tv Global Us Deutsche Welle September 11, 2024 1:30am-2:01am CEST
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the conflicts between israel and the palestinian is the mrs. group, the mass designate to the terrorist organization by several countries that's being raging for homeless. the southern lebanon is also affected. it looks like an ordinary summer's day. a. com sunday on the mediterranean families and young people having fun. yeah, it must be relaxed and happy. a mile was name nicks is a vodka. pina colada. she runs a beach ball here, entire specializing and cop tails on the fish dishes. but the apparent peace is deceptive. not far away, the conflict between israel and hezbollah continues to rage just 2 days ago. i'm
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a was me says she witnessed and he's really attack. com vibrate from the blast. i was in my car and started crying. i mean, who are we and what has happened to us last time i wrote to my friends and said, i don't want to die a monitor. nor do i want to go to heaven. i know they have a quiet, a forcing us to go through. oh, they have to have like, we don't want to die. we don't want all of us know how to of the, as she talks, we hear is really fine to jet. flying low was ahead and then allow buying ranking the reaches of his own various hard of hearing to attend to when we're not afraid. thank god, please. the sound bar. yeah, we drive 3 southern lebanon in a country with 18 different religious groups. the south is the hotline of the hezbollah, melisha po traits as much as another is
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a tool in the streets. but no one i meet you has any desire for will. instead as a shed sense of fear, i'm panic and impending doom. once or twice a week, a bus stops in front of several of the schools, the entire around 100000 people, displaced by the will have found refuge here. the children who pulled the bus on to leave the homes, that friends, that pet octo and drama teacher, some assembly takes the children to an old said to city is renovated by the children. have been living room. nice thing. yeah. can become something like a prison for that on the another level. nicholas and honestly hey, is there another wrong thing i've done to them? this isn't mounting time away when they can express themselves. feel free, feel peace. i'm be away from the war and see it or isn't active resistance against
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the war. i think that the problem is a coffee. who's the head of on stage. the children have space. they can shake off everything. be loud. learn to breathe, and to feel that bodies when cause some eastern bully asks what makes them happy? most remained silent. this is the whenever i hear the attacks i get scanned. i go and hug my dad and we cry. icons even go to the toilet because i'm says good on the desktop. the theater helps them to process the fee is might have some nice squares in business. i want the war to stop and to go home in our village. we used to play outside, but there's nothing here. we played in the garden, nor on the beach right next to our house with vineyards and all right. so
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right now dying fod elisa and her family have to live in an old classroom. 6 people cook, sleep on live here. they're exhausted. the room is unbearably hot. that means mother is desperate to go home. even though it's really military strikes have devastated longer than the border region. as soon as they don't see it all, it's dying. the one that we had so many lemon trees, olive trees, and the show got apple trees in elementary say someone would know several, a few people still living in the villages near the border. the olive groves has now become a black job. so the conflict lea a day goes by without explosions, fire, and destruction. and in the midst of it all on members of the lebanese civil
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defense to often become targets themselves, olives. the fiance team has been working for the emergency service for decades. the countries economic crisis means there's a lack of equipment. so he and his son risk their lives every day. in this be our equipment is inadequate, especially when it comes to helmets. and when we go out of vehicles often break down and dangerous areas from the to own about the income. this one is from 1999 yellow. it should have retired long ago for you. no problem have me submit. so would you be interested in the suit, skin valley, keep out the hot temperature as he explains he um they don't have to check give them off for most of the many of the dates of oh so definitely seen better days late to my mind. but ali saw feet on teens. what is sacred to him because he's on his he has a top 2 of his daughter, the been to be she was killed during the conflict between hezbollah and israel in
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2006 at home. his family off ruled with banzai as he, they've spent is suffering the optimize of the 2006 will, at least i feel dean's wife lost the science and her right high. she was left deaf in one ear to use the phone will do something that they shouldn't negotiate. they should do something to and this will help us not us know. so we thought we were done with was honestly this new will now. so we just can't take it anymore that how most of it in the time the family say they have just about come to terms with the pain of the last conflict. from now they see the once again that losing control over that line. the then these are the she says yes i'm was right. it sometimes ok
