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Le meilleur de l'histoire en une minute.
En novembre 2006, à Domont dans le Val d'Oise, Nicole Saada, jeune retraitée de 62 ans et amatrice de danse de salon, disparait. Deux mois plus tard en forêt de Rambouillet, on retrouve son corps décapité, les bras sectionnés et le cœur retiré de la cage thoracique.
En novembre 2006, à Domont dans le Val d'Oise, Nicole Saada, jeune retraitée de 62 ans et amatrice de danse de salon, disparait. Deux mois plus tard en forêt de Rambouillet, on retrouve son corps décapité, les bras sectionnés et le cœur retiré de la cage thoracique.
Welcome to Season 3, Episode 8! February 19, 2023 marks 100 years since the landmark U.S. vs. Bhagat Singh Thind ruling that further defined who were considered caucasian in this country and eligible for citizenship. Spoilers… it didn't include people of Asian descent. Although Dr. Thind is best known for his part in this ruling, he spent his life here, providing lectures and also being an activist for a free and independent India without British rule. And he did all these while facing racism and a U.S. population that often viewed him as a perpetual foreigner. We take time to talk about his fascinating life, including his imprisonment in Omaha, Nebraska in 1942. Dr. Thind has a website created by his son where you can learn more about him. We also take time to talk about the South Asian American Digital Archive (SAADA.org). We recommend visiting their site, donating to their work, and buying their recent book Our Stories: An Introduction to South Asian America. For previous episodes and information, please visit our site at https://asianamericanhistory101.libsyn.com or social media links at http://castpie.com/AAHistory101. If you have any questions, comments or suggestions, email us at info@aahistory101.com. Segments 00:25 Welcoming Gen back 01:54 The History of Bhagat Singh Thind 21:18 Organizations to Know: South Asian American Digital Archive
Un extrait du Hondelatte raconte de demain.
Samip Mallick is the co-founder and executive director of SAADA, which he has guided from its inception in 2008 to its place today as a national leader in community-based storytelling. SAADA, stands for South Asian American Digital Archive. SAADA uses the power of stories to create belonging to the 5.4 million South Asian Americans by documenting, preserving, and sharing stories from the South Asian American community, so that the struggles of past and current generations for equality, inclusion, and representation are not the same struggles we leave to our children.We talk about how a lot of childhood is shaped by the feeling that you don't belong, the incredible impact the 5.4 South Asian Americans truly have, the beautiful stories SAADA has collected from our community about their first days in the US, and how their walking tour of Philadelphia and Harlem shows that South Asians have been part of American history from the very beginning.We both agreed that the power of storytelling can help one truly feel embraced for who they are, discuss how SAADA's book, Our Stories, is out now and in 2500 school, libraries, and homes, and the importance of having access to information in order to really understand the whole picture.https://www.saada.org/
Paris, neuvième arrondissement. On passe devant une suite de magasins vintage, on continue un tout petit peu sur la droite. On y est. Aurélie Saada nous reçoit quelques mois après la sortie de son album solo Bomboloni chez elle, un espace chargé qui sent la fleur d'oranger et qui lui ressemble : « Moi, je dis souvent : “Beaucoup, c'est bien, trop, c'est mieux”. »La chanteuse et cinéaste âgée de 44 ans évoque son enfance passée à Paris auprès de parents arrivés de Tunisie dans les années 1950 et 1960, son plaisir du bruit, du monde, de la cuisine, ses premières expériences de chant à 10 ans dans le bar de son oncle, son long cheminement pour trouver sa voie, son goût des vieilles choses, l'aventure Brigitte, les violences qu'elle a su transformer, son admiration pour Françoise Fabian, son amour de l'art de la fin du XIXe siècle et du début du XXe siècle, de l'abondance, de ce qui brille et son rapport à l'honnêteté.Aurélie Saada revient aussi sur le mauvais goût qu'elle aime. « Celui qui est totalement à l'intérieur de nous. C'est là où se promène notre sang, notre vérité. Ce mauvais goût intime, c'est là où il y a le désir, l'érotisme, le moteur profond. C'est là qu'il y a quelque chose qui nous dépasse et qui est vrai. Ce qui nous bouscule chez les uns et chez les autres, c'est la faille. »Depuis quatre saisons, la productrice Géraldine Sarratia interroge la construction et les méandres du goût d'une personnalité. Qu'ils ou elles soient créateurs, artistes, cuisiniers ou intellectuels, tous convoquent leurs souvenirs d'enfance, tous évoquent la dimension sociale et culturelle de la construction d'un corpus de goûts, d'un ensemble de valeurs.Un podcast produit et présenté par Géraldine Sarratia (Genre idéal)préparé avec l'aide de Diane Lisarelli et Imène BenlachtarRéalisation : Emmanuel BauxMusique : Gotan Project Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Denis Saada, fondateur de Betterway, était l'invité de François Sorel dans Tech & Co, ce lundi 23 janvier. Il s'est penché sur la mise en place d'un nouveau concept de la mobilité durable en entreprise réalisée par Betterway, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.
He was a Palestinian fighter trained to kill Jews. His hatred was so strong he dreamed of poisoning Jews who frequented the restaurant where he worked. “I hated the Jewish people,” says Taysir Abu Saada (“Tass”), founder of Seeds of Hope, a humanitarian organization operating in the Middle East. His objective is to bring long-term […] The post Episode 18 – Taysir Abu Saada – Palestinian Fatah fighter once hated Jews first appeared on God Reports.
Ecoutez Le débat avec Yves Calvi et Amandine Bégot du 11 janvier 2023
Chaque samedi, Laurent Mariotte et ses chroniqueurs passent l'invité sur le grill : une interview qui permet d'en savoir plus sur les goûts culinaires de notre personnalité de la semaine. Aujourd'hui, Aurélie Saada.
Laurent Mariotte s'entoure de bons vivants pour une émission autour de la cuisine du quotidien : qu'ils soient chefs, artistes ou intellectuels, ils ont en commun cette passion du bien manger et la partagent pendant 1h30 avec les auditeurs d'Europe 1. Promenades gourmandes à travers les marchés et chez les producteurs, recettes simples et conseils proches des préoccupations des auditeurs... Le rendez-vous incontournable des gourmands !
Tuplaturinat - Yrittäjän rautaisannos markkinointia ja myyntiä
"Kun on alkuun päästy, niin antaa mennä vaan." Mutta entä jos ei pääsekään alkuun? Kun on tiedossa työläs homma – joko oikeasti tai kuvitellusti hankala – aloittamisen kynnys hipoo taivaita. Ihanteellinen vaihtoehto prosessin, ei ehkä lopputuloksen, kannalta on se, että joku muu tekee. Valitettavasti se ei ole aina järkevää tai mahdollista. Jos homma pitäisi nyt kuitenkin saada tehtyä, käännä katse aidan toiselle puolelle. Siis katso miten joku muu tekee ja kopioi. Mieti kuitenkin hetki keneltä mallia katsot. Ei ehkä kannata apinoida, jos naapuri halkoo klapeja leipäveitsellä. Markkinoinnin suhteen helpoin mallinvalikoimisindikaattori on se, mihin sinä itse kiinnität huomiota. Miksi kiinnostuit ja ehkä jopa ostit. Katso miten sinut johdatettiin kauppaan ja mallinna se prosessi. Ja noin vain pääset helposti alkuun, keskikohtaan ja loppuun. Tuoko tämä sitten taatusti tuloksia? Eipä tietenkään, mutta miksi niin kannattaa silti tehdä. Siitä ja paljon muusta puhutaan viikon Tuplaturinat-jaksossa.
