Ellen katsi tsakwas. well, that s all for this edition of witness history here at the people s history museum in manchester. from me and the rest of the witness history team, goodbye. hello there. a particularly wet months, for the same reason we have clouds close by at the moment. a very active jet stream from the us, which has always been close to the uk, and areas of low pressure formed, this week we got a broad area of low pressure across the atlantic. on the base of that, deepening
I ve struggled with my mental health over the last few years, and i think it s important to be honest about it. over the last few years, i haven t had the answers. he says he s continuing to train and is still aiming to deliver the best performance possible in paris at next year s olympics. and that s all the sport for now. from me, marc edwards, and the rest of the team, bye bye. this is bbc news. we ll have the headlines and all the main news stories for you at the top of the hour straight after this programme. hello and welcome to witness history. i m farhana haider, at the people s history museum in manchester, with more remarkable moments from the past, as told by people who were there. in this episode, we look back at five campaigns and protest
Protection of our languages and culture, our way of life. so, it woke up people, i would say. it woke up people. the mohawk activist ellen katsi tsakwas. well, that s all for this edition of witness history here at the people s history museum in manchester. from me and the rest of the witness history team, goodbye. hello there. there s still some more rain to come through the rest of this week at least it has turned milder. on wednesday, temperatures reached 16 celsius in northern ireland, and in southwest france, 30 celsius on wednesday. this early spring warmth will come to an end as we change the month, we change the weather.
There were a lot of arrests on that day. and this ain t a surrender either! we were still not surrendering, because the land dispute is still in full force. it s not been settled. i mean, the golf course sparked a discussion about the real issues that indigenous people have been fighting for for centuries, which is land dispossession, protection of our languages and culture, our way of life. so, it woke up people, i would say. it woke up people. the mohawk activist ellen katsi tsakwas. well, that s all for this edition of witness history here at the people s history museum in manchester. from me and the rest of the witness history team, goodbye.
Hello and welcome to witness history. i m farhana haider, at the people s history museum in manchester, with more remarkable moments from the past, as told by people who were there. in this episode, we look back at five campaigns and protest movements led by women. coming up, we ll hear about the fight for the equal right to pray for women at the western wall injerusalem, the argentinian forensic pioneer unearthing war crimes, the anti nuclear protest that was the biggest women led movement in the uk since the suffragettes, and a watershed moment for canada s indigenous people. but we start in london and a story about the strikers in saris, a group of south asian women employed in the grunwick film processing factory. because of the poor working conditions there, they decided to take a stand for workers rights