Month: July 2019
Number Of Brazilians Defining Themselves As Black Has Increased By 32% In 6 Years • AfricanGlobe.Net
From 2012-2018, the number of Brazilians declaring themselves as Black, increased by almost 5 million. The white population continues to shrink.
Source: Number Of Brazilians Defining Themselves As Black Has Increased By 32% In 6 Years • AfricanGlobe.Net
Meet the Militant Indigenous Rap Group Promoting Extreme Resistance – VICE
Tonight on VICELAND, RISE follows Savage Family and the polarized reactions to their music.
Source: Meet the Militant Indigenous Rap Group Promoting Extreme Resistance – VICE
Car mechanic shifts gears, becomes a doctor at age 47 and helps address shortage of black doctors – cleveland.com
Carl Allamby had a successful car repair business and an abysmal high school record. But when he went to pursue a business degree, a required biology course flipped a switch in him and he went on to pursue a medical degree. Now 47. he’s a resident in emergency medicine at Cleveland Clinic Akron General Hospital.
Afro-Brazilian Street Food – GIANT FOOD TOUR + Boiling Moqueca + Acarajé in Salvador Bahia, Brazil! – YouTube
Miners Kill Indigenous Leader in Brazil During Invasion of Protected Land – The New York Times
YEP… SAME OLD, SAME OLD.
THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES – Slavery in Italy
I just came across this short documentary this morning. I won’t taslk about this situatin too much since the video says it all, but I will say that wherever slavery pops up it’s ugly head, it must be fought, and destroyed.
DW Documentary
Published on Jul 9, 2019
Yvan Sagnet from Cameroon is battling modern slavery in Italy’s agricultural sector. Sagnet once worked as a low-wage farmhand. Now he is fighting for the rights of seasonal farmworkers, taking criminal recruiters, or gangmasters, to court. Yvan Sagnet calls them slaves: the hundreds of thousands of seasonal farmworkers from Africa and eastern Europe on Italy’s fields. Without their labor the country would have no tomato, orange or olive harvest. But the workers are exploited and often forced to live under inhumane conditions in ruins or shanty towns called ghettos. In 2011 Sagnet himself briefly picked tomatoes on the fields near the southern Italian town of Nardò. For four days he labored to fill the 350-kilogram crates. He earned 14 euros a day, ten of which he had to hand over to the gangmaster, or Caporale, for transport and water. Caporale is the term for the criminal recruiters who control and exploit the workers. After a 14-hour day working under the blazing sun and even being beaten, Sagnet took home only four euros. He helped to organize the first strike among the farmhands. It was a success, and since then he has been an activist for the rights of the farmworkers and against the gangmasters. Despite death threats, he has set up an organization called NoCap, a label to certify produce farmed under ethically acceptable conditions. And he has taken his fight against exploitation and slavery to the courts. So far, the Italian justice system has responded slowly. It’s a fight that will take a long time to win. ——————————————————————– DW Documentary gives you knowledge beyond the headlines. Watch high-class documentaries from German broadcasters and international production companies. Meet intriguing people, travel to distant lands, get a look behind the complexities of daily life and build a deeper understanding of current affairs and global events. Subscribe and explore the world around you with DW Documentary.
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Category
Education
Music in this video
Learn more
Song
a1
Artist
Ólafur Arnalds, Nils Frahm
Album
Stare
Licensed to YouTube by
[Merlin] IDOL Distribution (on behalf of Erased Tapes); ASCAP, LatinAutor, Kobalt Music Publishing, BMI – Broadcast Music Inc., Downtown Music Publishing, UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA – UBEM, and 9 Music Rights Societies
Archivists race to digitize slavery records before the history is lost | Public Radio International
The era of the trans-Atlantic slavery is documented in archives in former colonies around the world. Now, just as there’s the most potential to use those documents to fill in large gaps in history, some of those archives are at risk of being lost.
Source: Archivists race to digitize slavery records before the history is lost | Public Radio International
A Medical School Summer Camp Helps Minority Boys Erase The “Belief Gap” | WUNC
During the regular school year, Ty Mathis is a math and science teacher in the Alamance-Burlington School System. This summer, he’s teaching mostly middle
Source: A Medical School Summer Camp Helps Minority Boys Erase The “Belief Gap” | WUNC