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Transcripts For DW World Stories - Return - Syrian Refugees In Lebanon 20180818

leach that's easy to listen to. this is a call to the changes not to this concert so i bought and celeb plenty of people have put big dreams on the big story played. in movie magazine sunday w. this week on the world stories. germany headscarves in the classroom. india gay rights in the constitution. but first we go to the u.s. and to charlottesville virginia where people have been commemorating the events of one year ago in a far right rally turned violent the death of one counter demonstrator heather higher shocked the city and the nation we have this report had the high you always had that sparkle in her eyes her mother susan brill tells me when we meet in charlottesville carrying on her daughter's fight for social justice she says helps her to cope with the grief when i first held the urn with her ashes on it and i realize that urn in my arms was about the same weight in the same size as she was the day she was born that was hard. hier believed in standing up to discrimination so when far right nationalists came to town she joined her black friends to protest in august last year white supremacist neo nazis and members of old tried groups from across the country or to challenge still fun and now infamous unite there i truly klesha soon broke out between the group and counter-demonstrators i the violence ultimately that's to hands down an outpouring of public support has encouraged activists like delaine smit the roots of racism run deep here she says pointing to the state's confederate general robert e. lee still standing proud as just one example but for too long people of shallow debil didn't want to confront the issue schmidt tells me they wanted their peace and quiet white supremacy is part of the everyday fabric. of our political life our economic life the way for policing is conducted against black people and you know so there's much more discussion of this you know even among people especially white people who were previously very kind of self-satisfied and thought that everything was fine speech and see any very serious approach is still ancient and other local activist held a panel discussion to promote the importance of remaining vigilant. well. for years muslim teachers in germany have attracted attention if they want a headscarf now one state is considering banning the he job for pupils under the age of fourteen as did have use ya'll to talk about found out this would be a controversial move. and shiny the three classmates three muslim girls shahid has been wearing a headscarf since she was ten it bothers her that some politicians want to forbid girls from doing so. well my peers this time only to. well when i say you have to leave you headscarf i'd say no it's my choice you can't tell me what to do you know my parents you don't have custody of me and you can't make my decisions for me. i also want to wear a headscarf but only when i am older and mature enough to make my own decisions. but at what age are girls really old enough to make a conscious decision to very islamic head covering the german state up north when with various integration minister says that younger than fourteen is too young and he's thinking about banning it for. me it's very important to us we want women who voluntarily decide to wear a headscarf to be accorded full respect for society this is nothing to do with marginalization but we do not want young girls to be forced into it behaved. most school girls here at elizabeth's elbert comprehensive school in bonn say they were the headscarf voluntarily some teachers are critical of this trend but they feel a ban would be counterproductive to state islam teachers at the comprehensive school in bonn take a different approach near gun safety at sea it's very important to me as a teacher to enter the debate this shouldn't be a straight ban but there should be a conversation with school girls who are searching for ounces wearing a headscarf is of course a symbol that strengthens one's identity so to ask about such a personal decision i can only do this when this trust and a. sixth grade islam class is supposed to inspired these peoples to critically analyze the religion to make room for open discussion and allow different interpretations of the koran. you also have to think about how things were fourteen hundred years ago and how things are today this is. not an easy task when it comes to the headscarf debate most children have taken on their parents' attitudes. like dictation ordered should wear a headscarf from puberty from the idea of fourteen or fifteen so they don't. harassed or something because to my. my sisters have also started wearing headscarves and i've seen them wearing them and i was the only one left so i said ok i'll put one on t.v. so is this included sworn muslim villagers applauded these are religious traditions that have continued and of course they're also seen as traditions by their families . and their own absolutely seen that way by the mosques. are often more. than about. them balkanized is trying to get his pupils to question traditions for him school is just the right place for it. the war between russia and georgia over the breakaway regions of south ossetia and abkhazia only lasted a few days but even ten years on locals in border areas still live in uncertainty