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tv   Euromaxx  Deutsche Welle  November 3, 2024 2:30am-3:01am CET

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crises was, every single connection mapped out shows the geophysical reality. the on the board is what makes things the way they are mapped out, navigating a changing world. now on youtube, the would you like to live in venice surrounded by taurus joined us as we follow a young venetian resident and through the lagoon. there's more to manchester than footfall. this former industrial hub is an underrated travel destination. and what do berliners eat? it's not just crew versed or done or for the brave. there's also pork not call these stories and more coming up on your own max, the
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venice for money. it's a dream vacation spot and then there are it's $50000.00 inhabitants. what's it like for born and bred, venetians living between the grand canal and ancient buildings in our series, young and european, 18 year old nick cuts and their lo shows us his venice. i love that i think is one of the best places through uh, not only because of the culture but the freedom. you have, walk the streets, go whatever you like. then is the city of bridges and canals of dreams and romance, taurus, conversion, the queen of the age, re added from all over the world. but what's it like to grow up here? when you're not good morning, my name is nick and this is my how sometimes a 18 year old nicholas petronela was born here. he cruise us in on what life here is like as a student,
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i get up at 6 30 in the morning and eat breakfast here. italians usually have like breakfast like this one and then have something to eat at school and to and for lunch. a big meal like we'll see later at 730 after some coffee juice and cookies nic heads off to school. every morning i go to my grandmother and i say hello and take or trash, the downstairs. i don't know. and italy is very common to live with your grandparents and the whole family living together in one house. next family has lived here for about 250 years. as long as the house is old. nic lives in door, so daughter. oh, what of 6 districts in venice is historical center? here everyone goes nearly everywhere on foot. the develop already or water buses play
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a vital part for public transport. among the more than $100.00 islands, they run on 20 lines, day and night. motor scooters, bicycles and cars are strictly prohibited, didn't that is the i was gonna see is very beautiful, but after a father's time, so you do it, it gets a bit boring. the average age of venetians is rising up. the remaining 50000 residents only around 9000 or under 18. many schools have closed in recent years, especially in the store go center of venice. next high school is one of about 10 primary, middle and high school. still open the next in his last year of high school, after graduating he wants to study computer science, and so we have to apply sooner. so you have to do it for a months before you graduate. so in february,
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when i have an idea to what to do and where to go, i'll apply to a different universities and do the tests for those universities. by around 10 am, venice is all but over run with tourist during peak season. about 100000 arrive each day, plus a good $50000.00 day trippers. equal to the local population of the historical center of them. as for nick, it's another day in tories. kevin, organizations have to know these hidden streets to get around what, when there's a lot of people back home, his mother is waiting for him. good night. nick has dual citizenship. his father is a 12th generation venetian. his mother is american. like many italians, his age nic lives with his parents, but he plans to move out right after graduation. he'll be a minority in italy. we're about 2 thirds of men age 18 to 34. live with their parents that tell you and have a word for students who live with their mothers long past the age of 30 memo they
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almost every day after lunch, nick gets together with his friends. are going online since about a 2 hour ride and call. check those up to have our friends and kind of drink. many of makes friends like his long time, best di, filippo own their own vote for anything under 40 horse power. they don't even need a voting license. and after the age of 16, they don't need anyone else in the boat afternoon, we always come to bars and play some games. 0 thing basically, which is very interesting game, which we play always with. i play with my friends and um, i think i'm going to win this on the
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i've always been happy living in venice being a small city doesn't have a lot of opportunity for the future. so i'm thinking of going out for you into a city and maybe work, but i've always loved living here as a kid. and i think that in the future i'll come here to set up a family i left and come back on here one day. moving on now to lima weiss, a photographer and visual artist in madrid. but 1st and foremost, she's a dancer laila, grew up in a refugee camp in algeria. moving to spain as a child, her most important dance partners are her 2 crutches. she's made a living with a disability that is part of her art, the inviting. like for me there is no doubt whether you dance is the best thing that could have happened to me then. so if they carry things inside us that we need to
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let out in advance, it gives me the chance to do just that. for me, dance is total freedom minus for me. that's why the wide was born in a refugee camp in algeria. and she contract that polio there, which led to the partial paralysis of her legs. at the age of 8, she was taken in by a family in germany, spain. this quote in violet. and i discovered dance during a pretty rough time. the ad building and i was bullied at school. i see. gave one day i came home, went to my room, put on some music and turned off the lights. simplistic got that. i know it gave me a chance to express everything i was feeling inside a sad look at look at you about having anger frustration at that. i. yeah, in that moment i realized i was dancing without knowing what dancing was good, bye, less from wayne. but then the crutches are very important to me. no means they don't inspire me. they're a part of me that i couldn't do without. you'll know for that he has had a nice,
