tv Kick off Deutsche Welle September 6, 2022 4:30am-5:01am CEST
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one to a foreign planet. in the 16th century, it meant being a captain and setting sail to discover a route. a race linked to military interests, a race linked to political and military proceed. but also linked to my financial adventure full of hardships, dangers and death. magellan journey around the world, starting september 7th on d. w. and i couldn't get there to match that gallery cartoon, glen eden freedom. but at the moment during the listing freedoms are being curtail . jeremy trying to show the world that it's changed. and then this event happens is that
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a guarantee of his tragedy effects every pass and who stands the european values, space, democratic values, and humanistic values. stay with when culture meets politics, tensions can arise. we visit the artist at mohammed dublin in egypt, who in spite of government repressions ruins, the caricature museum. and we examined the road images played at 1972 munich olympics when a terrorist attack shot the world. but 1st, we meet a ukrainian conductor and asked her what it means to make art during war. ah,
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o. one of ukraine's most famous musicians is back in germany. oxen alaneese is in by road just one year after she became the 1st female conductor to perform here at the esteemed classical music festival. but the world has since changed, that this is really a tragedy. and i think this tragedy affects everyone, not only people living in ukraine, but every person who stands for european values, democratic values, and humanistic values that the democrat dish about the whole my niece dish about their state. my nag are my entire family is in ukraine. of course it affects me to have better off. i worry about my family every day. oregon or mine, the anger heard again. rushes war of aggression weighs heavily underneath here and by roach to supposed to concentrate on her art. while back at home, bombs are falling and people are dying. there, sir,
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but thieves all. this also affects us as artists very strongly anymore because at some point she begin to have doubts about art and even humanistic values there and, and human istation about that. but let me keeps on despite these doubts, and she points for her beloved homeland in her own way. like shortly after the russian invasion at a solidarity concert for ukraine in bologna. ah . at the beginning of 2022, denise became the chief conductor, bolona. she's the 1st woman to head, the italian opera house there. her orchestra plays music by ukrainian composer. you reship jenko. it's one of the many concerts for ukraine. she's conducted eyes as emotionally. it's extremely difficult until you look for an ex nation. it. but for
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me, it's been helpful to remind myself that they were also was and revolutions in the 18th and 19th century online in the yahoo that gabe's could he get on the w 2 on. and yet about that there were also all of these great composers who are still relevant to us to day relevancy and, and who had the idea of saving people. yeah, it day of saving humanity. i read the gap, tottenham something asana you need managed to save was her passion project. the ukrainian youth orchestra, founded by her in 2016. i tried doggone hobbies done in 2 days. i'd organized a zoom called with the youth orchestra foster. at least it was terrible to see how my musicians i had these wonderful young, talented people who we've gathered from all over ukraine into one orchestra. to see these people have always looked me straight in the eyes when playing music. now exposed to this brutality, martin, you're acting out and in some cases in life threatening situations is
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a brutally that yet the advise of it least lebrands, but broad. eh, d's his own qualifies. this soon call was a shock for me and talked somewhat calling from bankers or basements mine. she was of some said that they couldn't unpack their violin yet have been monday because maybe they wouldn't have the 5 minutes to package away again like that. i somebody that because every 10 minutes there are sirens and rocky to dogs in milton gib, sir said n on the katanen. oh, luckily, most of the youth orchestra musicians were able to leave the country and continue to receive lessons beneath also toured with them in europe. one emotional highlight was playing maria city by sultan mossey from ki iv dedicated to the victims of the bombing of the mario pou theater. fled the contact in virginia when my last concept in bolona. i performed beethoven's 9th symphony. it was unsettling to re read,
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shall, as larry exact, where it says said, all people become brothers, i bought amend the at the end. it says that the shouldn't be tyrants or executioners on hank again against tyrants and dictators like great artists of the past asana. linny will not give up for 1970 to munich olympics were supposed to be the happy games, but the terrorist attack on the israeli team turned them into a tragedy, captured and broadcast. but the press, what role did the media coverage play less than 30 years after the end of the nazi era. the 1972 olympics and munich was supposed to be an opportunity for the young federal republic of germany to present itself as a modern open and cosmopolitan democracy. germans wanted to show that the nation responsible for the holocaust had changed for the better law. dempsey
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wouldn't him anger for people in germany were so looking forward to getting some recognition from the world they hoped they were really gratified, enthusiastic and proud of that good. oh, the design of the 1972 games was a clear departure from the marshal. look of the last olympics. germany had hosted in 1936 when soldiers had marched for and saluted hitler, witless favorite director. lenny reference style delivered the desired aesthetics complete with steely strong bodies and heroic poses the 1972 games and to show that was history. the country was proud to welcome thousands of athletes from a 121. countries in the specially built olympia pock put these on the architecture was meant to symbolize that, especially as it offers
