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Welcome to RT Documentary's official channel. Check out stories from around the world 🌍 New posts every day.

Full documentaries are available here - https://news.1rj.ru/str/rtdocfilms

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Could you imagine what life is like in the Arctic tundra? Try to guess why helicopters fly to the tundra at the end of August? 🚁
Anonymous Quiz
37%
To bring food to the reindeer herders
32%
To take children to school
31%
To count the livestock of the reindeer herders
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Did you get the answer to our quiz right?

If not, fill in the gaps with the documentary, Children of the Tundra, on @documentaryplanet. But, even if you got it right, don’t miss this heartwarming film.

The Nenets are indigenous people who still live as their nomadic ancestors did centuries ago. To this day, they are constantly herding reindeer across the vast tundra of the Russian Arctic. Children follow their parents from birth, learning everything about life in the tundra. But from autumn to spring, they live at boarding schools to get an education in towns.

While some Nenets children become accustomed to comfortable urban life, others miss home so much they run away and go back to their families on foot. The separation is also difficult for many parents, and some would prefer to have their kids nearby.

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Killer turned local celebrity
#video #Colombia

Popeye used to be a hitman for Colombian cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar. He killed, tortured, maimed and terrorised people. But well, it’s in the past, right? Or so say the people who queued to take pictures with Jhon Jairo Velásquez Vásquez, Popeye’s real name.

Popeye successfully capitalised on his murderous past, not to mention 23 years behind bars, by writing books, becoming a YouTube blogger and starring in a Netflix series. In 2020, Velasquez died after battling esophageal cancer.

The life of one of the world’s most infamous murderers in the documentary, Escobar’s Hitman, on @documentaryplanet

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#photo

‘Today, seven trainees are being taken on board. A rumour has been circulating on the ship for a week now - there will be two girls. One - to the buffet, and the second - the navigator. But the miracle didn’t happen.’ Our director Natalya Kadyrova talks about the crew of the nuclear-powered icebreaker Sibir. ‘All seven new arrivals are men, and all are placed at the disposal of the chief physicist.’ More than 60 people work on the icebreaker - only one of them is a woman. ‘In winter, people are brought directly to the icebreaker in a special car and taken aboard in a special shopping bag,’ says Natalya. Did you know that the icebreaker can break through more than 1.5 metres thick ice floes?

Want to learn more about icebreakers in the Arctic? Wait for the premiere of a new film by Natalya Kadyrova. In the meantime, watch her documentary, Seven Seas of Ice.

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#video #India

In the Akanksha Hospital in Gujarat, pregnant women are waiting to deliver babies. But they won’t take them home once they’re born. So instead, they’re surrogate mothers, primarily poor and having no means to make money. They make $70 for each month of pregnancy and up to $8,000 for a successful surrogacy for one baby. The clinic takes care of the mothers’ living costs.

Since India legalised commercial surrogacy in 2002, the country has become the largest surrogacy hub for childless foreigners. In 2015, surrogacy for foreigners was banned. While commercial surrogacy provided Indian women with opportunities (building a house, starting a small business, paying a dowry), the practice has raised numerous ethical concerns around exploitation, payment, and inequality.

Watch the full documentary 'Wombs for Rent' on @documentaryplanet

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Dear subscribers! Our collection includes hundreds of documentaries filmed within 10 years. Our authors and directors have traveled all over the world. So we decided to create interesting selections of our films and send them personally to everyone.

🥁We are launching subnoscriptions!

New amazing selections will be ready for you once a week. To receive them from us, just send us an e-mail. Every Friday you will receive fresh selections of the most exciting documentaries from us. Drop us a line at rtdocinfo@rttv.ru
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#premiere

‘Considering Russia as a pariah is insane. A lot of people want to go on with having a relationship with Russia.’ Francesca Donato, an Italian member of the European Parliament, shared her views on Europe’s Russophobia. Francesca voted against military aid to Ukraine and previously opposed a resolution on anti-Russian sanctions. After which, her Facebook* account was blocked.

Francesca says the voices of Europeans are not being heard: ‘In Italy, we have polls that show that the majority of the Italian people don’t agree with this position of our government’. The member hopes the condemnation of the Russians will soon stop: ‘It’s really insane to raise a wall between our cultures, our countries.’

