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  • 6 months ago
This five-episode documentary series, "The Pamirs Today", reveals a diversity of cultures in the unique region, but also a commonality of values, dreams and hopes shared by people in its different countries. It recounts their efforts and perseverance in seeking a better life for their families, and above all, the opportunities brought about by the BRI.
Transcript
00:00Lying at the boundary between Central Asia, East Asia and South Asia, the Pamir mountain
00:06range is one of the world's highest. As such, it forms the largest geographical barrier
00:12along the route of the ancient Silk Road that has historically connected China with the
00:18Western world.
00:29Throughout its long history, the role of the Pamir region as a strategic trading route
00:35has subjected it to the influence of numerous outside cultures, many of which have left their
00:40mark.
00:45At the crossroads of a continent, this inspiring land on the roof of the world is itself the
00:51meeting point between different worlds.
00:58The
01:15I have always been a part of the artist's ballet
01:26who have been in the past eight years
01:32and I have never been able to do that.
01:35I don't know what you're doing.
02:05At 11 every morning, the National Ballet Troupe of Tajikistan begins its training.
02:22Among the 40 or so performers here, 27-year-old Mukamed is the top male dancer.
02:28In 2003, Mukamed's uncle managed to get him a place at a ballet school in Russia.
02:44From the age of 11, he spent eight years there.
02:51Many of the students are only training with the troop temporarily.
03:16Their monthly allowance is only a little over 400 somoni, or 40 US dollars.
03:23This income is not even enough to cover their basic living expenses.
03:30In addition to performing, Mukamed is also the ballet troop's instructor,
03:35and responsible for all its members' attendance.
03:42In addition to performing, Mukamed is also the ballet troop's instructor,
03:46and responsible for all its members' attendance.
03:50In addition to performing, Mukamed is also the ballet troop's instructor,
03:53and the ballet troop's instructor is also the ballet troop's instructor.
03:5511.30, Hralshrib.
03:57Hralshrib.
03:58Hralshrib.
03:59Hralshrib.
04:00Hralshrib.
04:01Hralshrib.
04:02Hralshrib.
04:03Hralshrib.
04:04Hralshrib.
04:05Hralshrib.
04:06Hralshrib.
04:07Hralshrib.
04:08Hralshrib.
04:09Hralshrib.
04:10Hralshrib.
04:11Hralshrib.
04:12Hralshrib.
04:13Hralshrib.
04:14Hralshrib.
04:15Hralshrib.
04:16Hralshrib.
04:17Hralshrib.
04:18Hralshrib.
04:19Hralshrib.
04:20Hralshrib.
04:21What do you want to write for a new album?
04:23For a new album, I didn't write for a new album.
04:25Yes, you can see it.
04:32In two months, the theatre will be staging a production of the ballet Giselle,
04:36in which Mukamed will be the lead male dancer.
04:39The orchestra-conductor approaches him to ask about the status of the performer list.
04:44What do you want to write for a new album?
04:51Yesterday we asked, when do they repeat all together?
04:55Why?
04:56Well, it's working in Russia. There's no time.
05:00Well, can you do it?
05:03Well, we looked at it yesterday and looked at it.
05:06And what can we change?
05:10Who can we add?
05:12The Aini Opera and Ballet Theatre is almost as old as the city of Dushanbe itself.
05:23Construction on the building began before World War II, then stopped during the war,
05:28and was not completed until the 1950s.
05:31At present, its resident national performing troupe relies solely on government subsidies,
05:37and funding is very limited.
05:42Now, we had to perform at the last few hours.
05:46But during the war, we were running a lot from the project.
05:47We were able to get a lot of employees from the next few days.
05:52But when the war was being a country,
05:54we were able to build a new job for the first time.
05:56We were able to make it easier for the next few years.
05:59We were able to get a lot of employees.
06:02We were able to get 60 people from the next few years.
06:04We were able to get 60 people from the last few years.
06:08Although times have been hard, the troupe is still preparing some major ballet and opera productions.
06:30Giselle is a classic romantic ballet and is considered a masterwork in the classical ballet canon.
06:36It is second only to Swan Lake in terms of worldwide numbers of performances.
06:41With a high level of difficulty, performing it is a test of skill for any troupe.
06:46In the 1960s and 70s, Tajikistan's greatest ballet dancer, Malika Soberova, performed at the theatre.
07:04Both inside and outside this resplendent work of architecture, traces of Stalinist times are clearly visible.
07:12As a flagship civic building, it has a grand atmosphere.
07:16With magnificent ethnic dΓ©cor, its every detail strictly adheres to the heroic and commemorative qualities of Soviet-style architecture.
