tv Afrimaxx Deutsche Welle April 2, 2023 6:30pm-7:01pm CEST
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and this is where all the ashes serving on europe to savor you. romance. 60 minutes on the w. 9. what our sport all a scoring, do we say thereabout never giving up sports like every weekend on d. w. mm hm. ah, situated in the heart of johannesburg, this museum offers a thought provoking, and educational experience. it serves to remind us of the segregation and discrimination under the apartheid regime. welcome to the appall take museum. ah,
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within these walls are unique exhibitions that illustrate the rise and fall of apartheid late. so we take a glimpse into the past. so history never repeats itself, but 1st we had to gone out to see how daniel tay is breathing life into rule spaces where he's modern architecture. then meet x comedian turned restaurant tear jennifer melendez schmid. we then hear the soothing sounds of della. do me a spoken word artist living in rwanda, the power flow through my veins. power. my name is pamela tonga, and you're watching after you max. oh ah ah, ah,
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the fall we talk to the no yes young, whiny about the atrocities of a party. we shine the light on the so we to choir. i could tell you all about the quiet, but you have to experience it yourself. shake this out. oh i, the sounds and stories own filled africa is the way to quiet, wants to bring them into the world and unite people through music. when ever they come from music man's sharing piece. the mother of therapy that i believe works wonders because it has no boundaries coming from a family of choir members in masters. it's a way to raise jimmy moodle. they'd be an emmy award winner and the musical director of the soil to choir, which has a diverse repertoire that includes a variety of gospel, spiritual, and traditional african phone. it is important for me to share music with people because we are able to connect to a we are able to express ourselves, our feelings,
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driven by a calling to serve. as musicians says, artists, vivid responsibility to actually take a knit embracing issues. oh glenfield, in most cases i raised those on stage through, through singing and that's what i believe that we as people we need to, to share experiences in order to grow together. oh, when they not until the ensemble meets and jimmy's parents garage for rehearsal, ah, no normal our graham members are from so it to some are born in villages that on the country, but to believe jane. so a to it, why is there only social come and most of them are of educated,
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said that it had to get jobs. so replied by all means through, you know, come together and create some kind of work for all of us. jimmy, he started singing at the age of 8 in the choir, founded by his grandmother that would later become known wald white as a way to gospel choir to branch out from gospel music. further on in his career, jimmy started the soto quiet. ah, so it's a big musical culture. we lend music from our homes friend and it stays. so it's something that is within us and when you're around. and so if you're going to work, you know, you'll find yourself singing in the bustle singing in the train. it's even difficult to differentiate between a friend around and a wedding because they're the energy future it's. it's a cultural thing. it's just swift enough and it's your list of this drive to, to go out and share music unites us as
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a group because we come from different cultural background. so in everything that we do, does an infusion of all the coaches coming together. so in essence, it's and it's a cultural exchange we have performed in many countries. we've been to canada to australia. we've been to the u. k. we've been to most parts of europe. the list is endless. ah, we incorporate a lot of african started tending through music stories that come from ages ago. and we ran workshops out on the world of the schools and all that and we injury, we use music to tell the stories that i believe it's good because we believe that i started to be told all around and through music it becomes much easier for
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people to actually get interested. ah, the people all over the world can actually feel what we are doing here. even though and and not yet because of their fuss is of gravity. leg to we are all attached to jimmy has 16 members in his choir eat, bringing their own bit of magic to the music. ah, well, well at family it is so much unity. we are very, very close group of people and it helps a lot when we are performing and also in we have problems crossway human. sometimes they'll be differences, but they're easy to be sorted out because this on that we are, we said,
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oh, it was good to see require performing outside the country because it's not only does about singing, but it's also about learning about how the world operates. but other cultures, it opens up the mind, you know, we, we learn a lot to that we come begging of families and our communities. so there's a lot of cultural sharing. that's how we grow as human because we are citizens of the world. and we need to learn from each other. oh, the party museum showcases the country's history of sake, legation, and discrimination under the apartheid regime. it offers a powerful and poignant reminder of the struggles and chimes off the south african people. i'm joined by the museum manager to newly. i don't whining for nearly
