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tv   Arts.21  Deutsche Welle  November 15, 2022 7:30am-8:01am CET

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prior societies, ah, computers that else were you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can only go up woodson for but how they can also go terribly, watch it now on youtube. and for the sort of knows that berlin is like the trans queer city, ah, the term transgender didn't really come into existence until the middle of the 20th century. this been my west. berlin really was a safe haven back van. that's true. you could live here without being bothered with
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the vibrant cosmopolitan city of berlin, attracts l g, b t q i, people from around the world, including trans people. the transgender community has become increasingly visible in recent years. boom, blue trans people have always existed around the globe in every culture. berlin has played a key role in trans history for more than a century. now people come to the city from around the world so they can lead lives unconstrained by gender roles or conservative sexual norms. according to the city authorities, berlin is home to between 2 and 300000 queer people,
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an estimated 8 percent of the population. it's not clear how many of them identify as trans or intersects many places cater for the l. g. b t q. i community berlin's queer magazines, eagles. oil has collated a map of relevant venues on its online portal. because the euler d e advice centers specialist doctors, hundreds of party locations and cafes, as well as cultural resources such as museums and bookshops. we're taking you on a 4 chapter journey through berlin's queer past and present one that explores one why trans asterisk people from around the globe come to berlin to day to how a scientific pioneer challenged prevailing sexual norms. more than a century ago. 3, how berlin achieved cult status for its quiz, seen in the 19 seventy's and full what life is like for trans people in berlin today and what problems they encounter. but what
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does being trans mean? well, 1st off, trans people are part of the queer community. queer is a collective term for people whose gender identity and or sexual orientation does not correspond to the heterosexual norm. trans asterisk is an umbrella term for people whose your identity differs from the sex that they were assigned at birth. ah, well then there is a huge range. there are some people who identify themselves, trans man or trans woman. and then recall this they fit into gen a binary and some people don't even defy what male or female gender. and they defend themselves. for example, as non button eric chapter one. so why do trans asterisk people from all around the
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globe flock to bud? and we asked 2 young members of the trans community who have moved to the german capital. felicia maletchko, a tour guide in berlin's gay museum, which focuses on l. g, b, t, q. i, themes and culture. and holden, my dog, a, me, an opera singer from the u. s. who has put down roots in berlin. in tile, mon compton ish, bon, especially out of us come to yard st. lindsey. my name is holden metonymy and i moved to termini in 2013 because germany has about a 3rd of the walls opera. and i am treasure under. i felt comfortable sort of relaxing myself as a trans person in berlin. hi, my name is felicia my pronouns. are she her? and i'm a transgender activist and tour guide in berlin. i came out in 2016 so 6 years ago . and coming out of us, very mixed experience had
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a very positive experiences here in berlin, in the communities in space, i was moving in the area i was studying and the friends i had the social circles i have most of that was very positive. felicia again transitioning in 2015 at the age of 20. she came to berlin because she wanted to live in a city where she could come out as trans holden came to berlin from the united states for work, but it wasn't just a career move. there were also some highly personal reasons for the relocation i think what attacks it trans and queer people internationally to come to berlin is partially that there's a big, big community here already. and everybody sort of knows that berlin has like the trans queer city, like it has that international reputation for it already. when i think also because i don't want to call it a utopia, but it, it because it's not necessarily used hope yet, but it's like berlin is
