tv DW News Asia Deutsche Welle October 30, 2023 6:15pm-6:31pm CET
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it said that around a 1000 survivors are trying to deal with that trauma and the loss of loved ones. as the w. rebecca has reports pull trying the dead from a time before they will fill a pot. just one of the therapies helping these people process their trauma at these up scale result on the did see the it's a place of relative safety in a country and more around a 1000 is riley's who escaped the massacred couplets. bailey were evacuated here without live for at least the next few months and trying to come to terms with what happened. yeah, is 6 and a half in the morning, somebody days we heard a lot of rooms and we woke up a little bit in the recalls. the moment the audio began, her parents soon texted her from the home up the street. they were in hiding. a mass gunman killed more than a 100 people in berry that day and
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a feed her mom and dad were among them. something like an hour later. so a big television when instead of with both, i always say so can. it's not any as well. i guess it's in gaza. 2 weeks later and i found this video on telegram showing her cap should mother filmed by some us. so looking for clues of where they might have been taken, she and her sister went back to their childhood time. why, why, why, why, why? i can't even describe a so hard, even yesterday when i was. so there you might be, po friend might be i couldn't stay on the ground because every face on the ground, a so body body. and i couldn't think of walking on there on the 12 donations from across. the
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country has been pouring in. the people who escaped with only the clothes on their back, they have to sell it over and over again. dena drawer is one of the team of psycho therapist stationed in the hotel to help them. she says the most important thing is to get people to okay. how they couldn't have had no food, how they were worried, how they signed the what's up the group, the people are in danger. how they escaped. what did they see? and they have to repeat this over and over until a so he has a narrative. it, it has the beginning, middle, and an ending. she says for his riley's, this was an event, unlike anything in recent memory. it's a collective greet. something we don't see usually in as well. you have the sarah sack and the soldier said, but here because of the massive numbers, we have a collective grief. and it's also a strong think of the communities of the going through it together going through it
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together. but each alone and the pain, there isn't a family that didn't last. someone isn't the family here. all the families last summer and even as a keyboards, we have a big family together. and stephen, i was friends and neighbors, and everyone loves someone. the 7th of october was traumatic for all these riley's and even as the people from bally trying to hear, it's clear the trauma will be felt for generations. natalie i spoke to show how may from israel age, that's the n g o that is working with the survivors we've just seen in that report into austin, how long of a take for the survivors and is riley society on the hold to overcome this trauma
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as of every emergency and is there a has responded to the last 22 years to over a 100 margin sees and over 62 countries. and it's impossible to know exactly how long it takes to recover it. but we do know that it takes longer in the 1st initial steps. and in the case of trauma, it takes many months for communities to process what they've been through to put structures in place that will help them on the long road to recovery. at present, we're estimating at least 6 to 8 months in the 1st stages here. and then if juanita for longer will be there for longer. now your organization usually works abroad including a parts of africa, central america, for example. and how was it for you and your team to find out that your emotions, their response is now required in your own homeland?
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yeah, absolutely. it was an enormous change for the organization. this is the 1st time that we are working at home. so for 2 decades our mandate is always going to bring is really innovation and it's really expertise to communities environment of crisis . and so we've worked with the best of um, techniques that have been developed here and as well so much of the experience we have with trauma over the years and different those different methods of addressing those trauma and mental health needs as well as water technologies and a certain is rarely can do spirit, it allows us to be often the 1st on the ground. and the last we as we all watched what i'm folded on october 7th, it became very clear to us by the end of the day that we would now be needed at home the 1st time that'd be experienced. but we have a broad and managing the large scale humanitarian crisis was something that,
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for all the incredible civil society organizations here, i mean, kind of go out for an, we've never had to manage the prices on this scale. and it's been different for our staff as well, having to work, there's no separation. we're all undergoing this at the same time. you talked about your experiences elsewhere. now you're working at home and also dealing with a quite extraordinary saturday as them have. you'll people ever dealt with the troll, but inflicted by such extreme vitality before the am i was speaking with? i see a few days ago this personally last emissions from the city army in japan, the u. k. moore to a bowl m. c. early on and the thing that he said, the type of collective trunk collective trauma that reminded him of we have worked with is 80 survivors devices violence. in the past we've seen extreme mental health fields and collective violence on large scale as well. but there is,
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of course, a difference in working at home in your own mother times in your own communities. now survive as often feel guild for having survived with others perished. do you encounter that? yeah, of course. i think there's all sorts of different ways of processing trauma as a reason i've even encountered, isn't my fault, right? i've been spending weeks i designed on with the dead sea and with survivors like the members of people's daily people to have all those people excuse the theme where with these communities. but i think the most important thing that helps, and we've seen this across as well as is being of service, i think is the most useful thing that you can do for those feelings of guilt. and we've seen it within the communities themselves that people's families, for example, we work hand in hand with the communities. and we've been so inspired by how the
