tv Europe Revealed - Migration Deutsche Welle November 3, 2022 7:15pm-8:01pm CET
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had all those layers of people who passed for he had left he, i created where sad, happy got married, fell in love, thought and felt pain. barnison, people today may get around faster. but at this meeting point of past and present, their reminded of how much they have in common with those who lived here more than 2000 years ago. that said show up to date a nicole flow. this will have a more world news of the top of the hour of next. here on d, w. a documentary i examines the impact of recent global events on migration in
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a new tag to this facade spots in germany, europe, and the world. d. w. travel extremely were in awe ga baja, many of my friends that sacrificed their lives. we can live like folks do in europe will have you brought the legacy of the harvest clearly depends on the fly. with migraine, flor needed audio look at them as cinema throws them off. when do every one does it that we weren't 0? we earn money and pay taxes. eva was now follow a predominantly white working class men around here. we want our own place by grace and b. it's right away. everyone's knee jerk reaction is close to borders, but these people will reach their destination and when they do what happen?
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since he sent muslim, get done. europe wouldn't be what it is without the work of millions of immigrants. there are a big part of its history. to day the continent is confronted with its biggest wave of migration since the end of world war 2. millions of people have fled the war in ukraine. on the one hand, europe and europeans are welcoming these refugees from the east with open arms. on the other, for years it is closed, its doors to migrants arriving from the south. turning the continent into a militarized fortress which migrates, they are allowed to cross the use closed borders. this is the big question that divides europe and its inhabitants. it's not just a humanitarian issue. more than ever. europe needs immigrants to breathe new life into an aging continent.
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ah, for most europeans rushes invasion of ukraine came as a shock. faced with a mass of humanitarian crisis, europe reacted promptly. volunteers from across the continent took action that as the military you can sleep in tent 12, or 3 lafayette within days, countless aid structures were set up to help relocate refugees across the entire continent. without me, where are you going? oh, to prague about the you was ready to help. member states gave refugees the opportunity to work and attend school right away. neighboring poland remains especially committed since the war began. crack, whoops,
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population alone has risen by more than 15 percent. most every family in poland is helping ukrainian refugees in one way or another in keys in k. if you in keith, his love to be in circle a school. if i shut down a rocket to day and he to residential building again. i've been a brother. he is 5 minutes away from me. can you imagine with him and school that? oh yeah. yeah, yeah. so i, so i heard everything will be all right over it will agnes covey dot scott worked for a museum in krakow, when, on the 2nd day of the war, she drove to the ukrainian border and brought back 2 bus loads of refugees. there is no store our bedding we any, we desperately need capillaries shorter, golly, come on in. she and some friends turned a former university building into
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a makeshift hostile. it provides accommodation and support for up to $200.00 refugees, mainly women and children before they continue on their journey. which mazda some boxes of in the area isn't perfect because it was sent up in 2 days with money from private don't or not to put about maybe that's why it has this home. he feel to his doggone yoga on come on, we're still working on it, but he, i still really, dana, i fool these women dream of going back home thinks i said come here with very little luggage and i haven't only brought the base they not only us are bloody they all hope the war will be over soon. robin is, i just hope that other europeans continue to sustain. that good will. i'm case, the war lasted longer, which i'm dreading who was 8 and if we may need their compassion and i went hans to much longer does have a use of says the ukrainian refugees are benefiting from a surge of empathy and solidarity. but europe isn't always as welcoming to those
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who seek it's help crossing borders into the you is proving increasingly difficult . many member states have built walls since the fall of the berlin wall in 1989 more than 1000 kilometers of new barriers have been erected in europe between greece and turkey, between hungary, croatia and serbia. in fe without a media between morocco and spain. and in 2021, 187 kilometers of barbed wire were added between belarus and poland. here migrants are constantly turned away. it's not just the walls and fences that keep potential intruders out, satellites, and drones, monitor the waters in and around the e u. this is the river ev ross, 500 kilometers long. it concert, it's a natural border between greece and turkey. it's also one of the most dangerous
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entry points into europe. the river is constantly watch the greek police, an army patrol it with the help of front tx, the european border and coast guard agency. what dis, device of security comes at a cost. the e u and grease have invested billions of european reinforcing border controls. the latest development, this 40 kilometer long steel barrier meant to keep out any would be intruders. in recent years, thousands of people have tried to get across the everest border. many of them have also fled war in syria, afghanistan, yemen or ethiopia. and they aren't welcomed everywhere with open arms. it was in the me been illegal. immigrants are a daily problem. they unfortunately,
