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tv   Europe Revealed  Deutsche Welle  June 10, 2023 10:15am-11:01am CEST

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to a p, a in a federal called the miami on tuesday, but he's still insisting that he will fight for the white house once again, the sound that's all from us for now. coming up next, how you were of his coping with the biggest migration wave since the end of world war 2. that's next on doc sale, but don't forget, you can always get the latest you some information around the clock on our website, w dot com. i'm gonna get jones and berlin, thanks for watching the perfect hearing instead of responsive the global business of asbestos. this is not legitimate because the people that are in don't deserve to be treated with any kind of courtesy by the governments of the world. the never ending story
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of asbestos starts june 21st on d w. how many of my friends of sacrifice their lives? so we can live like folks do in europe me if you're not going to see on the harvest community dependence on the flight was mike or enough for me that dirty or look at the end of the summer. we do everyone does. we weren't, we earn money and pay taxes, each of us will follow still mostly white working class men around here. we want our own place by doing it right away. everyone's new jerk reaction is close to borders, but these people will reach their destination. and when they do, what happens then see, think that's not going to get done. the europe wouldn't be what it is without the
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work of millions of immigrants. there were a big part of its history. today 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 your and its inhabitants. it's not just a humanitarian issue, more than ever your needs immigrants to breathe new life into an aging continent. the,
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for most europeans, russia's invasion of ukraine came as a shock. faced with a mass of humanitarian crisis, europe reacted promptly. volunteers from across the continent took action so you can sleep intent one or 2 or 3 within days. countless age structures were set up to help relocate refugees across the entire continent. where are you going to product for 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. connect goods population alone has risen by more than 15
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percent. most every family in poland is helping ukrainian refugees in one way or another. in keys in k, as in keith to defend circle the schools, they shut down a rocket today and this you to a residential building. again. i'm going to groceries 5 minutes away from me. can you imagine? yeah, yeah, yeah. so i, so i heard everything will be all right, it will. and yes, going to be that's got worked for a museum in clack, of when on the 2nd day of the war, she drove to the ukrainian border and brought back 2 bus loads of refugees. that is not so raw bedding he and we desperately need to cabin to ensure the goal is coming in. she and some friends turned to a former university building into a makeshift hospital. it provides accommodation and support for up to $200.00
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refugees. mainly women and children before they continue on their journey. which most of the sound parts of the area isn't perfect because it was set up in 2 days with money from private soon. and i'm not sure about maybe that's why it has to to me feel to minutes. so can you hold on for one that was still working on it, but it was still the day. and now the 1st full, these women dream is going back home. think 1st they've come here with very little luggage of, of my own people, the base they got somebody else of lives. they will hope they will, will be able to see what the problem is. and i just hope that off of your appeals continue to sustain that goodwill case. the who lost a loan, which i'm dreading, who is a nice just we may need the compassion and open house to much along with us about this, such as those each of the ukrainian refugees are benefiting from a surge of empathy and solidarity. but your, it isn't always as welcoming to those who seek it's help crossing borders into the
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e. u is proving increasingly difficult. many member states have built walls since the fall of the berlin wall at 1989 more than 1000 kilometers of new barriers have been erected in europe between greece and turkey, between hungary, croatia, and serbia. and stay with the many between morocco and spain. and in 2021187 kilometers of barbed wire were added between bellows and poland. here, migrants are constantly turned away, the, it's not just the walls and fences that keep potential intruders out, satellites, and drones monitor the waters in and around the u. this is the river ambrose 500 kilometers long. it constitute it's a natural border between greece and turkey. it's also one of the most dangerous
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entry points into your the, the river is constantly watched the great police and army patrol it with the help of from tex, the european border and coast guard agency. but this device of security comes at a cost. the you and greets, have invested billions of europe and 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 coveralls for many of them have also fled. war in syria. afghanistan union revealed and they aren't welcomed everywhere with open arms. was in the building, illegal immigrants are a daily problem. the unfortunately, a big problem they shouldn't be allowed in at all when you may as well,