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a thank you for making time for us now. this museum is known as the pre eminent museum. could you please elaborate on what that means? the bought that museum was opened in 2001, and it's known and acknowledged as the pre eminent museum for the reason that we are dealing with the 20th century of history, of sort of africa. so we, at the heart of thought african history. what specific movements and events in south african history are covered in the exhibits? on the about a bit, lucille takes you on a journey the way we focus from the history of the $1886.00, where you will see people from different age groups and races that journey through the 2 to him. a spoke on following the discovery of gold, then we go in to the apartheid era away from 1948 to
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1990 flags. and we focus on 1960 as well where the national party then started to state laws to segregate people based on their races. we also show case so way to uprising of 197 to 6, the shuffle. my so chris, well that's what we focus on. so a walk through the museum will illustrate all those events, all the moments inside africa that we went through. tell us a bit more about the, into active elements that are featured here in the exhibits. we've got your films, your photographs with go to our to fix. and that is the into active features that we have to give our visitors. soon to come is our voice map that our people will be able to use as well. you know what they so much wealth of knowledge and i cannot wait to learn more about it. the spoken word is gaining traction in rwanda and the rest of the world. join us as we meet della do me
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a young woman who was using her voice to address critical issues. della do best words matter. they're addressing critical social issues, challenging stereotypes and redefining long accepted norms. i am the frantic upsurge of metallic energy charge my kinetics and pill, a symmetry, and that's a definitive decision. i'll be remembered through poetry and pros and verse for my eyes. cold persists in atlanta mentality and celeste feel body power flows through my veins. power della is a young, creative spoken word. artist who uses the power of words and performance to tell stories and talk about the human condition while encouraging people to use their voice to be known and hurt diligence was born and raised in hover, or any of what. so i know that is where i learned a lot about african culture and african history has spent a lot of time warming as
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a kid. i was my, it was my a siblings. we absolutely love to being on stage and we would do it at chairs. we'll do it at school, or do it anywhere we had the chance to share our voice in our talents and we had an absolute blast is gone, then the ground love again. it's music runs through my veins. so it is always easy and spoken words is i believe language of the conscious. so bringing all these different forms together really helps me as he's what i want to creatively. and it lets me expand the breadth and depth of my message with the wind and nob della is that one of her open mike sessions, where she performs a piece that talks about the aspect of vulnerability in lovers having more to life than just living oneself. and a call to action to spread the love that the piece also exposes the longing and emptiness attached to the fear of loneliness in face to
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face. with all truly our voices, we only transcribe the dog, a low insatiable, riddled with finally, akin to the unholy hour that god being permitting to see a drawn to the reflected deep in search of a new religion. for we'd rather go blind than shrivelled and dr. sanity is amiga price. aside from being an item, della is a full time student here. she shows us her favorite spot at her campus, which she claims is one of her safe spaces. she likes to get away from the noise so that she can, we sent her rethink, reflect and organize her thoughts and put them down into sound writing either on her phone or not. but you. so at the raptor of the celestial sphere.
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take my flesh to a body of liquid crystal, that gleam at the sight of the golden sun. i really, really enjoy expressed myself the different odd form. i have a talent for spoken word, poetry, music, theater, drama, and creative direction as well. so what i do is when i'm thinking about a piece or thinking about a creative piece, i really think about what would bring the subject matter out in the best way. who am i trying to communicate with? and theater. i speak about that a bit has really been a great way for me to become a child again because there with the at one stage you where persona and the onus is on you to completely explore what that character is. so my role models include yasha haiti, she recently graduated from harvard, and i think that's amazing to the full time address, but also killed it at school. that's something that i draw duration from. music.