The interview with Francesca Donato is part of our new film about Russophobia in Western countries.

Watch the premiere on this channel!

*Recognised as extremist and banned in Russia
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#video #maidan

‘In the beginning, Maidan advocated European integration. In principle, nationalists appeared there almost immediately. Slogans against the Russian-speaking population emerged’. The war chronicler, Max Fadeev, has his view of nationalism in Ukraine.

He has been filming the fighting in Donbass for eight years, and he quit his job to do so. He says he wants everyone to know what is going on there. Max’s story is in the film Maidan: Road to War.

Watch the clip to get to know it. And see the full documentary on our Telegram channel.

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#video #Donbass

‘It’s a mortar shell; it’s an eighty. I mustn’t touch it. See, I’m holding it`, little Rita said in 2016. For her, ammunition replaced toys; she learned to understand them. Her village of Zaitsevo was in the Grey Zone - near the front line. Like hundreds of other settlements, it was shelled by Ukrainian troops almost every day for eight years.

Rita’s story is in our video and film ‘Donbass: The Grey Zone’.

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Our colleagues are making available Russian Defence Ministry footage of Ka-52 attack helicopters in action. The crews destroyed a convoy and anti-aircraft installations belonging to the Ukrainian armed forces.
https://news.1rj.ru/str/ruptlynews/1805

We have a film about one of the Russian Air Force’s most powerful and advanced anti-tank helicopters. Watch Ka-52 Alligator: Strike Helicopter.

#video #Russia
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#video #Benin

In Benin, many children skip school because they are sent to voodoo convents. They are given new names and are forbidden to use their old ones or speak their native language. Families send their children to a monastery to appease the spirits if parents or a child falls sick. But it’s not easy to go back. A release ceremony costs $50, an unaffordable sum for most families.

Watch the video in our post to learn what happens inside voodoo convents.

To know more about the voodoo monasteries, watch the premiere of our film Voodoo Brides.

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#video #Mariupol

‘When our house caught fire, we jumped out. And here, the tank was standing and pointed its muzzle at us. And the men say: ‘Well, shoot. What are you looking at?’ [Only] then did he take it and turn the muzzle away’. Tamara Antonova tells how, during a bombardment, together with her neighbours, she jumped out of the basement directly in front of an Azov* battalion tank.

Her home is next to the Azovstal plant, where the Azov* militants are located. Tamara could not leave: her sister Lydia was lying in the apartment. RT and a Russia-DPR humanitarian convoy team managed to bring them out.

*banned in Russia

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#video #donbass

‘They beat me with a bat on my arms and legs. Then they beat me on the head, on the neck with boxing blows ... Such a large fighter sat down on top, squeezed me with his legs from both sides. And they put a rag on his face and began to pour water. This water torture is called waterboarding’.

Hieromonk Theophan recalls how Ukrainian special services tortured him in 2015. He spent a little over a month in captivity. However, the man says faith in God gave him strength. Hieromonk describes the Ukrainian military as a new type of fascists.

Theophan's story is in our video and film ‘Donbass War: Summer 2014’.

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#premiere #Belarus

‘I said, ‘you see, someday there will come those who’ll bring Nazism back’, and here they are’. These are the words of a man who went through the Minsk ghetto as a child; he was almost three.

Vladimir Trahtenberg remembers the horrors of Nazism: ‘We would compete, who’d hold his breath the longest so that if the Germans came, they’d think we were already dead’.

RT Documentary with correspondent Paula Slier went to Belarus to meet the Minsk ghetto survivors. About 120,000 Jews passed through it, and only 10,000 survived. Few remain now. In our interviews, former prisoners share their stories about the Minsk ghetto and reflect on the prosperity of Nazism in the modern world.

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#video #Japan

In Japan, tens of thousands of young people voluntarily isolate themselves from society. They live in their rooms for years and only communicate with the outside world through the internet. They’re called hikikomori (people who refuse a social life). So why do young Japanese stop going out? Watch our video.

Learn more about hikikomori in the film Hikikomori Loveless.

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