Transcripts For ALJAZ A Sense Of Community Outer Hebrides S

Transcripts For ALJAZ A Sense Of Community Outer Hebrides Scotland 20221112



joanna gets raska al jazeera, doha ah tato ketchup. the headlines here on al jazeera us president joe biden has arrived in cambodia for the on summit. barton will meet with southeast asian leaders later on saturday, and they'll discuss the violence and me and my russian aggression in ukraine, uncharged military activities in disputed waters. ukraine is celebrating one of its most significant victories since russia's invasion in february cranium forces of entered the southern city of her son o residence, welcome. the soldiers and the ukrainian flag has been raised on public monuments. that's after russian forces retreated. and what seeing as one of its biggest setbacks of the war, mama vall is in moscow, he says, russian officials are down playing the withdrawal. the last minister of defense confirmed that the last russian soldier left the city of have sun by 5 a. m. friday morning, after a night of heavy bombardment by russian artillery and other defences against ukrainian positions in an attempt to prevent them from getting closer or disrupting that withdrawal and late. and that they thought him is of defense. gave some more details, saying that 30000 russian soldiers left the city of crafts on the race for the u. s . congress continues after tuesday's mid term elections. the republicans and the democrats both have $49.00 seats in the senate, with 2 seats still up for grabs. the democrats are trailing in the house of representatives and 200 seats. the republicans had 211 that 7 short of a majority. people escaping m $20.00 fee rebels and democratic republic of congo, say they have been sexually assaulted and tortured. the army has been striking, riddled held territory near the border with rolanda. m. 23 has denied allegations of human rights abuses. the chief executive of the f t x. crypto county exchange has quit as the company filed for bankruptcy in the united states like f t x is one of the world's biggest crypto exchanges. it's seeking court protection. as it looks to return money to its uses. argentina's government has announced a deal with good suppliers that tries to tackle runaway inflation argentinians afield. mass demonstrations over the cost of living businesses have now agreed to regulate prices of basic gifts. those of the headlines news continues here now to 0, after a sense of community stations down to what you bye for now. both journalism violently disbursing protest. these are some of the 10s of thousands of people trying to please call them in its program making. welcome to generation change unrivaled with broadcasting white people did not want black children in their school. we have quite forecasted and english proud recipient, the new york festivals broadcaster of the year award for the 6 year running. the i welcome to the hebrides, scotland. ah, the hebrides, a chain of island off the west coast of gland. ah, valley sparks, we've got some spectacular scenery ah, to be on the beach and the sea can look absolutely beautiful. caribbean blew me off any close knit community. everybody knows everybody in ah, the challenges their populations have been the last 60 years. ah, we don't have enough people to walk all the jobs that are going on. it's a really alarming scenario that we've got the population as something that we can change if we're just we but more a chart of rebuild our communities rather than just limit our last i ah, i absolutely feel like every time you get this excitement like what are we going to see this time? ah, is constantly wild. it's always keeping you on your home, but it doesn't matter what whether the colors are always back. i don't co starred laughlin laughlin would have been enough for all the area to see our ah, my dad is very involved with the c as well. he runs a boat to a company here where they go to look for wildlife and take tourists around the island. we have loads of animals. here we go, alters steals whales. dolphin, eagles, everything. and there is no place white like ah, i have been while playing my entire life me if it was up to me, i think i'd be in the see 247. this is probably the warmest time of year, the temperature wise, right? but 14 degrees, which is roasted, but winter drops to source of 5 or 6 degrees. the people, even the whole of the hebrides, know me as the hebrides and mermaids or our mermaid. i started swimming with a model often with my feet stuck together. and then i got a tail, although i thought it was so weird, i put it off for years. but i thought life's too short. why not just do ah, depend them close to the video online? and the reactions were actually quite positive. it just seemed like a sort of breath of fresh air for the world. ah, the, i think i've definitely become unintentional. influenced here. i hope to be someone who represents our way of living to sort of paradise. i see in me ah, we we, we, we, we, we, we mm hm. bye bye. bye. bye bye. boat day. i've been working today the full of beans. come by. come bye bye. mm ah, it's not an easy place to live. you've got to work hard to live here, and you only get out of it. what you put into it when you're outside in the winter and it's raining mud all over the place and your boots come off in the mud. done yes. up to your knees and it's just like, why am i doing this? why am i young? hartwick d is when nothing goes wrong. something always goes wrong. i spent my whole life cropped up. it's 2nd nature to me, a croft as a piece of land. the way across with farming is, 1st of all i do, i am a tenant. but as long as i use that land property agriculturally that land can be taken off. the cutting is uniquely scottish thing. family help on that crawford crop doing is a wheel night. it is a job that is a pain in my box site. that is something i love. it is my passion. we don't have loads and loads of sheet. each of us. you know, you'll have a few people will have that or maybe 203040 sheep. so you get together and you do a lot of work together, sharing the sheep. quite often it's done together. the crops, he would, i love that of that. around about 7 acres. i got 3 of them. i used to comment good evening as well. so the comment grades in the shared glazing that everybody can access on ups. tens of thousands of acres in the coast are able to roll over a large area. i've got