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tv   Documentary  RT  October 27, 2024 12:30am-1:00am EDT

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in the gym, but i'm certainly not ready to fight russia. this is also absurd. this is the 3rd world lunacy re washing press for so the funder line likes to say we have the tools while we just start with stability and business deals. what are you living on mac, have very good stuff again that you know price here in new york. i think we don't know the aftermath any time that you're not allowed to ask questions, you should ask all of the questions. the more questions ask a better the answer is will be the weight. hi everybody. so i am good and lead to again to us and that's come you it in. so it's a large light bulbs with the supplies scully was found. this goes off of them. big
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so in the mid 20th century and a small above and english don't do of can yonah is discovered and always got it. as it turned out it belong to one of the see boys which are banned against the british and the 19th century. they even managed to find out his fate. the boy's name was automate, and he was executed off to this oppression of the rebellion. and his head was brought back to britain by british officer. this was a common practice among the english at the time towards indians who opened the of what was understood the all right guys, i think we might have found it. i think the light i've just found as it is, the blue building. you see that he used to be the law type of where it's listed by he's got a list about when i brought the topic of the item, big guy that was found in, in, in the,
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in the above. she was of an effect. i have a boat with me here who is now the one of the, the base. uh and. yeah. so the, you know, about the history of this. i've been a suite of lighthouse binge mine, both the, the bill during a trip slip emailing me as a guy once we lived in, we were told at some point, but as somebody mentioned to us that the driver had a history then apart from them use makes and that because of the name somebody hubs back into the way, way back in history. in the early days at the pub, hutch of bruce presented the landlord with uh the scarlet oven bag. um, who was the of involved in the indian leave between 8 and was cools and published by being fired from a kevin the at 1st she was very hesitant to give an interview. and the reason that she told me was that his
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business day is going is the past, it's dead. but it happened. and it's, it's, it happened, nobody can change it. so why discuss about that? why talk about that? i think there's a lot of a media in, in the didn't go to it about of the colonial bonds. they have, they was a continuous stream of an armstrong, a violent and a very bloody arms for them as well. right from what was known as the 1st uprising in 1857. the 1946. when we had a naval and an army new to me. so throughout this entire screen there were lots of people who would know who would that ever use these? and then if we use the movement in india, the
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this month by our might be, it might be best to bite with them on the back of them. the, as you can see, it's quite do it is the lot of people come here. when i went to the british museums in the museum, i didn't see people who are really there to learn anything. they were just data,
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in my opinion, do um, as students do just just see in the different sections of the countries, what kind of artifacts are made because they have different styles. i don't see a point on the artifacts that belong to us became dead. and in, in london, a bit in as an excuse for 4 people in history. oh, i think we are in front of the moves going to ocean out of act in my opinion, in the british museum, which is the sword and the rings and perfume of the was on. is it? is it reminders of the colonialism that a good in india queued, if you to read these a descriptions, you will find that they have very explicit needed in that disorder. and that the link was actually taken from his dead body after he was candid ancestors protected
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. these objects without a blood, they lost their lives for it. um, you know, they, they've been brain to and given to the spectrum, these objects, 1st entities, the least we can do, is convince other nations to give these off to expect to us. at the time of my grandparents test, they had said, well, now the search for this or it is, is your duty. i've been looking for the source for quite some time. and it was in this, in october of 2018 was a time when the end is believe the ancestors come back to visit for a 2 week period. i saw that there as an announcement for an auction. and it was the auction of general, which is never metals. but in the story was
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a piece of information saying that in fact, he had kept this particular sort. it passed on in the family. and one of his defendants in 1965 had donation to, to the right opportunity institution. the i contacted around much, henry, you said you have the source. and they took about 3 months and they finally confirm that they, they have it and they were able to locations. and it was in a, in a case that hadn't been opened. it seems for a very long time. and anyway, they confirmed that they had it, they sent me some, some photographs the so what is important for my family and this sort?
