“Thanks to your crew, my mommy is now with me and warm. I will be grateful to you for the rest of my life. Once again, thank you very much,” Victoria Forkavets says in a message to RT Documentary. Our film crew helped her find her mother Natalya Angeleva.
Vika couldn’t contact her mother for almost a month. She only knew she was in Volnovakha, with no water, food, or power. She didn’t even know if her mother was alive. Finally, Victoria turned to us for help.
“We did what we could. And now Natalya Alexandrovna is alive,” - said our correspondent Vyacheslav Guz. From Volnovakha to Khartsyzsk, they chatted about the recent battles, marauders, and the cold.
Like other locals, Natalya had been hiding in a basement. She says there were no humanitarian corridors, no information from the Ukrainian authorities.
The story of Viktoria and her mother Natalya has become part of a film, shot by director Oleg Nekishev, correspondent Vyacheslav Guz and cameraman Vladimir Lipatov.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Vika couldn’t contact her mother for almost a month. She only knew she was in Volnovakha, with no water, food, or power. She didn’t even know if her mother was alive. Finally, Victoria turned to us for help.
“We did what we could. And now Natalya Alexandrovna is alive,” - said our correspondent Vyacheslav Guz. From Volnovakha to Khartsyzsk, they chatted about the recent battles, marauders, and the cold.
Like other locals, Natalya had been hiding in a basement. She says there were no humanitarian corridors, no information from the Ukrainian authorities.
The story of Viktoria and her mother Natalya has become part of a film, shot by director Oleg Nekishev, correspondent Vyacheslav Guz and cameraman Vladimir Lipatov.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
“If President Putin wanted to go in with bombs, it would be like America does,” says Mark Dougan, a former US Marine and police officer. He went as a journalist to Ukraine to see the progress of the special operation. His point of view is in the video; check it out.
Want to know his story? As a police officer, Dougan investigated the crimes of his colleagues and tried to bring them to justice. He even created a website where people could report police brutality. But according to Dougan, former colleagues started planning to kill him. That’s why he left the country. Our documentary ‘Breaking Bad Wolf’ is about it.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
“If President Putin wanted to go in with bombs, it would be like America does,” says Mark Dougan, a former US Marine and police officer. He went as a journalist to Ukraine to see the progress of the special operation. His point of view is in the video; check it out.
Want to know his story? As a police officer, Dougan investigated the crimes of his colleagues and tried to bring them to justice. He even created a website where people could report police brutality. But according to Dougan, former colleagues started planning to kill him. That’s why he left the country. Our documentary ‘Breaking Bad Wolf’ is about it.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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Here’s a friendly reminder to everyone who misses RT Documentary’s channel on YouTube - we’ve moved to Odysee odysee.com/@RTDocumentary:4 Watch all our documentaries without ads!
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
Russell Bentley, an American blogger, has collected over $100,000 for the people of Donbass. He came to Donetsk in 2014, at the very beginning of the conflict. He joined the ‘Essence of Time’ battalion as a volunteer and participated in battles at Donetsk airport and Avdeevka. Learn about his story from our post!
It turns out that Russell is also a character in our documentary Donbass. Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow. Watch it right now.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Russell Bentley, an American blogger, has collected over $100,000 for the people of Donbass. He came to Donetsk in 2014, at the very beginning of the conflict. He joined the ‘Essence of Time’ battalion as a volunteer and participated in battles at Donetsk airport and Avdeevka. Learn about his story from our post!
It turns out that Russell is also a character in our documentary Donbass. Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow. Watch it right now.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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Subscribe to our friends @russiabeyond to read more interesting stories about Russian culture and history!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/russiabeyond/689
https://news.1rj.ru/str/russiabeyond/689
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Russia Beyond
One of the planes that will see an increase in demand is the new Sukhoi Superjet-100.