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a big problem. they shouldn't be allowed in at all. when emma is no fee, lucas, i'm a member of the national guard. well, there are many of us here at the city of the any time the army needs us, but we're ready. dileskimo, montana, middle of love. we learn about weapons, how to shoot of everything that's needed, but without pay, of course, yet we do it for our country and for our family. so to me, if a legal immigrants cause any trouble on them, we know what to do. but hopefully that won't happen. dabilla ah, cost us the haughty odyssey is a farmer and cafe owner in a village near the river ever us as a child, he lived for several years in germany, when his parents couldn't find work in greece. he knows himself what it needs to be an immigrant, but for him,
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there's no comparison. you couldn't give him the notice. we were economic immigrant . this in the germany was looking for workers and they get the bigger military, missa. we didn't sneak into the country if we'd been unable to find work a little move ago, we would have come back home to, but that is the most we weren't there literally taxes like any one else. we didn't deal or anything. uh huh. mm hm. well, if it up a little i left here, when i was in 5th grade, the up was a in the beer hall. i'd hear germans say it on, pardon the expression, the greeks, her hair so gloomy. i also experienced racism at work and it went abroad. you're always a foreigner as well. that never stops that when i sent kennels the above,
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if the whole day. at some point you will experience racism in autism here in greece and i feel like i found my family against that 80. my mom will my home country to both of them with i lived on been as you go it to me don't, you will do so awesome. and you don't do animal see me says sony beeson buff want isn't diesel. they go math. so what is with western? europe's post war economic boom would scarcely have been possible without its so called guest workers. mainly from turkey and greece. they were only meant to stay for a while. yet many settled permanently and brought their families. these guests became
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fellow citizens, which wasn't easy for either side. ah, but it adds on their parents came to germany in 1968 and 69. this my father arrived in munich and 68 to call than went on to cologne. my mom came 6 months later, most of our problems with our documents. so that's how life for the units of and family started in cologne for to come read a use of and we'll go with the mr. vinny and we're standing. gosh woman, i my mother. i'm a crunch dog. i know that my papa. com going to nathan from dish dust asked my luck deutsche. my dad came to germany for the 1st time in 1958 as a guest worker and a factory. my for his dream was always to earn money here in deutsch and go back home to naples and, and mercedes stood on, then people would say, look at penny. no, he's made it down. he's a big man. now i go some unfortunately, that didn't happen that because my dad still lives here. healy but still i feel
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both neapolitan and from cologne, both equally a part of shakes by hudson and no boost. the bon i know go, boom, fun kin done. took we were quite the group of kids, my walk on a turkey, she, tunisians, moroccans, greeks, spaniards, own few mission want to me. we were all the same. one does come home. if he spared till mid mid season. it was only much later that we started to feel uncomfortable here and mom has foreigners and over they called me spaghetti eater or macaroni eater when he flips up. minutes and i'm so my parents told me i must be neat to be 10 times more german than the germans for them to accept you to judge acts of tim from. can you ridiculous? modest gunther begun to pin code to come on one job? why those all month that was the summer of 1989 when glossy and under had beat box tomorrow. and i wrapped lyrics by l. l. q j eliquis jigger and that one of a said
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a month that start to rough group rep. and so he founded microphone mafia right on the spot. your microphone must have been loose in the mentioned with these. and we loved this music. i'm probably because we could identify with the people who made a tom when he does parked it. you didn't need any ex of instruments, lamented. yeah, just on pen and paper walton. blackpool stiff, declined the human form addicting yard. the 16 year olds from that place are still in us aware of the alcohol and their dreams having changed to move to music, live in sync with it. ah, i wouldn't be active with guns negha mic sunday. we realized right away that drop has this power to reach people missions, so you an old people identify with our lyrics with our music, didn't you see it was so we said ok, let's wrap a better lives with her about the stuff we weren't able to talk about him about us,
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the any it's he in quinton good as his gut a dust me though it's germany gave me and my parents a lot 30 years ago. i see she including a certain way of thinking these are some of the traditionals is a bit from the left, a bit from the right would in, but also a bit out of the box. ok. because there are so many cultures here on the as it ah, is what is, what was yoga like i wanted for years they expected us integrate. how much more can we do? we got to school. we were, your kids go to school, here was the, it's i, parents did so much for this country, hon. within that, they're still saying, but you must to integration when and that's been passed on to the next generation. but now there are people traumatized by war suffering and death to squeak justice. so we as a majority society issue to which i believe we now belong, should welcome people 1st health mentally as will become twice yeah,
