Matter just 0. Hi emily and youre in the stream today were talking about the kalashnikov Assault Rifle or a k 47 just what makes it the worlds most popular don will discuss its history and legacy and we want to hear your questions and comments about it share your thoughts get twitter or and our live chat. Hello im dr Charmaine Nelson professor of art history at Mcgill University in montreal and you are in the street. Russia is commemorating 100 years since the birth of soviet weapon inventor kalashnikov for the Russian Ministry of education it is an opportunity to teach School Aged Children about kalashnikov who was hailed a National Hero and died in 2013 at the age of 94. Online russians are using the hash tag kalashnikov 100 to share their thoughts on his life and legacy lewis offers this insight the machine gun invented by him became a symbol of russia as well as the most widespread small arms in history radio studio but its important to protect kalashnikov memory just this is invention how to protect russians on Instagram People are using that same hash tag here hes commemorated on postage stamps and lapel pins and the military offers a look at an in progress morio that will be installed at the museum in St Petersburg later this month meanwhile kalashnikov media put together an immersive website to have you learn more about his life we heard from the projects editor in chief andre have. To coax 2 lives together is needed because ultimately which collision course will do little good to sleep pretty new so simply because ive learned to trust you still could prove your. Control of you can move to my favorite late to. Me is absurd im not going to do you see is due. To his dual online space project for me to cook you are a bunch of convenience. Introduced me to impose recent really cool constructive. So weve heard from people commemorating his legacy but to people in other parts of the world joining us today to discuss in poznan poland eunice army far a combat zone anthropologist and author of the book living with the a k 47 also with us Jonathan FergusonArmaments Research services and the firearms curator at the Royal Armories Museum in leeds in the u. K. Where he joins us and in doha. And journalist who covers the middle east the balkans and Eastern Europe shes written for a variety of Media Outlets including aljazeera welcome everyone to this show so good to have you here i want to start with our community because they had a lot to say about this weapon many familiar with it all started here 2 opposing opinions wasif says it symbolizes terror mass murder and lethal violence to say the very least so thats one persons perspective ill give you another persons who wrote in and this is just minutes after we sent out this tweet our community telling them were doing this show as well the case symbolizes freedom to me when i look at the a k 47 it was instrumental in the freedom of zimbabwe mozambique it symbolizes great. So jonathan you see these 2 opposing sides there although both still be true can you give us the back story how did this come about. Sure yeah totally so you want to be extreme views and views in the middle as well. As to origins the car kalashnikov was a military man himself time criminal it was injured times mine to theirs and of small arms came up with a submachine gun. Carbine. Ended up in charge of a design team working on a new concept there so why for so combining different types of weapon into one the central something that would do all of the jobs of an infantry unit the automatic fire medium range controllable fire as well. So this was based in part on a german german concept and 2nd world war there filmed. But we got Assault Rifle from this is very much the russian take on the design. I want to play a video comment from a member of our community who had some parts on the creator this is eric harper is a Political Science lecturer in the us here in virginia and heres what he told the stream hed been plucked out of obscurity to lead a new Research Development program a Weapons Program that he was involved in. It wasnt creating the most sophisticated gun never quite the opposite it was the simplest firearm and the result was to make warfare easy for amateurs in the 1960 s. In the 1970 s. We saw the consequences guerrilla warfare everywhere in the 1980 s. His rifle made possible the spread of global terrorism in the 1990 s. It was directly responsible for the spread of child soldiers be idea of having not more sophisticated technologies in the future but simpler easier to operate technologies thats kalashnikovs that was his insight. You know what do you make that parents come in there specially the point where he says it was the simplest firearm that true in your view and as it is its still true. So its quite a simple. To operate but it was not a fire our whole amplified violence violence that existed in different ways in a underlying structure of societies being in africa the middle east or central asia basically it highlighted. So the simplicity is one thing but the symbolism which produce in different societies around it it allowed to become such an appealing element so you have knowledge is quite a much of militia fighters are course middle east who do not care for necessary if youre 47 anymore and they have access to other arms so it produced certain form of Cultural Habits you asian as well besides the fact that its a simple weaponry