Les annonces de grossesse pleuvent dans notre entourage mais nos tests à nous restent désespérément négatifs. Pourtant, on est en bonne santé, amoureux, on a méga envie d'un enfant mais c'est comme si un sort avait été jeté sur nous deux : quand ça veut pas, ça veut pas. Pour certains, l'alchimie fonctionne au début mais les fausses-couches s'enchaînent, nous laissant fatigués par les montagnes russes hormonales et émotionnelles. Mais pourquoi on tombe pas enceinte pour de bon et surtout, comment y remédier avec la PMA ? On savait que ça pouvait prendre un peu de temps pour avoir un bébé. Mais on n'était pas préparés à ce point. L'attente, l'espoir, les déceptions, les stress de fausse-couche, les règles qui arrivent finalement, les amis qui demandent « c'est pour quand ?? ». Tout cela, on ne l'avait pas anticipé assez. Et ça ajoute à notre désarroi. Mais que se passe-t-il bon sang ? Pourquoi nos corps ne fonctionnent pas comme on le voudrait ? Faut-il consulter tout de suite ? Qu'est-ce que la médecine propose pour notre cas ? Comment supporter cette intrusion de tests, d'injections, d'examens, ce timing obligé et ces interrogatoires dans notre vie privée ? Quelles chances de réussite ? Et de survie de notre équilibre et de notre couple tout au long de ce parcours du combattant ? Même si la PMA a fait des progrès de géant et que les chiffres sont très encourageants, Dorothée Saada a posé toutes nos questions au Dr François Olivennes, gynécologue obstétricien, spécialiste de la fertilité et auteur de « Mille et un bébés » (Éditions Grasset, 2022).Galère sa mère est un podcast de Parents.Cet épisode a été enregistré à Uni-Médias (Paris,15e).Directrice de la rédaction : Anais Jouvancy,Rédaction : Katrin Acou-Bouaziz et Dorothée SaadaRéalisation : Nicolas JeanMusique : François ClosIdentité graphique : UpianCommunication : Farid Adou Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
A weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. This Thursday APEX Express proudly presents “South Asians and The Labor Justice Movement.” This episode highlights Sandhya Jha, a pastor, founder and former Executive Director of the Oakland Peace Center, and racial, housing, and labor justice activist. In the first half of the episode, we discuss Sandhya's life, their path into organizing, and what they're up to now. The second half is dedicated to their recent project with the South Asian American Digital Archive's Archival Creators Fellowship Program. This episode was interviewed, produced, and edited by Swati Rayasam Follow @Sandhya Jha on Facebook and check out Sandhya's website https://sandhyajha.com/ APEX Express is a weekly magazine-style radio show featuring the voices and stories of Asians and Pacific Islanders from all corners of our community. The show is produced by a collective of media makers, deejays, and activists. Listen to the episode live on KPFA 94.1 in San Francisco, 89.3 in Berkeley, and online at KPFA.org. References throughout the Show and Links: Without Fear Consulting Interfaith Alliance Oakland Peace Center Book – Blueprint for a Revolution Book – The Selected Writings of Eqbal Ahmad Podcast – Bending Toward Justice: Avatar the Last Airbender for the Global Majority The Alliance of South Asians Taking Action – ASATA Bay Area Solidarity Summer South Asian American Digital Archive Archival Creators Fellowship Program Sandhya Jha's project, you can listen to all of the oral histories here. Solidarity Forever Online Exhibit Arab Resource and Organizing Center Block the Boat No Tech for Apartheid University of California Labor Center Equality Labs California Trade Justice Coalition NAFCON – National Alliance for Filipino Concerns Filipino Community Center Madhvi Trivedi Patak Transcript: South Asians and Labor Justice [00:00:00] [00:00:00] Swati Rayasam: Good evening everyone and Happy Thursday, my name is Swati Rayasam. While I'm usually in the background of APEX Express editing, this week I'm honored to bring you a piece from a dear friend of mine Sandhya Jha. We explore Sandhya's background as a mixed race kid, a housing, labor, and racial justice organizer, and a faith leader. [00:00:50] Swati Rayasam: And then we dive into an amazing project, Sandhya did for the South Asian American Digital Archive's Archival Creators Fellowship program. Stay locked in.[00:01:00] [00:01:00] Swati Rayasam: I'm really excited actually today to talk to Sandhya Jha, who is a really close friend of mine. Hi Sandhya. Hi there. Sandhya is, a Pastor is a consultant and has been working on this really amazing project with the South Asian American Digital Archive that will get into later in the episode. But yeah, Sandhya I'm just really excited to learn more about you and to hear more of your story and, let's just dive in. [00:01:26] Swati Rayasam: Absolutely. [00:01:27] Swati Rayasam: We should first talk a little bit about how we know each other, you have this long organizing background. I've been in the Bay Area for the past seven years and I would be totally lying if I said I have not historically been, or I'm not even currently an active fangirl of yours. You are literally a pastor. You are a movement worker, how did you get involved in organizing? [00:01:53] Sandhya Jha: Yeah. So I am the product of my parents who were generous, compassionate [00:02:00] people who thought about the world beyond themselves, but were never involved in organizing or activism or anything like that. I think for anybody who comes from immigrant backgrounds, it's hard to tell our stories without naming who we come from. Right. And so my father was Sunil Kumar Jha from the village of Tildanga in West Bengal. My mother, who is still alive is Jeanette Campbell Jha. She is from Glasgow. So I come from a mixed religion and mixed race home. My parents chose not to name me Sandhya Campbell Jha not to give me that kind of grounding, but I was called Sandhya Rani Jha, which is a lot to live up to, well, yes, Rani does mean Queen. But it was actually handed down to me, part of the reason they wanted that middle name was it was my aunt's name, Durga Rani Upadhyay and she was the one who really [00:03:00] brokered my mother's acceptance into the Indian family and I think that there was something about being accepted on the Indian side of the family and not for many, many years on the Scottish side. That caused my parents and particularly my mother to double down on making sure I knew who I came from and who I came from was my people in the village of Tildanga. [00:03:23] Sandhya Jha: I grew up in Akron, Ohio, so we immigrated to this country when I was a toddler, in the late 1970s, which was a complicated time for Asian immigrants to be in the Midwest because it was a time that the rust belt was rusting and there was a growing sense that we were the reason. But also I grew up alongside folks who were trying to figure out how to put food on the table. So I think that landscape shaped me in a lot of ways. And I also come from people who grew up in poor working communities. And[00:04:00] when I went off to college, there was an organizing campaign. The board of directors of the university had created a for-profit corporation with the exact same board. [00:04:15] Swati Rayasam: Oh wow. [00:04:16] Sandhya Jha: So that the universities could subcontract all of their catering, all of their custodial work to this… basically Shell corporation. [00:04:28] Swati Rayasam: Are we telling on the university? [00:04:29] Sandhya Jha: Mm, Yeah. Why not? It was Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, and I think that's relevant because the tension between Black communities next to Johns Hopkins Medical School and the school itself were very real because this was part of a very long history of exploiting community members. So the workers were organizing, and you know, I had read about activism, I cared about it. I paid as much attention as I could for a high school student. But when I got to college, this organizing [00:05:00] campaign was going, and the workers were really clear, Hey, college kids who are excited about this, we do have a role for you. It's to fill the crowd. It's to cheer us on. It's to when we ask you communicate to the university that our well-being matters to you because they will listen to you in different ways. But the campaign centered the workers and was really clear with us about what our role was because we were the folks with all the privilege by getting to be there, right? We had tons of privilege and it was a really good lesson for me. I am so grateful. The first organizing campaign I was a part of was a labor campaign that understood what it meant to center the people who were the most impacted by injustice and I think that shaped the rest of my career. [00:05:46] Swati Rayasam: And that's so special too because I think for many people who come into organizing, and I will definitely cop to this myself, like coming up and organizing through high school and college level organizing. When you are a student, nobody ever [00:06:00] tells you that actually you are the least useful kind of organizer that exists. Right. You are in this incredibly enclaved community. Your oppressor, the university, all they have to do is wait for you to graduate institutional memory will not keep you. Yeah. Right. And I think that it is, it's this perfect storm of, you have actually sometimes cool ideas, sometimes very rudimentary ideas, but you also have this turnover issue and you have this sense of self import, which often comes with your teens, early twenties. Yep. As you're just figuring all of that out. So Yeah, self differentiation, right? It's a narcissistic phase in our development. . [00:06:46] Swati Rayasam: It absolutely is and I think that's so important, and I can't imagine how my life would be shaped if I didn't have to spend a lot of time unlearning the self import and narcissism that I had gained through student [00:07:00] organizing. [00:07:00] Sandhya Jha: Yeah. No, I am really, really grateful for it. [00:07:02] Sandhya Jha: My first job outta college was working for a member of Congress, which sounds super fancy and pretentious, but, a member of congress from Akron, Ohio. So put that all in perspective. His name, believe it or not, was Tom Sawyer. Oh, wow. What I loved about Tom was back in those days, he believed very strongly that 80% of legislation was nonpartisan and that was the part that he spent most of his time on. He would weigh in with his party, when they were dealing with that 20% pretty consistently. But he was more interested in the stuff that everybody could agree on and I remember for about 15 years after I worked for him, I looked back and found myself thinking that was so naive. How did he not understand where we were about to head with the divisions between the political parties? But at this point in my life, I realize the people I respect most in organizing work keep pointing out that the binary of [00:08:00] left and right actually doesn't serve us very well. One of my biggest heroes in the movement right now is the Reverend Dr. William Barber, [00:08:07] Swati Rayasam: Hometown hero of mine. Yes. [00:08:09] Sandhya Jha: Poor People's campaign from North Carolina. And he always talks about how it's not about right and left. It's about right and wrong. And it turns out that when we engage in organizing with the awareness that there are huge swaths of things that most of us are well served by, we can do better organizing. And that was actually how Tom was legislating. And at a certain point I realized that my deep passion was around racial justice, but the distinct experience I had in a multi religious household was an awareness of how religion was being used as a weapon. I had an obsession. Every paper in college I wrote was about the Christian coalition, this right wing, organizing body in the nineties. So a friend of mine [00:09:00] said, You know, there's an interfaith organization working against the Christian Coalition. And it was called the Interfaith Alliance. Her mom had been a superintendent in Washington state in eastern Washington and was a pretty conservative person by my standards. [00:09:18] Sandhya Jha: But, Dr. Chow believed in multiculturalism and believed in teaching evolution. And the Christian coalition had organized to push her out of her position as superintendent and the Interfaith Alliance of Washington State had supported her in that time. [00:09:38] Sandhya Jha: And so Liz said, you know, they've got a national chapter, a national office. And that's where I ended up, cutting my adult organizing teeth which was great because talk about learning lessons for our current moment where religion is being weaponized in ways that are anti-trans, that are anti-queer, that are anti-women, that [00:10:00] are anti reproductive rights, that are anti-immigrant and refugee. I am really grateful to have experienced the power of multi-faith organizing, around a lot of those same issues. So that was what I did in the early two thousands and then I went to seminary and public policy school, and then I ended up out here pastoring a congregation of 10 people in a building of 40,000 square feet. [00:10:29] Sandhya Jha: And long story short, that's how the Oakland Peace Center was born, was out of this dream of cultivating deeper collaboration among nonprofits who were dedicated to a shared cause. The Oakland Peace Center, which is a collective of 40 different nonprofits committed to dismantling the root causes of violence in our community. I was the founder of that organization and it was when I was pastoring First Christian Church of Oakland that I asked the handful of folks who were members of that church, what they wanted to [00:11:00] contribute to the community, and they said they wanted to contribute peace in the midst of violence. And for a dozen folks to have given birth to a space that in non pandemic years, saw over a hundred thousand people do things like the Lawyers for Black Lives Conference and to do Kingian non-violence training and to be a part of food and clothing distribution, to participate in all the very diverse ways that we can create peace is pretty impressive. [00:11:30] Sandhya Jha: And a couple of years ago, I left the Oakland Peace Center because a colleague of mine said, Anybody can run a non-profit. We