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display for interaction has a serious, intense as just how do you react when a person tells you about that will not take experiences on how can you help them? it this, this is what these 17 future counselors, what psycho social advisors unloading the boxes that from the organization and fox, the young day themselves and flip the switch. so most of experience and social psychological book. i'm not one to help. others does give to me. i need to say, and more people are funded, really encouraging to say that in future i'll be able to help people who come from my homeland, off a corner of mine who speak the same language as me come from the same culture. who does country in these it at least doing a huge price line. talking to someone who shares your culture and language can be very helpful for asylum seekers. suffering mental health problems come on ground can even do more than a degree in psychology. is kind of what it is. again,
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i'm of absolutely no you. i've seen it different icons to be the language and i don't know the culture. and so i constantly emphasize with that situation and that problem due to a, to the poor blame it is, i mentioned he 9, but for our counselors sort of share that language and culture as long as it's not a problem at all. we'll come tonight. there's classes, question, it's a sound kind of cool. the in the counselors receive 3 months of training a. i'm a big shift. firstly, we study the full basic attitudes that a customer should have called on them. we looked at communication, technical tools, technical training aims to ensure the counselors themselves don't stuff, a re traumatized ation on to encourage those. they help to be open to receiving support and the ones that are considered a minus to me. in our culture, we don't talk much about our feelings and escaped all the we don't have these communication skills has to and fake. i don't want to keep asking the trying to for advice and that includes me then 3 and the idea was developed enough down this time
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. and there's also been established in germany now proxy and he's bringing it to switzerland. unfortunately, it's not about replacing psychologist. is that a bit often to pick a it's about giving advice and support to people before they become l. chronically ill full that become a fluid and on the health care system? so the part of the project is funded by regional authorities, the switch, the federal government, and the nations. the content of algo is contributing half a 1000000 swiss francs. i'm gonna also fund a counseling session. this product will benefit both individual asylum seekers and the region itself. the for the all the cases, the split the drugs especially we provide relief of people in the asylum seekers shell last cases because it's a far more suitable alternative to repeat appointments with a family dumpsters where they have to organize an interpreter whose thoughts takes it's all met and it's better than going to a psychiatric clinic and then realizing that it's not the right place, but that makes a dish. i have gone,
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it's nice to can all people the training counselors are currently on a 9 month internship offering their services and accommodation centers. like this one and video deck and the content of algo, they found it very rewarding so far. almost reminded me of photo based etc schema to live. i mean, in my experience, one or 2 sessions i'll spend crying and grieving kind of a 30, but from the federal full session on was coming. there was a great sense of relief and sandy. have i found this is mine and i was my dream job of out and i studied social work in my home country deep and then worked in it to i like helping people help again mention. and this is about exactly about helping people to ensure that for me, i think experiences don't continue to hold those of have to flee that homeland the
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i as in the industry for 35 years. and i was always the only person of color in the orchestra's, and i was aware of it, but i never had a space to talk about it. the another massive problem is that i'm trying to get you written expression. and a part of that for me, was like really speaking of ways to my head should look, which i found and kind of be inappropriate. i think that conservatories are also seeing perhaps the decades entries as miss the call them and are now trying to correct 9 years ago teaching one. 0 cool tanya. jim. okay, london based orchestra, the musicians of color, the assistant
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principals, the on the stage, playing all the work of a female african american composer. because the, the reason is it was the 1st time that all of us, i think all we have to think about was the meeting. and we all said feeling well, we've always felt awful for them to be trying to see when that feeling was gone. because everybody belonged i think in a perfect world, organizations like gender, k or springs wouldn't have to exist because classical music would reflect our
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society as it is, which is incredibly diverse and people from all sort of sections of humanity. yeah, i think you're right about that. i also work in education sides with jenna k. so going into schools, you know, essentially getting instruments into young people's hands and then working further with those that already know how to play some instruments with a junior orchestra, which is incredibly busy. and even those children who don't become classical musicians, but that the people that are going to make up our audiences compose the cost. so you can know she's hung pumpkin chateau was especially commissioned by the chief. okay. orchestra. 2 2 the . 2 and the musicians also enjoy we discovering the works of pickup and composes.