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they're my best friends and what is, i mean, they're my lovers. they're my companions by meta sunbury. everything many, only time they don't exist for me is in my dreams. just when the self taught dancer had her 1st performance in 2014. today she performs on international stages and collaborates with for now and choreographer as from across europe. the road to here hasn't been easy though, but as time goes on, laila has begun dancing and increasingly prominent companies. england was her 1st artistic home a lot. that's f. well not portland, was a very important doorway for me. that's where my career as a dancer began when someone steps into your life and says, trust in your work, confident that that you eventually start to believe it as soon as nothing,
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nothing in it, but that takes a lot of effort. so it doesn't happen over night school, it's about gaining so confidence and embracing the crutches on stage, lead bethany, and now in addition to dance, laila is also a visual artist and photographer through her images. she explores her relationship with her twin sister who remained in the refugee camp in algeria. as a result, she didn't grow up with her. as i left that f, yes on dance and photography are very different forms of expression and beautiful, thoughtless self portraits were another refuge for me. then go. and the only way to visualize my twin sister's existence made allow me the amount of email. yeah. maybe that gave i could especially gotten older, i started to wonder, does she look like a link to that? that includes that. i think i found her through photography. and that includes that i like 2 forms of artistic expression with 2 crutches and 2 families. and
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with each movement and every photo liked is telling her story, the lead me this sort of spending the borders lie within ourselves in that way. i leave that. but if you know how to bring what you loved to life, there are no boundaries before you play dance without crutches, when that without feet, without fingers in the end of all the barriers are just in your head. the when to pay passes away the sense of loss for some is like losing a family member. more and more pet owners want to give their fairy friends a dignified farewell. and a former church in southern germany is helping make that possible. this family is grieving. the loss of a loved one and he was always there
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a long ways there. whether i needed him or not. he was always there. he was simply always there. they're not grieving the loss of a human being live, rather their dog p new amount and what husky here in the former saint paul's church in southern germany, families can gathers and give their for a friends a proper send off. but wait, a church service for animals is that even allowed in germany. more on that later sonya of us or mine, is a professional eulogy, as for both people and animals per eulogy for p. new is full of anecdotes and memories as if she were talking about a human being. for me to get this for me, there is no difference because when you have loved someone and say good bye to a family member, the pain is the same. whether a loved one is gone or
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a beloved animal that further i am going to come in ships biggest order. i can give this to you. and find one and her partner florian to step out bought this former methodist church in august of 2023. so how did the local community react to having their former place of worship turned into a funeral home for animals, math and science. and nick is clickable. now we were incredibly lucky when we took over this church economics. got this, there was a blessing surface with all the former parishioners. everyone was there. we got to know each other personally. you know, everyone's thought it was good and is happy that the church will continue to be used in this way cnn. right. took your notes to us. and what do they say to people who think this is all a bit too much? so nothing. so then i'm in minutes, this is new for some people, it's just an animal. and for others, it's a fully fledged member of the family. me
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a 2nd. and we always say that everyone is allowed to grieve as much as they want to get up and everyone is given the space to do so of some flight, whether it's a small or large space that's decided by the heart, silva and a method. guess there's animals are still very much alive, although one of the iris wolfhounds may not live past the age of 5. tina is wife appreciate having a place to plan the funeral of their pets even if they need some more outdoor potty training. as of who owns is just for us, it's like a circle, like a friend going through the circle, saying good bye cremation, into the earth and back home again. and for us, this completes the circle size sources around 34000000 pets live in german households, and the trend is rising. l environment organizes up to $1000.00 funeral services for deceased pets each year, including horses. prices range from $250.00 arrows up to $4000.00 depending on the
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weight of the animal. germany has very strict rules regarding pet burials. unlike in the us where there are no federal laws pertaining to them or in canada were animals can be buried with their human rights. given dodge the law in germany, clearly states that every pet and domestic animal may be cremated, but any animal that would see radically b. e may not be cremated. as this is of course a border line case with horses because of horse can also be and times 5 by the south. yeah. but you do have the possibility to apply for a so called exemption permit for horses into os. then this animal can also be cremated and off pieces in the coming of a game that gets a former saint paul's church. pastor marcus can 19 stops by to see how business is going in the eyes of a church official. are these had services an acceptable practice?