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if you look us, i'm a member of the national guard will. there are many of us here at the city of the anytime the army needs us, we're ready to listen to most of them at the level of we learned about weapons, you know how to shoot of everything that's needed to go without pay. of course, we do it for our country and for our families argumentative illegal immigrants cause any trouble government. we know what to do, but hopefully that won't happen. and it will cost us to heidi i this 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, as he knows himself what it means to be an immigrant. but for him, there is no comparison. okay,
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we thought we were economic immigrant. this in the germany was looking for workers imaging becoming less of them as a we didn't sneak into the country. if we'd been unable to find to work with them as we go, we would have come back home. so, but that is the most, as we weren't very glutamate taxes like anyone else, we didn't some deal or anything with the the, the one of the approval i left here when i was in 5th grade, i was in the beer hall, i'd hear german say be like, pardon the expression, the greeks are here to me and i also experience racism and work on it just went abroad. you're always a foreigner, small that never stops that are going to is and of channels within the above. if
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at some point you will experience racism and i will go here and grace on them. i feel like i found my family again. so really my mama, my home country, but there is, i'm the least i'm going to go with them and they'll give them do some talk to them and they just don't take through it and they'll see me soon. they'll be so fox, what is of the diesel, the going to have? so what is the western europe post? more economic pool 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 fellow citizens,
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which wasn't easy for either side. the money at times the parents came to germany in 1968 and 69. this my father arrived in munich and 68, then went on to cologne. my mom came 6 months later, i. most of our problems with the documents are not so life for the use of and finally started in cologne, 150 for me. they used to then we'll go to the category, was the mr. finance, which said the cards for my the i'm at the time of catch the cable. pop up. com noise from dish does estimate enough deutsche. my dad came to germany for the 1st time in 1958 as a guest worker in a factory. like, for his dream, was always to earn money here in georgia and go back home to naples and, and mercedes to them. then people would say, look at penny. no, he's made it down. he's a big man. now i go. so i'm on. fortunately, that didn't happen. mission up because my dad still lives here. healy but still i feel both mini a politan and from cologne. both equally,
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a part of shrikes by hudson and nicholas the vaughan. i know people on getting done took we were quite the group of kids, michael connell, director donations moroccans, greeks, spaniards, on few mission. want to me. we were all the same time on this. come, i'd say a few squared to meet, meet these and it was only much later that we started to feel uncomfortable here in mind as foreigners inova. they called me spaghetti eater, for macaroni eater when he flips. so many times my parents told me i must be need to be 10 times more germany than the germans for them to accept you can judge is active to focus on your response and they've gone to a few scope because on shift. so there's almost that was the summer of 1999, the one glossy and under the bookstore. and i wrapped lyrics by coaching, la quaker, and then one of us said one month i started
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a rough group of offense. so we found a microphone mafia right on the spot to your microphone much it is when the visa visa, as we loved this, music's i'm for me because we could identify with the people who made it. tom let's see, does punted. you didn't need any expense. some instruments to mentor? yeah, just don't pen and paper. ultimately look the field and shift decline as you move from existing beyond the 16 year olds from that place, they're still in a somewhere. and their dreams have changed to move to the music. and if in sync with us, the convention economics of the we realized right away, but drop has this power to reach people. home is human, old people identify with our lyrics with our music students. so we said ok, let's wrap about our lives through the but the stuff we weren't able to talk about shouldn't be able to see any, etc. and clinton's was his cut. the
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does supposed to be a torch. 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 traditional is this a bit from the left a bit from the right within, but also a bit out of the box. ok. because there are so many cultures here on using the this, what is, what was he all the about to for years they expected us to integrate, how much more can we do? we go to school work and your kids go to school. here was the parents did so much for this country on what even that they're still saying because you must have integration that's being passed on to the next generation. but now there are people traumatized by war suffering and death. those peaks are still so we as a majority society to which i believe we now belong to much of welcome people. first health that's eventually has become sort of many men and women are willing to do anything to reach your but the reality is only