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people like nina simone, lauren hill, have strongly called pro us and strong characters as well. so women like these really inspire me to be more than ordinary and to make serious impact who work before crossing limbo or the blue and white, ny, creating creative faces for artists upcoming autistic children as well to be expressive enough. and to be daring to think about the things that really matter, i'm really passionate about advocating for children in the space. because there isn't enough emphasis on protecting these young minds. i also like to organize some music jobs for people to come through and collaborate and create. that's how i contribute. and i hope to do more in the future. my shop my by tonight, but a few years ago. and i've been out of believe that there is no choice that i'm making out of believe that it's something was born to do. but i think over the years,
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choosing to be more intentional about the messages that i put out there has what has made me go for the you know, my words and my messages. i really what helps me get into doors that i probably wouldn't have been qualified for, but because i'm using my voice to make a change, you'd be surprised how many people need to hear that will need that reminder of how amazing they are. and also just raising awareness and issues that we often sideline . so my poetry, my voice, my music has always been a gateway to bigger platforms, reaching new audiences and making a change as a whole. i got a job. oh, i know to try. oh, i know that to use the nuclear, what impact to these exhibits have on visitors both emotionally and intellectually so far? dick museum takes you on a journey of darkness. so walk into apart the coliseum,
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you will see a whole lot of darkness. so with the visitors that we get at are part of thickness young. it is a both emotionally draining. it is emotionally training, but at the same time it is a moment of healing. it is a moment of education, it is important also for that. but at the museum to remain an educational institution. so we want people to actually understand that we are not putting them in a position to be political, but to also just understand that we have to display the information that we have. so it's important while people to engage with the museum once we once they walk into the museum. thank you so much for your time and sharing this wealth of knowledge. i hope more people come and visit they do and we're calling on more to come and visit and educate themselves. thank you so much for your time. i could take like daniel tay are modernizing rural. i could take her while staying to,
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to the aim of helping the community around them was. i completed architecture school i made, it's one of my life missions to play a rule. her minuscule might be to find a way of improving the lives in such communities. we want to use our designs to bridge the gaps between them or the social constructs. we also want to switch him where our designs enable us to engage more comfortably with one another. and so doing meets expectations of our people. a very powerful tool to do that. so we're very mindful of the opportunities that are also offers in that direction. ah,
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be mindful of the environmental impact resulting from providing civil infrastructure . daniel employees higher standards of procedure to execute project by taking into consideration quality, health, safety and the environment to ensure sustainability. his designs aim at achieving timelessness by offering aesthetic pleasure and attention to detail to unifying ship behavior in order to elicit the pissy was of a holistic development from the one we understood that this project should not impact the environment in negatively. so we are sure that none of the workers would live within the site. those 2 are beds in stands of pollution and you know, air latrine and stuff like that. we'd all going to these communities with the intentional bringing on, you know, people from the cities to work. we try to engage the youth off the communities,
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bring in experts to help shape their mindset around projects. we engage about 500 young men and women. this has of course, a direct impact in the economy and quite apart from that, there's a long term impact where some of these people who worked with us on the project or even haven't worked with us before, are encouraged to continue with the operations of the resorts but 5, his agreed on the past 5 years. so safari valley came to the town. i, for one have benefit immensely from the one i had the opportunity to provide building materials. this really made me expand my business and employ a lot of young people about it, but i have managed to afford university education for my children. most young people in this town are gainfully employed. as carpenters sheriffs, landscapers,
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and other jobs. even 2 of my kids i employ as copied as bad as well. and when we, it happened that way before he knew what architecture was. daniel, who was always driven naturally to make space is more useful. mostly materials are we use here are whereas others will consider them with we actually found a wheel for use in them. so we recycled. a lot of timber. there's been a lot of attempts at sustainability and the client wanted to execute the resort in the forest. we were looking for some peculiar attractions for the sites that brief had to make room for the introduction of animals create opportunities for residential accommodations. we needed also to create room for recreation to engage people. so primarily as we developed,