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a really great place to be trans and queer, feels really, really safe. and i think a lot of the world is not safe. and so i think a lot of trans people come here because they know basically they're going to be safe. and if they come from really oppressive countries or oppressive places, bob, it's going to be so much better here. i think that's a major part of it. there are huge opportunities for trans people here. there is a chance for community just in places like this is we are at now are in other community spaces all across the city. things trans people in the rest of germany often don't have, don't have that degree. which is the reason why many trans people moved to berlin in order to live their life. where lin 1st became a queer haven over a century ago, that long history has helped give to days city its colorful and inclusive reputation. but the terms we use now to describe queer people are comparatively new . the term transgender didn't really come into existence until the middle of the
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20th century. is not to say that people weren't experiencing discomfort in their assign gender dysphoria or feeling a desire to express gender more broadly or more or differently than than society. um would have wanted or expected. oh, tempted to have a pioneer challenged sexual norms more than a 100 years ago. oh, berlin became internationally famous in the early 20th century for its hedonistic decadent night life. but it was also where the 1st groundbreaking research on sexuality and gender identity was conducted. and the 1st sex reassignment surgery, magnus, her spelled, was the driving force. he was a pioneer in sexology and one of the 1st people to scientifically investigate sexual and gender identities. in 1919,
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he set up the institute for sexual science in berlin. he coined the now outdated term transvestite for people who described themselves as trans asterisk today. he actually researched on the entire spectrum of gender identity and sexuality. he assisted people in his practice as a doctor to try to come to terms. he gave people a vocabulary about what they were experiencing, and he offered actual assistance in the case of, for example, of trans men and women. he helped them with, with early on gender confirmation surgery with homeland therapy with 6 her tree was tactical, less like, ah, hair movable. so he really didn't make a difference in all other people's lives. mm hm. james conway is the translator of berlin's 3rd sex, written by magnus hersh failed. it was published at the start of the 20th century
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and was one of the 1st works about berlin's queer subculture he ish failed, was himself part of this community, and wrote about venues like the queer night club and cabaret el dorado. it was later targeted by the nazis before that berlin was a place of freedom and experimentation in the viola era. you have really elva who is known to us through the um, the book and the film, the danish girl, the movie, the danish girl from the year 2015 retails the story of lily albert, the danish trans person, an artist was a media sensation. she was one of the 1st intersect people to undergo gender reassignment surgery. in 1930, she came to germany for the procedure he overcame from denmark and consult with bruce levels. his throat found he guided her
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through tend to confirmation surgery madness. harshfield wasn't just a doctor. and a scientist, he was an activist campaigning for the rights of queer people. this campaign included a revolutionary regulation in berlin from the year 19 o 9 co drafted by harshfield, a granted trans people the right to dress as they pleased in public and in the workplace. they no longer needed to fear arrest for public order offences. yes said hut mitten, pull inside president and deal else. god, it does. the 1st world negotiated a deal with the police chief which looked like this an athlete. herschel would issue a medical certificate ignore and a diagnosis which red transvestite consistent me. diesel duke knows a good with this diagnosis. the trans person will go to the police headquarters and get a photo id stating that be a transvestite interstate. these the pal zones and plants the steep and possibly
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that soon. and then the document would be stamped by the police chief div upon spelled out after started. life is come to put it side on has the if this trans person walking down the street in the police stopped them, say they could show their transvestite id and the police would refrain from arresting and charging them out of an up c n c. fester name on until the 1st in other words and, and this was a way of we're beating legal persecution or focus and that was an important milestone set at 19 o. 9 on her shrill initiatives. yeah. what's the handled? 9 for the 2nd gazette stood afo sophisticated said team here spelled was the head of his time. but not everyone agreed with his ambitious reforms. as far as the nazis were concerned, he embodied every thing they despised about the unsure min weimar republic. when they seized power in 1933, the nazis ransacked the research library at here spelled institute. it was one of the 1st targets of the nazi book burning program.