need you to do what you're actually good at, and what she meant by that was we need more people of color doing diversity, equity, and inclusion work that is actually grounded in power analysis. That isn't just how do we be nicer to each other in the workplace, but how do we recognize the ways that systems of white supremacy [00:12:00] unconsciously often shape the culture of our workplaces? And what do we do to dismantle that white supremacy culture so that we can be building nonprofits and institutions of higher education and faith organizations, and even corporations that are dedicated to our full liberation, our liberation, the lands liberation. [00:12:23] Swati Rayasam: I mean coming, especially from the place that you come in grassroots organizing and in faith based organizing, what is it actually to transition into this kind of consulting space around racial justice and really interface with a lot of people that I feel like as organizers, we don't really talk to? [00:12:42] Sandhya Jha: One of my favorite things about this shift in my work is I love getting to work with folks who don't think of themselves as organizers, who, it turns out are organizers, Right. I think we sometimes create a cult of here's what an organizer looks like, you [00:13:00] have to be a Martin Luther King or a Cesar Chavez and what I love is getting to work with moms and with teenagers and with folks who think of themselves as caring, compassionate, individuals, and when I go into an organization and work with their handful of folks who care about this issue, the DEI team, I get to teach them how to strategically organize. I get to teach them how do you create culture shift over time? I get to teach them how do you figure out who your allies are? How do you figure out how to move people who are neutral? It turns out that there are a lot more organizers out there than we realize if we don't create one definition of what an organizer needs to look like. [00:13:45] Swati Rayasam: I have been reading this political scholar Eqbal Ahmed, who really talks about the way the burden is on those of us who are deeply committed to movement work, narrow definition people, the burden is really on us to try and [00:14:00] create a liberatory future that feels both achievable. Mm-hmm. and safe for everybody. Because when people engage in mass struggle and in revolution, there are people who are a hundred percent willing to put their lives on the line. People who are willing to die for the cause. And we absolutely need those people. And there are many people along the spectrum who, if you can create a future that feels like it's within their grasp, they will come with you. [00:14:30] Sandhya Jha: Yep. I teach a lot of organizing classes and have gotten a chance to teach alongside my beloved colleague BK Woodson at Allen Temple Baptist Church, they have a leadership institute there. And one of the books we use is Blueprint for a Revolution by Srđa Popović. And I feel like I learned a lot as we read that book together and thought about how to apply it to the work we're doing in Oakland. They talked about how by engaging in nonviolent direct action, [00:15:00] they created space for elders to be a part of their work and youth to be a part of their work and families to be a part of their work. By making the movement playful. They gave people hope and gave people courage because dictators are terrified of being mocked. [00:15:17] Swati Rayasam: Yeah, exactly. And I think by being really restrictive or narrow about who we view as actually valuable organizers. And I think labor movements teach us this a lot, right? We really cut ourselves off at the knees on our ability to build a network or to be in touch with the general population, many of whom are more connected than we ever give them credit for. [00:15:41] Sandhya Jha: Yeah. Yep. it's part of why I love labor organizing. I talk with a lot of people who are disenchanted with organizing who ask me how I can have stayed involved for the past 25 years. And why I've been able to stay in it is cuz I'm organizing alongside workers and they have [00:16:00] full lives. And the work that they're doing in the movement is so that they can live their full lives. And there's something about having that perspective and recognizing the why all the time instead of getting lost in the weeds of the what. Is so important in this work. I think that has been a big theme of my organizing life is how do we build to the greatest common denominator? As my friend BK often says how do we build towards those shared values that often get erased when we are engaged in the right versus left debate. [00:16:39] Swati Rayasam: Yeah. I think that it is so important and I also think that it's really hard in this moment of what feels like constant trauma and re trauma. [00:16:51] Swati Rayasam: And to some extent especially when we're talking about the left right dichotomy there are real concerns [00:17:00] about safety. Yep. And there are real concerns about security and who you are in community with and who you can find even the smallest level of acceptance from to ensure that you won't have violence visited upon you. And I think that these conversations of united front organizing, Right. trying to bridge across difference mm-hmm. for a shared goal, for a shared liberatory future Yep. Are really important. And they feel kind of impossible to achieve right now. [00:17:31] Sandhya Jha: It's interesting cuz I think that in many ways that is true. There are a lot of conversations that I think people with privilege expect, people who are marginalized to engage in. And those expectations are unfair, what I found very frustrating was the number of people with a lot of privilege who would be like, Ugh, I just can't talk to those people. And I'm like, Then who's going to? Exactly. and so I do think that some of this is about being willing to have [00:18:00] hard conversations in the places where we have privilege and recognizing who's at actual risk and showing up in ways that are protective of who is at risk. But that doesn't mean walking away from people who aren't where we are. Right. Because the fact of the matter is everybody's on a journey. And I have watched at the same time some of the disposability culture in movements write off people without giving them any way to address harm, repair harm, and find a pathway back into community. [00:18:41] Swati Rayasam: Yeah. And I think that's why, at least I am feeling really hopeful about, what I've seen over the past couple of years, this really important track into transformative justice and restorative justice, to acknowledge that there is harm that has happened, there are harms that happen every day between people. [00:19:00] And also we are all on our own journey to unlearn the things that we have been taught either directly or indirectly by our upbringing, by our environment and that you cannot easily dispose of people and that people are able to come back into community. Now that comes with a very important caveat that like they recognize the harm. Mm-hmm. that. They have done or how they've been party to it, that they acknowledge that there is healing work that needs to be done both with the person that they harmed and also probably in internally. [00:19:35] Sandhya Jha: Well, and the community, folks who don't do RJ on a regular basis tend to skip the community aspect. Yeah. That there is actually repair that needs to be done with community and there's work community needs to do to figure out how to re-embrace reabsorb people who have done harm in ways that still protect the person who's been harmed. [00:19:55] Swati Rayasam: Exactly. In ways that do not erase the harm that has happened, but [00:20:00] acknowledge, contextualize it and say, Okay, we are patching this and we are working to move forward in step with each other. Absolutely. [00:20:09] Sandhya Jha: Can I just say that one of the other things that I think you and I have in common is a real passion for bringing joy back into the work of Justice I quote Fabiana Rodriguez a lot on this particular thing, because I was at an event she was doing eons ago, and she looked out at us and most of us were activists and she said, Listen, y ‘all you keep inviting people to a struggle. I'm on your side and I don't wanna join a struggle. I want to join a party. And that was like a call to arms for me when I heard her say that. I was like, Oh my gosh, you're right. We are so much more fun. Like, I've hung out with people who are anti-trans and anti queer and anti-immigrant and anti refugee. They are not fun people. No, no. We have all of the best parties. So I don't know why we don't [00:21:00] capitalize on that more. So I think the role of joy and justice is so important. And this is why I was so excited to have you on the podcast that I launched recently. [00:21:11] Sandhya Jha: Right. Bending Towards Justice Avatar the last Airbender for the Global Majority. [00:21:15] Swati Rayasam: So literally like bringing it together. Two of my favorite things right, is like TV shows, wholesome TV shows like Avatar, The Last Airbender that I deeply love and organizing. Yes. All the work that I love. And I think it's true You know, what is actually really the important work is to work to build toward a future that is desirable Yep. That people want to be a part of. Yeah. That people can see happen. Yeah. And I think that is a lot of the difficulty that I have seen in some organizing circles. We are so well versed in what we are against and all of the things that are bad that so many people have a really hard time seeing or visioning or communicating [00:22:00] what it is that we are fighting for. Yeah. Right. And it's not enough to say, I'm fighting for a world where we can all be safe. Right. Yeah. I'm not, I'm fighting for a world where we can all take long naps in the middle of the day if we'd like to do that. Right. Yeah. But like really building and visioning that future of like, in this world in which we are all safe, there will be harm that happens. How do we deal with that? Yeah. What do we do with that? How do we make sure that it is able to keep everybody safe and also able to account for the times in which it is not able to keep everybody safe. [00:22:38] Sandhya Jha: Visionary does not have to mean naive. And we need it to be visionary. And sometimes I forget to do the visionary stuff. I've got a colleague, Dave Bell, he's a farmer who is also an anti-racism trainer and we do a lot of work together. He's a white guy who lives in White Swan, Washington, on the reservation and I remember being at a training with him and I [00:23:00] was all fired up and I was so excited about the conversations we were having and the people were really ready to do the hard work and roll up their sleeves. And Dave says to them, I would like to not have to do this work. And I'm like, What is he talking about? This is amazing. We're doing such good work. And he says, I would like for us not to have to talk about racism all the time. I would rather be farming. I would rather be, taking care of the cows in my field. [00:23:26] Sandhya Jha: I would rather be talking about my pottery work that I'm doing badly but learning how to do, I would rather be doing anything than have this conversation. But I don't get to be on the farm with the wheat, with the cows, with my bad pottery until we figured out how to do this anti-racism work. And it was a really humbling moment for me because I also get into that like I'm an organizer, that's my identity space. And it was this reminder of Dave's doing this. So he gets to live in a world where he gets to hang out in the fields and he [00:24:00] gets to, love on the cows. There's something about being reminded that we're doing this so that eventually we don't have to do it. That I think is actually visionary in its own way and it's important. [00:24:12] Swati Rayasam: Moving into a little bit more of the grit of like why I asked you to be on the show today. I met you originally when I moved to the Bay Area when you were the executive director of the Oakland Peace Center because At that time I was doing organizing work with the Alliance of South Asians Taking Action, which is a 20 year old bay area based organization, that was really founded around the Laki Reddy Bali Reddy sex trafficking. Yep. Caste and labor exploitation case that happened in Berkeley in 1999. And I was just so thrilled to be around and have in community so many rad desis. And you also did work with ASATA, right. Historically and are actively doing work with us. [00:24:56] Sandhya Jha: Absolutely. One of the places I think I invested the most [00:25:00] energy in where we got to spend a lot of quality time in the kitchen was one of the projects, Bay Area Solidarity Summer, an organizing institute, camp, however you wanna refer to it. [00:25:10] Swati Rayasam: Political education, Summer camp. [00:25:12] Swati Rayasam: Yeah, exactly. For young South Asian Americans who are committed to activism. What I think was the most beautiful part of that program when I was involved in it, and it's still the case today, is for young South Asians who think that they're the only ones who care about justice issues, who haven't met other people, who are South Asian, and identify as justice seekers first to meet each other and realize that there are people just like them. Then to look around and realize that those of us who are usually 10, 15, 20 years older than them are also committed to the work and have been doing it for decades. And then for them to get exposed to the long history of radical visionary organizing and activism of South [00:26:00] Asians here in the US and also in the homelands of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Afghanistan, and diasporic countries all over the world. [00:26:13] Sandhya Jha: There's something about realizing, Oh, you have contemporaries, oh, you have elders, oh, you have ancestors. Mm-hmm. Especially in the face of the model minority lie that so many of us have had imposed on us, this lie that all we are all we're supposed to be is cogs in this larger capitalist machine that are non disruptive, which is why we're allowed to survive. And if we are non disruptive enough, we might even be able to be comfortable. And to discover that there's more to