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#video
Shortly after Russia's military operation in Ukraine began, many Russians abroad felt a surge of Russophobia, from politicians to ordinary people on the street. Most Western countries deem discrimination unacceptable, and even illegal, when it comes to Russians, this no longer seems a given.
Some Russians say they are being fired from their jobs just because of their nationality, denied apartment rentals and even having bank accounts closed.
When it comes to social media, verbal abuse and bullying levels are unprecedented. Russian immigrants say they try to abstain from commenting on Facebook. “I’ve been getting various threatening messages on my phone recently. Most are along the lines ‘get out of here, a dead Russian is the best Russian,’” says one Russian woman who lives in Iceland.
Experts say this wave of harassment will eventually subside, but before it does, Russians should steer clear of social media and report physical threats to the police.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Shortly after Russia's military operation in Ukraine began, many Russians abroad felt a surge of Russophobia, from politicians to ordinary people on the street. Most Western countries deem discrimination unacceptable, and even illegal, when it comes to Russians, this no longer seems a given.
Some Russians say they are being fired from their jobs just because of their nationality, denied apartment rentals and even having bank accounts closed.
When it comes to social media, verbal abuse and bullying levels are unprecedented. Russian immigrants say they try to abstain from commenting on Facebook. “I’ve been getting various threatening messages on my phone recently. Most are along the lines ‘get out of here, a dead Russian is the best Russian,’” says one Russian woman who lives in Iceland.
Experts say this wave of harassment will eventually subside, but before it does, Russians should steer clear of social media and report physical threats to the police.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
Hundreds were killed, thousands injured, and a city destroyed. Twenty-three years ago, NATO launched airstrikes on Belgrade.
Operation Allied Force launched 2,300 missiles and dropped 14,000 bombs. Collateral damage included schools, libraries, hospitals and homes. The alliance blamed Belgrade for ‘excessive and disproportionate use of force’ in a conflict with an ethnic Albanian insurgency in Kosovo.
To learn more about the legacy of NATO’s bombing of Yugoslavia, watch our documentary, ZASHTO (WHY?) on https://rtdocumentary.online/films/why
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Hundreds were killed, thousands injured, and a city destroyed. Twenty-three years ago, NATO launched airstrikes on Belgrade.
Operation Allied Force launched 2,300 missiles and dropped 14,000 bombs. Collateral damage included schools, libraries, hospitals and homes. The alliance blamed Belgrade for ‘excessive and disproportionate use of force’ in a conflict with an ethnic Albanian insurgency in Kosovo.
To learn more about the legacy of NATO’s bombing of Yugoslavia, watch our documentary, ZASHTO (WHY?) on https://rtdocumentary.online/films/why
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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Watch top documentaries on Telegram! 🎬Subscribe to friends @documentaryplanet to access the best documentary films from around the world. Watch new films every day, including our own exclusive documentaries. Subscribe and share with your friends – it’s going to be interesting!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/documentaryplanet/2
https://news.1rj.ru/str/documentaryplanet/2
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#video #USA
Texas would be the world's 40th largest country if it was still an independent state. Yes, still. For a nine-year period between 1836 and 1845, Texas was an independent country. But some Texans, or Texians as they call themselves, claim their country never lost its sovereignty.
These separatists believe the United States’ annexation of Texas was illegal. The activists run their own government and have their own currency system.
Watch the full documentary on our website RTDocumentary.online or Odysee.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Texas would be the world's 40th largest country if it was still an independent state. Yes, still. For a nine-year period between 1836 and 1845, Texas was an independent country. But some Texans, or Texians as they call themselves, claim their country never lost its sovereignty.
These separatists believe the United States’ annexation of Texas was illegal. The activists run their own government and have their own currency system.
Watch the full documentary on our website RTDocumentary.online or Odysee.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video #USA
There are more than 17 million veterans in the United States, according to the US Census Bureau. For many, leaving the military for civilian life is difficult and riddled with challenges, including unemployment, homelessness, and mental illnesses.