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community leaders themselves have stepped up and taking control of the situation. and they want to be involved in the planning. we don't do anything. we don't bring the aid to them and tell them what they need. we work with the communities to a good day and a sense of control by putting new structures in place for themselves and for their families and for their wider communities. and really, i think the best thing that anyone can do in these moments is to be of service to their community. now it's been over 3 weeks and some of the launch these or a fine, a tags bio team seeing any progress in the people they are working with. so just a week ago, one of our psychotherapists told me we were discussing post trauma and she said, we're not dealing with those trauma. we're not post anything yet. and i think that's still quite true. we have a body still being identified. if people still waiting for news of loved ones were
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being held hostage, so i think you will see at we're still very much still in the midst of this event. it's not something that is and us, and we're looking back on. yeah. and i think communities are really day today is the changes, and it's just the way it's, it's the way the situation sundays are better on sundays and work so that you are starting to hear people started homeware of their stories and really feel the need to tell those stories. so how may that from the organization is right, which is providing shelter and psycho social support, who is really survivors of the october 7 attacks. thank you very much for taking the time to talk to us. thank you. and to submit a good tax of also being on the rise in front. a teacher was recently killed to an attack by a rabbit glass, former pupils. but one multi face group is advocating for piece of corresponding
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lisa lewis reports from bull there. that's just north of paris, a haven of peace amidst the world in turmoil. discreet cool to united, believe us, a piece was set top 20 years ago. it aims to show that people from different religions come live in harmony even in times of crisis. the method is to work together on a common project. this garden is toby's city. the demo. it's great to have this place where we can all meet us, all muslims, jews, protestants, catholics, to work together and exchange views. he shows e. so toby, it was all the b, c, we gather here to show that human life, who still has great value of good, even if it's put at risk elsewhere in the world, it was more in me on the plan. would you say proceed with this just goes to show that you can get along, even if you don't agree on everything over. men see only political stuff too. when
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it comes to the current conflict in the middle east they, they prefer to keep that use private for now. they feel times attends, especially in a country home towards are among the largest jewish and muslim populations in west in unit. you won't be able to directly to that was fear, is emotionally charged. more people have a tendency in times of crisis to take sides of the 6th and look for the 2nd divide on a level 2, we took it so instead of being soaked up by our belief that only talking to people who agree with us. the reason why people who should try to establish a connection with other people in order. so as garden helps it, that'd be so it's like another planet, you know, we can forget about all the wars out there that you develop. well, it's really cool for you to move, but not all parts of france, i'll say come, that has been numerous demonstrations in favor of israel and pro palestinian gatherings over the past weeks. of the government says that almost $600.00 and to submit to gaps have been registered in france since the current conflict broke out
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. this research assess, it's not the 1st time unrest that has led to tensions here. well no, there's uh, during the 2nd intifada between 200-2006, the number of anti semitic acts went up considerably. and most of them's in france were also reporting that they were being discriminated against it. we don't know yet. if the recent stabbing death of a teacher and what is believed to be in this logic, terrorist attack was linked to the warren is right now. but this event reinforces distrusts towards almost funds, even if they are in no way linked to this and pay this, i might get more for it back in bull that the group plans to organize discussions on the wall in the middle east. see this afternoon though, but interrupting that reports. uh, we only live to israel with prime minister benjamin. that's it. yeah. i was speaking to the price is going all that we sure and are sure in
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a world of fear and darkness. ladies and gentlemen, this is a turning point, a turning point for leaders and nations. it is time for all of us to decide if we are willing to fight for a future of hope and promise, or surrender to germany inter. now rest assured, this well will fight since october 7th, israel has been at war. israel did not start this war. israel did not want this war, but israel will win this war. come us launches war by perpetrating the worst side which we have. people have seen since the holocaust. how much murder children in front of their parents murdered parents in front of their children. they bird people alive. as they wake women, they'd be headed men. they tortured holocaust survivors. it could not babies,
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they committed the most will rip it crimes imaginable. and they're part of the axis of evil that he won his form and access of terror that works but arming, training and finance and come us and gaza cause but i love it on the who is in yemen, and other to proxies throughout the middle east. and beyond the middle east, in fighting come us and do you have any access of to as well as fighting the enemies of civilization itself. victory over these enemies begins with moral clarity. it begins with knowing the difference between good and evil, between right and wrong. it means making a moral distinction between the deliberate murder of the innocence and the unintentional kind of casualties that accompany every legitimate war. even the most just for it means holding come us responsible for the double walled,
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crowded commits every day by deliberately targeting is very civilians, while deliberately using palestinian civilians as human shields. it means making clear that the use of human shields is not only an immoral tactic of terror, but also an effective one. because as long as come us as use of palestinian human shields result in the international community planning, israel come us will continue to use it as a tool of to our and so will others come us will continue to use the basement some guys as hospitals as a command post of its vast tara tunnel network, it will continue to use most as fortified, military positions and weapons. people's will continue to steal fuel and humanitarian assistance from human facilities. while, as well as doing everything to get palestinians, civilians out of harm's way. come us is doing everything to keep that of things civilians in a.
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