Tag Archives: pain

Walk of Causes – Lebanon – Episode 8

Against Poverty

Now that we’ve been on the road for quite some time, Jørgen is starting to feel it in his body. His $10 shoes seems to hold, but his feet are falling appart from the inside! And as each step is reminding him of this pain, we run out of money, which is problem that had to be dealt with urgently.

This episode of Walk of Causes is dedicated to poverty. Fundamentally, poverty is a denial of choices and opportunities, a violation of human dignity.[1] Today, more than 1.7 billion people are estimated to live under absolute poverty, which means that they cannot afford basic human needs, such as clean water, proper nutrition, basic health care, clothes and shelter. Every day 17.000 children die from hunger.[2]

See 2famous.TV to see how we live our lives now, trying to break through as actors in the Middle East. See our ups and downs, as we make our lives public.

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Walk of Causes – Episode 13

Now that we’ve been on the road for quite a while, Matias’ body is finally about to give in. We expected more problems actually, as none of us have ever walked across a country before, nor exorcized. But the pain seemed to have been accumulating, and now it reached a point where we were forced to find a solution to the problem. And the solution was to sit down and rest while firing guns.

Right after the first world war the armenian population of the ottoman empire was systematically destroyed. Their people where deported in forced marches under conditions designed to lead to the death of the deportees. Between 1 and 1,5 million people were murdered in this massacre, which is widely acknowledged to have been one of the first modern genocides.

However, due to pressure from Turkey, most countries in the world still don’t recognize it as a genocide, something almost no scholars back them up with.

It is important to recognize this as a genocide, as “the denial of genocide is widely recognized as the final stage of genocide, enshrining impunity for the perpetrators of genocide, and demonstrably paving the way for future genocides”(1)

Many of the Armenian Holocaust survivors settled in Lebanon, and we often spend time in their neighborhood in Beirut.

See 2famous.TV to see how we live our lives now, trying to break through as actors in the Middle East. See our ups and downs, as we make our lives public.

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