we visited the village of deep sea. land falls on the fault lines of a frozen conflict some maps show the boundary line to the russian backed breakaway region of south running straight through his farm. signs in the distance read state border a line most of the international community doesn't recognize it says russian border guards patrol the end of his cornfield better shot. if you cross the line they can seize you find you put you in prison. for animals across they take them. they walk around here and belongs where they walk around with dogs with weapons and puts you in a certain psychological state all the time. during the war several bombs fell on the land his eighty four year old mother vanessa says she lost one of her three sons. at night i sometimes long because i'm afraid for my son but. the. afraid that they will come back. right. in august two thousand and eight tensions between russia and georgia escalated into a war over the breakaway regions of south. georgia moved to take back control of. russia responded with tanks and airstrikes it said it was defending russian citizens in the region. today there are russian bases in both breakaways including in south a city is de facto capital tskhinvali the e.u. monitoring mission acts as a mediator and it patrols the de facto border but the e.u. calls the administrative foundry line. the fact that solved and you have a big number of. a relatively close to each other and there's something that you have to monitor closely especially where there's no common agreement on where the a.b.l. is running and. something that has to be watch carefully and that's why we on the ground with two hundred monitors twenty four. the moving boundary line has swallowed some of india's property in the past now he's determined to stand his ground this farm has been in his family for generations for the younger generation living on the border the war is a distant memory but with the conflict still unresolved the threat of tensions boiling over again is an ever present reality. india's top court is reviewing a colonial era law which outlaws homosexuality gay rights activists are if you're far is among those spearheading the campaign to have the legislation scrapped but his advocacy has come at a huge personal cost. has been talking with him. a nine hundred. a refuge for gay men like. over ten years. it's a place they can be free from society's keys in a country where the law criminalizing homosexuality known a section three seventy seven is routinely used as a couple to hound people it is making their lives hell they are there fears everyday affairs blackmails extortion rape heris men beating forty percent of them just commit suicide just because of the fear that they would be outed by the police or the by the community because it is still seen as a criminal thing and if knows that only too when he runs a child be awareness programs among the working class gay population and activity fraught with risk in india several years ago he and his colleagues were thrown into prison they were charged with conspiracy to commit sodomy and possess so-called obscene materials it was a shock because what we're trying was trying to save lives and we're being imprisoned and that was horrific because in jail for initial candy and we were denied drinking water the they've been beaten up regularly and that left so many scars. lost most of the state because of the beatings and the poor hygiene in prison he was shunned by his friends it took years before he dared to enter the station again but he hasn't given up the fight he's now one of the petitioners pushing india's stop court to decriminalize homosexuality among the gay community the poor of the most bundle. in give idea of how go along with the gong no one at this workshop can seek six wants to show their. husbands and fathers some of them are sex workers only then would. have a diagnosis no one in my family or my neighborhood knows i'm gay if they did they call me a faggot. my family wouldn't accept me anymore as. i did spends long hours at the office he draws strength from the state and his family especially his mother who has been hugely supportive. india's supreme court is expected to deliver a verdict on whether the bill is constitutional. the so just hope in the gay community. that they may finally be able to step out of the shadow. plastic model turn into a paving stone. make it clearly. working anywhere and there are people developing smart solutions everywhere. let's inspire each other to environmental magazine eco africa next. european stars deliver rousing performances. every concert an unforgettable event the flame british india bad cuts a cheap place. good place for forty five minutes on the dublin. mainland hundred sixty eight and i'll try and go to around the world to help. young people the games the parents' generation the field if it wasn't on city and dusty fullest stupidity until. they demanded nothing less than a home society. like maelstrom of conflict lines of play how did those who remember the last time for the first time had a feeling of being the promise of something. the seeds of civil rights the peace movement and women's football player. nineteen sixty eight. the global revolt starts september first two double. play. play. play. hello and welcome to a new idea in of african european magazine called africa my name is mail. and i'm here on the all scots up.

