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What’s the name of a temporary dwelling used by nomadic reindeer herders in the Far North?❄️
Anonymous Quiz
45%
Yurt
16%
Tepee
13%
Ger
27%
Chum
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Tundra Wonder Mums / 2021
#Russia

A chum is a mobile home made from reindeer hides that is used by the indigenous people of Russia’s Far North. It has a simple design, tested by generations. The tent-like structure has to be easy to set up and move because this nomadic people has to change camps once every three to four weeks.

A chum takes about an hour to assemble. The task used to fall exclusively on the shoulders of women, though this custom isn’t often observed nowadays. But it’s still women who work to make their families feel comfortable and warm in these extreme conditions.

Since 2018, ‘chum-worker’ has been recognised as an official job noscript in Russia. Chum-workers are even paid a modest salary.

What does it take to keep the family hearth in the middle of the frozen tundra? Check out this beautiful documentary.

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Iceline. Lifeline // 2022
#Russia #Arctic

‘Once, the navigation started very early, and several ships got ice-locked. Back then I was working on the ‘Captain Dranitsyn’ and the old ‘Arctic’ icebreaker saved 5 or 6 ships. One was simply squashed’, recalls boatswain of new icebreaker ‘Arctic’. Back in the day the Northern sea route was dangerous even for icebreakers. For decades, only the Western part was used, but with new icebreakers of Project 2220 it can be finally open the whole year.

Nuclear-powered icebreakers travel through 118 inches thick ice for 8 700 miles from Northern Europe to asian coast of the Pacific Ocean. Jump on board to see how it is done from the inside!

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Forwarded from People Say
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‘The Azov Regiment forced people out of their flats into the basement, and tanks started firing.’ Residents of Mariupol tell how they survived.

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Armageddon Ready / 2019
#USA

Roberta Griffin is ready for the end of the world. Her bunker in the backyard has a place to sleep, shower and stocks of canned fruit that should last for 20 years.

Roberta is one of America’s doomsday preppers, or survivalists, who plan for the worst-case scenario, from a zombie apocalypse to a civil war. Preppers are usually seen as crazy people, but when you visit some modern bunkers, you kind of wish you had one!

Numerous businesses cater to the needs of survivalists, offering modest and high-end options. There are underground escapes with swimming pools and movie theatres.

Meet the doomsday preppers and bunker sellers in Armageddon Ready and hear why they believe an apocalypse is inevitable.

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Dance, Sex, Dance / 2017
#India

There’s a red-light district in the Indian city of Muzaffarpur that some say has existed since the early 16th century. Men come here to watch women dance and sing, but it’s only a cover for prostitution. Nearly 2,500 sex workers live here. Some were sold or forced to sell their bodies, others had nowhere else to go, and some even followed in their mothers’ and grandmothers’ footsteps.

In a long-awaited ruling, India’s Supreme Court has recognised sex work as a profession and ordered police to treat sex workers ‘with dignity and equal protection under the law’. Sex work has been legal in India for more than 30 years, but prostitutes face violence and exploitation.

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Qatar 2022: Football Fever / 2021
#Qatar

The 2022 FIFA World Cup is around the corner, and it looks like the tournament will surprise you. When Qatar was chosen as the World Cup host, it raised concerns. The country is too small, too hot, and alcohol is prohibited.

The first country in the Middle East to welcome the major football event spent billions on infrastructure like a portable stadium and a driverless metro. The tournament was moved to late autumn to avoid scorching temperatures. And fans will have a chance to toast their teams’ victories in special recreation areas.

Learn more about Qatar’s preparation for the FIFA World Cup in the documentary.

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I am John Kopiski, a Russian farmer / 2020
#Russia

British trader John Kopiski came to Russia in the 1990s on a business trip that changed his life. ‘After Perestroika, everybody was so hospitable. It was a new life.’ John decided to move to Russia at 42 because he felt at home.

He met a Russian woman, converted to Orthodoxy and fathered five children. Together they run a massive farm with more than 4,000 cows in the Vladimir region. They produce 50 tonnes of milk every day, and John has taken up cheese production following EU sanctions against Russia.

John takes pride in his newfound motherland and says his relatives in the UK don’t get his love for Russia.

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EVALI: Vapes of Death / 2021
#USA

Mexico has banned the sale of vaping devices and electronic cigarettes after health alerts.

Since 2019, cases of a mysterious vaping illness have become widespread. In the neighbouring US, nearly 3,000 people were hospitalised between 2019 and 2020, and 68 died. The disease is now known as EVALI, short for e-cigarette, or vaping, product use-associated lung injury.

Discover what’s true and what’s a myth about vaping?

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Black Holes of Yamal / 2021
#Russia

Monstrous, perfectly round craters appearing in the Yamal tundra have been puzzling scientists since they were first found in 2013. The holes, which can reach up to 30 metres in depth, look as if powerful blasts or meteorite impacts left them.

While researchers have explored a massive gas emissions theory, the local Nenets people have their explanation. The Nenets are nomadic reindeer herders whose life revolves around nature. They believe the holes may be a bad omen or a warning that “someone sometime did something wrong.”