to be careful about this one because she, she, she think be a little bit violent. the times she hurt me 3 times with her horns. not the point to the horn, but like the front of it. it's like been baseball back. i ended up in hospital 6 months ago. these are the highland coast that a native scottish breed. i think the gorgeous that they're brilliant, they look at it. i live in nest, which is a district right up at the northwest took off the hebrides. what really bugs me is when people come here and say, oh you're remote, you're isolated, you're cut off. i instantly turn on, it's hard to say, what am i remote from? this is the center of the universe center, my universe. ah, i feel a whole year. i know everybody, everybody knows me. he brought me the city and anonymous. it's easy to be surrounded by people and be all alone. you're never alone here. even thought a few people are right. i. we love our collector's item in the 1st type, a way to the city. not like really, really people keep the factors because the world that i was everybody had their own backed up. so factors out a big part of like it's difficult to describe because it's just a selective, right. it's fun. the whole factors got a lot the stock point, and then it can, i have around the whole district going through every village, the tractor road goes right. and you collect the money and we all know beforehand it's going to this family or individual who everybody knows is having a tough time. so it's a note of hebrides code funded the. are you giving me just a wee bit harder to get the pin center was a cut off the i don't have to be a large number of these historical society. the record in the heritage on culture of these islands and something normal joy to work in a place like this every day. you're surprised by the thing i thought about people bring in quite often we get people to nathan photographs we find in that house. and often they don't know who the people are. so we have a, could you guys could come in every week looking up for to get off identifying the people in them for the records. you can see the history in the landscape everywhere you look, ah, we have places like the colonies. we have churches, monuments, lots of historic building, the site sure. when people on the table to be for 10 years him to be in society is traditional joe, who love the same this area, have the highest number of garlic speakers in scotland. it's vitally important that we retain this information about language. i've had a central no culture for future generation ah, committee to office locals. musician teachers, the children below did for important to keep those children from those instrument. keep them alive. right, so i'll just start really 2nd one for both for tv. i'm just going to go for just one moment and hold on. just enjoy an evening of music and i feel it's very important to to be a bridge from one generation to the next. and so that we don't lose the unique and vital heritage, but we have my mother was born here and all her generations of her family from here i was born on the mainland. i just really loved being here. and i was like helping i was running the croft and helping with the sheep. what i've learned from living here is that you just have to take time and enjoy what's right and you help other people enjoy being part of an a community holder. donald, find it right when i 1st joined the band, it was all under 60 plus aged men that one in the band. this is where we meet the thursday night and have done for the past 20 years. and we played some tunes and beat them your and some of them very long. the i was quite shy when i moved here. well, the band, i wouldn't have grown into the the person i am no, it was actually in my uncle. he used to tell me to come along to the lodge band and i was really grateful that i did ever do miss those days. i didn't pick them up the time when we lost my uncle. he was the 1st member that we actually lost and it was very hard to come back into do bond over the years, the numbers have declined. with losing membership. you have possibly do fear that the music will be lost. one of the things that keeps me coming back is to preserve it. i me i if you drive around the island, you'll see a lot of houses many of those houses have been empty for 2030 years, possibly even more. me . oh, i round about 2010. i start getting quite seriously interested in photography and i think probably the old houses, pale to me because some times when i go in the choir, this very really, i almost fail yourself. imagining little bit about the person's life just by what you can see around it in the, in the 1st time i photograph rep help to raise the issue, put it more in the public waltz, allowing some of the population thing to happen is that so much of the land is owned by absentee landlords, very wealthy individuals, the own large slices of scotland, and they don't have involvement with the actual place. they completely out of touch with people trying to make a living here. oh, the ah, she's always been part of my family. if you go back to me, my family, her people have been here for hundreds of years. my own family were cleared from their original land to make way for sheet farms all shooting the states. they were just told your time's up, you've got to move on. people who are forcibly either evicted, sent a way to really to canada, to america, or to less respectable talks about islands such as the rocky east coast of the islands, thomas lunar landscape. it's just like a massive quality in places. suddenly made life very difficult. and i would say even to day, hundreds of years later, there's a real frustration as to how we have been molded in some ways to be the community that we are today when there's been things taken away from us. i my industry pushing is significantly impacted by the population that i bought when she was just one or 2 people. so you've got a very small crew trying to do the work of many trees on rollers working from these islands from ghana and also from eastern europe to make up the shortage and labor. the businesses are struggling all through the islands due to lack of workers. if you don't people of our work and age, your whole economy stagnates. i think the majority of people i went to school with of left as a local trying to meet someone here. i'm related to move to the island. so it's not ideal really. we are desperate to get more young