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it's as intended to help people rejuvenates themselves. and then hopefully with that refreshing experience, they'll be able to go back to the cities or wherever they come from and impact society. possibly, we recently won a competition to design the gap insurance college in adam or a bit of a unique circumstance. as majority of the people in that community at def or blank, we're hoping that through the zine would draw attention to the community. hopefully, game assistance for their welfare and then also be able to provide them with some as skills to fend adequately for themselves and their families. daniel and manages his own architectural fem wood,
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a team of professionals who provide secure services to clients by 10 and fish new ideas into value added functional, an aesthetically pleasing product, but locally and globally ganna is surely an architectural paradise. we now travel to germany, to meets king and born at jennifer melinda schmidt, who decided to open a traditional restaurant in berlin. ah, jennifer melinda schmidt has lived in berlin since 2005 marcus and i like it when something's happening and things are always going on here in berlin. because unpredictably by i in 2016, she opened her restaurant shots a heidi in berlin and has been serving swiss classics ever since. sometimes even
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wearing a journal. and of course, she reveals her most important tips and tricks him and you have to swirl it in a figure 8 here. i'll show you all of the red drop. that means you have to pay the next round. now that really high per restaurant is called shots, a heidi or black heidi. it was also the title of a comedy show she developed, inspired by the world famous swiss children's book character heidi, the trained actress wanted to play more than just the usual cliches in berlin. the basic premise is that the swiss girl, heidi has fallen into her grandfather's pot of chocolate and suddenly turned black believe schmidt performed the show in berlin from 2009 to 2011. is it really did break through the ceiling because there are so few women doing
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comedy, holland, and a black woman, and a swiss woman on top of the eyes. so then jennifer melinda schmidt was born in kenya in 1982, her ugandan mother, a flight attendant, moved with her to switzerland when she was still a baby. there, she grew up with her swift step father and 3 siblings. money, king. hi, my childhood was really very lovely. fact maybe it's because i was able to speak swiss german so well that i often didn't notice that i looked different on those else. i was only reminded from time to time when i looked in the mirror tub, but actually i just felt the same and i never really had any problems. and he had the dicky, me probably him it. the self confident girl got in front of the camera at an early age and a whole explode. she studied drama in munich, then made a career as a comedian when she stopped doing that. she became a restaurateur, had the image in mood. i've always had the courage to do something you muscle these
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and i've always had the confidence that i can do anything shuffle. the yellow shuffle can. the founder, hooter, in berlin's. frederick signed district opens from november to february. it specializes in swiss cheese fondue. it's the best fondue beyond the alps. at least, melinda smith says, so. her favorite is fond you with truffles. of course, it tastes even better with your loved ones. becoming most affordable. i feel like a little girl who came to berlin and who now has a restaurant, which is still such a dream for me from human look, even when my restaurant is full. i think. why are they coming here? i got but then it makes me so happy why we spend bonds in i don't think i could achieve what i've achieved here in switzerland. it's was a here i taba nash whites, and i hit a jennifer melinda schmidt, a berliner from switzerland. ah, and that is, today's episode comes to an end. i hope you enjoyed it. i learned as much as i did
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europe to saver euro max in 30 minutes on d, w. o. and when you work as an architect, he go all in or not at all. women in architecture. why are they so invisible to the larger public? ah, we decided to ask them, what is the poetry the secret of the house about their struggles and dreams for walkability of huge they have so much to lose. shattering the glass ceiling women in architecture. this has to be really, really good. starts april 20th on d w. hey guys,
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it's evelyn shar. my welcome to my podcast, love matter by and by celebrities influences and experts to talk about all playing loved effect from day to get to day, but nothing less because all these things and more and then you know, season off the plot can make sure to tune and wherever you get your pot path and join the conversation, because you know it love matters. ah, ah master, what did you do? the food. ah, i'd have to tenant, fantastic. ah, she survived auschwitz, thanks to music. and he was, the nazis favorite conductor is morally degenerate. ah, 2 musicians under the swastika documentary about the sounds of power,
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inspiring story about survival of the home and go get the tennis. i was the only one. what lines and luc music nazi germany watch now on youtube, d. w documentary. ah, there wasn't a w is alive or from berlin. holes have just closed in finland, parliamentary elections, a very popular prime minister, santa marina, seeking a 2nd term in office. but she's facing a strong challenge from the far right. bringing the latest as results. come. also coming up with the shell emotional good.
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