Many veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, as well as drug and alcohol addiction. Instead of turning to medication, some seek help and emotional outlet in therapeutic activities. Watch this documentary to learn more.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
There are more than 17 million veterans in the United States, according to the US Census Bureau. For many, leaving the military for civilian life is difficult and riddled with challenges, including unemployment, homelessness, and mental illnesses.
Many veterans suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, as well as drug and alcohol addiction. Instead of turning to medication, some seek help and emotional outlet in therapeutic activities. Watch this documentary to learn more.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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We have a 24/7 livestream of our documentary films on Odysee. Tap on the link and subscribe to our channel. Watch the best documentaries online on Odysee https://odysee.com/@RTDocumentary:4/rtdlive:6
Odysee
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Website https://rtd.rt.com/
Rumble https://rumble.com/c/c-1466061
Website https://rtd.rt.com/
Rumble https://rumble.com/c/c-1466061
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Agafia Lykova might be one of the most famous women in Russia. The world has changed many times over in her time, but life in the Siberian taiga hasn’t changed in 77 years. This documentary about Agafia was filmed eight years ago, but it’s still relevant.
Agafia Lykova, 77, is the sole remaining member of her family, which fled religious persecution during Soviet days. She lives apart from society, reads the Bible, and speaks old Slavonic. Although she rejects modern technology, last year she accepted a solar panel to power a satellite phone so she can call for help in case of emergency.
Hear Agafia’s incredible story of unshakable faith and resilience (it takes guts to live alone in the land of bears and wolves) in the documentary, Agafia, on Documentary Planet @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Agafia Lykova, 77, is the sole remaining member of her family, which fled religious persecution during Soviet days. She lives apart from society, reads the Bible, and speaks old Slavonic. Although she rejects modern technology, last year she accepted a solar panel to power a satellite phone so she can call for help in case of emergency.
Hear Agafia’s incredible story of unshakable faith and resilience (it takes guts to live alone in the land of bears and wolves) in the documentary, Agafia, on Documentary Planet @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video #Donetsk
- What scares you most, a drone or…the mines?
- Mines.
- Why?
- Because you walk, walk, walk…suspecting nothing. Then boom! And you’re gone.
Little girl Masha, like every kid in the Donbass, knows the difference between types of ammunition. Local children are used to shelling, while grown-ups try to protect them from the horrors of war. The full story in the documentary, Trapped.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
- What scares you most, a drone or…the mines?
- Mines.
- Why?
- Because you walk, walk, walk…suspecting nothing. Then boom! And you’re gone.
Little girl Masha, like every kid in the Donbass, knows the difference between types of ammunition. Local children are used to shelling, while grown-ups try to protect them from the horrors of war. The full story in the documentary, Trapped.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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Subscribe to our friends @russiabeyond to read more interesting stories about Russian culture and history!
https://news.1rj.ru/str/russiabeyond/693
https://news.1rj.ru/str/russiabeyond/693
Telegram
Russia Beyond
For 30 years, Valentina Tereshkova didn’t disclose what happened to her during the historic mission.
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#video #Bolivia
Salar de Uyuni is the world’s largest salt flat. It covers 11,000 square kilometres. Locals call it ‘God’s Mirror’. When salt was in great demand, it was essential. But now the situation has changed.
In the late 1980s, vast lithium reserves were found at the salt flat, some of the biggest in the world. Lithium sometimes referred to as ‘21st-century oil,’ is an essential raw material needed to manufacture batteries.
But unfortunately, lithium extraction pollutes the atmosphere and seriously disrupts the ecosystem. Still, saleros continue their work even risking their health because salt has become their whole life — they earn their living extracting it, making art pieces of it and even building salt houses.
You can watch the full documentary on @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
Salar de Uyuni is the world’s largest salt flat. It covers 11,000 square kilometres. Locals call it ‘God’s Mirror’. When salt was in great demand, it was essential. But now the situation has changed.