our story than that is so exciting and I love, love, love being a part of that. [00:26:52] Swati Rayasam: Yeah. I think that is like fundamentally one of the most important kind of activities that [00:27:00] happens in the ASATA universe, I was a kid who also grew up thinking that there were no other South Asians like me, or there were no other folks who were interested in justice. I spent a lot of time doing, reproductive and queer justice in the south; I always think about what would it have meant if I came in, BASS for 18 to 24 year olds. Yep. what would it have meant if I had come in at a fresh 18 and been able to basically be apprised of the fact that I have this history Yeah. That it's not just me. And that actually, immigration and white supremacy and neo-colonial culture has created this project of assimilation that all of our parents have been in on, in a way to survive Yeah. And to be safe. And I tell my, I tell my mom that a lot because she's always a little surprised about the organizing work that I do. And I was just like, Your job was to survive. My job is to liberate. Yeah. [00:28:00] You know? Yeah. And I could not do that if you were not so focused on creating that environment for me. [00:28:07] Swati Rayasam: I love that. [00:28:07] Swati Rayasam: we'll drop in the show notes, but, BASS – Bay Area Solidarity Summer is solidaritysummer.org. So we'll put that in the show notes as well as ASATA, the Alliance of South Asians Taking Action is ASATA.org. And yeah, I think that is a really good segue into how we got involved in this amazing project. [00:28:31] Swati Rayasam: You're tuned in to APEX express at 94.1 KPFA and 89.3, KPFB in Berkeley. And online@kpfa.org. [00:28:43] Swati Rayasam: I think it was Fall 2021 that you and I were talking. Yep. And you were telling me that you were involved in this amazing archival fellowship project. Is run by the South Asian American Digital Archive and [00:29:00] that you were going to do your project about labor. Mm-hmm. and South Asians. Yep. And my immediate, incredibly naive response was, how many South Asians are there in labor? [00:29:12] Sandhya Jha: Exactly. And it's not naive. It's interesting cuz I think that this project actually emerged out of my favorite part of BASS, which was when the young adults would ask what their opportunities were in the world of justice. And I would say, you know, there's a place for us in labor justice. It had never crossed most of their minds. Right. We don't think of ourselves as having a role especially in formalized unions. And so SAADA, the South Asian American Digital Archives has an archival fellows project. And the whole purpose of it is to diversify their archives and collect the stories that are usually overlooked in the telling of South Asian American stories. [00:29:56] Sandhya Jha: And they have done a great job over the years of collecting the [00:30:00] stories of informal organizing, like the Punjabi Taxi Drivers campaign, the Bangladeshi Nail Workers Campaign. Those were informal labor organizing campaigns. That have been really well archived and they're amazing stories. I wanted to make sure that the next generation of South Asian activists knew about the South Asians who were actually part of the formal organized labor movement. [00:30:30] Sandhya Jha: And so I spent this past year interviewing, maybe a half a dozen or so South Asian American workers. Generally, not always, but mostly what would be classified as low wage workers who found a pathway into formal organizing bodies, unite here or the building trades or any number of the formal unions that keep [00:31:00] the labor movement alive across the country today. And I'm really proud of the fact that we do have South Asian workers who have moved up the ranks to be official organizers or to be at negotiating tables. And so that's part of the story I thought it was worth us telling. [00:31:19] Swati Rayasam: And I am, I'm so excited that we get to dive deeper into this project and I really love your framing too, around the three large bins that you have, solidarity, spirit and struggle. [00:31:34] Swati Rayasam: Right? Yeah. Yeah. [00:31:35] Sandhya Jha: I started out with certain assumptions about what I was going to learn, partly because I've been doing labor solidarity work for 25 years at this point. I really thought I knew what I was gonna hear. And what I discovered was there were these consistent themes across, the interviews. that there were these notions of, Oh, what's meaningful to me is [00:32:00] getting to organize across cultures, getting to organize with people who, on the surface and even deep down are very different than me, but we share this vision of what our lives can be. And so that solidarity message I found really powerful. Also, and admittedly because I come out of a spiritual background, was probably looking for it. I was really struck by how many of the interviews ended up talking about the role of spirituality and shaping people's values. And in a couple of instances, organizers said, what my religion taught me was that religion needs to be challenged. And building up that muscle was what helped me challenge systems of injustice in other places. But others said that their journey with their faith tradition was what guided them into the work of labor organizing. [00:32:52] Sandhya Jha: And then that third bucket of struggle, I think is the lived experience of how [00:33:00] hard it is to take on oppressive systems of capitalism, how hard it is to take on decks that are stacked against us and what it means to have somewhere to turn in the midst of those struggles. I will say there were also a couple of lessons I was surprised by because my South Asian identity is so central to my organizing work, I was expecting to collect stories of people who were proud South Asians, who were also proud to be involved in the labor movement. And I assumed that they would see connections between those things because I certainly do. But what I discovered is for the most part, they were like, Yeah, I'm South Asian. I'm not saying that doesn't matter, but it's not super relevant to my organizing work. My organizing work is about [00:34:00] our cross-cultural solidarity. And that was something I hadn't been expecting that emerged as I did those interviews. Interesting. And I'm really grateful that the South Asian American Digital Archives likes telling all of the stories because I think I promised them that what they were going to get was, we're proud to be South Asian organizers. And what I got was, yeah, we're South Asian, we're proud to be organizers. And the that SAADA is like, yeah, that's part of our story too. [00:34:28] Swati Rayasam: Yeah. And I think that's, that I think is incredibly important. We have this really, amazing series of audio clips from your SAADA interviews that really represent a lot of the themes that you were highlighting about solidarity, spirit, and struggle. And I'm just really excited to play them as we talk through these larger themes in your larger project and the experience of South Asian labor organizers. [00:34:55] Swati Rayasam: This clip is from somebody that you and I both know, which [00:35:00] is Prem Pariyar. I was so thrilled that Prem was a part of your project. I think Prem is an incredible organizer, so yeah tell our listeners a little bit about Prem. Prem [00:35:09] Sandhya Jha: It was pretty exciting to get to work with him you know, he moved here from Nepal and in Nepal he had been a Dalit activist and he came to the United States and had this notion that in the United States there is no caste and he was disabused of that notion very quickly as a restaurant worker dealing with anti Nepali bias in Indian restaurants, dealing with caste bias in Nepali restaurants, well dealing with Caste bias in all the restaurants. [00:35:35] Swati Rayasam: Hey, everyone, Narrator Swati here, I just wanted to put in an explanatory comma, a la W Kamau Bell and Hari Kondabolu to talk about some terms you just heard. Sandhya referenced that Prem was a Dalit activist and also talked about Caste bias. For those of you who don't know, Caste is a violent system of oppression and exclusion, which governs social status in many south Asian countries, although it is [00:36:00] most commonly associated with India. It works on an axis of purity and pollution, and it's hereditary. At the top of the caste system are Brahmins, by the way Sandhya and I are both Brahmin, and not even at the bottom, but completely outside of the system are Dalits who were previously referred to by the slur untouchable and Adivasis who are indigenous to South Asia. [00:36:25] Swati Rayasam: Despite being “illegal” Caste bias, Caste Oppression, Caste apartheid, are still prevalent, both in South Asia and as Sandhya references, in the United States. It manifests in many ways that people experience racial injustice, via socioeconomic inequality, systemic and interpersonal violence, occupation, and through the determination of marriage and other relationships. You can learn more at EqualityLabs.org and APEX currently has a show in the works that delves into this more deeply. Now. Back to Sandhya [00:36:58] Sandhya Jha: What is [00:37:00] delightful to me is Prem went on to get an MSW and is building out amazing mental health resources for Dalit communities for the Nepali community. Seeking to build out a program where there are more and more people in Nepal who are trained with MSW skills. [00:37:21] Sandhya Jha: I met with one of his professors from CSU East Bay where he got his degree and she said, You know, that the entire Cal State system is adding caste to its anti-discrimination policies thanks to the work he started at CSU East Bay. And it was really beautiful to hear that because the focus of my conversations with him were more around how his experiences in the restaurants led him into the solidarity work with nail salon workers. [00:37:53] Swati Rayasam: To just, kick back to the caste abolition work that Prem has been doing, that caste abolition work [00:38:00] at CSU East Bay has been such critical work in these ongoing conversations around caste that have been in the South Asian community primarily, but have been percolating elsewhere. [00:38:13] Swati Rayasam: You know, the state of California filed a lawsuit against Cisco systems Yep. For caste discrimination in their workplace and there have been all these conversations around caste and tech work and interplay that with the no tech for apartheid work. Right. That has been happening in Palestinian liberation circles. Yeah. And really building that solidarity movement. So I think that Prem is an absolute powerhouse Yeah. In that regard. But yeah, let's listen to this clip. [00:38:42] Prem: During that time, I got connected with other community organizer, like workers group. I got connected and so I was connected with nail salon workers, who were exploited at their workplace and with them, [00:39:00] I got to go to the capital in Sacramento. And so I thought I need to advocate for the restaurant workers. that was my first experience, like working with other workers and with the assembly members and like other other policy makers I shared what is happening what kinds of discrimination happening at the workplace. So I advocated for the restaurant workers at that time. I shared my stories and I supported the rights of nail salon workers. I was there to support them and they supported me as well, and it was wonderful. And finally that advocacy worked. And the bill was drafted and it was passed finally. And so it was huge achievement at that time. [00:39:49] Swati Rayasam: I love that. I think that is such a perfect story of when you win, we all win. [00:39:56] Sandhya Jha: And what I also love about it is he goes on [00:40:00] to talk about how he has remained in relationship with those nail salon workers. That they show up for each other, that they take each other food, that they show up to each other's baby showers and birthday parties, and there's this sense of community that emerges out of this shared struggle. And so that's a cross-cultural campaign. They were mostly Vietnamese. There were some Bangladeshi nail salon workers, but it was mostly people from a different culture than his. [00:40:27] Sandhya Jha: But somebody at the Asian Health Services program that he was at, saw his gifts, saw his passion, and he really responded to that in exactly, the most powerful way. I can imagine. [00:40:38] Swati Rayasam: And I think one of the nice things as well about that is that person at Asian Health Services connected Prem in and the Nail Salon Worker group, California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborative, Prem came from Nepal, I'm not sure, but the extent to which his organizing background and how comfortable he was in the US organizing space around labor [00:41:00] issues was probably significantly less that worker group took it upon themselves when they saw Prem come in to say, Oh, you are advocating on behalf of restaurant workers. Great. Why don't you join us? Let's help support and so the nail salon workers saw Prem, saw solidarity with Prem and said, It is our responsibility mm-hmm to bring you into this space to connect you in and to move in, struggle together. Yeah. Toward our shared goals of safety, of health, of rights. Yep. [00:41:35] Sandhya Jha: Exactly. [00:41:36] Swati Rayasam: So, we have this clip from Daljit, tell me a little bit about Daljit. Daljit [00:41:42] Sandhya Jha: Yeah. Daljit was an attorney who now reads tarot for people because she needed a break from the toxicity of that career and how it was taking her away from her family. Daljit is a deeply spiritual person and, [00:42:00] as I mentioned before, this theme of spirit showed up in some really beautiful ways in some of the interviews. I loved the way she understood her Sikh tradition as foundationally being connected with the land and foundationally connected with the people who work the land. [00:42:15] Daljit: Agriculture is our culture and the religion that I was born into, Siki, the founder of that faith was a farmer. And so a lot of the scripture, the analogies, the metaphors, the poetry, the music, the songs, the boon, the traditional folk songs, that can be taunting and teasing banter, all that stuff the