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that diesel bishop or pennell for the d vista fall knocked us hills at this book. learning that from the bust of mug, missouri felt it was carried over the head of the nazis as they marched towards the bonfire. little fear he might im institute miss seizing these trophies from the institute. there was a way of showing that the spirit of the by mar era must be extinguished wi symbolically casting them bust. and the entire contents of the library into the flames wound the schism to shift good in does foil ga bolton built? i was almost a pagan ritual to cleanse germany of quote unquote, unclean tendencies. madness hair spelled was on an international lecture tour when the nazi came to power and laid his institute to waste. he never went back to germany. after all, he knew that as a gay jewish social democrat, he would never be safe in a 3rd rash legacy. his phone died,
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a broken law, he died on his birth. i don't know as a significance to that, but he died having seen his life's work literally going up in flames. hash felt reformist influence was lost. during the nazi dictatorship, berlin's free spirit disappeared for decades. and with it, the freedoms that queer people had fought so hard to gain. but then came the 19 sixties and seventies. chapter 3, how berlin became a cult location for the queer community in the seventy's. when berlin was still divided by a wall, there were places in both parts of the city where transgender and queer people could gather and express themselves. i'll viet in different ways. as of responding by damage south, west berlin really was a safe haven back then. that's true,
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ma'am. you could live here without being bothered. you're wrong, we didn't really have any rights, but we could get everything we needed is copyrighted. there was a trans community which meant we could communicate with each other. this is scott. there were already basic networks in place, which is important because you need information and that existed in west berlin within this. but the trans community was as small as it existed here. and you didn't have to feel that you would just on your own, obscene or more sinister sca food harm yolanda to resign. ah norah occurred as written a book about her life story. as a, as in the time 63, when i came to west berlin in 1973, it was the 1st place i had ever heard of trans people consent or i learned there were people who were trans. hm. and that was very important for me because i saw that it was impossible that these people actually did exist. as a mentioned certain has gotten there was a nightly drag show, which was also something really special about it. but for me,
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it was also an opportunity to go and see trans people, your transmission to see it. not every one on stage was trans allen. there were also gay man who had made a career of performing and dragging with grandma i. but there were also trans women performing and seeing them was very, very special for me because i was able to see that it was possible to live that way . who the best known trans performer at the time was ro me hard? who's tardies for one of the reasons why disreputable west berlin became a hot spot for miss feds and the art community. the dutch national arrived in berlin in the 1970s. before that she'd been a dancer at the famous paris night club alcazar scene while she was an absolute idle of causes. she looked amazing and that alone made her role model i've it will be in 1974 ro, me hug, opened her travesty club. she wrote me hug in west berlin. it quickly became
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a popular venue with those thinking a more open, inclusive night life experience. ah, this was when really hug started dating david bowie. the singer like to play with gender roles and adopted an androgynous look in rebel rebel, he sings about a mother who is annoyed by her child's confusion. a boy at the same time dancer marlo la fantastic, was lured by berlin's free spirit and arrived from the united states. she loved the city so much, she ended up staying for 30 years. she also worked with ro, me hug for a time where she was coming from paris and she was with her name. and she came to say new. ready work that thing. oh,
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my kid. quiet enjoy of awe. before she rami hug, there was the she new berlin oldest here cabaret, or travesty theater as they are called, famed throughout europe. it opened in 1958 enclosed in 2008. i can try to work in cabaret. she knew my be original owner and founder of the capital and i left on new york going to fair lin at the my current job where she knew it was a year. then i and i'm standing working, an alert clarkston cavalry at the either mom, a cabaret,
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and especially cross dressing were in vogue at the time, marlo felt more comfortable and accepted as a trans woman and performer in germany than in the united states. with i will check and the girls won't. ready terminated again very badly, but berlin says jonathan, i liked it and jenny was very exciting in a wall there. i knew. fantastic people. i love travesty. ah. 7 0, the night clubs and cabarets shade to west berlin's image around the world. ah, in east berlin, there was also a small connected queer scene in communist east germany. nadia schellenberg lived
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openly as a trans person and was an activist in the queer community groups. one of her main meeting places was the san tugs club, which still exists today. ah, as rebellion via berlin was always melting hot for all kinds of people in east germany for intellectuals, homosexuals, artists, and miss fed. mm hm. all there wasn't much information in the eighty's and from a, neither in west germany, nor in the east to go on. it also wish and what you did see in the media was almost always presented in a very negative lights. a man in women's clothing. i think that was something out of the movies on clyde, on the popular. i'm firm with brooklyn, in east berlin show a lot of fun mas door was the pioneer in the trans community. she began collecting every day objects in the 19 fifties and exhibiting them in the goods house. miles door of the manor house became a villa, manian era museum and
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a famous meeting place for east berlin's queer community. on coming all the topic. i feel after coming out i met shalysea and that's how i found the community in via luncheon was already well known in the east german scene. but after german reunification, people's awareness about her grew a lot. 16 sex law. sure. lot of on miles door received the federal order of merit germ is highest order in 1092. she passed away in 2002, she to pave the way for today's more tolerant berlin. at the gay museum in berlin, and exhibition is dedicated to the efforts of trans activists like shalonda, fun miles dwarf and nadia schellenberg chapter 4, how do trans people live in berlin today? and what problems do they face? very many spaces in berlin?