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a tiny fraction of the making. every year, thousands of migrants drowned trying to cross the mediterranean. more than 20000 between 20142021. a tragedy that europe has grown accustomed to these dots represent the number of bodies that have been recovered to many fines are never registered. despite the dangers and all the efforts to discourage them, some migrants do manage to reach europe, shores. se do deal as one of them by obama. well, originally from senegal, he passed through libya before reaching spain by boat. some of the us get his thomas off of hand here. so we're the ones who picks the
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fruit guys. mendosa is the reality. you see here it'll be a lot for the best one that you make it on. every one. picking fruit is an imagery, although we'll get that you come in everything that you eat and enjoy it home with your families. so it's gonna disappear. like people who are suffering little then just so you know, the in the just look all of the sun s o head to get the label, receive miserable wages and suffer a sofa in which they don't have decent housing and putting them. people are living under plastic sheets and police has made from wooden pallet because somebody called one pallet that might add a bedroom. i assume in the winter it's freezing cold. and then summer scorching holland is gonna be $1.00 and you can't ever relax like that. as but as soon shameful, when i say when the wind everyone prefer so looks the other way. it benefits just this didn't exist side open with, you know he did, that's the reality weiss,
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we already know they could at least build alternative housing or and because there are tons of solutions better than this one, but i'm just mostly shown is me holidays getting this is a good simone. we deserve respect. basically mrs. he found to be treated with dignity and with the music on a bit of humanity. juanita essentially gave me this is the industrial parks the last associated espanol spanish society should understand that when we are contributing to onto the we do, everyone does look at that. we weren't, couldn't, we are earning money and pain taxes. it's almost but on the e, by the say, do deal is a member of us, new c and association, that provides aid and advice to migrants. it also campaigns for better working and living conditions, the si se,
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se give up to me if i some new. so you can build a shelter to host 40 men and women, but if you move in and then the authorities and the politicians could do even more, because no point enough here to must guess to is a gesture, to shows a how many no more excuses out of them was that i can, i must, a school says the conditions on some farms in southern europe are reminiscent of those in the days of slavery. cheap workers for cheap food in which you're the luckily there are farms where labor relations are more equitable and valid. gonzales as far migrant workers are treated with respect model the over the when i was in school, there was some like re to re workforce coming from within spain. you this zillow. my father had
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a team from civil heading away from the villages and finished with you get it. they came just to pick, store product locals. they turned it off today. so out of the room. but since i have been getting you in and out as just a small percentage of spanish workers and the rest of from molly rural cohort to go and fold area to do i able to body you know that i'm of you. how's it going to is the fruit. okay. i for the yang. yes. more or less? oh man. a lot of it matched. yeah. so lots button. don't a ton a ton because same. what do we do then pay them black. paint them into the yes much in the so then the think over the some 75 or 80 percent of the work is on not from spain. 80. and then the harvest clearly depends on the flow of migrant on the
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agreement that the countries have made. and how this is being handled, geopolitically, because if they had him on the 20 percent of workers in spain, from the agricultural sector come from other countries, mainly from outside the u. the statistics are similar in many other member states. what, what europe do without migrant workers, there's a backbone of its economy. caregivers cooks careers, doctors by 2 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 a decade ago for workers secured the pension of one retired. by the year 2016, there will be just 2 working people for every retiree. this ticking demographic
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time ball poses a threat to every country in europe. the projection 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 walk on some 2600000 refugees. what integrating them is not always easy. for the new commerce or their host country. both need to be open to what can be a long process of the 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 total. i know my nest. i'm not suppose use here is that either you might have been to my standard line is you here to pay my pension divide? i'm the typical old white german nail. i'm 61. been out in the line to the next