land is the framework for that. And my most favorite line from the Guru Granth Sahib, our holy book, is, [speaks Punjabi] and that basically means that, the waters our guru, the airs our father, but our mother is Earth. And that's the greatest of all , and that's adherence to ecosystem. That's the [00:43:00] indigenous Cosmo vision that should be paramount. And that's what I try to teach my children. And so I think that's what I was taught as a kid without necessarily being able to pinpoint it, but it was just infused throughout our songs, our music, our food, the Harvest, there's two times a year that our celebrations, whether it Baisakhi or Lohri. It's so connected to the harvest and what is coming out of the soil or not. And you're connected to the cycles of nature. [00:43:28] Swati Rayasam: The connection between nature land, spirituality the way that it shows up in so many faith backgrounds and so many faith organizers, I think is really, really beautiful. [00:43:41] Sandhya Jha: And I love that Daljit Kaursoni who was raised in this tradition, has found her way to Buddhism and is raising her kids with those connections, but without ever losing this grounding in the liberation of the land, the liberation of the [00:44:00] people. [00:44:00] Sandhya Jha: And for that to be a key element of her spirituality, even as her spirituality evolves, I think it's pretty powerful. Tafadar [00:44:08] Sandhya Jha: One of the other people I got to interview ,Tafadar, he's a Bangladeshi American in the building trades and is a deeply committed Marxist. For me, this was a particularly exciting interview because I'm Bengali, so from West Bengal, before partition, Bangladesh and what's now West Bengal, were one state. And so it was fun to get to talk with him and to say, Hey, this is our legacy as Bengalis is radical worker organizing. [00:44:40] Sandhya Jha: And I remember saying to him, Some people in the building trades are not super excited to be working with brown people. And some people in the building trades are a little biased against women. And as a very, very progressive South Asian? How do you navigate that [00:45:00] space? [00:45:00] Sandhya Jha: And he said, Here's the thing is, yeah, I organize alongside some moderate to conservative white folks from New Jersey and he said, but in the building trades, if that moderate to conservative white guy from New Jersey decides he doesn't like my feminist politics, or he doesn't like my brown skin, if he decides that's a reason not to train me, he might die. And it was really interesting because even though I've been doing labor justice work for a long time, it was one of those moments I was like, Oh, right. Your work is very dangerous and you all have to rely on each other whether you like each other or not. That is the magic of organizing that no one ever talks about. This is why we can do cross class, cross-cultural work because literally you have to trust each other with your lives. Right. That was a really clarifying moment for me. And it was one of those interesting moments where I was like, [00:46:00] Solidarity is not a romantic thing. Uh, it is very much a matter of life and death. [00:46:05] Sandhya Jha: And I think that is really important and that exact thing that you brought up, you don't even have to necessarily trust somebody. Right. But you do need them. Yep. Right. And like that really clear understanding that like your fates are intertwined and it is truly in everybody's best interest. If you are trained well, irrespective of whether or not at lunch, I'm interested in sitting anywhere near you. I think that's really great. [00:46:32] Sandhya Jha: One of the things that was really exciting about talking with Tafadar was the reminder that labor organizing and formal union organizing at its best can be in solidarity with other movements really worker justice and housing justice and racial justice are inseparable, on some level. And so, one of the most inspiring stories I got to hear across all of these interviews [00:47:00] was a campaign that brought together folks across the anti- gentrification, the immigrant rights, and the labor justice movement. [00:47:14] Tafadar: It's ironic, building affordable housing with deadly exploitation. And, um, to do this, the de blassio administration, they embark on massive major rezonings of poor areas to relax the local zoning laws to be able to bring in these developments. And a couple of years ago, my, my union in local 79's. Took a very sharp turn towards a community organizing approach because labor can't win on our own, and that's the perspective that all of labor should adopt. In order to fight against the sweatshops in our industry. We united with a lot of community organizations in the South Bronx. [00:47:53] Tafadar: We formed the South Bronx, Safe Southern Boulevard Coalition. And along with these groups, we [00:48:00] protested and did a whole lot of activism, lobbying, community organizing to stop the rezoning of Southern Boulevard, which is a massive stretch in the South Bronx, while the De Blassio administration had succeeded in another part of the Bronx where there's like massive displacement still underway right now. And we were determined to stop it there. And it was a beautiful thing that we can unite because on our end as labor, we had to prevent all these trash companies from coming in and exploiting workers. And we were working with these tenants who are afraid of being displaced. And people generally, we do need revitalization of our neighborhoods. We do need investment. We do need things to be changed and made better. For us. If it's not for us, if it's done without us, then eventually we're not even gonna be here anymore. So we had that alliance going on and not only did we manage to stop that rezoning, we also educated the local city councilman on why his position was wrong and supporting the rezoning. And he eventually completely flipped this [00:49:00] position. And now chairs the land use committee of the city council from the perspective that we educated him on, which it's just been a very interesting dynamic. But, there's a lot of rezoning battles all over the city that's like the main front of anti gentrification struggles. And I've been watching those kinds of campaigns go on since I began organizing about 15, 16. I've seen very different approaches to them, but I've never seen any model really work until that one kicked in where Labor and the community came together. So that was one of my favorite campaigns because of that lesson that we were able to concretely put into practice and set as an example for not only for community movements all over New York City, but also for Labor. [00:49:43] Sandhya Jha: I think this hit me in particular because I've done so much work around antis displacement in Oakland, and my experience has been. [00:49:53] Sandhya Jha: That while for most of us on the ground, the connection between housing justice and labor justice is really clear. When you [00:50:00] start getting into the technical policy issues and the funding issues, the folks who are running labor and housing justice or affordable housing, struggle to find ways to collaborate. And it's been one of my consistent heartbreaks for at least a decade at this point because I work at the intersection of those things and sometimes I despair of us being able to find ways to move forward together. And so to hear a story like this one and to be reminded at core, those justice issues can and must be we already knew, must be, but actually can function together to build a better community. That was actually really life giving for me to hear. [00:50:45] Swati Rayasam: Yeah. I a hundred percent agree. And I think the point that Tafadar as well brings in the clip of just saying we knew that we could do this, but we knew we couldn't do this without community organizing. Right? Yeah. That labor couldn't do this alone. Yeah. [00:51:00] And I think that is a lot of what, when we talk about solidarity politics, it's not just a backdoor way of inclusion for inclusion's sake, we have to all do this. Actually, it is integral that all of us are involved in any of these campaigns because it impacts all of us. And because we are not going to win with only a single constituency and in the very same way that, Tafadar was identifying that labor couldn't do that alone. in community organizing spaces that you and I have been in mm-hmm. , like we are constantly talking about how we cannot do any of this without labor. Yep. And I think a beautiful example of that is the Block the Boat campaign yeah that the Arab Resource Organizing Center, started back in 2014 and then again during 2021 to block the Zim ship from the port of Oakland. And like this community organization [00:52:00] AROC could not do that without working with the longshoreman to collaborate with the port workers. And I think that when we see the marriage of community organizing and labor organizing, that is when we get the power of grassroots organizing. [00:52:16] Sandhya Jha: Something I wanna mention about the SAADA Fellowship that I was really grateful for: two things. First off, they did a really good job of making sure we got trained in grassroots oral history. So they took really seriously what it meant for this to be justice work. And they made sure we had exposure to methodology that was gonna lift up and honor and foster the voices of people whose stories don't get heard often enough. And that was a really big deal to me. The other thing is they made sure that we had an advisory board, people who are in this [00:53:00] work who could help us, figure out who to talk with, who could help us build out an event strategy. And you helped me build out my advisory committee. Anibel Ferris-Comelo who is with the University of California Labor Center, [00:53:14] Swati Rayasam: Prem Pariyar, a Nepali Dalit restaurant worker, organizer pushing for Caste as a protected category with Equality Labs, a Dalit feminist organization, and a social worker supporting the mental health needs of his and many other South Asian communities in Alameda county. [00:53:31] Swati Rayasam: Will Jamil Wiltchko with the California Trade Justice Coalition, Terry Valen who I did a lot of organizing with at the beginning of the pandemic, around the struggles that seafarers were facing with the onset of COVID-19. And he's the organizational director of the Filipino Community Center in San Francisco. The president of NAFCON which is the National Alliance for Filipino Concerns and just an all in all amazing organizer [00:53:57] Sandhya Jha: the last thing I wanna mention [00:54:00] is SAADA also helped me set up a digital exhibit with Art by Madhvi Trivedi Patak and I wanted to give them a shoutout because they're an incredible artist, but also they grew up in a working class family and didn't get exposed to what it looks like to do labor justice. And so as they developed the artwork to go with the digital exhibit, they got to experience the possibilities of labor solidarity that they hadn't gotten to experience as a child. And so I really loved that Madhvi was a part of this project as well [00:54:38] Swati Rayasam: All of the clips that you shared really identifying, again, these like huge fundamental pillars of solidarity and spirit and struggle. these clips were amazing. They are so rich and so layered with all of these people's varying and different experiences. Really showing in [00:55:00] all of these different walks of life at all of these ages with all of these experiences, that all of these people have this unified and shared identity in struggle, in spirit, and in solidarity for liberation. [00:55:14] Sandhya Jha: And one of the things that I think is worth celebrating is whether they see it as part of their South Asian identity or not. People who do identify as South Asian now have this resource that says there's a home for you in the labor movement. Yes, there are. There is a value to your voice. There is a value to your wisdom, there's a value to your experience in the labor movement. [00:55:36] Swati Rayasam: I think it's a beautiful project. Sandhya, I think it has been an amazing amount of work I've watched you do over the past year. These stories are so wonderful. I really encourage people to check it out. Where can they find your project? [00:55:49] Sandhya Jha: The website's www.saada.org/acfp [00:56:00] /exhibit/solidarity-forever. We'll put that in the notes. We'll definitely put that in the show notes. [00:56:05] Swati Rayasam: I just wanna make sure that we replug your podcast Bending Toward Justice Avatar, The Last Air Bender for the Global Majority and you can find that at tinyurl.com slash ATLA podcast, Capital P (tinyurl.com/ATLAPodcast). And then the last thing that I also wanna make sure that we plug is Without Fear Consulting. [00:56:27] Sandhya Jha: I love working with folks who know that their organization could be a little more liberative, and are, just not quite sure where to start. I love working with a team of folks who want to be about the work of incorporating diversity, equity, and inclusion into the DNA of their organization and I love setting them up so that they can keep doing that long after I'm working with them. So please do find me withoutfearconsulting.com. If you're interested in that. [00:56:58] Swati Rayasam: Amazing. Sandhya [00:57:00] Jha, Pastor, Racial Justice consultant, podcast host, archivist, singer songwriter, amazing cook. You can do it all. I think you deserve a nap. it has been amazing talking to you. I am so glad to be able to hear about your project and also to hear a lot more about your life. [00:57:23] Sandhya Jha: Yay. Thank you so much. [00:57:25] Miko Lee: Please check out our website, kpfa.org backslash program, backslash apex express to find out more about the show tonight and to find out how you can take direct action. We thank all of you listeners out there. Keep resisting, keep organizing, keep creating and sharing your visions with the world. Your voices are important. Apex express is produced by Miko Lee Jalena Keane-Lee and Paige Chung and special editing by Swati Rayasam. Thank you so much to the KPFA staff for their support have a great night. The post APEX Express 1.5.23 South Asians and The Labor Justice Movement appeared first on KPFA.