07:25One hundred years ago, the valley in which Dushanbe now lies contained only three villages.
07:42In Persian, the word Dushanbe means Monday, which was the only day of the week when the village's markets would be open.
07:51The area has superb natural conditions. Its elevation is about 700 meters above sea level, with ample precipitation and abundant resources, and is highly livable.
08:02In the western Pamirs, Dushanbe is a very important city.
08:10Mukhamid gets his dance shoes from Russia. His former classmates there send him pairs regularly.
08:15This time, however, his shoes are late in arriving.
08:19A pair of dance shoes costs around 100 simoni, or seven U.S. dollars, a price that Mukhamid feels reluctant to pay.
08:40About 60 more years after the pension.
08:50But he works in the first place, likeβ€”
08:54what kind of business will be paid?
08:55Why do you hire for this balance?
08:57This man is a corporation.
08:58What kind of business would be done?
09:00This is a company.
09:01The money is a company.
09:03This wanted to pay.
09:04I hold it.
09:05I have picked up my phone with my neighbors.
09:06I have to pay on my screen.
09:07I can only pay for the milk.
09:08Here's the water, I'm going to put the water in the water.
09:15What's wrong with you?
09:18Two, two, three.
09:21Mukhamid's colleague, Malika, is a veteran of the theatre.
09:24She's one of the dance choreographers for Giselle.
09:29I went to the director and said,
09:32let me write down and write down.
09:34My mind doesn't bring me to the theatre.
09:36I said, no, it's not 29, it's 30.
09:38I said, what do you want me to call me?
09:40I said, let's go without directors.
09:42I said, no director, I'm not a director.
09:44I said, we're going to work together.
09:47What do you want me to call me?
09:49I said, you call me.
09:50I said, what do you want me to call me?
09:52I said, what do you want me to call me?
09:54I said, we have no problem at the theatre.
09:56Mumkamid's uncle works at the theatre as a physical therapist.
10:08In some performances, he also acts as an extra.
10:12I said, you said, I'm going to work.
10:14I'm going to work.
10:16I can't do that.
10:17I'm going to work.
10:18I'm going to work.
10:20I'm going to work.
10:23I'm going to get five or four of them.
10:26What?
10:27I don't have to do this.
10:31I'm going to get a little bit longer.
10:34I'm going to get a little bit longer.
10:36At the time, I was going to put a little bit longer.
10:41How did you see?
10:42What is this?
10:43I am going to get a little more.
10:44How did you see that?
10:46I am going to get a little bit longer.
10:48Yes, I am.
10:49You are going to get the kids.
10:51Not long ago, Mukhamid wanted to change to a career in sales.
10:59He went to Kazakhstan to take part in a business event, but came back empty-handed.
11:21Haven't we heard the company that was available to me?
11:29When we were intoigo, we had the company to send the company to ourselves.
11:32We saw a company that was inmarket-med.
11:37We made it to ensure that we can give the land.
11:39And then the company will not be able to get the company who is in the business.
11:42We will see a lot of people on the Africa region.
11:45Our company will be able to get the company married and to keep our businesses around the world.
11:49Oh, Steph!
12:09Several months ago, Mukamed and his wife divorced.
12:12Now he lives in an old quarter of Dushanbe.
12:15The price he rent is his biggest living expense,
12:18costing him half his monthly salary.
12:35The neighbourhood was built in the Soviet era.
12:38Mukamed spent his youth in Russia,
12:40so he has only a handful of friends in Dushanbe.
12:43One of his few acquaintances is the Russian woman
12:46who lives next door.
12:52How much?
12:53All right.
12:54I went and agreed,
12:56for 150, a car.
12:58I don't know where I'm going.
13:00I stopped.
13:02Now it's already reformed.
13:04$110,000?
13:05Well, $110,000.
13:06But I give $150,000.
13:08They also had to go to Grand Hotel.
13:10I gave $150,000.
13:11$20,000, $20,000.
13:12$20,000.
13:13$20,000.
13:14$20,000.
13:15I took $1,000, $2,000.
13:16And I've got $1,000, $50,000.
13:17It's $50,000.
13:18And I got $1,000.
13:19I have no money to go to the city.
13:20That's all.
13:21I got $1,000, $2,000.
13:22I was so furious.
13:23I got $5,000, $10,000.
13:24$20,000.
13:25$2,000, $2,000, $3,000.
13:26I got $5,000, $9,000.
13:27That's all.
13:28And I got $5,000.
13:29I got $5,000.
13:30It's $5,000.
13:31I got $5,000.
13:32I got $5,000.
13:33But I got $5,000.
13:34What are you惨 for? Even for us, Pabllo.