its quite easy to operate its quite it has a good resilience and learn to beauty but it had it has a lot of symbolic partition and it has a lot of aesthetic appeal and so those elements basically need elements of balance or element of highlighting balance buds those balance all of that just as if youre 47 was not there Something Else would make it much more why arent you as youre speaking mary or maria was nodding her head mary you go 1st and then janice that youre out and you come in after. Yeah i mean i was actually quite surprised. Where a brow aaron. Assessment of the a k 47 but it calls somehow terrorism violence and all that stuff if there was a k 47 if kalashnikov hadnt been around. Many decades ago to invent it there would have been another weapon that would have been produced that would have it was out in the exact same thing so were talking about wind and so when soaking about surgeons the. Heroism and so on all these different types of warfare they would have to look at geopolitics and we have to think about when the a k 47 was born and he was born the cold war was beginning and what was the cold war doing it was there were 2 superpowers that were interested in influencing the world and were always to influence the world was to provide weapons to different forces on the ground in Different Countries and to support their goals right so this is well a k 47. 00 that for the u. S. S. R. It basically supports and so if it closes the u. S. S. R. Wants the police because to succeed the u. S. Was also supplying weapons to different factions different parties Different Countries governments and so on so to blame everything bob happening in the world in terms of violence you know terrorism and so on its i think a bit of an exaggeration right now jonathan. I was going to Say Something similar. If it was in the i k it would have been Something Else and not Something Else is there now 15. If we have 7 which is you know the United States is an answer in a way correct yeah absolutely yeah we talk just then about different states providing arms to different actors. Sometimes United States to supply kalashnikov rifles because it would if it had the time to slice whatever. But if we if we think in terms of the numbers 75000000 kalashnikov. Direct variant minimum in the world will the next most numerous is the way off if dame americas favorite rifle arguably and certainly the u. S. Militarys rifle thats at 11000000. 00 so its a lot a lot lower quantity wise but starting to catch up and its simply its own way in fact it has something i wouldnt say mess about the cost because it is easy to use its definitely simple what it isnt is particularly the gnomic so the controls a few and quite simple but no kind of way you would want them to pay if you were starting from scratch if that makes sense they were made to be as simple as possible thats great for mass production which conscripts soldiers. Not find you know you thought was the starting point of any right and its perfectly adequate for the grateful professional armies as well but just like the British Army Rifle you kind of to try and around that the the office scene is like a Gold Standard for the firearms going on next i was. On its simple in its own way without getting into the technicalities its not so bad the have the time its a product of its time. The manufacturing techniques of the time as well the m 16 i often think could not be said. Usually also cheap. I love that that tell you something because jonathan i want to bring in this comment we got from someone watching on you tube a man he says explaining the reason that it is everywhere is that you can only do that with a low maintenance weapon the simple ease of use of the 8 k. Allowed the soviets to then give them away so i want to show our audience because i know our gas probably already know this i want to show our audience the places that it is traveled at least models of the 8 k. So this is mozambiques National Flag you might notice it there you saw it in the 1st tweet that i read it on the today show explained that there this. Quite interesting one saddam husseins gold plated a k 47. 00 that was found after the u. S. Invasion of iraq and this last one is a whole list be a mike 10 photos that show how the a k 47 has become a Global Political symbol a scroll to show you just a few chill a iraq the hezbollah although some say this is a variant of the a k 47 not the a k 47 itself but explaining that and why it has really spread so many places yunus i want to bring you in here on this why. Is there go global appeal how do you explain. So my area of work is most lets say best Asian Central asian and that i can talk much but you see there was a confluence of times when s. P. C. And seventys when a lot of resistance groups they met each other in the west asia and these groups they understood they can talk to this to simplicity of design of a cure for autism and together they could train together they can exchange lesson militar knowledge to the simplicity and then from there when the 1st resistant groups like hezbollah are they received this weapon it became the symbol symbolic appearance which something which always comes along with martyrs so you see if in any photo when theres a martyr theres a if youre 47. 00 there so it became met with the idea of martyrdom and this emergence slowly slowly produces the culture of resistance so this culture of resistance of produce the symbolism and the oil and mark around if youre 47. 