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Youth radio keeps indigenous culture alive in Venezuela
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UNICEF correspondent Kun Li reports on Wayuu youths using radio to promote their indigenous culture in Venezuela.
You are watching UNICEF Television.
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Temperatures soar above 100 degrees Fahrenheit in this village market run by the Wayu people,
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the largest indigenous group in Venezuela.
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On a hot day like this, 11-year-old Blanca and her friends like nothing more than to relax in the shade
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while listening to their favorite radio show.
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I'd like to talk on the radio one day, so that I could be listened to, just like I always listen to them.
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I like the program, especially when they talk about our Wayu culture, the stories, the music and the drum.
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The hit radio show is broadcast here by a group of young people.
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Faced with social and economic exclusion like many other indigenous groups,
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these Wayu youth are determined not to lose their culture and identity.
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In our program, we encourage people not to leave our culture behind.
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We remind them not to forget about our customs, our traditional dress, our language, our music,
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and everything that has to do with our cultural heritage.
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The radio show is broadcast in both Spanish and Wayunaki, the native language for Wayu.
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It has become a vital tool in educating the new generation of children about their own language.
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Outside the radio station, the young people also meet within a network
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where they can make new friends and discuss issues concerning their indigenous community.
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Traditional rituals are performed for neighborhood children and their parents
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in a display of respect to the Wayu way of life.
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Back at the radio station, talks on the next new show are underway.
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Children and elders all contribute as keeping a culture alive is a task involving everyone.
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In Guajira, Venezuela, this is Kunli reporting for UNICEF Television.
00:02:23
Unite for Children.
00:02:29
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- Idioma/s:
- Niveles educativos:
- ▼ Mostrar / ocultar niveles
- Nivel Intermedio
- Autor/es:
- UNICEF
- Subido por:
- EducaMadrid
- Licencia:
- Reconocimiento - No comercial - Sin obra derivada
- Visualizaciones:
- 389
- Fecha:
- 28 de mayo de 2007 - 17:12
- Visibilidad:
- Público
- Enlace Relacionado:
- UNICEF (United Nations International Chidren's Emergency Fund)
- Duración:
- 02′ 37″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 4:3 Hasta 2009 fue el estándar utilizado en la televisión PAL; muchas pantallas de ordenador y televisores usan este estándar, erróneamente llamado cuadrado, cuando en la realidad es rectangular o wide.
- Resolución:
- 320x240 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 15.56 MBytes