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generation to keeping comfy in my old age. i thought supervisors financially is 5000 firms to be an angel was founded in 2015 to, 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. and this empower, aim is empowerment. we want people to be able to live their own lives without her housing. yeah, i was leaving sound good. yeah . behind me we have see thing for 110 people high, but we have 7 trainees. right now. our team consists of 16 people from 10 nations. we only work with refugees. crushed the spelling of the war in syria forced us to flee,
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but after we settled into refugee housing, i started running, jim, and i know i've been applied for official papers. i've got them not know of luna. i know you said that was with everything. okay. good, since i missed you, did you miss me? we missed you 2 such as the mother as a global, i registered this and language school and needed to reach be one of the 2 levels of it. money, any gym and certificates go a long way here. i looked for a suitable career where i learned cooking was my passion when i started working here making decisions for the restaurants and to react to them at the very yvonne. so how did you get on with the interviews with the okay, steve for this, the yes. okay. and easy for me. yeah. but you're still not happy and you're still free 9 by. it's been feeling close to shall know,
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because i'm 34 years old as soon as i graduated in 2 months ago on the, which means i'm a young chef nations on this head. so i'll only be paid what a young shepherd fuzzy which is disappointing interest. i yes, i understand to help as far as i have experience on the certificate. the issue is i've done an internship. yeah. the photo is thing is i think 2 years experience should be enough to get a good starting salary. we'll see. yes, i'll keep trying the vice the in the spring of 2022 under the us to come. and this team begin bringing ukrainian refugees, which led to poland and will dover to germany. for years, people from countries bordering eastern europe have immigrated to the e. u, but until now, for other reasons. this footage was shocked in the summer of 2021. at the bottom,
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yet check point on the ukraine. poland border. every day, thousands of ukrainians lined up to go to work in poland. it shows, even before the war broke out, how close ties were between the 2 countries, the 6 months later, ukrainians were lining up again. this time to flee putin's army and to regain their lost freedoms and safety. and things can change incredibly quickly. within the e u. people move from one country to the next without giving it much thought the, 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 idea of the one that's also foster decades of economic growth most and all of this,
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you know in 1999 the rasmus program finally arrived in romania. i'm going to thoughts i'm going to apply for us and managed to get a scholarship which is the one i booked on. a romanian architect, living and belgium is one of those who has benefited from the idea of a unified euro to and i'm still with you that i didn't know what leaving romania for you meant back in 1999 open through been thrown on. she asked on some, not it meant terms of paperwork was not successful. copays medical tests and other things to get my visa out of the castle team visa. she the purchase of the whole process was so she, many i seen and so tedious that when i listen to that, it was such a relief from i said to myself, i'm thank god you're out. i because you guys know, no, i didn't want to go back. that's how matt. i wasn't romania, but when yeah. she don't most of the month,
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but i left behind my family and very many friends. i did miss the end of yes long enough was the cause of some reason when i arrived in live and they didn't know much about romania and looked at me oddly with the 2 dots and to go they associated romanians was biggest thieves, dangerous people want to hunt, belgian roanoke, virginia lower. and they'd say your from romania, but you got blue eyes. i think some of the boys found that said a look at us asking about that will change when romania joined the use of occupant . know that bill now submit move. romanians more don't just big as little thing. it's dr. sure thought police are holding. it has change to put it less. asking bob, besides lou liberty in front of this was actually my own. m a. h. the use most diversity around 75 percent of brussels residents. are foreigners or have foreign
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roots? lots of people go no, you're not viewed as a foreigner and brussels issue to really you just one of its inhabitants. i'm going to model when the state romania is still not able to protect its citizens or the belgium is the bought up and who comes to the felt free because for the 1st time in my adult life is i knew i was safe to simplify the very fact to being european should offer a system protection to actually send and the feeling that we can live online just the signature on it. the 2007 was a crucial year for romania, along with the guerria. the country joins the european union. many romanians immediately took advantage of this opportunity and left their homeland the to the bottom. you don't have that a one click ok. almost a full meeting. romanians have immigration. that's