In the late 1980s, vast lithium reserves were found at the salt flat, some of the biggest in the world. Lithium sometimes referred to as ‘21st-century oil,’ is an essential raw material needed to manufacture batteries.
But unfortunately, lithium extraction pollutes the atmosphere and seriously disrupts the ecosystem. Still, saleros continue their work even risking their health because salt has become their whole life — they earn their living extracting it, making art pieces of it and even building salt houses.
You can watch the full documentary on @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video #USA
For 50 years, the authorities in Flint, Michigan had bought water from a trusted source. However, in 2014, the city switched to a cheaper supplier. Before long, residents were experiencing serious health issues. Some women even had miscarriages.
Local activists did their best to draw the attention of the federal government. Did they succeed? Watch documentary, Murky Waters of Flint, to learn more.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
For 50 years, the authorities in Flint, Michigan had bought water from a trusted source. However, in 2014, the city switched to a cheaper supplier. Before long, residents were experiencing serious health issues. Some women even had miscarriages.
Local activists did their best to draw the attention of the federal government. Did they succeed? Watch documentary, Murky Waters of Flint, to learn more.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video #Japan
When a plutonium bomb dropped on Nagasaki, a teenage postal worker, Sumiteru Taniguchi, was ‘lucky’. However, he received terrible injuries to his back and left arm.
Sumiteru was a hibakusha, the Japanese for an A-bomb survivor. Burns covered his entire back, forcing him to lie on his stomach for nearly two years.
Sumiteru devoted the rest of his life to the anti-nuclear movement, showing his scars as a symbol of the horrors of war. More than 70,000 people died in Nagasaki due to the Fat Man bomb.
Sumiteru died of cancer in 2017. This is part of his interview from the documentary Atomic Message.
Subscribe on our channel odysee.com/@RTDocumentary:4 All our films are available there!
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
When a plutonium bomb dropped on Nagasaki, a teenage postal worker, Sumiteru Taniguchi, was ‘lucky’. However, he received terrible injuries to his back and left arm.
Sumiteru was a hibakusha, the Japanese for an A-bomb survivor. Burns covered his entire back, forcing him to lie on his stomach for nearly two years.
Sumiteru devoted the rest of his life to the anti-nuclear movement, showing his scars as a symbol of the horrors of war. More than 70,000 people died in Nagasaki due to the Fat Man bomb.
Sumiteru died of cancer in 2017. This is part of his interview from the documentary Atomic Message.
Subscribe on our channel odysee.com/@RTDocumentary:4 All our films are available there!
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
‘We sent our children off to school, and we didn’t know if we would see them again.’
This is the second time Zinaida’s family has had to abandon their home in Eastern Ukraine. The first time was in 2014. Then, they fled to Russia and were housed in a church.
They don’t understand why their compatriots have turned against them, and their suffering has been ignored for eight years. Zinaida says it might sound cruel, but maybe now those fleeing to Europe will understand what it was like for the people of Donbass all this time.
Hear from more Donbass residents who found shelter in Russia in the upcoming documentary, Ukraine: Heading East.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
‘We sent our children off to school, and we didn’t know if we would see them again.’
This is the second time Zinaida’s family has had to abandon their home in Eastern Ukraine. The first time was in 2014. Then, they fled to Russia and were housed in a church.
They don’t understand why their compatriots have turned against them, and their suffering has been ignored for eight years. Zinaida says it might sound cruel, but maybe now those fleeing to Europe will understand what it was like for the people of Donbass all this time.
Hear from more Donbass residents who found shelter in Russia in the upcoming documentary, Ukraine: Heading East.
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
‘My comrade and I decided to lay down our arms and leave. We were intimidated by our commander. They intimidated us, saying… Azov fighters* would shoot you.’ RT Documentary’s exclusive footage shows war prisoners who served in Unit 3057 of the National Guard of Ukraine in the city of Mariupol.