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a striking contrast to balance olympic stadium. bank billings, 1936 olympic stadium, was an imposing edifice that embodied the knots, his megalomania. this is its ery counterpart built for the 1972 games that bad in the stadium in munich was even described as a modern tent riff and as a tent for a 2nd. that might only be in town for a short time before leaving the city again. i stopped by, it was supposed to symbolize lightness and transience in courts. violence tied them bullies yet the roof appeared to float. weightlessness over the top. it's transparent and elegant design reflected the game spirit as wendy and tom, if you think of the brightly holiday seeds and even the flags in green and blue, the whole visual conception of the olympic games via that will. i'd say this design really captures the image they wanted to present. i las vegas both admitted, ah,
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and visionary logo papa posters and plenty of personal tones that stood in stock contrast to the nazis color schemes. the design of the pictograms was cutting edge and there was the cute little mascot, but excellent cloudy. the uniforms of the limbic hostesses were from the same color palate, including a modern joyful blue, shallow took no props. daughter, a young jewish high school graduate, worked as a hostess. the other of these it's, she got this beautiful light blue suit on the young lady's duties involved looking after the guess it's, it's a claim and it was a very nice job. and she got to know a lot of people, she was very happy with well, for the young people, it was great, a kind of journey out into the world and developed i'm the world was watching. never had so many reporters flocked to a sporting event. it's spectacular. days were meant to be seen by every one. the
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world was invited to munich and ready to accept germany again including israel, even athletes whose families were victims of the holocaust made their way to munich . for the israeli team, it was a, it was a hugely symbolic gesture just to go. and i think it was maybe one of the 1st times that her, that a sizable israeli sporting contingent had gone to germany to complete and so on. i think that i think that i think, you know, the germans were very aware of that. i've symbolically important this was and he is, had a alicia father to see in his railey flag over the olympic stadium in munich after such a relatively short time really was the sensation for him and his and everything was working. and the thought the little tiny of it was thought restrictive security plan might damp and this euphoria and nothing was supposed to recall german militarism and the police stain. no one wanted to hear the experts, warnings,
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although there was evidence of possible attacks. and so on september 5th, palestinian terrorists were able to enter the olympic village unhindered. the terror group at the black september held 11 members if the israeli team hostage in their own rooms and shot 2 of them for the assailants principal demand, the release of more than $200.00 palestinians, most of whom were imprisoned in israel. negotiations with the german government went no way as the terrorist attempted to fly away with the hostages. the situation escalated into a fierce fire fight when it was over 5 palestinian terrorists were dead. but so were the 11 israeli athletes and a german policeman. ah, at the memorial service, avery brundage, president of the international olympic committee stated the game buffalo. it was
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a highly controversial decision. in the end, it was a refusal to bow to terrorism and defense at the olympic ideal as the world looked on. because a 1000000000 view, as in 98 countries were watching live, it was an unprecedented media spectacle. and as if to nearly this meeting with, i made its way. lindsey william, it was the start of a new era of multi media there, founded in the 1970s sales of tv. it's got a huge boost due to be olympics, as you can really see how the sporting events increase sales of color movies, especially guided us pop, found in of a full 1000 reporters were on site nearly twice as many as in mexico 4 years before . and they reported live to a world audience morning, noon and night, that set an ideal stage for the attackers, allowing them to forcibly redirect the global spotlight onto the middle east conflict. like an attack, after the attack, the town of september's members said,
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attacking the vatican or the white house wouldn't have given us the same media attention as the olympic games did. because the press was already on site. they were already there. i live, i'm from around the wild. yvonne national life stuff by an international audience was already gathered in front of the t v's. and i was watching that on the terrorists and take advantage of that time and sounds f as i'm it is. and that's what the games will well underway when the 1st reports of the crisis in the olympic village came trickling out. no one knew what to make of the situation. neither the organizes nor the reporters. from today's perspective, that's really hard to imagine. the games were carrying on in the stadium at the same time as there was this hostage crisis, just hundreds of meters away. there was a dead athlete lying in the, in one of the apartments there immediately a few 100 yards from that, from,
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from where the games were continue. they had never been a scenario. anything like it in the history of life reporting broadcast is around the world, switched back and forth between the sports events and the hostage crisis. journalist scramble to secure the best spot. but reliable information was still hot to come by. shallow took no block found after the media that as a hostess on the olympic side, her daughter could be in danger too. as celia trinity, she was already gone. when i heard on the radio, how there had been an attack. and they couldn't report any more details on her mac . honestly, it is finished. i cried because that news didn't give you the slightest idea what was going on as they didn't know of it is something else coming. what's going to happen? that's why it wasn't until the evening that the cold came shall not his daughter