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bab. many men and women are willing to do anything to reach europe. but the reality is, only a tiny fraction of them make it every year, thousands of migrants drown, trying to cross the mediterranean. more than 20000 between 20142021. a tragedy that europe has grown accustomed to, ah, these dots represent the number of bodies that have been recovered. though many finds are never registered. despite the dangers and all the efforts to discourage them, some migrants do manage to reach europe's shores. se, dude, york is one of them by your, by them. oh, are regionally from senegal. he passed through libya before reaching spain by boat . some of the us
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get us almost a whole handle it. we're the ones who pick the fruit guys ran north. it's the reality you see here it will and love little bethany me can on every one. picking fruit is an immigrant. i look at that common everything that you eat and enjoy it. home with your families has gone, is picked by people who are suffering a little hogan, just a, you know, the in just look at all of this photo, some sr la handy, get federal, and the label, receive miserable wages, and suffer a super in which or they don't have decent housing, including the people are living under plastic sheet in places made from wooden pallet, paula equals poverty, galvan palate, and madera. berman as him, which in the winter it's freezing, cold and and in summer, scorching, harness in one but even he can't ever relax like that is but of whom. oh, shameful that i say and i've been going every one prefers to look the other way. it
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benefits as if this didn't exist side open with, you know, a thing that's the reality. nice minority, alina. they could at least build alternative housing, because there are tons of solutions better than this one would game, which is mostly she wanted me horrid gaze day. it's a bit so now we deserve respect fiscal missy down to be treated with dignity and we didn't if he can. the bit of humanity. awkward it woman, anita i said bully guinea. this is the industrial park elastic. so she had at his bernoulli's spanish society should understand that we are contributing to we do every one, does the okay that we work with them. are we are earning money and paying taxes. it's almost button gilbert and was eva say do do you is a member of our new c and association that provides aid and advice to migrants. it
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also campaigns for better working and living conditions. he of missy gave out to me. if i knew he can build a shelter to house 40 men and women, but even greater than the authorities and the politicians could do even more with it because no point enough had, must guess though, it's a gesture to show the hum and no more excuses out of them, we'll start out again. i must excuse us. conditions on some farms in southern europe are reminiscent of those in the days of slavery. cheap workers for cheap food in rich europe. but luckily, there are farms where labor relations are more equitable. on beller gonzales as far migrant workers are treated with respect. lemme know they all. when i was in school, there was him like greater a wet force coming from within spain. you did love. my father had
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a team from civil heading and i went from an adjacent venosity and they came just to pick store beretta, lagossi kelly lawford aisha. out of here, you put us and i begin yoga. now there's just a small percentage of spanish workers a, the rest of from molly morocco, portugal until guerria do i. e will aria you know, you got it that well you how's it going? is the fruit. ok. i for the doing yes, more or less for miss a lot of it that we had. yes. let's bad. and on a ton a ton. you got them. what do we do then? paint them black, paint them into the yes, much in da said in the think oversee some $75.00 or 80 percent of the workers on not from spain,
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maybe. and the harvest clearly depends on the flow of my going on the agreements that the countries have made and how this is being handled. geopolitically, a commodity atenolol, 20 percent of workers in spain, from the agricultural sector come from other countries. mainly from outside the e. u. the statistics are similar and many other member states what, what europe do without migrant workers, there, the backbone of its economy. care givers. cook's couriers, doctors, i t specialists. there's also another argument to be made for immigration. europe is aging, and demographers are sounding the alarm. soon there won't be enough young people in europe to ensure its prosperity and standard of living. but decade ago for worker secured the pension of one retiree, by the year 2060,
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there will be just 2 working people for every retiree. this ticking demographic time bomb poses a threat to every country in europe. rejection show that if germany wants to maintain growth and preserve its social systems, it needs to take in 400000 migrants a year. that's why, since 2013, the country has welcomed some 2600000 refugees. what integrating them is not always easy. for the newcomers or their host country. both need to be open to what can be a long process. in berlin, the restaurant be an angel, is a project set up to promote integration, run by a charity. it was founded by former journalist under the as tucker. i am honest, i merge bush's here. oh is it a human and my standard line is your hair to pay my pension under typical old white
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german mail, fish. i'm 6100 and reliant on the next generation to keeping comfort in my old age shout outs for susan bin angeles might own from be an angel was founded in 2015, was due to the humanitarian emergency situation and lack of support in berlin, which has since developed even further has been we've placed 900 people in apprenticeship programs and around the same number and jobs focus and power aim is impairment. we want people to be able to live their own lives without her health and your own was lim, drunken. we. i mean, we have seating for 110 people harbor. we have 7 trainees right now. our team consists of 16 people from 10 nations who only worked with refugees with fought cushions. hello emron. i believe they're still in the war in syria. forced us to flee,