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a huge number with the remaining immigrants. okay. so the only initially were confirmed on the euro box and then on all the construction site site visits, i had people speaking, remain in that simple one go to these are the romanian people who are not shut off . i've been been seed, you know, since you for some of the there's so many romanian intellectuals who left him this choose a career as a program for the cost of squinting way. i'll keep that the 1st one on the 3rd issue. the example, for instance, when i go to any hospital clinic and brussels, nico doesn't exist, i always see the name of some romanian doctor for us. avoid whom at the bookstore when some leaves. others stay such a mass exodus as of workers have left ghost towns and deserted areas all over europe. here in red,
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we can see the regions 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 a special agreement book area which has lost 15 percent of its population in the last 20 years. and it's predicted that by 2040, over 30 percent of bulk areas will have left their country, making it the fastest population decline of any country during peacetime facilities and i made of a for a lease or something that assessment. this village is located in southeastern bulk area, you know, to, to, to near the bowl gary a turkey border. she had a in the past and she, there were 1200 inhabitants in you, but as of now, unfortunately. so there are just 35 people left out to cool 3. she pitched to be
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jealous. unfortunately, for villages located far from the city. so that's what happens. you can't, it's the great migration that the people die that out to you. but no babies are born generally, that's all there is to it. so i'm going to do my english. do quite a bit of good. but i go there was a pop where we will gather the v. they through great counties, human look. now, there are a new celebration for new policies. nothing new. good. everyone stays at home. they do me. there's no way to go to, you know, one to say a few words to no one's telling the stories to know some insight. you have a son who's now living in from for to if he comes in once every 3 months left, it amazed that they like to use the me do you got a tax life feeling for got them and abandoned as
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a frustration that doesn't just eat a way of 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 card in the north east of england, which has fallen on hard times. so the cult merrier. read cat a as in the top, 3 percent is deprivation. the country we've ida, numerous amounts of unfortunate happenings over the years that have made our area so create for those that revision scales still works have been around for around a 170 years. unfortunately, 2015, it was like large stocks of steel and, and unfortunately it died. i mean that was gonna stay
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the same for 36 years and i've got friends who've been in the after the yard. yes. it really didn't get a lot of names, confidence it was, you know, being made the find a statement, a world and now, you know, they were going to be told to go out to going cautious to be the rest is and you know, make coffee and sound legit say, you know the somebody's changed and it was just it just devastated people that 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 box or 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 cobham 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 residents voted for breakfast brackets. it was very important for us. 71 percent of the people in this town voted to leave. people are at the point where the would just like me to listen to the. so we need to change. i believe that's why don't i don't know how i said, i'm not an economist, but if, if i give the european union a pound and they gave me some depends back and, you know, i've got a minute to a pinch going. so i'm, i'm quite happy for, for us to spend our own money and make our own laws. we want the industries to come back. we want our own place by no pay. and the lack of jobs
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across europe, people in disadvantaged regents feel neglected and let down by their governments and elected officials. some politicians target these fevers and frustrations. here in tight immigrant rhetoric finds receptive years. it's 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 you in 2004 many poles left to work in britain or other member states for wages and standards of living or higher. but many have since returned. and not just because of breakfast, the business is booming, and poland in 2021. it had the 9th largest economy in all of your the city of which,
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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. if that's of i'm of the i was working at the daycare center. i just, i thought if i were ever to go back to poland, i do for one like that. the parents, children were not going to show them how to learn languages and how much fun a daycare can be. gimme a can also find that the kids wouldn't even want to go home with the adults was the main reason why i came back for 10 of them. but i wanted to start my own business or show others what i learned in my years abroad, and bring it back to bone and you call it the bush, but it didn't work out. unfortunately, you said that you also have ended up with of office shops, but polls returning from abroad can't make up for the labor shortage caused by the economic boom. pollings ruling law and justice party,