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i looked up nice. 2 just fine, yet i couldn't believe it. i had no idea about this guy. i've never heard of him. the inventory is not the concepts want to divide in congest and the contest has them all upset to us to fix it. the fool has been going up to find that amazing pieces of the assistant host on using the festival in northern germany. syndicate performed a re imagining of, of all these forced agents to greater claim the how do we encourage and empower women people of color?
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you know, people outside the norm of historic cells. and so how do we get them to feel so great in the nation so that they can then when those jobs, windows positions, and excel and those positions the world wide urban populations of the me, there's a huge need for more housing. but there's a lot of demolition going on to the results. a gigantic, every expanding mountain of construction level tele bounce, reusing some of its built in the
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1950s as part of the us military's significant cold war presidents in west germany . patrick henry village was an american island on the outskirts of titled like many us army bases. it was basically its own little city, with housing for thousands of soldiers and their families, schools, a church, a bowling alley, and most importantly, that even had american fast food chains you couldn't find and the rest of germany a. but after us troops relocated to nearby the spot and in 2012, patrick henry village became a ghost town, leaving behind thousands of american appliances and even outlets. since then, the jury is only been used in part to temporarily house refugees. the city has grand plans to redevelop the village into a shiny new district with housing for thousands offices in green spaces that would typically mean mass demolishing and getting rid of these old houses and putting up
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entirely new ones. but old buildings are only a problem if we see them as such. yeah, yeah. and like we have an urban mining concept us, it's based on the idea of a circular city where we treat everything left behind here as though it's a mind. i can be sweet in a minute and basketball, the guy from voice you're going or chuck is heidelberg step, you de mer, and heads up in the city planning department. some border fair really are lots of resources here. and we want to value these materials and use them to build the new district and go into that type on. roughly one 3rd of the buildings will be left standing, gutted and renovated. the rest will be taken down to make space for a denser neighborhood with mixed use buildings, not just housing. but the special thing about this project is that instead of sending the deconstructed buildings to landfill, the goal is to re sell for use or recycle every thing that you can see here, from literally the ground. while windows like these could typically be used
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for changing energy standards, since these were put in, it means that they can't, they tend to be recycled. a tricky process, but it's possible concrete can either be used or recycled as well. but then we've got to find a home for all of these big old american fringes in germany. all those will be tough. so all of this represents a new approach to old buildings and goods. and proving how we built things. it's vital to instruction accounts for 13 percent of global energy related carbon emissions. and it's not just about putting up buildings. when buildings are demolished, they usually end up in landfill, all told construction and demolition account for about one 3rd of all the waste in europe. projects like the one in heidelberg can do their part to change this, but it didn't actually start here. it started in an office and stood car about a 100 kilometers. so the 1st step is actually to, to get an idea of what do you have to sign which works for e t a,
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an environmental consulting company that's partnered with title back to build a database of the cities building stock, starting with patrick henry village. so you need to know exactly how much material you have, what is the properties of the material? are the hazardous substances, for instance, you can estimate of buildings construction materials based on its agent location and its data base hope cities like title may i get a sense of reusable and recyclable materials at their disposal on planning new projects titled back then confirms the estimates that means boring holes in the floors walls and ceilings and making a checklist of everything looked hanging around the former base. it shows you that over 52 percent of the building is ex, the concrete in around 5 percent. this metal. and this is like a 1st overview of the inventory. me. this information is track for the whole
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neighborhood with a breakdown of all 500000 tons of material. look, i know this seems a bit try, but without any of this documentation in all of these databases, that'd be actual mining of urban mining is remotely possible. color been mining sometimes called circular construction is a new term and has begun to take off in the last 5 to 10 years. it's not a new principle up until the industrial revolution actually urban mining was very common. me go shout and focuses an adult environment at dutch sustainability, consult and see metabolic during the industrial revolution. i think that's what we see with a lot of production process. ease uh, production became cheaper. mazda consumption became more common. and we kind of let go of we're using what we already have met about urban mining efforts include partnering with cities, architects and construction companies. i think a very interesting case that we worked on is the building of the dodge national bank. the 14 story skyscraper was entirely disassembled, metabolic,