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there is a concept in hinduism called pittsburgh. gosh, this is the idea that your ancestors may have done something bad for something bad may have been done to them, but you is descendants carry the karma of those events and those acts. and so there is a disturbance that enters into the family. in other words, it's like a collective traumatic consequence of events. and in order to put those things to rest, you need to either perform certain ceremonies, or in this case, the return of the sword is really about putting to arrest the effects of history. so they'll be individuals in my family who all have risen to a certain 6 says that it just dissipates. one can see this repeating pattern of individuals rise and then for rise and then for rise and then forward stream the
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quickly. and so this is a very typical comment, consequence, cold fits your dish, which in which basically the ancestors are trying to get your attention to fix the situation. so you can move on peacefully. what do you do in social emotional learning? well, the question though, i h east asian as question. and the question for social emotional learning is, who had been their friends in 6th grade, who are here ally, but we didn't share social emotional bay because some kids thought on say, but they didn't have friends. and so they couldn't share about friends because it in a friend fiction deep, deep so maybe like creat,
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fletcher. i could me cues, pharmacy, that's how lift gates had. he was in prison. how can i do night? the society divided at the wonderful golf street and communities in a be sturdy and villages in the dogs. because the line is that inconvenience lack a sense of food on the evening. the strong black founding and i assume button, which creates a really no one this then a do will provide you with that little actually many streams of the indian freedom struggle. one common narrative that is, that's being held is that it was largely a non violent moment. of course, the pressure that my gun, the, the congress booked on the british judge to model persuasion to, to ensuring that, you know, to the non violent moment actually rang through the conscience of the colonial
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press. the dentist, i gave him a formula mission 19 o. 8 before 90 came on the scene. he said, don't join the a doctor. see, don't join that army isn't that has been in saving. you don't joined their quotes if you can do non cooperation on these 3 sectors. you will paralyze several guys. it does not have them to forgotten the because we need the drum, the to actually put us all together. we need to guntee who can give us a simple message which even an ad us for correct, but understand and even the for us to corporate understand that. so people see how got to be communicated. i mean, one of the greatest examples of this communication was the sort much the, uh, my email back, am giga and then a local advertised. yeah. the look of i had get out of it them. yeah. like huge. i
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did like that in the area, but i do love, we get them get you. uh, what about that? no, i get that. but good. i thought of it. she said uh, go ahead and go to the id 20 by the web tab. its moment generated by guntee. yes, just so my husband gotten the the, the see took a pinch of salt and broke the files back. and how did he do that? he took 78th of his follows from out of the box and walked 241 miles to the sea coast to a village called on the end of these 241 miles. when he reached the coast of i'm don b. he had a 100000 ingles with him and one helping somebody. but if the help of somebody not getting back your conscience at some point of time, but if you can. and so what am i doing? am i doing that? i think, i think that's what he did to the british the,
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the, the way it looks doesn't state the steps of getting the net man, but of some of those things in mind that got those. com. yes. can i show some of the number you just didn't check from the magic, you know, whatever the missed on this reading goals this yeah,
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probably sheila or research you can change the subject. you know, one that i give, i'm going to do, i want to let them eat to, i mean, the clips can we can most of the justin justin mcgill, i'm the mother to release the financing to either him that are on the road. and it's so much little ocean. well them procedures going to be moved to bowers. i'm gonna sit or not split them huge companies with those checks in their state police whose opinions? shapiro, the so suddenly the boy lived in years with no way most shooting. curtis, the india became independent on the 15th of august. 1947 was we were moving towards
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independence of india, but was so moving towards the partition of india that was 10 the legacy of the british when they were here in india, as rulers. because one of the things they did was divide andrew. so they did create a kind of schism between the hindus and the most slims was they were ruling this country. and that meant that the british folks did, they could no longer control the situation they brought in mount baton and he was the last viceroy of india and he needed to do something. and he thought that partition was the only way out. so then he brought in the judge from the u. k. cord subaru, civil radcliffe, who came in with never been to and deb before, she had no idea of the country at all. and he was given 5 weeks to divide the country. and within 5 weeks, he takes the decision and he just draws up the lines mount back and could not tell