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as he's coming inside, that's a steel for the infant. in this case, of course, i would rather speak for the regional protestant church. animal burial is possible . thing between the question is, of course, which liturgical rituals are used to accompany it one dog. and you have to be careful that it's not identical to a normal human funeral means can be stopped. but for me, comforting a person who has to say good bye to an animal is a matter of sincerity and the past oral care and makes the both the feel solid and all the say, it's all good for the mention as the surface for the dearly departed p new draws to an end. as the ceremony given his family, a sense of closure. especially the tale skirt. i felt was that most of these, but i kept looking at these photos of him and was reminded of the news life sleep. pompey knew if i can be of help. i thought it was like a whole other world for a moment. we were really together with him again regardless of whether you are for or against such ceremonies for animals, this was no doubt an emotional send off for man's best friend.
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if you're going to the u. k. manchester is well worth a visit. this former industrial city lights some 300 kilometers north west of london. over the past few years, it's become something of an inside. her tip, as our reporter hannah almost found out are welcome to manchester, the northern industrial city that is probably most well known for its football, or for the fact that its previous musical legends like oasis and the stone roses. but the cities, industrial heritage means is not exactly famous for its beauty and therefore isn't usually on everyone's travel book and list. i'm starting out with a wonder through the on coats district, which was once the beating heart of the cities industry. manchester's payments for being the 1st industrialized city in the world and was the case leading producer of kaufman textiles during the industrial revolution. nowadays. and coats is one of
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the coolest districts in the city with lots of up and coming restaurants, cassie's and bars. manchester is one of your fastest growing cities, but it seemed even more redevelopment than usual since the pon demik there seemed to be individual projects being set up all over the city. this big white building over here is under construction right now. so we kind of getting closer to what it set to open in june as a major, our space and cultural hub. the cities development hasn't just been inviting you building, creating more green spaces, has been at the heart of the cities. growth mayfield park is mine just as far as our city center public park. and it was designed as an urban escape. the you can see that they really made an effort to preserve manchester's industrial
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parts in the midst of this huge, beautiful green space. unique to the city. i guess time for some more culture. manchester has always had a thriving culture, see, especially when it comes to music. i me, thing santana. get who to find out more about had the city shape the music scene here. the, the why do you think manchester has been such a hot spot for music? it's always be like trying to redefine itself lots of the i why things happening. i think that's why the music came from like, and also the influence that came into the city. so we've always had quite a big immigration of influx of, from the irish and folks back in the days to yeah. to the south asian influx to, to, to make an influx. ok. so there's always been kind of something going on in manchester which influenced the music and i think you can hear it and that full.
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and i think that for the great music that came out and a great artist that came out of my chest, now i'm heading to my final stuff of the day. i took some lunches, so would it be complete service? one of the city of davis crossed here by some of the finest press here in the world . it is free to write here in manchester. so a trip to the marble arch and it seems like a perfect end to my day. here's welcome on festa. thank you. so is it here that you guys have here? is it all locally brewed the birth date, initial start in the cream of where the kitchen is now in just a very, very tiny and it's a positive popularity to my group. we needed to pick pharmacists, so we then right away from the corner from the hub, quite hired and going away. just possibilities and manchester operating out. was it just use right away? ok. we would have us do it the well i have
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to say i've been live at least surprised by manchester. it might not be as beautiful as some other cities, but this definitely a vibe and an atmosphere here. so a lot of other places just don't have just the alternative scene is what you're saying. manchester is definitely some traditional dishes can really divide opinion and the berlin style, pork, knuckle or ice bind is one of them. some say it's too fat for others is wonderfully tender and juicy. one thing is for certain, after finishing an ice fine, you're guaranteed to feel full of berlin, pork, knuckle or ice spine makes quite a visual impression. but in berlin, it's a traditional dish. so does everyone like it is if it's degree,
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see i'd rather not do one. i mean you have to like it. i do know for your see you tomorrow but not so much. no, it's super easy. you have to either by no one can tell me otherwise either get a decent one or one that's bad. opinions are as divided as the port knuckles themselves. today, when many people think of berlin cuisine, they think of curry versus doing a cup ops for me falls. but pork knuckles or a berlin classic will tell you what to watch out for when cooking them. because they teach strictly speaking, peer nitride is pure poison. and how is ice bind related to ice skating? dick of them, and then berlin serves authentic and original berlin dishes. the restaurant has been around for nearly 100 years. meat balls in white paper, sauce, liver and onions. and meat balls with fried eggs are on the menu. the cuisine here is hardy to say the least ship on today is bonus cooks the meanest of the classic