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Bonn

Transcripts For DW World Stories - Return - Syrian Refugees In Lebanon 20180819

solutions and reforestation. they create interactive content teaching the next generation about environmental protection and more determined to build something here for the next generation of global ideas the multimedia environment series on d.w. . law. this week on world stories. germany headscarves in the classroom. india gay rights and the constitution. but first we go to the u.s. and to charlottesville virginia where people have been commemorating the events of one year ago when a far right rally turned violent the death of one counter demonstrator heather higher shocked the city and the nation we have this report for the high you always had that sparkle in her eyes a mob or susan brill tells me when we meet in charlottesville. carrying on her daughter's fight for social justice she says hold sir to cope with the grief when i first held the urn with her ashes. and i realize that urn on my arms was about the same weight of the same size as she was the day she was born and that was hard. hier believed in standing up to discrimination so when far right nationalists came to town she joined her black friends to protest in august last year white supremacist neo nazis and members of old tried groups from across the country cover to challenge still fun and now infamous unite the right to rally clashes soon broke out between the group and counter-demonstrators. i the violence ultimately that's to hands down an outpouring of public support has encouraged activist like elaine smit the roots of racism run deep here she says pointing to the state of confederate general robert e. lee still standing proud as just one example but for too long people of shannon's build didn't want to confront the issue schmidt tells me they wanted their peace and quiet white supremacy is part of the everyday fabric. of our political life our economic life the way policing is conducted against black people and you know so there's much more discussion of this you know even amongst people especially white people who were previously very kind of self-satisfied and thought that everything was fine. and see any very serious approaches still ancient and other local activists held a panel discussion to promote the importance of remaining vigilant. that . for years muslim teachers in germany have attracted attention if they were a headscarf and now one state is considering banning the job for pupils under the age of fourteen as d.w. xian to talk found out this would be a controversial move. and shinedown three classmates three muslim girls she that has been wearing a headscarf since she was ten a brother start at some politicians want to forbid girls from doing so. little my speech this time only. well when i say you have to believe you had scoff i'd say no it's my choice you can't tell me what to do you are not my parents you don't have custody of me and you can't make my decisions for me as for alcohol i also want to wear a headscarf but only when i am older and mature enough to make my own decisions. but at what age are girls really old enough to make a conscious decision to wear islamic head covering the german state of north rhine-westphalia integration minister says that younger than fourteen is too young and he thinking about banning it for what is going to speak. to me is very important to us we want women who voluntarily decide to wear a headscarf to be accorded full respect for society this is nothing to do with marginalization but we do not want young girls to be forced into it me of going to because. most school girls here at elizabeth's elbert comprehensive school in bonn say they were the headscarf voluntarily some teachers are critical of this trend but they feel a ban would be counterproductive to state islam teachers at the comprehensive school and take a different approach gunsmith that's the it's very important to me is to teach it into the debate this shouldn't be a straight ban but there should be a conversation with schoolgirls who are searching for ounces wearing a headscarf ease of course a symbol that strengthens one's identity so to ask about such a personal decision i can only do this when this trust and a. sixth grade islam class is supposed to inspired these peoples to critically analyze the religion to make room for open discussion and allow different interpretations of the koran. you also have to think about how things were fourteen hundred years ago and how things are today is the fourth. not an easy task when it comes to the headscarf debate most children have taken on their parents' attitudes . like think they should and should wear a headscarf from puberty from the idea of fourteen or fifteen so they don't. harassed or something. like this my sisters have also started wearing headscarves and i've seen them wearing them and i was the only one left so i said ok i'll put one on t.v. so it's included villagers applied to these are religious traditions that have continued and of course they're also seen as traditions by their families. and their own absolutely seem that way by the mosques. are often more. devout and. then balkanized is trying to get his pupils to question traditions for him school is just the right place for it. the war between russia and georgia over the breakaway regions of south ossetia and abkhazia only lasted a few days but even ten years on locals in border areas still live in uncertainty we visited the village of deep sea. land falls on the fault lines of a frozen conflict some maps show the boundary line to the russian backed breakaway region of south a set running straight through his farm. signs in the distance read state border a line most of the international community doesn't recognize he says russian border guards patrol the end of his cornfield better shot the mole. if you cross the line they can seize you find you put you in prison. for random moves across they take them. they walk around here and belongs where they walk around with dogs with weapons and puts you in a certain psychological state all the time. during the war several bombs fell on land is eighty four year old mother vanessa says she lost one of her three sons. at night i sometimes not because i'm afraid for my son but. afraid that they will come back. right. in august two thousand and eight tensions between russia and georgia escalated into a war over the breakaway regions of south. georgia moved to take back control of. russia responded with tanks and airstrikes it said it was defending russian citizens in the region. today there are russian bases in both breakaways including in south the city is de facto capital tskhinvali the e.u. monitoring mission acts as a mediator and it patrols the de facto border but the e.u. calls the administrative foundry line. the fact that solved and you have a big number of. a relatively close to each other. is something that you have to monitor closely especially where there's no common agreement on where the a.b.l. is running and. carefully and that's why we on the ground with two hundred monitors twenty four. the moving boundary line has swallowed some of the property in the past now he's determined to stand his ground this farm has been in his family for generations for the younger generation living on the border the war is a distant memory but with the conflict still unresolved the threat of tensions boiling over again is an ever present reality. india's top court is reviewing a colonial era law which outlaws homosexuality gay rights activists is among those spearheading the campaign to have the legislation scrapped but his advocacy has come at a huge personal cost. has been talking with. a nineteen. a refuge for gay men like. it's a place they can be free from society's keys in a country where the law criminalizing homosexuality is known a section three seventy seven is routinely used as a couple to hound the people it is making their life hell they are there fears every day faith blackmails extortion rape harris men beating fourteen percent of them just coming out for side just because of the fear that they would be outed by the police or the by the community because it is still seen as a criminal thing and if knows that only too when he runs a child be awareness programs among the working class gay population and activity fraught with risk in india several years ago he and his colleagues were thrown into prison they were charged with conspiracy to commit sodomy and possess so-called obscene materials it was a shock because the what we were trying was trying to save lives and we are being imprisoned and that was horrific because in jail for initial candia they will deny drinking water wheel being beaten up regularly and that left so many scars. lost most of the state because of the beatings and the poor hygiene in prison he was shunned by his friends it took years before he dared to enter the station again but he hasn't given up the fight he's now one of the petitioners pushing india's stop court to decriminalize homosexuality among the gay community the poor of the most. in give idea of how go along with the gong no one at this workshop can seek six wants to show their. husbands and fathers some of them are sex workers only. more literate have a diagnosis no one in my family or my neighborhood knows i'm gay if they did they'd call me a faggot. my family wouldn't accept me anymore but i guess i didn't have the. added spends long at the office he draws strength from the state and his family especially his mother who has been hugely supportive. india's supreme court is expected to deliver a verdict on whether the ball is constitutional. this is sort of hope in the gay community. that they may finally be able to step out. even. if there's. some festivals and news. outlets to anyone. never ending heat wave by visiting cultural hotspots around the country. good band stars deliver a rousing performance or. straight up rock with a reggae fan. and a place that is one of a kind. well most metal band skin dress. good in concert in forty five minutes. they make a commitment. they find solutions. based and stronger. africa on the move. stories about people in a different shaping their nation. and their continent of africa on the move stories about motivational change makers taking their destinies into their own hands. d.w. multimedia series from africa. d.w. dot com or go on the most. hello and welcome to a steaming hot edition of art's twenty one. europe has this weltering under a heat wave this summer with record breaking temperatures across the continent everyone was so.