00 and for example to give you in very specific an actor and much are masood who basically was the commander of the Northern Alliance in afghanistan then he at ended the funeral of a one of his commanders imagery during the during the burial ceremony he picked up the age of 47. 00 and handed it to the brother of the. Multiyear and said this is the weapon of a martyrdom so will you promise to carry it further so it has that aura and however now any weapon which has similarity of structure it has its becomes kalash it becomes a 47. 00 collage as it would be said in central asia or middle east so that symbolism which is to certain social history it had it creates for that abil and a lot of forms of masculinity and all the hood is. Militarized the middle east so this militarization could do certain imagination idea as a whole to become a man so if youre 47. 00 becomes a purchase or accessory of. Certain male groups in the. I mean thats all right its amazing that so passing i wrote that down and how to become a man eunice because were actually hearing from people who talk about the use of the 8 k. By children especially child soldiers i want to share this from you tube nathan says as a u. S. Military veteran any weapon of war does not belong in civilian hands im a 4th generation bat my father faced child soldiers in vietnam with a k 47 s. And we also got a comment from a former child soldier himself in the south sudan region conflict i listen to emmanuel jal and heres his experience with that gun. In my experience its a k 47 and its light its easy to kind of. When you find you enjoy the beat of reason makes you strong strong when my friend die and i have to cause lots more. What i can say now is. That. No child should ever come this. Is when we were growing. Were taught to care for 70 so far and how much we looked at. What do you make of that comment. Its actually really sad and i wish there was a bit more awareness. Among the countries in the governments that decided to send these weapons to different points around the world whether its africa whether its the middle east like in america. Funnily enough actually on the other side of. The process the people who produce the gun you can see that there is actually pride in it there is no no there is no we morse there is no sense of guilt there is no understanding that this gun has created a lot of violence it has created a lot of suffering so you can see i mean that was the introduction of the program so how in russia this gun is perceived and also the maker of the gun i can tell you in vogue area for example which received to transfer think knology. The license to produce this during the communist era. They might come she and many of my country mates see the ball gary and kalashnikov as this superior kolache go so they dont they havent realized you know during the coleman is theater broke it was exporting a large amounts of kalashnikovs and other small arms. So the soldiers seen it continues to do so during the yugoslav war for example bulgaria was a huge source of weapons without conflict which was right next door. Then they were called 6 a bit further but still close enough lets say syria in iraq of gonna stand and so on and you can see the dung go as far as places in africa. And i have traced like somewhat both gary and made weapons as far as africa so in vogue area when you talk so much. Or lets say a weapon feeler they will say proudly the bulgarian kalashnikov has the best kalashnikov in the world but if you ask this child soldier if you ask right now a fire in syria. You know back in the day during the vietnam war d. In vietnam if they could recognize the bulgarian kalashnikov and they could tell it apart from the russian one or the chinese no pulse none of them would tell you yes i can normal most of them would say like yeah i proudly carry a bulgarian gun the bulgarian kalashnikov. And that for me. I would say is is incredibly sad to see that there is this. Cold meat of this in the us in the way the people who produce the guns and the people who end up using it. This is the socially the idea that there are different flavors of kalashnikov we lump everything in on there i k 47 which is a problem in itself of People Like Us who try to track and record and write about these things. Because that best describes only one of many. Offspring jonathan im glad you said that because its not often that were able to show what were talking about on the stream you have with a style weapon can you show us what makes it in h. K. Yeah well the d money the collection that we have. The bomber is expensive kalashnikovs i have one myself which is not actually live thankfully for everyone involved. Well it depends where you are right. Where i am it would probably get me in trouble so this is actually a factory made dummy gun so its just a training. Instructional process so its the same as a real kalashnikov a case 70 full m. This is. 990 and still in use today in the Russian Armed forces. Weapons very much like it in many other forces russia has modernized recently with the i k 1215 so we just see iteration after iteration even from from russia. Who are still sticking by that basic mechanical design and then around the world so the main difference here is that this one is chambered and a small with a small of well within the cartridge which is a high velocity flash