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a can act a safe harbors for trans people, but not universally as video as a whole is huge dimension of head crimes and violence and discrimination that we experience in the streets and our workplaces. and in our social environments. it's difficult to gauge the exact extent of violence against queer people until recently, only a fraction of anti l g b t q. i. crime was recorded by the authorities in 2020 however, for lin became the 1st german state to publish an annual report. monitoring the homophobic and transfer big violence. in 2021, the victims support center monet, registered a spike and report despite an estimated 80 to 90 percent of incidence going unreported. the center recorded 731 cases of insults, threats, and attacks against transgender people, gays, and lesbians. in this, in between phase, where like, they can't tell if you're a woman or a man,
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people get really angry. they get angry that they, they can't figure it out, you know? and so, you know, people spit it you had like, um, like boys with like square water. me was quick ions or something like that. you know, like that stuff like that happens all the time. went on, i was walking home late at night and a boy was writing a bicycle and he was just like harassing me. and um is really scary. he was really late at i and there was maybe around here and it is not only the fear of hate crime that weighs heavily on members of the trans commune. ready. those who hope her fast and uncomplicated medical treatment in berlin may also be disappointed. and if we're talking about germany specifically, then there are the, there is the issue of massive barriers for trans people when they are entering the medical system, looking for gender funding treatments. some of these barriers may include extensive waiting period for access to hormone replacement therapies. are, and the kind of other medical procedures are long waiting periods with discriminating and humiliating processes that are part of that. despite many
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obstacles, trends people are becoming more visible in society. in 2021 voters elected the 1st 2 trans women to the german parliament. the bonus tag internationally, the spotlighted on hollywood stars like elliot page or mikaela, j rodriguez, who raise awareness about diversity. there were many decades of activism and resistance and risk taking by many people, particularly by people who could not, who could not hide who they were. and who can't hide, who they are. oftentimes it's people who don't fit into the categories and who can't, who don't have the option of hiding. right? it's, it's people who who are trans and present as trans. i think the history off, like the queer community in berlin is still important till today because like our
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cheese and family, our ancestors did a lot of work like also and the very hash condition. and i think like is their work and their passion, which allows us today to have this spaces to have knowledge and to have the idea of what it could mean being trans, being queer. and i am very thankful and a thing leg is one of the important part of being queered to honor the people. yeah. who have worked for it was dad for it. well suffered for it and a thing, it's important to acknowledge that every single time you're being out and queer. although the struggle for more tolerance and diversity continues, the cities past offers some hope. i think as a trans person in berlin, what i think i see, i see it becoming more of a sort of interconnected carrying system. so i see things like that getting even
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better in berlin. berlin is definitely home and i, i would like it to stay as my home. i know ha long lafayette hawk da vice small and lot are my dentist daughters don't the fall was like munsey. i expect that as an artist, as like a singer, i will probably move a couple of times for jobs, but berlin will always be home burned in the rainbow capital. it might not be a trans person's paradise yet, but the city remains the refuge for queer people. seeking an open community, just as it has been for over a century. ah,
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[000:00:00;00] with with oh ah,
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[000:00:00;00] with a beginning of a story that moves us and takes us so long for the ride.
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it's all about the perspective. culture information is d w. w. made for mines for wildlife in her wanda, these kids belong to a club that wants to protect it. it's part of the government's educational program because for one does unique flora and fauna is threatened. initiatives like this should help raise awareness is the idea of working eco africa. 90 minutes on d. w. oh. you sick? can't be destroyed, company you can try,
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but it's impossible. i don't murder ah. she performed for her life in auschwitz. jewish cellist anita lucko von fish. he was denazi's favorite conductor. mm hm. foot 2 musicians who lived beneath the banner of the swastika. ah, why was music so important to the national socialists? music of the odds were to be used as part of the motor machine. a film about the sounds of power and inspiring story about survival. thanks to music. as a home and usually stay fetched, the channels play out well, i was the only one and i was super lucky. user under the swastika starts november 19th on t
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w ah, ah ah, ah ah, says dw news lie from berlin as the g 20 summit opens on the indonesian island of bali, ukraine's presidency. lansky gave a video address outlining 8 piece formula. he said, russia must reaffirm ukraine's territorial integrity cold for measures to prevent

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