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NEK Council on Aging hosts 2023 annual meeting | Vermont Business Magazine

NEK Council on Aging hosts 2023 annual meeting | Vermont Business Magazine
vermontbiz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vermontbiz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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NEK Council on Aging honors Senior Companions as 2023 Humanitarian Heroes

NEK Council on Aging honors Senior Companions as 2023 Humanitarian Heroes
vermontbiz.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from vermontbiz.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

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JEC, Bruriah Team Up With JFed Metrowest On Mental Health

With mental health concerns rising throughout the country and disproportionately impacting school-aged children, the Jewish Educational Center and its Bruriah High School joined with the Jewish Federation of Greater MetroWest to provide preventative mental health programming to students of all ages.

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The Origin of Diamonds Can Be Fingerprinted, Study Shows

January 22, 2021 Ever since the blood diamond issue burst into public consciousness more than two decades ago, the industry has searched for a scientific method to determine the origin of diamonds. That need is felt most acutely in the Central African Republic (CAR)—currently the world’s only source of conflict diamonds, according to the Kimberley Process (KP) certification scheme. CAR diamonds have been under KP embargo since 2013. The conflict in CAR is limited to certain regions; other parts of the country are peaceful. Since 2016, the KP has green-lit diamond exports from certain specified non–conflict zones. But while those shipments are subject to heightened scrutiny, concerns remain that diamonds from the rebel-controlled mines might slip in through official channels. What’s needed is a way to tell them apart.

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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - DW - 20180819:17:17:00

had that sparkle in her eyes a mob or susan brill tells me when we meet in charlottesville. carrying on her daughter's fight for social justice she says hold sir to cope with the grief when i first held the urn with her ashes. and i realize that urn on my arms was about the same weight of the same size as she was the day she was born and that was hard. hier believed in standing up to discrimination so when far right nationalists came to town she joined her black friends to protest in august last year white supremacist neo nazis and members of old tried groups from across the country cover to challenge still fun and now infamous unite the right to rally clashes soon broke out between the group and counter-demonstrators. i the violence ultimately that's

Charlottesville-virginia
Fight
Mob
Sparkle
Eyes
Social-justice
Sir
Hold
Grief
Daughter
Susan-brill
Urn

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