shooting more like the american m. 16. Yes so. Theres a particular type. So strictly 47 is only the prototype troilus rifles so we use a code which is actually easier but its a bit late because the world has already branded the whole thing ok well i think you for dispelling so i missed it and explaining that to us you know if i hear you trying to get in but i want to add one more thing and ill direct this to you because i do want to share this with the world for those who dont know this is a headline its from 2014 weapons designer kalashnikov repented 47 killings in a letter before his death. This is reported by russian daily the pain in my soul is unbearable i keep asking myself the same unsolvable question if my Assault Rifle took peoples lives that means i am responsible for peoples deaths now there was an interview a little clip of caution off his daughter speaking at a Museum Exhibit earlier this year in september heres what she said. And he was a quiet man who was a very short stature he was very modest he had great selfrestraint he was a very wise man. He looked at he only came out on the world stage so to speak in the 1990 s. And before that our family was kept secret the kids were kept secret and everything was kept secret. Eunice as we were playing that someone watching on you tube says the gun is not to blame those who put it in the hands of children if it wasnt a k. It would have been another weapon probably an American Made one point that has been raised earlier here you know what if you want to. So i wanted to add there is one thing which will land around this interesting lets say a little object is that the political economy of us or some and how even us socially produced this idea lets say not manufactured as a piece of machinery as an idea because if you look at the very how it became so pervasive because the u. S. S. R. Tolerated its not version and all the copycats so it was a form of a decentralized power because we imagine u. S. S. R. As a point of art already an absolute authoritarianism but even just to look at the travel of this object is basically a cure for autism and we see how it allowed to power to be decentralized and everybody who produces produce lets say a little object and at the same time so u. S. S. R. Locked all the lets say friendly country to act and not by giving them on so your foot is a by locking them to the ammunition because the ammunition basically which is a if if a said correctly adding is 4. 50 or 4. 4 they will lock in with an awful lot of people that are of yeah i think if you want. 5. 00 it will lock in that production of ammunition and they were locked with the continuation of the pollution of 47. 00 so it was more there was a lot of political thinking around hall lit such a legal eagle object become a dominating of weapon in the certain areas so its great its simple its so one so which we talk a lot but there was much more into it there was a lot of political loading into it i mean here is a unicellular fire Jonathan Ferguson thank you for adding that n n clarifying a little bit unfortunately i have to pas us was maria had called thank you so much for joining. Thats all the time we have for this conversation but so much more to say it could happen online. At 8 or stream thank you for joining us and thanks to our community for sharing your thoughts well see online. Was taken to. That was submitted. In force today was they dont think the intention was to make sure that. No longer entitled to be the basic rights for citizenship once their villages were burned were funneled into what is now become complex where the injured are makes your prints. Coming soon on aljazeera. I dont deal with poverty unless you deal with the gap you decide to i disagree with that toy it sounds like are blaming the public the country for the art of not literally naming anybody these people well trained much of. The extent machinery. Of a very inspirational populace that altered future join me as i put the questions to my special guests and challenge them to some straight talking political debate here aljazeera. Across the United States indigenous families are searching for their loved ones for relatives of people who go missing finding closure is often impossible people are meeting here to raise money for the search efforts of the young woman advocates and family members have started to raise awareness about the high rates of violence they disproportionately impact indigenous communities most Tribal Police departments are understaffed and under resourced another factor is that tribes dont have jurisdiction over nonnative americans for all crimes there but a lot of concerns that the federal agencies dont respond that they dont take these crimes seriously a lack of evidence is the main reason federal officials are declining to prosecute crimes on reservations that shouldnt be the end of the discussion. There should be then a ok lets see while im wrong in this case why the is no evidence or why the evidence isnt good enough and make sure that thats not happening yet. Building more barricades protesters refuse to back off off the police warn hong kong is on the brink of a breakdown. Hello im don jordan this is al jazeera live from doha also coming up the new face of the libyan leadership an opposition senator the clear as a self interim president. But to Indigenous People even murat as is still the hero they vowed to push for his rich