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which is traditionally very anti immigration, was forced to turn to a neighboring ukraine. when these scenes were found, nearly every employee at holland as barber shop was ukrainian. the others are to test again. i was studying in ukrainian assumption, but i quit because i didn't see my future there. so that's why i moved here together with my girlfriend. she talked me into coming. see, i'm a came here together to study the studio which left to the dentist is one of the many ukrainians who come to poland to work and finance their studies if the day is that. so let that pass over to look at 1st i worked at mcdonalds and stuff, even the worst job is still better here. and let me know if it's not like you can live a normal life, even on the lowest wages and reflect that one's not liking ukraine. nobody knew it
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was like say, saw him today. i have come here to stay and i didn't come just to work and go back lisa wrong. as i feel a little bit of both cheerfully and ukrainian for lucky echo could i have not sent you an apple the end of the business. i'm assuming i knew him a moment about the summit. we also system i think if we see things the same way, it can have similar views as i say. but ukrainians have more in common with poles than with russians. and my against the reason they've when they're just flows, orient themselves to the west and that way of life isn't uh, on your spectrum those ukraine is not like that yet. the said,
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go either cuz you're going to use the phone and do some more research on it. but now that it is part of the, the, the compact to ukraine. you would you still hoping to get into the new because from my vision of it for the it was 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 you're here with desperately trying to get her family out of ukraine, dennis was nowhere to be found. his cell phone wasn't working, the ukrainians clean their country, have now been granted temporary protection in the u. this emergency measure it gets all ukrainian citizens to the right to live and work in any you country the
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we got the waste of a have to i think many ukrainians will stay in europe on the behalf, so many will come back to rebuild the cream. so the resurrected door, what did you mark the machine? what are people are dying just so that we can live freely, man is not like under that tyrant. in russia, the probably we'll take meal and bathroom breaks on route. great, thanks. welcome to the age of 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 tomorrow for me. yeah. which is that if we want to be law abiding to walk, we want to work to rebuild you crazy to talk you a few little people. 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. we use a job to submit like an evil empire. some studies law
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doesn't meet the person who must be life without democracy and freedom isn't an option to you. and then we will live in europe for the last week. and that's why it was easy to and that's why that's why our families are fighting. this poor people will always move in search of security freedom and a better life both within and outside of your yep. migration changes, not just migrants, lights put things in there, host countries to send to me them, let me get on some now to some bought it to me. immigration was myself ation response to the i to say i was privileged. my god. in the meantime, over the past 20 years, i've come to the conclusion that this privilege works both ways that you want any
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kind of meaning that those welcoming immigrants enjoy this privilege to let you know that there are revitalizing false trusts, with the the helps and hills of society, i consider this a good thing for the board, the, your most recent gets 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, the europe needs to find new ways to receive and integrate people. these migrants have rights and wants to be seen as future fellow citizens. many are already living and working on the continent. they are europeans to the,
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the, the in good shape. how can we manage stress the mind and body both need regular breaks from the pressure of everyday life. otherwise, we can become sick. but there are different kinds of stress. which means there
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are different types of recovering the 30 minutes. the hot tips for your bucket list, the magic corner, check hot spot for food and some great cultural memorials to w travel off we go to, i think on the manuals engine via you belong to the 77 percent. because who i don't go to 65 full was last those i years, 3 reasons why 1115. we are here to help you make up your mind
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to the top because i'm not up to you from table topics. the new culture of my dentist payment, let's say, well, quote, the, the, this is the building used lie from the in the when. so is that flooding has made sense to many terry and situation in ukraine? she actually was ukraine steps up evacuations and ukraine's kind of song region as concerns over this lots of land mines and grange oil changes from the ruptures down the road.

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