Une réunion du conseil de sécurité aura lieu pour évoquer les questions palestiniennes suite à la visite du ministre de la sécurité intérieure israélien Itamar Ben-Gvir sur le mont du temple.
Joël Mergui, Président du Consistoire de Paris.
Simone Rodan Benzaquen est directrice de l'American Jewish Committee en Europe.
Invité de la rédaction : Rudy Saada reçoit Xavier Laurent Salvador pour son « Petit manuel à l'usage des parents d'un enfant woke » aux éditions du Cerf À propos du livre : «Petit manuel à l'usage des parents d'un enfant woke» paru aux éditions du Cerf Que répondre à son enfant persuadé que l'Occident est raciste par nature, que son ressenti vaut plus que la science ? L'enjeu, c'est l'école et la société de demain. Des pistes pour comprendre son enfant woke, et renouer le dialogue avant de le virer de la maison. " Woke ", " privilège blanc ", " décolonialiser ", " hétéropatriarcat ", " intersectionnalité ", " racisé ", " études de genre "... Depuis que votre enfant est entré à l'université, le voilà qui emploie un vocabulaire pour le moins novateur et auquel, soyons honnête, vous ne comprenez pas grand-chose. Pire encore, il use et abuse de l'écriture inclusive, s'insurge en permanence et entend " déconstruire " tout ce que son éducation lui a inculqué. Alors, que répondre à cet enfant, persuadé que l'État est systémiquement raciste ? Que son ressenti vaut plus que la science ? Que la langue " invisibilise " le féminin ? Ou encore que l'on peut étudier, au même titre que n'importe quel idiome, la langue des plantes et des cailloux ? Voici enfin le manuel indispensable pour comprendre votre enfant woke ainsi que votre époque, afin de résister à l'air du temps. Agrégé de lettres, docteur de la Sorbonne et maître de conférences, Xavier-Laurent Salvador est l'auteur de nombreux ouvrages dont Le Pont des âmes, Magie et Merveille au Moyen Âge , et récemment Archéologie et étymologie sémantiques . Il est par ailleurs le co-fondateur de l'Observatoire du Décolonialisme et des idéologies identitaires.
Saate teemad: • LastPass paroolihalduri suur andmeleke – vaheta oma salasõnad esimesel võimalusel ära! • Kas TikTok ikkagi keelatakse ära? • Redmi K60 seeria toob juhtmevaba laadimise soodsatele telefonidele • Nuti- ja spordikellad võivad samuti Saada standardse laadija. • Amazoni Alexa sai virtuaalassistentide testis kõige kehvema tulemuse, Samsungi Bixby on aga üllatavalt hea. • Tehisintellekti abil raamatute kirjutamine on hoo sisse saanud. • Youtube ostis suure spordisarja ülekannete õigused. Saates osalevad Meelis Väljamäe ja Indrek Sillaste
Ceci est une ode à la vulnérabilité. « On peut faire de nos douleurs des choses extraordinaires et joyeuses, » nous confie Aurélie Saada. La moitié du groupe “Brigitte” se livre sans détours en parlant d'écriture, de psychanalyse, de choix artistiques guidés par l'instinct et aussi de la vie de famille monoparentale. Dans cette conversation qui ne manquera pas de faire vibrer votre corde sensible, Aurélie raconte comment elle a su transformer des blessures profondes en forces. On y parle bien entendu d'écriture, de musique, de son processus créatif, mais aussi du déséquilibre créé par les algorithmes des plateformes de streaming. Hors de la scène et loin des paillettes, le quotidien d'Aurélie est celui d'une maman qui élève ses deux enfants seule. Ce que vous apprendrez de cette conversation : comment prendre la vie avec avec légèreté et audace aide à surmonter les difficultés ; pourquoi embrasser ses failles et ses limites permet de mieux créer ; la différence entre un séducteur et quelqu'un de séduisant ; que la routine du matin, ça marche pour les artistes aussi ! Rencontre avec une femme dont la sensibilité et la joie de vivre font la force. Il ne vous reste plus qu'à tendre l'oreille pour découvrir sa recette du bonheur. Cet épisode est comme un baume au cœur, partagez-le avec quelqu'un sur WhatsApp. TIMELINE : 00:02:07 - Présentation 00:23:24 - Trouver sa voie 00:46:45 - Une routine créatif 01:00:59 - Le syndrome de l'imposteur 01:24:53 - Le trac et les émotions 02:14:01 - Ses combats On a cité avec Aurélie plusieurs anciens épisodes de GDIY : Entreprendre un podcast #6 Bernard Werber #9 Olivier Goy #49 Joël Dicker - Auteur #110 Julie Chapon - Yuka #151 Virginie Guillot - Patrouille de France #195 Stéphane Andre - l'Art Oratoire #205 Franck Ladouce - What Matters #261 Caroline Vigneaux - Humoriste #263 Jean Marc Jancovici - Carbone 4 #272 Mike Horn - Aventurier et Explorateur Avec Aurélie, on a parlé de : Restaurant Le Faham à côté des bureaux de Cosa Vostra Arnold Schwarzeneger dans le podcast de Tim Ferris épisodes 60 et 216 Une Vie démente, Ann Sirot et Raphaël Balboni (2020) La vie est belle, Roberto Benigni (1998) Open AI Aurélie Saada vous recommande de lire : Vivre avec nos morts, Delphine Horvilleur Si vous avez apprécié cet épisode, laissez un commentaire sur nos posts LinkedIn ou Instagram. Si vous voulez faire découvrir cet épisode, taguez un ami. La musique du générique vous plaît ? C'est à Morgan Prudhomme que je la dois ! Contactez-le sur : https://studio-module.com. Vous souhaitez sponsoriser Génération Do It Yourself ou nous proposer un partenariat ? Contactez mon label Orso Media via ce formulaire. Vous pouvez suivre Aurélie Saada sur Instagram et lui piquer ses recettes de cuisine sur Tik Tok.
Pour découvrir l'épisode en entier tapez " #298 - Aurélie Saada - Brigitte - S'armer de sa vulnérabilité et devenir invincible " sur votre plateforme d'écoute.
«Seconde main» est une invitation au voyage en revisitant les fonds de placards, et en laissant les objets nous conter leur histoire : une nappe et c'est une repas de famille ; une soupière, le souvenir des volutes qui s'échappent l'hiver et la soupe réconfortante, les pailles et leur lot de jeu et de sons, glaçons virevoltant dans un verre de limonade, des serviettes, des verres en cristal taillés, des porte-couteaux à laisser filer de part et d'autre de la table. «Seconde main» est beau, c'est un livre poétique, curieux, étonnant qui, une fois refermé, appelle à glaner, à chiner, et à poser un regard neuf sur les objets empilés. Avec - Sonia Ezgulian, cuisinière astucieuse et anti-gaspi, cuisinière «Les petits riens qui changent le quotidien», auteure de plusieurs livres dont : Anti-gaspi, la pasta allegra avec Alessanda Pierini, aux éditions de l'Epure, son site et sur instagram. - François Motte, organisateur d'événements. ancien de Dalloyau, il est styliste et scénographe de table. «Seconde main : 32 tables de fêtes chinées et autant de recettes qui vont avec», avec les photographies de Caroline Faccioli, est publié aux éditions Hachette Pratique. Pour aller plus loin - Emmaüs - Ventes aux enchères, les brocantes et... Diaporama Programmation musicale - La complainte du progrès, de Boris vian - Bomboloni, d'Aurélie Saada.
«Seconde main» est une invitation au voyage en revisitant les fonds de placards, et en laissant les objets nous conter leur histoire : une nappe et c'est une repas de famille ; une soupière, le souvenir des volutes qui s'échappent l'hiver et la soupe réconfortante, les pailles et leur lot de jeu et de sons, glaçons virevoltant dans un verre de limonade, des serviettes, des verres en cristal taillés, des porte-couteaux à laisser filer de part et d'autre de la table. «Seconde main» est beau, c'est un livre poétique, curieux, étonnant qui, une fois refermé, appelle à glaner, à chiner, et à poser un regard neuf sur les objets empilés. Avec - Sonia Ezgulian, cuisinière astucieuse et anti-gaspi, cuisinière «Les petits riens qui changent le quotidien», auteure de plusieurs livres dont : Anti-gaspi, la pasta allegra avec Alessanda Pierini, aux éditions de l'Epure, son site et sur instagram. - François Motte, organisateur d'événements. ancien de Dalloyau, il est styliste et scénographe de table. «Seconde main : 32 tables de fêtes chinées et autant de recettes qui vont avec», avec les photographies de Caroline Faccioli, est publié aux éditions Hachette Pratique. Pour aller plus loin - Emmaüs - Ventes aux enchères, les brocantes et... Diaporama Programmation musicale - La complainte du progrès, de Boris vian - Bomboloni, d'Aurélie Saada.
Ex-moitié du duo glamour Brigitte pendant 13 ans, la chanteuse Aurélie Saada a choisi de se réapproprier son histoire. Dans son premier album «Bomboloni», la nourriture se veut le coeur d'un propos appelant à la réparation, à la réconciliation et la consolation. L'album “Bomboloni” est à découvrir dès fin octobre. Aurélie Saada est l'invitée d'Anne Laure Gannac.
Det franske maskineriet slo ut de tapre atlasløvene fra Marokko, og dermed blir finalen Frankrike-Argentina, Mbappe mot Messi. Vi har med oss Arilas Berg Ould-Saada fra Al-Bayt stadion og Helge Pettersen Kalleklev fra Youngstorget, begge med mye på hjertet.
Vanligvis snakker vi om mye og mangt, men i dag handler alt om Lionel Messi. Arilas Berg Ould-Saada er med direkte fra Lusail Stadion og Vadim Demidov forteller hvordan det er å faktisk spille mot den argentinske magiker.