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was safe. but for the relatives of these riley athletes, the nightmare continued. most of the journalists were sports reporters, entirely overwhelmed. they provided running commentary on the events following every step. even the positions of the snipers, we see the footage of the police on the rooftops going closer to the address. light athlete said case, they're seen that you are just look at their athletes on the roof. why they would be out on the roof. i don't know, but then at a certain point we realize that the palestinians can see them on television and that the germans have forgotten to tell the television stations to stop filming, as, as, who the terrorists had found out that side as we're getting in position 3 press coverage and reacted to that information, and that's when it dawned on everyone. okay, we have to do something. we can't just sit back and keep rolling our cameras and basically give the terrorists the heads up. yet the journalist remained on the scene of the 1st live act of terrorism to be broadcast around the world. even as
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a hostage situation progressed into a nearby military, airport members of the media swarmed the area, making it difficult for the special task force to get through this to took place before rolling cameras around midnight. a government spokesman wrongly announced that all the terrorists were dead, and all hostages had been rescued. his source of false report from an international news agency, a mistake that hasn't been explained to this day. 3 hours later, the terrible truth emerges. all 11 israeli hostages had been killed. the massacre left the world stunned, bringing shame and embarrassment to the german authorities involved. so many people ended up dead largely because of the bad handling of it by the german authorities. but this really typically tragic becomes in front of the world. you know, the whole world was we was watching this whole were was holding their breath. ah. the trauma of munich
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still echoes through the collective consciousness. 50 he is on the scars remain the he has asthma like that, a very french quote on the games must go on be that there is such an images that dominate our collective memory of that event along. and those are a product of the media does not help me like this image, a photo of a terrorist on the balcony than they it's, he does that. i'll alice good. if you look at the hollowed out eyes and the very straight lines it is. and that those evoke feelings of deaf orders for drama, the anthea, anchor vida, as fact, even now they reflect the feelings people associate with the attack. it is an anti problem. filmmaker kevin mcdonald held the tragedy of september the 5th, had all the elements of a thriller. his academy award winning documentary is compiled entirely from archive
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footage. i wonder if you could make a documentary using all real material real people actually also operated like a thriller. but told a story like a thriller. we're finding so much archive footage everywhere in the world, india, japan, i think in the film to something like 50 countries presented during his meticulous research. mcdonald found countless inconsistencies code his documentary, raised some uneasy questions with decision makers in germany. and i then refer brendan done as are the minister. i think i have to go to look what the producers doing. and then i went to the captain of the police, a company there and said, do something that didn't do anything. i've noticed the film shows the disastrous entanglement, but in german politics and mass media at the time germany trying to show the world that it's changed that you know, you can have
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a totally pacifists peaceful games where even the, the police officers were dressed in these blue hurry, he kind of welcoming new uniform so they didn't look militaristic. and then this event happens and everyone phrases like a, like a rabbit caught in the headlights because it's the worst possible thing that can, that a tragedy. inadvertently facilitated by germany's desire to show the world, it was a democratic and rehabilitated country. from munich, we go to cairo on where we meet an artist who finds inspiration out of the streets who doesn't shy away from being political. and it was just awarded to good to metal, cairo, a megacity built from concrete and the dreams of 20000000 people. now, how much of la chronicles life here on paper and canvas, his portraits of people from ordinary residence to the powerful,
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are depicted with affection and humor. they have a complexity like it find in a graphic novel organs many even though it okay, as stories are very important and my work fact stories are essentially what my arts about anderson, what motivates me to paint my own fan that will knock a sentence of metaphor for a joke, there's always a story behind op in it. mohammed upland knows to city light the back of his hand. in his studio in downtown cairo, he feels its pulse. he observes the way people move about their lives in 2011 when the masses talked to the streets for pro democracy protest. during the spring, ablow was there to demonstrations, converged a tally of square document by apple. from a boots perspective, he depicted the hope of the people as a hidden object, peach, again, and then