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are working with the developer to design a new building from the secondary materials. they've also built an office park out of old house boats in the global south, for example. there just aren't as many empty houses office as in shops and some of the global north. but in a way, urban mining is pretty big here. even though people don't necessarily call it that when you think offering formal sacraments, for instance, they are very sick in a, in that me, the materials that have been using these informal supplements have been, have had several lives before the end up in, um, in these informing areas and how to bag this process is a lot more bureaucratic, painstakingly documenting every tile in an entire mini city by color may seem a little bit crazy, but you never know when it might help. and that's not even the hard part. it's now that's a real suddenly dense things that can be directly reused will need to be sold. we've got 2000 complete kitchens and i don't know how many built in cabinets. we've
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got sockets and toilet bowls and sinks, and the faucets, you might be able to reuse the process of having the buildings themselves will have to be picked apart. and then you need to figure out what to do with the materials. take the $90000.00 tons of brick at patrick henry village. most of that will be able to be reused to some degree. but for the 230000 tons of concrete, it's a different story to then we'll definitely have to process the concrete is combined . it will be broken down and seen part combined with new concrete and this is some of it will be used as a base our streets of those are some of the different utilization as we've developed, vague and we've had to do that for every single material. yeah, you know that some feed it up even if we start cataloging and mining our buildings on a grand scale, will never be able to entirely eliminate the use of new building for us. it's not just about how we deconstruct what's already here. it's also about rethinking how
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we built to, usually in the building, you design a building and then you find materials that fits. but if you have to design it with a set of materials, then you really have to shift your way of thinking and really have also a different position as the architect this whole process to be more of a assembler. also materials instead of a designer of the building will need to use different materials if we want to make future urban mining easier. with that in mind, it builds with materials that are prime for easy reuse, pencil all of the, and treated wood furniture in their office. they've also designed a circularity passport for new buildings that logs materials for future reference and tracking. this data could soon be a requirement in germany, despite the different contexts, lessons from these projects could be useful all over the world. but to make this happen in the 1st place, they just might have to cut some red tape, which is something heidelberg planners knew all about the listening route. we have
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to be incredibly careful and that none of the materials we collect here are technically considered waged up, then it becomes a whole big thing. and the 2nd that happens, only specific companies are allowed to handle that. the guns which was installed and with individual or big mining projects starting to pop up all over the place, governments will have to help coordinate these complicated logistics. and they'll also have to step in to help overcome what might be the biggest challenge cost. incentivizing urban mining and making it cheaper will help drive change, but it will still take time. projects like fido banks, patrick henry, village re development or a start, but also showed just how much has to change to get with an a smith of those goals. looking for more insights and solutions from around the world. if you want to meet the people fighting climate change visit test on facebook, instagram, benz tick,
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critical if you wanted to highlight the negative computer survival is assessing the next conflict for data with china be a little fortunately, how do you expect to take on sullivan? this is he is hungry for the future. so i'm saying it's still a place telling us 32000000 people live here. many of them i understand it. so it has so many people. there must be a way to do business here though, except my parents wanted me to become
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a civil service, but i didn't like the idea of getting such an old fashioned job as being stuck with dreams coming through, making money, having a fun way not fails, and so i'm seeing stuff, september 19th on d, w, and living independently rise to society is full of contrasts and inequality is a big challenge. many problems can only be solved by working together. yes, i think i pretend as a new slaves and what is home the new and the cost of the roof over your head. you must have a place to rest. let us in the refuge from the world keys are the most important thing. you can have him for he has seen how do we tackle the major issues about time? let's talk about the, there is a significant risk of human extinction from advancing our systems. climate change
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is the new frontier of so from our series continues on. since i'm dw, the, this is the top we can use and base around top stories. the us secretary of state has consume that iran is supplying russia with ballistic missiles to the war in ukraine. actually blinking says washington will respond with new sanctions against the ron gemini, france, and bruce, and condemned the delivery as an escalation. they have promised to impose sanctions against the ron's transport industry or palestinian health officials in gaza say and is riley attack on attend. and cap mence has killed at least 19
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