OVV Asuntopalvelut Turku tilasi laatikollisen Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjoja. Yrittäjä Johanna Manner: ”Meillä OVV Turun toimipisteessä uskotaan pitkäjänteiseen asuntosijoittamiseen ja pitkäaikaisiin asiakassuhteisiin. Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjan kasvuun tähtäävä ajattelu on linjassa sekä asiakkaidemme että yrityksemme tavoitteiden kanssa.” Kiitos tilauksesta. Jos toimit asuntosijoittajien ja vuokranantajien parissa ja halaut tilata suuremman määrän kirjoja, ole yhteydessä harri@ostanasuntoja.com UUTTA! Asuntosijoittajan ABC -verkkokurssi. Tutustu ja tilaa kokeneiden asuntosijoittajien Harri Hurun ja Niina Huhtalan verkkokurssi kurssin nettisivuilta. Kiitos sponsoreille Suomen Vuokranantajat ja Sijoitusasunnot.com. Mitä keinoja 10 %:n alennuksen sijaan voisi yrittää, jos markkina todella on sellainen, että vuokralaisilla on varaa valita eli tarjonta ylittää selvästi kysynnän? Silloinhan yksittäiselle vuokranantajalle kyse on vain siitä, että hän löytää asuntoonsa vuokralaisen. Sijoitusasuntoja ostettaessa yksi tekijä aloittelijasta seuraavalle tasolle siirtymisessä on sisäistää konsepti, jossa asuntosijoituksen kannattavuus koostuu kauppahinnasta ja kaupan ehdoista. Ei siis pelkästään kauppahinnasta. Samaa ajattelua voi soveltaa, kun tehdään kauppaa vuokra-asunnosta vuokralaiskandidaatin kanssa. Se on markkinointia, myyntiä ja neuvottelua siinä, missä sijoitusasunnon myyminen ja ostaminen on. Käyn läpi 10 itse käytännössä kokeilemaani keinoa, joita voi pohtia, löytyisikö sieltä ratkaisua. Onko sinulla lähipiirissä 14-25 -vuotias nuori, joka opettelee tekemään itsenäisiä rahapäätöksiä. Ostan Asunto Podcastissakin vierailleet Terhi Majasalmi #31 ja Minna Nikula #102 ovat julkaisemassa Vaurastuvan Nuoren Rahakirjan, jossa käydään läpi, miten eri päätökset vaikuttavat nuoren omaan talouteen, ja miten nuori voi suunnitella itselleen sopivat päätökset. Ennakkotilaa joulukuussa ilmestyvä kirja osoitteesta vauraat.fi Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille: Sijoitusasunnot.com tarjoaa hyvätuottoisia sijoitusasuntoja alle markkinahintojen ja arvokasta tietoa sekä ajankohtaisia näkemyksiä asuntosijoittamisesta. Käy katsomassa nettisivut, uusimmat kohteet, liittymässä sähköpostilistalle, lataamassa ilmaiset asuntosijoittajan työkalut ja katsastamassa uusimmat artikkelit osoitteesta sijoitusasunnot.com. Tosi laadukas opas: Sijoitusasunnon valokuvaus ja kuvien editointi nykyaikaisella kännykällä Pistä muuten Sijoitusasunnot.com YouTube -kanava tilaukseen Kiitos Ostan Asuntoja -sisällön mahdollistavalle sponsorille: ”Kuka tahansa voi olla vuokranantaja – kuka tahansa voi asua vuokralla. Asuntosijoittajan tai sellaiseksi aikovan mielessä liikkuu monia kysymyksiä. Miten tunnistaa hyvä sijoituskohde? Miten onnistua vuokralaisvalinnassa? Mitä vuokrasopimukseen tulee kirjata? Mistä apua ongelmatilanteisiin? Tietoa tarjoaa Suomen Vuokranantajat – hyvien vuokranantajien yhteisö, jonka jäsenenä vuokranantaminen on palkitsevampaa, turvallisempaa ja helpompaa. Liity joukkoon: vuokranantajat.fi.” Kovakantisen Asuntosijoittamisen lumipalloefekti -kirjan tilaaminen onnistuu asuntosijoituskirja.fi -sivuilta ja koodilla KOTIMATKA saa 30 %:n alennuksen. UUTTA! Asuntosijoittajan ABC -verkkokurssi. Tutustu ja osallistu kokeneiden asuntosijoittajien Harri Hurun ja Niina Huhtalan valmennukseen kurssin nettisivuilta.
Sõda on äärmiselt julm, ütleb rohkem kui 30 aastat rinnetel ja konfliktipiirkondades, ka suurte looduskatastroofide järel ja inimsmugeldamise juures lootusetust ja surma filminud rindeoperaator Ivar Heinmaa.
Elle se sert de la cuisine comme une langue à double-sens. Un bomboloni croustillant, et c'est un chagrin d'amour qu'elle mitonne, son auteur qu'elle fricasse, ses plaies soignées au miel. La musique d'Aurélie Saada est sensuelle, elle caresse et pique aussi à qui tend l'oreille aux paroles des chansons du premier album solo de l'ancienne chanteuse des Brigitte, également autrice et réalisatrice de «Rose» en décembre 2021. Bomboloni, du nom de ce beignet italo-tunisien chaud et croquant est un album en faux semblant, dans lequel la cuisine joue le rôle qu'elle a, pour Aurélie Saada, dans la vie : un refuge, un repère, une force. On se laisse bercer, inconscients, par le rythme chaloupé, oriental, gai de la musique et des arrangements de bomboloni, mais... ne nous laissons pas tromper par les paillettes et les ors ; cet album garde l'amour en joue et la peine sous haute surveillance, il cuisine savamment les infidèles et les briseurs de coeur. L'émission est jalonnée d'extraits de l'album Bomboloni, d'Aurélie Saada. Un album Sony Music et Couscous productions. Sa rencontre nous donne l'occasion d'un détour à La boule rouge : un restaurant emblématique de la cuisine tunisienne à Paris, un refuge et une institution ouverte en 1976 par Raymond Haddad, toujours à la barre de cet établissement qui compte autant de fidèles clients que d'amis. Les banquettes rouges, les plafonds en fresques, les photos de personnalités qui décorent les murs sont autant de repères et de clins d'oeil délicieux, qui font le charme de ce restaurant. La cuisine y est généreuse et savoureuse, comme l'accueil. Pour suivre Aurélie Saada, toute de paillettes vêtue cuisinant montecaos et bombolonis ; sur instagram. Elle sera en concert en janvier 2023, à la Maison de la Radio ; le 20, à la Cigale en mars 2023 et en tournée dans plusieurs villes de France. Rose, d'Aurélie Saada est sorti en décembre 2021 - Vivre avec nos morts, petit traité de consolation, de Delphine Horvilleur – éd. Grasset 2021 - Et tu n'es pas revenu, C'était génial de vivre, de Marceline Loridan-Ivens - Boulettes, 10 façons de les préparer, de Andrée Zana Murat, éditions de l'Epure - La cuisine tunisienne, de Jacqueline Bismuth. La Martinière 2017. ⇒ Brigitte sur RFI Musique. Diaporama Programmation musicale - Carmen, de Bizet interprété par La Callas - Histoire d'un amour, de Dalida.
A l'école, dans les livres, les spectacles mais aussi aux infos, les enfants sont constamment informés sur la crise écologique que nous traversons. Cette sensibilisation a des effets positifs sur leur comportement. A tel point qu'ils deviennent parfois les meilleurs prescripteurs de nouvelles habitudes pour toute la famille.Mais il arrive aussi qu'ils développent une forme d'angoisse qui nous angoisse à notre tour, j'ai nommé « l'éco-anxiété ».Pour peu qu'on soit nous aussi accablés par la pollution et la surconsommation et c'est le cocktail gagnant d'émotions désagréables.Alors, comment on s'en sort pour parler sereinement avec nos petits de ces questions inquiétantes ? Sans leur transmettre notre stress ? Sans en faire des ayatollahs du tri sélectif ? Ni faire exploser toute la famille en proie à des contradictions permanentes entre celui qui ne mange plus de viande et celui qui ne croit pas du tout à la fin du monde ?Dorothée Saada a posé toutes nos questions à Charline Schmerber, praticienne en psychothérapie, spécialisée sur les éco-émotions « Petit guide de survie pour éco-anxieux » (Éditions Philippe Rey).Galère sa mère est un podcast de Parents.Cet épisode a été enregistré à Uni-Médias (Paris,15e).Directrice de la rédaction : Anais Jouvancy,Rédaction : Katrin Acou-Bouaziz et Dorothée SaadaRéalisation : Nicolas JeanMusique : François ClosIdentité graphique : UpianCommunication : Farid Adou Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Intellectuels, chefs d'entreprises, artistes, hommes et femmes politiques... Frédéric Taddeï reçoit des personnalités de tous horizons pour éclairer différemment et prendre du recul sur l'actualité de la semaine écoulée le samedi. Même recette le dimanche pour anticiper la semaine à venir. Un rendez-vous emblématique pour mieux comprendre l'air du temps et la complexité de notre monde.
durée : 00:54:40 - Côté Club - par : Laurent Goumarre - Côté Club, le rendez-vous de toute la scène française et plus si affinités. Une heure pour faire le tour de l'actualité musicale et plus encore. Quand la musique rencontre les arts, du cinéma à la BD, du théâtre à la littérature. Bienvenue au Club !
Benjamin Saada, PDG de Fairmat, était l'invité de Christophe Jakubyszyn dans Good Morning Business, ce lundi 21 novembre. Il est revenu sur sa levée de fonds et son objectif de recycler 3 500 tonnes de pièces d'avions en France d'ici 2025, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au vendredi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Intellectuels, chefs d'entreprises, artistes, hommes et femmes politiques... Frédéric Taddeï reçoit des personnalités de tous horizons pour éclairer différemment et prendre du recul sur l'actualité de la semaine écoulée le samedi. Même recette le dimanche pour anticiper la semaine à venir. Un rendez-vous emblématique pour mieux comprendre l'air du temps et la complexité de notre monde.
Ex-moitié du duo glamour Brigitte pendant 13 ans, la chanteuse Aurélie Saada a choisi de se réapproprier son histoire. Elle nous plonge dans les saveurs, les parfums, les couleurs de la Tunisie, berceau de sa famille, juive sépharade, et nous offre un album à la fois intime et solaire, chaleureux et dansant. Il y est question de maternité, de ruptures, d'amour, de traumatismes et de résilience. Et la chronique Ailleurs nous emmène en Suède avec Meryl Maussire, attachée de coopération pour le français pour l'Institut français de Suède. On parlera du concours du Prix de la Francophonie qui vient d'être lancé et dont le thème est :l'humour, une langue universelle.
Ex-moitié du duo glamour Brigitte pendant 13 ans, la chanteuse Aurélie Saada a choisi de se réapproprier son histoire. Elle nous plonge dans les saveurs, les parfums, les couleurs de la Tunisie, berceau de sa famille, juive sépharade, et nous offre un album à la fois intime et solaire, chaleureux et dansant. Il y est question de maternité, de ruptures, d'amour, de traumatismes et de résilience. Et la chronique Ailleurs nous emmène en Suède avec Meryl Maussire, attachée de coopération pour le français pour l'Institut français de Suède. On parlera du concours du Prix de la Francophonie qui vient d'être lancé et dont le thème est :l'humour, une langue universelle.