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even after we settled into refugee housing, i started learning german inner. i then applied for official papers and got them right. know it, luna? salon. hello. hello. yeah. you for how's, where everything ok, give that i missed you or did you miss me understand? we, misty them. says be mothers, glover, i registered as a language school and needed to reach b one and b to level of it money, any germany certificates. go a long way. here i looked for a suitable career, the where i'll and cooking was my passion. when i started working here making desserts for the restaurant and he react, lemme get there, but he yvonne, so how did you get on with the interview source with the ok here for dish a. yes. okay. and easy about you're still not happy mr. freed 9 via
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it's been fueled i, sasha. no. because i'm 34 years old. abstruse. i graduated in 2 months ago on dust, which means i'm a young chef. nation on this hand. so i'll only be paid. what a young chef earns fuzzy, which is disappointing. it's been endorsed, i yes, i understand. he's had a fall. i have experience and the certificate that show is i've done an internship here, faro, which didn't get and i think 2 years experience should be enough to get a good starting salary. we'll see. yes, i'll keep trying a in the spring of 2022 under the as turco and his team began bringing ukrainian refugees who had fled to poland and while dover to germany for years, people from countries bordering eastern europe have immigrated to the
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e. u. but until now, for other reasons, this footage was shot in the summer of 2021. at the bottom yes checkpoint on the ukraine, poland border every day, thousands of ukrainians lined up to go to work and poland. it shows, even before the war broke out, how close ties were between the 2 countries whose 6 months later ukrainians were lining up again, this time to flee putin's army and to regain their lost freedoms and safety. things can change incredibly quickly. within the u. people moved from one country to the next without giving it much thought. it's easy to forget that this freedom is an achievement and that the free movement of peoples is one of the pillars of the european ideal. one that's also foster decades of
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economic growth than others. you know, in 1999, the erasmus program finally arrived in romania county that i applied for it and managed to get a scholarship also a longer bulk dime. a romanian architect, living in belgium, is one of those who benefited from the idea of a unified europe. to nom she would you? i didn't know what leaving romania for a year meant back in 1999 open troop and on. she asked on some, not, it meant tons of paperwork was photocopies, medical tests and other things to get my visa gossiping. visa she purchased the whole process was so she mediating and so tedious that when i left, it was such a relief. and i said to myself and thank god you're out. i cut you. no, no,
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i didn't want to go back. that's how mad i was romania, romania. she thought that a little more but i left behind my family and very many friends. i did miss the yes . warm enough, i can imagine sullivan when i arrived in live and they didn't know much about romania and looked at me oddly to associated romanians with beggars and thieves. dangerous. wanted to harm belgian noble jenny and they say you're from romania, but you've got blue eyes. i suppose i've always found that said local us as asking, but that all change when romania joined d. u a can. but now that belgium had met more romanian. i'm not just beggars that leads to such a thought. i believe there indian has changed, but a less asking bob. besides lou, nobody in brussels was actually my own. ian yet h. the use most diverse city around 75 percent of brussels residents are foreigners
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or have foreign roots. do not worth a few. but if you go now, you're not viewed as a foreigner and brussels issue to really you just one of its inhabitants in county, not at all money as the state romania is still not able to protect its citizens. saddam belgium is libra pendragon, and i felt free because for the 1st time in my adult life, because as i knew i was safe simplified. that the very fact of being european should offer us this protection finishes and, and the feeling that we can live our lives with dignity ah, 2007 was a crucial year for romania. along with bulgaria, the country joined the european union. many romanians immediately took advantage of this opportunity and left their homeland and out of
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a bottle yana. their own blankets, almost a whole 1000000 romanians have emigrated on one that's a huge number with the romanian immigrants. care for the elderly in italy, work on farms all over europe. make on all the construction sites i visit. i hear people speaking, remain in that syndrome one got it. these of the romanian people had a nutshell, build and feed you it that says you want them with darrell, so many romanian intellectuals who left this to that glycerol and hopefully causes contin where i think that that one of us are now low enough on i thought 30 she they them, for instance, when i go to any hospital clinic in brussels, unique or there's an exist, i always see the name and some romanian doctor. put us avoid one moment, the doctor on one some leave. others stay such mass exodus as of workers have left ghost towns and deserted areas all over europe.