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ice bind. that's glasses are very nice, fine diners in berlin have enjoyed eating ice bind for over a 100 years on the you guys and i like that needed to around the i personally i even like the fat. most of all this fits. i polish it off the supervisor, he has this fact all but what exactly is a pork knuckle? we came to the comfort and coil up, what's your shopping at berlin? market hall to find out his eyes. finally, i might sort of those come from the hind quarter or the 4 quarter. shang fired at 1st flight. she got the hind quarter is a bit needier than the 4 quarters. so it costs a little more of the holes. they say the bone and the 4th quarter looks like the blade of an ice skate. does it always be an issue that you pull that back in the day? people would supposedly strap it to their feet and go skating across the ice on lakes icicles. them 1st comes the carvings and then the caring. what exactly is the caring? food sharing means we take the meat color,
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you normally have the appetising read and conserve it. for this, put your us, 1st of us uses nitrate, curing salt, some all spice. they leaves mustard seeds, sugar and onion, add flavor to the meat. at marinate in the brian for $2.00 to $3.00 days, we can also be cured at home. ones that sort them on weather rule, and this is important. nitrate during salt shouldn't actually be used for seasoning because only through the cooking or degradation process does it become edible and non toxic? strictly speaking, one moment if your nitride is pure poison, it was a please. as i pull this gift, it's not safety 1st. now on to the preparation, how do we make a berlin eyes bind? does ice price spine is boiled? fox always goes into the oven. in southern germany, this cut of meat is traditionally grilled in an oven and they don't usually call it ice spine, but instead shine the hawks it. but it's pork,
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knuckle all the same. that slice is called the meat is dryer, it may turn out tender too. no question, but it's dryer. and while the ice bind, if it's cooked properly and we'll just melt in your mountain view, those eyes by them would. now it's time for the actual preparation. find me my on mit. let's start with a good old onion. done by offering the that what we need bailey's see of all, all the buys berries, people and very importantly, a little sugar and solution. and this is silver evolved and we need a salt and a bit more curing. solvent line is busy and to diet. the meat simmers with these ingredients in water for about 2 and a half hours. that makes it nice and tender. it's, it's a, it's a simple this um design button. many people maintain that a pork knuckle taste best when it's cooked in a pot with 15,
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or in this case with 20 other pork knuckle indian that makes the pork knuckle taste better than the nice makes of i find as. but what's totally inconceivable is pork knuckle without sauerkraut on the slightly breezes onions, bacon, carrots and spices. then adds the sour crap, white wine, apple juice, and sugar and simmers it altogether for 30 to 45 minutes. and then the classic berlin dish is done. i spine with sauerkraut and potatoes, the slices. the meat is really tasty, or call it the 2 will tender with sour crowns potatoes. and if you wish, some peas. so 9 o'clock, that'll fill me up. that's fine. then phone up, but the may be on your next visit to berlin. you'll give ice buying that. try and
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all that, suzy note, we come to the end of the show. don't forget to hit the subscribe button on our social media sites to see more fun stories from the heart of europe till next time . it's good bye and i'll be the same. the, [000:00:00;00] the,
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[000:00:00;00] the somebody tells you that he's scared rambles, or they are either on drugs or line because i have never, not been scared right. in the heart of texas, though rodeo girl, these are challenging gender barriers. life in rodeo is exciting and is not
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forgiving mistakes. in 15 minutes on the w, the similar in the day is between 2 nieces and olivia is to have a whole list stick approach to migration policy rooted in that respect for human rights. our investigative research shows that the anesthesia behind the refugee, the desert guns would not take place without funding from the u. it's determined by this was,
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is happening to migrate on the african continent. those people in the, there's lots of you my thing. yes. so the semester the migration policy starts november 9th on dw, the some people don't care about me because they don't see my beauty. some people don't care about me because they think i have nothing to give back to being in to, to do to them. i am everything at home. they have food, then livelihood, but day by day i do so and so does everything 92000000000 people care about me?
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me me. and now the the . this is dw news and these are our top stories. spain's prime minister pedro sanchez is deploying 10000 more troops and police officers to help recovery efforts after flash flood scale to more than 200 people in the valencia regent. dozens are still missing, and hopes of finding survivors are slim. officials say more bodies may still be

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