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anybody what the boundaries, well, you know, because it was the one lead between him and radcliffe. and of course, the previous governments back home in london. so papa son was born on the 14th of august, and india became independent on the 15th of august. but the terms of the partition of the country were only announced on the 17th of august. so it was a free in deal and focused on that loan to about what are the terms of the partition, but the people the completely on for that and people have to leave. they have to leave the homes that being forced out of their homes. because there are rights all around them, people, are you taking homes that driving people out? what happens in a situation like this when the nation is unprepared for it? and that, that is what had happened to the british left. a very unprepared nation. be lost so
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much, they lost lives, they lost homes, they lost their status, they became refugees. but what night in, in the new country that there was was to go to. it is also a division of everything right from the all means to the cricket team, to music, to arch, to show everything was divided, you know, on the basis of religion. the so this is a very beautiful sculpture given to us on no one by crush me, the artist did when she and it represents, as you can see, the whole story of migration. how difficult it is. because this is a horse painted in the traditional style of kashmir and paper machine style. but on his back he's carrying bones, different bones of different thoughts. so for humans bodies,
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and i think that is very symbolic and something which we must remember that when people migrate the carry many things with them. the my name is milan, show pro, i'm 11 years old and have a lot of family history. the associate, these are the same. oh yes, correct. she's the last and in line. awesome. they just so there's a straight from a line from, from the d. one motorized show problem from, from the red shelf more time. so that was the on of the sports. and, and in the main line that goes down to judge, she's in the, the last isn't a boy there's a partial india called punjab. and we had, or there was mirage,
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who had his sword there and he was flashing was a sword and he had to give the sword. and he went to prison. and we want the sword back because we don't want any more bad things. we don't want the past trauma, we just want out the swords in a safe place. the i went about seeking the return event and i basically requested it. and that was very kelly and, and rather abruptly rejected. a certainly is very, very disappointed. and i think especially at a time when, when, when we've gone through quite some transformation, generally in the world where, where we've become much more accepting of, of, of different, different cultures and different people and, and the world has become more diverse place. and i think also the discussion of actually returning objects that were taken in the colonial context has become, you know,
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a very relevant discussion. so this is the initial letter for me requesting the return of the sword. this was the response which after its explanation, ends with the words in conclusion, i must advise you that the regiments will not agree to the return sal at the top of my sword and considers this matter to us. which of course, for me it is not they basically explained that this was a war trophy and as a war trophy, as a material object, it was important to them to celebrate their victories of the past. which of course, was adding insult to injury for the family that had suffered in the very brutal seas. and in addition to that, they said, well, if we give this back why, why shouldn't we give everything else back? and if we don't give everything else back, why should we give this back and to me that it's very falls logic. if i go into
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someone's house and i take something and i leave the house. and i say look, more people will benefit from this from, from your possessions because i can put them on display. is that going to be a very satisfactory answer for you? you just want it back. it came from your house. so i don't think that brittany, as it's museums, have done, can self appoint themselves as the keepers of shipments, civilization in terms of these objects. it is not about changing history. it is not about changing the facts of history. there was a siege, there was a defeat. that's a fact. we can change our experience of that history and i have made it very clear to the wrong turn or either the family continues to suffer. consequence from that, my daughter will say she doesn't want any family occurs to be passed on to her. and this sword has gone through and, and honestly,
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dramatic experience. i think the answer is for this or to be taken to the kind of place that mirage himself would have wanted, which is basically a hindu temple for the sword to have a degree of respect to be treated with respect and uh for that piece to come the um, so i've just made these a us to follow indians who i'll, i spoke to about this cause, you know, they're just happy to be there. that the are, the fact that they are seeing should, are best appreciated by being at the british museum. that being put down to see a lot of stuff, feel that you know, especially coming back bureau of themselves, that's out to india. so i'm for sure man. these come from because i learned more here to both of them both and about lower she why they more average so yeah, go on. that's one. look at the end or who are um yeah,
