so ma'am, ma'am. mazda, really? there were children during that war, and to this day, they've only been met with silence. he gets em white, and i'll be honest. they're dying with the pain of never having found the remains of their husbands or father's. it's so sad that he's there, but i saw him out of the on the grandchildren's generation like saw stroke. are looking for a new approach to explore the past throughout a virus escrow as a celebrated slum poet. thousands attend her performances such as here, madrid and she has half a 1000000 followers. an instrument with them is
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with performances are like concerts yet. i saw sara has made poetry hip again. yes ma'am. i will get out of the continental that it says, members. yeah, he and i love with the are in the end only poetry can express feelings. so directly to the next one, thousands of poets, thousands of styles, a universe of emotions. them off y'all. i am when bought a ban, vic, a file, but you can't learn this sentimental education in any school up as they live either, you know, they're still there. so now you know, got to know how to recognize your feeling and find an expression for them in the end. if he got along with his mom and also have left, somebody just put a saddle of them for sa stroke, poetry is about exploring her own and collective emotions. her debut novel is about
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love and times of war. it looks back on to the future like $11.00, all said, giving an old woman. she came to a presentation of my book in madrid and thanked me your last without house. but as somebody said that thanks to this novel, she had finally found a way of speaking to her grandson about the civil war that she couldn't do before. i learned that i saw the book aroused his curiosity and they could finally talk about it. i was so pleased about that you want to within a month on the looking glass. so me. but on this now the war passed and our souls seemed to age millions of years. we lost friends and the lives we had once had, but not the need to teach our children to yearn for freedom. mm. ah. with that was our 21 for to day. will be back next week with more music for the song.
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or we were told that 14000000 loan accounts have been blacklisted for those people there at risk or even not getting financial services at all. as our question today is, is it fair to look out people from money knowing full well they might not have any other options. people have run away from the houses. people have done so many bought a few liberals when they go to the a 90 minutes on d. w. o. o. what secrets lie behind these walls? discover new adventures in 360 degrees. and explore fascinating world heritage sites. d, w world heritage. 360. get the app now. ah,
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let us issue. when i arrived here i slept with a single people in a room as a 9th in. it was harsh, fair. i even got white hair is learning the gym and language head. yeah, lots this kids to me and they built much tunic to and track with you want to know their story info my grants verifying and reliable information for my grants. how long does it last or an eternity time? it can be measured precisely and yet each person experiences it differently as if there are different forms of type type phenomena. a dimension and illusion about time starts april 14 on d, w. ah
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ah, ah, this is dw news lie from berlin, ukrainian shore, evacuating cities in the east of the country, in fear that a new russian offensive is on the way. we report from genea, where local authorities, shame, more than 700 people have been killed during weeks under siege by russian forces also on the program and then well met call cheeks a 2nd term in france's presidential election. but poll show for right drive open marine la, penn just a couple of points behind.
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