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here in red, we can see the regents that are losing the most inhabitants, mainly and eastern europe. people are moving to more prosperous areas with more promising job markets. in blue on the map it's especially grim in bulgaria, which has lost 15 percent of its population in the last 20 years. and it's predicted that by 2040 over 30 percent of bulgarians will have left their country, making it the fastest population decline of any country during peacetime is healed. to soon i met over for a week or so ago that it says this village is located in southeastern bulgaria. we know to show it to near the bo gary a turkey border. she had a, in the past she, there were 1200 inhabitants in you, but as of now unfortunately. so there are just 35 people left article tracy edge,
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t loses yellows. only go unfortunately for villages located far from the cities. but that's what happens with it. it's the great migration. people die, that's it. but no babies are born generally. that's all there is to it. that garage, blameless you ought to the bitter brag of there was a pop where we will gather tolvey. they threw great parties, ma'am, like now there are no celebrations. what no parties, nothing, no good. everyone stays at home. do me. there's no way to go when you no one to say a few words to no one to tell any stories to not a soul in sight, then i have a son who's now living in france. what do he come saying once every 3 months i've been amazed that they like to visit the me? do you have to that's life
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feeling forgotten and abandoned is a frustration that doesn't just eat away at people in southern and eastern europe. this feeling of abandonment also exists and economically troubled parts of western and northern europe to like and red car in the north east of england, which has fallen on hard times. this is a call merrier. red car is in the top 3 percent of deprivation in the country. we've had a numerous amounts of unfortunate happenings over the years that the of made our area saw a creep on. those deprivation scales the still works have been around for round all 170 years. unfortunately in 2015 with like large stocks of steel and unfortunately it died.
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i me, dogs in statements for 36 years and i've got friends who have been in there for 30 odd years. it really didn't get a lot of names, confidence, so it, you know, it being may the final state of the world. and now, you know, they're gonna be told to they go out the golf course is to be baristas. and, you know, make coffee and sandwiches for, you know, these are these chains and it was just, it just devastated people. it really did devastate people. franky wales runs a charity that's trying to bring a ray of hope back to the people of red car. the former boxer has made his boxing club a pillar of his organization. the classes are very popular with the local youngsters . there's not much else for them to do in town.
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at coda hall, franky wales organizes a variety of events that provide entertainment and good cheer. most people here feel far removed from what's happening in the major cities. in 2016, the majority of red cars residence folded for breakfast with brakes. it was very important for us 71 percent of the people in this town 40 to leave people who are at the point where they were just like i was listening. so we need to change, i believe that's one. and i'm alice. i said, i'm not an economist. but if, if i give the european union a pound and they give me 70 pence back. you know, i'd go on a minute when a 30 pence going. so i'm, i'm quite happy foot for rose to spend our own money, make our own laws. we want the industries to come back. we want our own place by
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no pe and a lack of jobs across europe. people in disadvantaged regions feel neglected and let down by their governments and elected officials. some politicians target these spheres and frustrations. here, anti immigrant rhetoric finds receptive ears. it slogans and policies divide, not just communities, but all of europe itself. still poland is an example of how quickly things can change after it joined the e. u in 2004 many poles left to work in britain or other member states where wages and standards of living were higher. but many have since returned and not just because of breakfast. business is booming and poland in 2021, it had the 9th largest economy in all of europe. the city of
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woot, once known as the manchester of poland, exemplifies this transformation. kasha hollis is one of the many emigrants who returned home to be part of this upswing. f that's of m. i was working at the day care center jones's. and i thought if i were ever to go back to poland, i damp one night that the parish children were not going to show them how to learn languages and how much fun day care can be skim. yeah. so fun that the kids wouldn't even want to go home and stuff like never. those was the main reason why i came back. shelton, i to start my own business or show others what i learned in my years abroad and bring it back to poland fuel let me push, but it didn't work out. unfortunately. you said it was, i've ended up at about charles but polls returning from abroad can't make up for the labor shortage caused by the economic boom. pollings ruling law and justice
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party, which is traditionally very anti immigration, was forced to turn to neighboring ukraine. when these scenes were filled, nearly every employee at hollace as barbershop was ukrainian is, did you all the others were killed us today and i was studying in ukraine, dylan, some charitable, but i quit because i didn't see my feature there. play hung. that's why i moved here together with my girlfriend and viola nato. she talked me into coming and we came here together to study the to the square video which left for the policeman. dennis is one of the many ukrainians who come to poland to work and finance their studies. he if they that, oh like that, but i thought it might at 1st i worked at mcdonald's. i didn't like even the worst job is still better here. electing of aetna like you can live a normal life even on the lewis wages of blood. and we're not liking ukraine now.