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that's an advantage of stay be just coming year with the builder. yeah. but i think it's just a lack of awareness. it is not just about a to to stake viewing. of the artifact is actually about history is actually about the rightful ownership of each artifact. and addition, rightfully be in india, give me one minute. okay. the what i would recommend is maybe you can send data heritage to india and i can got an d, they'll be more iphones die, and the british museum, the world needs to understand that history belongs to its geography. when people talk off for the imminence of british colonialism for leading positive, like, i think we have to be fair and balanced. and talk about british colonialism. you
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know what it left back is. do you go out to ask? i mean, you should speaking person on went to school educated and they would give you 10 reasons why the picture showed was good funny dick's time to show them to, to let's say, if i call you my neighbors my, that my neighbors mother is more beautiful than my mother, so i caught calling her mom because she's more beautiful than mine. mother. the dish on the left us still a kind of should in blind worship, is actually putting your forwarding in somebody else's hands and loving dental control. you sold this misuse should stop the i'm speaking to you in english and i've been, i've learned that as my 1st language in school in my growing up years and later on
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it's safe as an acknowledgement of the fact that they've been colonized. and the fact that many indians cannot even, you know, probably speak probably sickly. and then what isn't the language is in the reason the language is data and mother tongues. he's an acknowledgement of the button. he says, the fact of colonialism reduce gene is quite inexplicably come into the indian. uh, you know, dna today seems to be honest with you, as i said, be a 5000 you know, soon if you look at our history bridge and probably use the last 200 years. but if you take 5000 meals into account, almost every part of the world has visited india. so i think not only that would be a gene of the, of the english people over here. but i think the whole lot of times i would, i would ask the destination to remember that history and to tell your own narrative yourselves don't to be dependent on foreign historians to tell you who you are. and what you did in there to do is um, is reborn, there's, there's
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a new energy, there's a new, there's a new buzz, and i see a seat around me. and i don't think, daniel, as of what actually says this, this change, and it's a huge shift. we are a young nation of young people who have a lot of energy. so yes, they're going to make a difference the, the impact brooks, many industries there with the shrewdest who came to plunder and understand says with the gold of india. others came to offer the challenge of a new civilization and opened in due to the wonders of the west. in time, the computers were touched by the grand jury to india. and the concord in return the
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oh, the the, the 1st 3rd of the 19th century was marked by the aggressive expansion of the united states. the americans sought to seize as much territory for settlement as possible. ignoring the sovereignty of the neighboring states and the interests of the indigenous peoples in 1845, washington announce the annex ation of mexican texas. and in march, 1846 american troops invaded mexico. however, mexico itself did not have enough means to effectively confront the enemy. besides, it was being torn apart by internal conflicts. the americans manage to turn the
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tide of the war in their favor. in september 18, 47, the us army captured mexico city. mexico was forced to sign a humiliating peace treaty according to wait to get lost 55 percent of its territory. vieques, asian of the lands to the united states led to terrible consequences. bloodshed, genocide was committed against the indians in california. during the 1st half century of the american ruled, the number of the indigenous people in the region decrease from 150216000 people. slavery, which had been abolished in mexico long before the united states attacked was restored on the occupied territory. this will later become one of the reasons for the civil war in the united states themselves. nations like individuals are punished for their transgressions. we got our punishment. american president ulysses grant ro,
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what about the consequences of aggression against mexico several decades later the, the, i think that there is, i think that there is a potential for the, the countries in the south to south, realizing it, understanding that these are the 3, the, you raising the economies of china and india and russia, you know, there is basic cape and fewer and fewer needs to the top rates. we traditionally west the technology industry, military capacity, the overall economic to strain. you know, the terms of actually shifted in geographical terms from the west to the east, the the
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loud blast roster night in the lebanese capital as of a rush of idea of bomb target favorite suburbs toward states. prices have hit the doors, alvarado and the camp organized by the red crescent for palestinian refugees. the votes are almost all counted in georgia as ruling party is leading the race with 54 percent in the countries parliamentary elections. the opposition accuses the governments of regain the ballot process and bricks to take center stage this week, wrapping up its annual summit.

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