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Mysterious craters in permafrost - what made them?
Anonymous Poll
47%
Climate change, 100%
53%
It’s a gateway to hell 😈
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Foreign Fighters of Donbass / 2022
#Donbass

‘It’s very sad that so many people had to die. But they wanted to seize these lands. That’s the result. That’s the result of Ukrainian policy,’ says Alexis Castillo, showing the remains of Ukrainian soldiers at the Illich plant in Mariupol. Ukrainian troops turned the industrial zone into a fortified area and have been shooting at the city for two months. Finally, after a series of brutal fights, the Russian army and the Donbass militia liberated the plant facilities.

Alexis Castillo was born in Columbia. In 2014 he felt it was his duty to join the Donbass militia. Alexis’ anti-fascist views drove him to protect the people of Donbass from Ukrainian nationalists. Today Alexis is one of the foreign volunteers of the special operation in Ukraine. Most of them fought for years on the frontlines of Donbass. So what stories do they tell?


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Syria: The Story of One Tragedy / 2021
#Syria

Leith was a happy boy. He had a mom and dad, brothers and sisters, rode a bike, kissed his mom before bed, and went to the seaside with his family. Then, when he was five, he suddenly lost them all.

Terrorists killed everyone. He only survived thanks to his father, who smeared Leith with blood so the murderers would think he was dead. His grandmother saw everyone die in a matter of minutes. She was only left alive so the terrorists could swap her and other women for their people.

June 4 marks the International Day of Innocent Children Victims of Aggression. Millions of children like Leith from Syria suffer the consequences of war.

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Operation Liberation / 2022
#Ukraine #Donbass #Russia

“We understood that the situation was different. We fight not just against Ukraine; we fight against several countries on Ukrainian territory,” says military analyst Vladislav Shurigyn. According to him, if Ukraine were alone, the conflict would have ended by May 2022. During the special operation in Ukraine, the Russian army destroyed 16 Ukrainian military airports, 3,363 tanks and other armoured vehicles, 185 military planes and hundreds of other gear, according to the Russian Ministry of Defence.

It is the result of the first phase of the special operation in Ukraine, which aimed to lower its military potential significantly. In April of 2022, the second phase started, which aims to liberate Donbass and Southern Ukraine territories. Even though NATO and the USA provide help, Ukraine continues to lose its grip on Donbass. Go to the Operation Liberation documentary for a truthful account of the special operation.

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♻️ Happy World Environment Day!
🎲 Test how knowledgeable you are about recycling and eco living?

🖊 5 questions · 1 min
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Green Citadels / 2018
#USA

Near Taos, New Mexico, a group of enthusiasts builds sustainable houses to take your eco-consciousness to a whole new level! In the Greater World Community, they make homes from recycled and natural materials that are completely off-grid. Architect Michael Reynolds calls them Earthships.

He started building his eco-houses in the 1970s. They don’t need access to water, gas or electricity. Instead, Earthships store rainwater and the sun’s heat, treat sewage and garbage, maintain a comfortable temperature, and generate sustainable power. So what else do you need?

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Universal Dostoevsky / 2022
#USA

Fyodor Dostoevsky was a great Russian novelist whose masterpieces still inspire readers worldwide.

They learn Russian to read Dostoevsky’s novels in his native language and turn his works into pieces of art and performances.

Some of Dostoevsky’s fans re-invent his novels with the help of rap, allusions and video in the Dostoevsky Games, a contest for students at Duke University, North Carolina.

It is among the leading centres in the US for studying Dostoevsky and has a powerful Russian language, cultural, and academic tradition.

June 6 marks Russian Language Day. Celebrate it with the documentary Universal Dostoevsky.

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Marijuana Victims: Colorado / 2021
#USA

Can marijuana be dangerous and even deadly? Johnny Stack was only 19 when he took his own life.

His parents blame recreational marijuana that flooded Colorado’s many marijuana shops. Johnny had used marijuana since the age of 14, abusing high-THC concentrates, such as wax, oil and shatter.

In 2012, Colorado became the first state to legalise recreational pot. Since then, it has become more acceptable and legal in 18 more states.

In 2020, an estimated 3.43 million used recreational cannabis. But the cannabis they’re consuming is far more potent than joints passed around at Woodstock. Cannabis has become a lucrative business claiming lives.

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Sailing Seven Seas / 2021 🌊
#world

A group of four Siberian men take a voyage around the world in an inflatable catamaran that one of them designed.

This is not a movie plot but a real-life story. The crew members are engineers, extreme sports enthusiasts, and scholars. Their route is not for the fainthearted – they set off from Thailand, sail across the Indian Ocean, and reach South Africa. Then across the Atlantic to Brazil and a year to cross the Pacific.

The skipper, Anatoly, even earned the right to wear a silver ring in his ear for navigating the treacherous waters around the Cape of Good Hope.

The crew carefully documented life on the catamaran – how they slept, cooked, bathed, and remained sane during their trip without a roof.

Connect with nature in this documentary to mark World Oceans Day!

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