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getting in yet will life say hello to they. i have come here to stay and i didn't come just to work and go back later on, which i feel in a bit of both to polish and ukrainian poor. lucky. a coke and i, he had no extension apple. somebody who's but i think will in the what the hell? the schnell yeah. this is that mr. man, you who's on the for him, you mama come back to something we all laugh system if we see things the same way. they can have sim levine, this actually bought ukrainians. have more in common with polls than with russians . am i am the answer is neg when they're just, polls orient themselves to the west and their way of life of them on the spectrum
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of ukraine is not like that yet. don't. so go, either you're going up to holland is more advanced now that it is part of the, you know, the bookstore compared to ukraine, which is still hoping to get into the use of the course for margaret of a, for the one year almost in the summer of 2021. life and poland seemed full of promise for julia and denis. 7 months later, russia's invasion of ukraine changed everything. while jojo was desperately trying to get her family out of ukraine, dennis was nowhere to be found. his cellphone wasn't working ukrainians, clean their country, have now been granted temporary protection in the u. this emergency measure gives all ukrainian citizens the right to live and work in any new country.
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we got the waste of ohio. i think many ukrainians will stay in europe. unable hot, but many will come back to rebuild ukraine. chavez? resurrect it. if you don't, what day did you, michael? can you not? she knew it or people are dying just so that we can live freely. zone is not like under that tyrant. in russia, the bravo, all your agreement will take meal and bathroom breaks on route. great, thanks to learn, which was at the quantity is in which we want to live, like people in europe do freely in a democratic country under the rule of law. oh, that's some kind of democracy. yeah. which is that if we want to be law abiding to walk, we want to work to rebuild ukraine at the dock. you will not be told. there's no doubt that we want to live like in europe. many of my friends sacrificed their lives so we can live like folks do in europe for years, a job. that dos
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a man and not like in that evil empire. wisdom. deep fatty is love was the me, the list life without democracy and freedom isn't an option to cookies and then we will live in europe board. i'm not one of the big problem to me. even that's why it was a little that's why that's why our families are fighting. the people will always move in search of security freedom and a better life. both within and outside of europe, yet migration changes not just migrant lives, but things in their host. countries to use them to me. i mean get out. awesome. now the sound to me immigration was my salvation. i dare say i was privileged mike, but in the meantime, over the past 20 years,
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i've come to the conclusion that this privilege works both way and why many meaning that those welcoming the immigrants enjoy this privilege to lead. there were revitalizing full trust with the health and heal south society. i consider this a good thing was the local born the europe must rethink its immigration policies from a humanitarian and practical point of view. the crisis in ukraine has shown that the you can welcome large numbers of refugees swiftly and efficiently, rather than leaving them in limbo for years. europe means to find new ways to receive and integrate people and these migrants have rights and want to be seen as future fellow citizens. many are already living and working on the continent. they are europeans to
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they're always on the lookout for ideas to fight noise pollution and the illness it causes even an hour mean auto. the silent last. how everyday life can be quieter? oh, in 30 minutes on d. w. o . sometimes a seed is all you need to allow the big ideas to grow. we're bringing environmental conservation to life with learning packs like global ideas. we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can all make
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a difference. knowledge grows through sharing and download it now for free. ah ah, ah ah, doesn't stay that way and here is live from berlin. pakistan's, former prime minister, him run con shots and wounded out of political rally. he was leading a large demanding snap elections after being ousted from office this year. his
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