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tv   Sports Life  Deutsche Welle  December 8, 2024 12:15pm-12:30pm CET

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and you can choose and data between the both sides. that was the journalist assignment mohammed income. usually we thank you so much for being on the w here up to date on the w news. marietta evans dean, thanks for watching. the cream was like a stepping point. you know, probably point you into that warranty. once it finishes now. yeah, i saved it from crane. you can just go back to somewhere else. come and see more people than ever on the world wide in search of, of best in life. so why do i want to go back tonight? yeah. like, i don't have any reason. there's no reason, investment thing for me, this. yeah. do me something that is coming very, very soon on. we know when the
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story in for my renewal, i will need to migrate wherever they may be. the dancing is a very, very big part of my life. it's uh, it is my passion a jeremy would have had a dancing band is kind of like, i don't know, cutting one of your fingers off in a way to. but someone is holding you back from doing something in the islamic republic of a ron. dancing is banned, many people still do it, and after they've videos as a form of protest, but you're in for more freedom, especially women whose lives have drastically changed for the worse since the rainy
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and revolution. now many are protesting the secrecy at home and abroad. there's so much things i can say with that with, with my art for him and to touch people and to inform people the, the ability i have to actually have a voice here and to be dancing on the stage screening as well. in the video, i saw the queen of our is on her way to rehearsals at the door to open the gym, and opera between g 8 year old as a dancer at the shots been at the berlin state ballet. she was born in good, simple sweden and has been dancing all her life. as a teenager,
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she then studied at various national ballets across here in her parents come from iran, but she only ever visited the country as a baby. now she lives the life of a professional battery. i mean, i've always been surrounded with knowing how women are being oppressed in the wrong. they have to be forced to wear a head scarf or a he job and that this has been quite normal for me like a growing up and i've never thought too much about it. but that changed when protests began any wrong. now she's in touch with the children starting school in to run. i just realized how i feel so distant from this country um the people and how unfair it is to,
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to be around in girl like any or iranian girl in iran. but living here and to have the privileges i do have here, which they wish to have there. i've had contact with this girl. now, since the pandemic and i said i wanted to actually travel during these years to to go there and to maybe give them chassis and give them workshop to teach them and maybe have a collaboration. she's actually answering, we're trying to, to have a phone call say, but now she has to rehearse a performance from the world renowned choreography. peanut boss stravinsky's the rise of spring, the
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or she missed the train every day practice until its perfect classical dance as demanding physical work. it's a lot of care. and within this profession, it's a full day job. even if the end product is made to look so easy, the life of the valley rena is not what it seems. places of valerie in us. it's a lot of this. a lot of this exact and um, or yes, the toes. how? how's your toes do? do valerie knows 8 bags. of course, the best thing about food is for sure. if they seeing the blacks one movie and then like, is it true about the holy age, like a piece of fruits or like a great fruit in the morning and like no, no, it's not. pasco,
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valley and modern dance has similarities, but also a lot of differences is different muscles you work with so badly it's you have to be kind of more higher on your hips and you're like funny, straight and then a and it's lights or i would say and then lot of nice can sometimes the most of the time spent more heavier and you have to be more grounded and grounded into the floor. and, and this also brings different muscles and different pain. so if i, if oliver, yes, it's fine. it's just very tired. you some of
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the whole lower legs. in the meantime, vivian is found time for passion projects. in 2022. she really has to own pace together with other ensemble dances and young talents. the title of it is in these books that which means this too shall pulse. it's a persian adage describing the federal nature of life and the human condition. the project focused on the lives of women in iran before and off to the revolution. the piece was very inspired or of the time of the 7 days. so i did use kind of this colorful costumes and music from yvonne in rock artists. from that time, women were afraid they were liberated back then women in iran didn't
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have to kind of, they ahead go. this went to school together with boys. they was send them us and alcohol was not yet, but that all changed in 1979 with the writing and revolution. religious lead is seized power and women lost most of their individual freedom. vivian's mother personally experienced this transition of power to i told her the whole, the whole main and the drastic changes led her to leave the country in 1987 to emigrate to sweden 5, i guess. so wasn't came on if we wanted to speak up, they could send us to prison for that to click it in, but they arrested so many people. my father was so frightened and i was so active. so therefore, he told me, you better leave the country to as vivian tells her about the don school into iran. there are a lot of families that like secretly send their kids to this her school to like
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to, to practice dancing, music. and i mean, i, i'm looking really up to her that she's able to do this for children there, you know, and super risky. what she does and, and she's willing to do this tomorrow she aims to cool the down school. well i see a lot of just children that look like me, like it just reminds me of my childhood. you know, like when i was like a little girl in school and practicing dance. and because, you know, i have pictures like when i, when i was in school and i was the only, you know, dark haired girl with like the darker skin and all everyone else was more like blown the light skin you know. and just like seeing like a group of the same girls you know, how much in michigan use it?
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hold on. okay. like like how i was when i was young, you know, i just, i get really emotional actually seeing this. it reminds me of my childhood, but also to see that you know, there's so many children in a wrong that wants to do the same thing. like having the freedom and just having like, enjoy this is what i see like joy in their faces that into that they're able to you know, enjoy their childhood is like have the chest to practice what the like to, to like and be happy. this is what a time which should be. it shouldn't be just a good memories. and i feel like there's so much going on in the country that like are traumatizing, these children and dream is being crushed. you know,
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just a few hours later vivian, the head, back to the sconce, or the bit in state opera. as a professional don says she performs up to 14 shows a month with a bill and state ballet. now the focus is on guessing the timing perfect. getting every move precisely rise ahead of tonight's performance the
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. busy the following day, vivian is on home. tough. the rehearsal space of the door to old ha. it's almost time for her, cool. with the dawn school in to run, but then plans change so out of young as ease. meanwhile, i am cooper. she sadly cancelled the interview due to security reasons. and i don't wanna pressure into anything that she doesn't feel safe
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with and, but of course it's disappointing that she even has to feel like this in the wrong. the people are still scared and still feeling that they could use everything. so just by a phone call, i would try to contact her by myself here and try to still keep in touch with her. i can't deny the feeling that i have been look away from what's happening in the long and sadly enough, these incidents are inspiring me. i wanna message people, none of your audience to, for them to understand better how terrible this is, the most people are going to choose big business. it is what it is. this week we're going to talk about the big influence as making big money. and the question is, do they have
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a big responsibility to society? i don't think that the person that comes to my mind when i'm going to place these people say, do your duty, your own civic responsibility to participate in social discourse of the democratic society. the 77 percent next on d w l. c umbrella ringer, i'm a visual as cure h s. r. c. africa. i'm going to show you some amazing i are. we are as diverse as the kenyan capital itself. 9, rubies. alright. seems in the 60 minutes on d. w. get ready for an exciting auburn toyota to look surprised. i am shopping and i am ready to dive into the hands of the gentleman who 2 of you have. you have
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a one dodge, so give me before you go to the spot and the unexpected side to slide. welcome to the 77. i am victory wilson. broadcast journalist 1010 events m c. i am took a p c t a simply to severe. we're asking the question to influenza carries to show responsibilities or is it just evicted? well, i received word of the business. i am in favor of a social responsibility i make a living of journalism, but i also believe that would great risk comes great responsibility.

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