La crise sanitaire a amplifié le phénomène. Mais la dépression infantile a toujours existé avec en toile de fond pour les parents la peur lancinante du passage à l'acte, du suicide. Cette dépression chez les petits, chez les ados est souvent plus silencieuse, toujours plus tabou que celle des adultes, certainement plus effrayante et culpabilisante aussi pour les parents qui peinent à imaginer que l'enfance de leur protégé puisse se teinter d'idées noires. A quoi la reconnait-on à coup sûr ? Quelles en sont les causes ? Existe-t-il des traitements efficaces ? Des façons de réagir meilleures que d'autres pour l'équilibre de nos enfants ?Une foule de questions qui se pressent dans nos esprits inquiets et que Dorothée Saada a posées au Professeur Philippe Duverger, du service de psychiatrie enfant et adolescent à l'hôpital d'Angers. Il nous apporte ici des clés pour relever un défi de plus dans l'éducation de nos enfants… Galère sa mère est un podcast de Parents.Cet épisode a été enregistré à Uni-Médias (Paris,15e).Directrice de la rédaction : Anais Jouvancy,Rédaction : Katrin Acou-Bouaziz et Dorothée SaadaRéalisation : Nicolas JeanMusique : François ClosIdentité graphique : UpianCommunication : Farid Adou Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Le 18 janvier 2007, son corps dénudé était découvert dans la forêt de Rambouillet, caché à la va-vite sous les fougères. Entièrement dénudé et mutilé, sans tête, sans coeur et sans mains. Retrouvez tous les jours en podcast le décryptage d'un faits divers, d'un crime ou d'une énigme judiciaire par Jean-Alphonse Richard, entouré de spécialistes, et de témoins d'affaires criminelles. Ecoutez L'heure du Crime avec Jean-Alphonse Richard du 03 novembre 2022
IT-maailm on teadagi andmeusku ja veendunud, et kui kasutajat piisavalt jälgida, siis on lõpuks päris selge, mida ta tahab ja kuidas talle seda pakkuma peaks. Aga mi siis, kui tegelikult sellest ei piisa ja tuleb ikkagi minna kasutajaga rääkima? Algorütmis on täna külas Rakendusliku Antropoloogia Keskuse asutaja Keiu Telve. RAKil on viimaste aegadel kogunenud mitmeid huvitavid projekte just IT-valdkonnast ja IT-firmadega, et pakkuda hard/big data kõrvale muud vaadet. Antropoloogid ehk inimese ja inimkäitumise uurijad on tööl ka mitmes Eesti tehnoloogiafirmas, näiteks Pipedrive'is. Räägime sellest, mis vahe on analüütikaandmete ja teistsuguste andmete kogumisel ning kasutamisel ja millised on näited sellest, mida saab kasutajate ning toote kohta teada inimestelt küsides, mitte ainult nende käitumist mõõtes. Vaatlused, süvaintervjuud ja inimeste uurimine neile tavapärases keskkonnas annavad sihtrühmadele uue perspektiivi. Millist süsteemi inimesed vajavad ning miks ekspertide eeldused erinevate e-teenuste loomisel sageli ei tööta? Mis paneb mõnda keskkonda usaldama? Miks luua kliendi- ja kasutajateekondi ja kuidas need annavad süsteemidest tervikvaate? Algorütmi veavad Priit Liivak Nortalist, Martin Kapp Pipedrive'ist ja Tiit Paananen Veriffist.
D'abord est-ce bien un rhume dont notre enfant souffre ? Peut-être une allergie ou un autrevirus ? Ca nécessite de le retirer de la crèche ? Et pourquoi il ne parvient pas à se moucher ?Comment l'aider sans lui faire mal ? Sans se faire mal, tant il se débat ! ? Si on abandonne, ilse passe quoi d'ailleurs ? Et les outils bizarres en pharmacie pour extraire la morve, on enparle ? Enfin, il existe pas un moyen naturel de prévenir ces foutus rhumes chez les petits ?Non, parce qu'ils dorment mal, se plaignent et nous on déguste entre les nuits courtes et lesmouchoirs sales. Alors, on consulte quand et qui dans tout ça ?Dorothée Saada a posé toutes nos questions au docteur Emmanuelle Rondeleux, pédiatreallergologue et homéopathe, fondatrice du site www.monpediatre.net et directrice médicalede l'Application May Santé.Galère sa mère est un podcast de Parents.Cet épisode a été enregistré à Uni-Médias (Paris,15e).Directrice de la rédaction : Anais Jouvancy,Rédaction : Katrin Acou-Bouaziz et Dorothée SaadaRéalisation : Nicolas JeanMusique : François ClosIdentité graphique : UpianCommunication : Farid Adou Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Dr. Mohamad Saada é médico otorrinolaringologista e, nesse episódio, conversamos sobre o porquê da sinusite é uma consequência e não uma causa, qual a relação da rinite (e da sinusite) com a alimentação e o porquê de labirintite não ser o que você pensa e ser uma condição rara. Também falamos sobre os famosos cáseos amigdalianos, dentre outros assuntos. Conheça as redes sociais do Dr. Vitor: YouTube: https://youtube.com/DrVitorAzzini1 Instagram: @drvitorazzini TikTok: @drvitorazzini Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/doutorvitorazzini Conheça as redes sociais do Dr. Mohamad: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/DoutorSaada Instagram: @doutorsaada Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/doutorsaada/
Certains couples sont passés au préservatif. Mais pour le reste… On a vaguement entendu parler de vasectomie, de slip chauffant, de pilule pour homme… Et avouons-le, entre la peur de blesser la virilité de nos amoureux et celle d'avoir recours à des méthodes qu'on connaît mal, on est très peu nombreuses à envisager la contraception masculine comme une solution pour notre vite intime. Dans un sens, tant mieux car c'est bien aux hommes de s'intéresser à la question de plus près et de constater que les progrès sont immenses dans le domaine ! Mais en attendant que la gente masculine tombe sur ce podcast, on vous a concocté un épisode qui explique tout bien, techniques, chiffres et témoignage à l'appui. Histoire de lancer la discussion ou de partager le lien aux intéressés.Pour ce thème sexo mal connu, Dorothée Saada a posé toutes nos questions à Erwan Taverne, co-fondateur du Groupe d'Action et de Recherche pour la Contraception (GARCON). Galère sa mère est un podcast de Parents.Cet épisode a été enregistré à Uni-Médias (Paris,15e).Directrice de la rédaction : Anais Jouvancy,Rédaction : Katrin Acou-Bouaziz et Dorothée SaadaRéalisation : Nicolas JeanMusique : François ClosIdentité graphique : UpianCommunication : Farid Adou Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Do you believe that God's Word has the power to transform anyone?In this episode of Inside The Epicenter, Tass Saada, a former Muslim and founder of a nonprofit aimed at reconciling Arabs and Jews, speaks about the hope we can only find in Christ. Saada shares how he encountered the Messiah and reminds listeners of the Bible's truth and God's command to love our enemies.Learn more about The Joshua Fund: https://www.joshuafund.com/learn/podcastMake a tax-deductible donation: https://www.joshuafund.com/give/donate The Joshua Fund Stock Media provided by DimmySad/Pond5: https://www.pond5.com/artist/dimmysad
Welcome back to Chakras & Cusswords Podcast. This episode is all about transitioning from nursing burn out to becoming a spiritual mentor. Bio: Roshni is a heart-led community connector & compassion-driven nurse dedicated to empowering others to integrate into their whole selves. As a Critical Care nurse on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic, the emotional & physical fatigue of facing death and fear head continues to be unpacked. She has spent the past year collecting stories from the frontlines to capture the voices of South Asian American healthcare workers mental & spiritual impact of the trauma stemming from the COVID-19 pandemic. On IG @SouthAsiansBehindTheMask, the project aims to understand the unbearingly heavy burden to serve as “heroes”, while suffering from loss, combating stress and striving for survival despite a large gap in mental health & emotional support. Outside of her work at the bedside, Roshni works as a Integration coach supporting clients to deepen the connection of mind-body-spirit through life's unexpected and challenging transitions. You can follow her work on IG, TikTok and twitter @FollowTheRoshni. The focus for healthcare workers/healing: A year ago, I was selected by SAADA to curate and create a project around South Asian Americans in Healthcare.(SAADA stands for South Asian American Digital Archive. It is a community-based culture change organization ensuring that South Asian Americans are included in the American story: past, present, and future.) Over the course of the year, I did just that! Interviewing 9 incredible "heroes" from the frontlines, working with my incredible artist friend Meghna to create renderings, my amazing musician friend Nimo to source music and along the way, find space for my own story to find a place in history. It has been an incredibly humbling and encouraging project and one that I hope continues to grow as more Desi-Americans find the courage to share their own truths. I am so excited for you to finally experience this & as always, am so grateful for your support in all of my endeavors. SHARE: I have curated a social media handle on instagram to help others share their own stories. If you or anyone you know are a healthcare worker who worked during COVID (or left because of it) I would love to share a short video or write-up with your own reflection. The instagram handle is @Southasiansbehindthemask . DM or email me for more details. IMMERSE: I hope you find time to listen to the powerful stories from my incredible interviewees and see double the impact our culture as Desi Americans AND as healthcare workers connects and conflicts with our own personal journeys. Even if you are not South Asian, I hope this glimpse into someone's perspective helps you build your empathy muscle for all of us in the pandemic. Also see the incredible art created by my lovely friend Meghna. Check out my gallery page here: https://www.saada.org/acfp/exhibit/heart-of-a-hero --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/chakrascusswords/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chakrascusswords/support
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Järgmiste nädalate Algorütmid on kena suve tõttu mitte väga töised, vaid keskenduvad meie saate kuulajate huvitavatele hobidele. Kutsume igasse saatesse ühe inimese, kes tegeleb süvitsi mõne põneva teemaga. Tänase saate külaline on Anti Veeranna, kes muidu töötab Starshipis, kuid tänases saates räägib ta oma harrastusest, milleks on improteater. Lugu, kuidas Anti improni jõudis, on osadele meie kuulajatele kindlasti tuttav: tal oli suur hirm avaliku esinemise ees ja kui ta sellele lahendusi hakkas otsima, jäi otsingumootoris esimesena ette just impro. Algorütmi veavad Priit Liivak Nortalist, Martin Kapp Pipedrive'ist ja Tiit Paananen Veriffist.
On June 15, 2022 the Court decided Golan v. Saada, holding that a court is not categorically required to examine all possible ameliorative measures before denying a Hague Convention petition for return of a child to a foreign country once the court has found that return would expose the child to a grave risk of harm. Joining today to discuss this case is Professor Margaret Ryznar of Indiana University's McKinney School of Law.