The prisoners explain why they decided to lay down their arms and said Russian servicemen treated them “better than the Ukrainian army.”
This interview will be included in a new RT Documentary film. So don’t miss the premiere.
*recognized in Russia as extremist and banned
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
‘My comrade and I decided to lay down our arms and leave. We were intimidated by our commander. They intimidated us, saying… Azov fighters* would shoot you.’ RT Documentary’s exclusive footage shows war prisoners who served in Unit 3057 of the National Guard of Ukraine in the city of Mariupol.
The prisoners explain why they decided to lay down their arms and said Russian servicemen treated them “better than the Ukrainian army.”
This interview will be included in a new RT Documentary film. So don’t miss the premiere.
*recognized in Russia as extremist and banned
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
On August 8, 2008, Georgian tanks rumbled into Tskhinval, South Ossetia’s capital. Decades of simmering conflict between Tbilisi and the breakaway republic finally erupted when Georgia launched an assault to retake the region. As artillery fire rained down on residential districts, Moscow came to Ossetian rescue, and the war ended in five days, still claiming hundreds of civilian lives.
Over a decade has passed, as the South Ossetians have been trying to rebuild their lives. At the time, people who were kids recall the shelling of their houses and fleeing bombing hoping their children would grow up free of such blood-curdling memories.
South Ossetia is to hold a status referendum on joining the Russian Federation after the next presidential election on April 10. President of South Ossetia Anatoly Bibilov said legal steps in this direction have already been made.
Watch the full documentary @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
On August 8, 2008, Georgian tanks rumbled into Tskhinval, South Ossetia’s capital. Decades of simmering conflict between Tbilisi and the breakaway republic finally erupted when Georgia launched an assault to retake the region. As artillery fire rained down on residential districts, Moscow came to Ossetian rescue, and the war ended in five days, still claiming hundreds of civilian lives.
Over a decade has passed, as the South Ossetians have been trying to rebuild their lives. At the time, people who were kids recall the shelling of their houses and fleeing bombing hoping their children would grow up free of such blood-curdling memories.
South Ossetia is to hold a status referendum on joining the Russian Federation after the next presidential election on April 10. President of South Ossetia Anatoly Bibilov said legal steps in this direction have already been made.
Watch the full documentary @documentaryplanet
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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#video
‘People are being kicked out into the square, Ukrainian soldiers are occupying flats, and they are shooting from the windows...’ This is what Mariupol residents whose apartment buildings have been half destroyed by shells told us. Entire families fled the city center and settled in a building on the outskirts, hoping it would be safer there.
There is no heating in the building, people sleep in warm clothes because it gets very cold at night, and they cook outside. The explosions and rumbling never stop. Natalya, the mother of ten-year-old Sveta, says the girl ‘even flinches in her sleep, she’s really afraid.’ But most of the adults don't notice the explosions and say they’re already used to it.
Mariupol residents say some people have been intimidated by Ukrainian volunteers: ‘They said that people are sent to Siberia, to the Urals, that passports and phones are taken away, and you’ll be left with only document saying you’re a displaced person.’
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
‘People are being kicked out into the square, Ukrainian soldiers are occupying flats, and they are shooting from the windows...’ This is what Mariupol residents whose apartment buildings have been half destroyed by shells told us. Entire families fled the city center and settled in a building on the outskirts, hoping it would be safer there.
There is no heating in the building, people sleep in warm clothes because it gets very cold at night, and they cook outside. The explosions and rumbling never stop. Natalya, the mother of ten-year-old Sveta, says the girl ‘even flinches in her sleep, she’s really afraid.’ But most of the adults don't notice the explosions and say they’re already used to it.
Mariupol residents say some people have been intimidated by Ukrainian volunteers: ‘They said that people are sent to Siberia, to the Urals, that passports and phones are taken away, and you’ll be left with only document saying you’re a displaced person.’
Follow: https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocumentary
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