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a month when i was on top here square on i painted there, the 2 pictures on display here or from 2007 before the revolution. and from 2011 been been in the hotel for me, the revolution was not a surprise, nor was the fact that talk here square became the central setting. i was able to predict been like a prophecy haggard. the the i'm currently schafer abnormal that not far from tufty a square in of boston street. the good to institute is a key making place for artists. for subaru night in the institutes library has always been important pillar of her artistic education. she's a former student of mohammed abdulla, and often stops by for decades, the good to institute in cairo has been a place where art had space to breathe, especially in restrictive times like days. the view from the institute on to tuffy a square says is motivation for the future. to declare t from in kyle,
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is this for the greatest people of hi rose. this is an historic and very important place. hoyt, we're very happy that we've managed to create this space on boost tom street yet because these days there are very few venues for performances or places for artists or civil society groups to gather. hm. that's come on. you can go there, rehearse their meet up, and be a little bit under the radar under them ha das sign. it's our way of giving a little something from our side lie and it's something that is perhaps sorely needed in egypt up moment. besotted jessica. poke the t n a k p. mohammed. oblong korea has spent almost 50 years because his always championed and supported emerging artists. the community looks up to him. artists like allah abraham. he is currently exhibiting here in the access aunt space. for this work, his embellished bowls that are used to mix cement with cave paintings. he draws
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his inspiration from the city streets. keidel have this the heritage me thing in the cafe is. so we all need to make this connection 1st before you get on the art spaces or art centers, it's all in rich moments on the motivations we're. we are a, we used to have a we find the common things between us to file now a 100 kilometers to the west of kyra. on a weiss's, when mohammed abra established the fine art center, he will say founded a museum for caricature was here. the 1st of its kind in the arab world. egypt has a rich history of political caricature going back to the 1880 bought while they used to be many satirical magazines. this tradition has faded away and i couldn't get there to make that gallery cartoons need freedom. but at the
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moment the journalists, freedoms are being curtailed. most newspapers and magazines are owned by the government can home. so that's why it's not the best time for cartoonists right now . it's going to get it. many have stopped working altogether the content, but following some, one of my been somewhat every he had a fine art center hosts a winter academy where artists from all over the world live in what together for several weeks. in recognition of his multifaceted work, mohammed outlet is one of these he is recipients of the good to metal. this prestigious german culture prize means a great deal to him. his wife, his swiss, and his children grow up in germany, egypt, and switzerland. his daughter nura works as his curator and adviser. she's also involved in q in the athletic submission as part of the good metal awards ceremony in fy mom. at feel gamma, he's done so much for not just for himself,
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but for an entire earth community that buys. so i think it's important for him to have his family there we in and i think it's important for us to it's not always easy to be the child of an artist. it's a wonderful moment for us as well to see that it's all been worth while oscar had to buy some emitter, an island in the nile, casea 25 years ago. more than 600 large paintings were lost in a fire that destroyed his studio in tyra's historic center mohammed abdulla now works in his studio close to the water. he paints at least one pitcher every day, but finds it difficult to part with his work. a member of a shuttle to get that i were to lie on my bed. mm hm. but i don't like selling my paintings. i thought i'd actually rather rip them up for both of our them. sometimes i just enjoy ripping up my paintings and there, maybe i don't have to sell everything. i make huge bread preventative. this is an
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ongoing dispute of a who has the right to live on casea island. mohammed abala has joined the locals in their campaign to remain there. it seems this struggle will never end. but neither would his love for his beloved city of cairo. and that's all from march 20 would see you next week with ah ah ah thing
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close up in 30 minutes on d. w. an invisible enemy caused mass devastation during world war one, the spanish flu. it became one of the greatest disasters of the 20th century a global investigation on earth, new archival footage, and asked the question, what can we learn from this tragedy today? in 75 minutes on dw, with his, the journey across the entire continent. variety of cars. so with this, so the focus, the move is shake as visionaries and make it when bonnie, the meaning of modern africa this is an egg
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on d, w 9. when you work as an architect like go online or not at all. women in architecture. why are they so invisible to the larger publisher? we decided to ask them and for women go up with you know, sufficient models that she and identify with certain professions about their guiding principles. messes, and what is the poetry? the secret of the houses and i'm house about their motivations. architecture does so much to you, it needs you. a real goal of architecture is to create a dead one human about their struggles and dreams. sponsibility is huge. they have so much to lose. shattering the glass ceiling women in architecture. this has to be really,
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really good. start september 30th on d, w. ah, this is a d w news line for berlin, germany asked israeli families for forgiveness over handling of the 1972 munich olympics massacre. president, calling for the shy meyer acknowledges germany's responsibility for failing to protect israeli athletes at the games. 11 israelis dined following and attacked by palestinian militants also coming up the program. the u. k gets a new prime minister this.
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