people here, young families, and to keep the life and the activities going. the government started the scheme where they were offering 50000 pains to young people from the mainland to move to the habit. and far as i know, it didn't really work. they will struggle just as much as a local. well, what we need is to help people. and money isn't the only answer the white sticker, but the people team, the boys and the people team, which 30 guy quite a few that we don't have partner. you going to stop it at night? it's not yours. i was at your i think part of the problem is that we have been exporting people for generations which neu, easy answer to it, to both jobs, to buy hoses. the distillery is, was brilliant because it's provided so many jobs that attract so many people on it, skin worldwide. mm. what drove me personally to get involved with because i grew up here. the entertain means everything to me. my family have lived here for generations. courtland is obviously world famous for producing whiskey, but because it has no history of distilling here, there were new people qualified to do those jobs. so the company invested heavily and employing people locally who wanted to have a change of career that came from lots of different backgrounds. and they sent them off to learn how to become to still. and there's no way we're going to feel of it. you know, we're all local, we have to make it work that did give everybody a real energy to make it succeed. we would have baby more people that keep over the years to ne, q. 42 jobs is a lot, a small community, a lesson to pay for people. and we do have a young workforce. we've also helped be a capitalist to think for some other companies to set up. and they're also employing lots of people with great opportunities. the real challenge is that the young people that have come to work with those here, they can't see here because of lack of housing. my partner and i rent a house on the edge of the ocean and it is in the middle of nowhere. but we are absolutely in love with it and we're so lucky to have a we really, really struggle because everywhere is either 2nd home or it's just empty or it's rent during summer months. tourism brings in a loss of money to our economies. but because it's such a seasonal industry that winter villages are going dark because there's no one here . i think the worst i come would be that we end up with no young people here. there is a possibility that a community could completely crumble. i live in the base of harris, the district. the population is a little over 700 people. the, the current landlord, the said english person, the inherited it from somebody who bought it nearly a 100 years ago. the community. so for him, because the income that's generated and go into the landlord is not being used here for anything since 2012. i've been power steering group who i've been given the job of looking at the, into the viability of a community by out. the landlord basically suggested that you have a po, gauge the interest of the community. if they send a strong signal that they want to go in favor of a bio, then he will enter into negotiations with us over a sale we are seeing bordering best rates have gone into community ownership. they managed to do development to make improvements, and we've seen growth. we've seen the population increase both of our neighbors and the base of harris on the absentee landlord. we've kind of feel a little bit isolated and we've been left out ah, in. i think we know best to look after land when it comes to buy it. there's no guarantee that everybody's going to guess. people are quite often scared of change. you've got to be quite brief to take risks. the vote has taken place quite apprehensive. i genuinely don't know which way people go into a voted the turn i was sent. want to proceed. the question of what are you in favor of community ownership of the be 290? no 170. yeah. well that was quite rocky. good night. still go away to go, we've got to get a whole deal settle with the landlord. the probably will be arguments over what projects of pursuit and will actually get money into it. but i still feel that about far more beneficial to have those argument over that mostly because at least in here and something will happen with it. a lot of people lament the loss of population in the islands and look back rather than looking ahead. a lot of that lament is based in frustration over the injustices that were done previously. i personally feel that we need to be looking ahead b. c. nobody opportunity that we can to build a sustainable feature for our community for our children. what i like about the hebrides is the people we have a very, very strong identity. it gives a real connection to where we live because the people here have had to work hard for our community. ah, what the hebrides means to me. ah, is happiness home feeling at one with where you. 7 are the community that you're in? ah, yes, hebrides can teach the world to appreciate what the right them. some places are worth struggling to live in, and that it's worth the hardship. it's not all by a big modern and up to date and social sometimes just by walter. right. and you, ah, a new series, exploring how traditional knowledge from indigenous communities is helping tackle today's environmental catastrophe. in columbia, the arrow lack of people, team of scientists to understand why species of tone, once thought extinct, is still thriving in the coastal mountains of the sierra nevada. thus nations frontline, the starry night towed on al jazeera as climate change heat up the planet. one scientist intends to take his back to the ice age to save the permafrost below. he's reintroducing animals to the grand slams above. starting with the living creatures, the planning to resurrect an extinct species. good is approach, save our wells. witness the zimm of hypothesis on al jazeera watching the world cup in 982 glorious technicolor from spain. i've never seen anything like in these plays about it come from a different planet. and after that, i was all in on the world cup. i think we're forcing from doha, which is now my home on the very 1st world cup is going to take place in the middle east. it's going to be like it is a hugely complex and often controversial events cover. but once a ball is kicked, the passion and the excitement of football pi oh.

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