13:38How much?
13:40Anifa! Bersha!
13:45Travelling by train from Dushanbe to Moscow usually takes three days.
13:49Each week there are two trains departing from Dushanbe.
13:53The area around the train station has become a distribution centre for second-hand goods.
13:59After the USSR dissolved, among the 15 independent countries it split up into,
14:04Tajikistan is today one of the least developed.
14:07The civil war that followed its independence did little to help.
14:11Today, persistently high unemployment is the country's biggest social problem.
14:22Tajikistan is home to some of the highest mountains in the world,
14:25and 93% of its total area is mountainous.
14:29Geography has historically made it isolated,
14:32but there are still time-tested passages connecting it with neighbouring countries.
14:44This is a region where beautiful highland scenery combines with distinctive ethnic culture.
14:49As a secular Muslim country, Tajikistan continues to attract attention from around the world.
14:55Its economy has made a turn towards improvement over the past decade.
14:59The Dushanbe of today is working hard to step out of the shadows of its troubled past,
15:04and the appearance of the city is undergoing gradual change.
15:08Muchamit's home town, Badat, is about 20 kilometres east of Dushanbe.
15:09His mother and brothers live together here in Dushanbe.
15:13in the same house.
15:31Muchamit's home town, Badat, is about 20 kilometres east of Dushanbe.
15:35His mother and brothers live together here in the same house.
15:39The Chinese animated series Bouni Bears is very popular in Tajikistan.
15:51Five-year-old Amin is Mukamit's nephew.
15:54This group of children are being raised together under the protection of their large family.
16:00A few months ago, Amin's father went to work in Russia, leaving Amin, his one-year-old sister, and his mother behind.
16:15With so many people at home, there's lots of work to be done around the house.
16:22This is a curatob, a traditional Tajik dish.
16:26The final seasoning must be overseen by Mukamit's mother, since she's the head of the family.
16:31None of Mukamit's four brothers went to university.
16:44They work as contractors for home decoration.
16:47This is a common state of employment among young Tajiks.
16:57Children are for the most part unaware and unaffected by the troubles of the adult world.
17:02A large family provides protection for its youngest members.
17:06Every weekend, Mukamit travels from Dushanbe to his home town in the suburbs.
17:30Mukamit is the children's favourite visitor.
17:33Mukamit's mother previously worked as a maternity ward nurse.
17:54In 1992, when Mukamit was one year old, civil war broke out in Tajikistan.
18:01The civil war lasted five years and caused 50,000 deaths, with 1.2 million people displaced.
18:14The area of Mukamit's hometown saw the fiercest fighting.
18:26Mukamit's extended family all lived nearby.
18:28One of Mukamit's cousins is a doctor.
18:30When the civil war broke out, he was 15.
18:31Whenever they're chatting, his stories from that time will always come up.
18:32Mukamit's cousins is a doctor.
18:34When the civil war broke out, he was 15.
18:36Whenever they're chatting, his stories from that time will always come up.
18:41What?
18:42What happened?
19:12You're dead.
19:15You're dead.
19:16At what point you to get thatgraded with Islamic music?
19:18You see what invite us to talk about?
19:19Let us understand that from the Indo-plan.
19:22How did you wennir da Emilia?
19:25I just wanna stop laughing.
19:28We don't know in the details.
19:38We are back in for the interview where nothing is normal.
19:42Thankfully, children in Tajikistan today don't need to experience the horrors of the
19:59war.
20:09Amin is approaching school age, so Mukhamid often checks on his educational progress.
20:32The income that Mukhamid's brothers earn from contract work is limited.
20:36Since their father passed away two years ago and their mother's pension has only been
20:40fifteen dollars or so a month, everyone in the family has to live frugally.
20:57Mukhamid's uncle lives in this courtyard too.
21:00He has worked at the theatre for years and knows the ballet troupe's history well.
21:04Among the troupe's main performers from Soviet times, today only a small number remain in Dushanbe.
21:11The theatre has started requiring all staff to dress in formal wear.
21:20Mukhamid really dislikes this new rule.
21:26I was at the table, I was at the table, and I was at the table.
21:43I went to the hotel.
21:45I came to the hotel at the hotel and I had gone to the hotel.
21:50I went to the hotel and it was like a kid.
21:53I asked to go to the hotel and I have to leave my house.
21:58I left my house with my house.
22:01My husband is the man.
22:04My husband is the man named Alishky.
22:06He's the man named Alishky and I have to leave my house.
22:10I don't like it either.
22:13And I have to talk to you now.
22:16There are many things, for instance I have to talk to you next week,
22:20and then I am going to take it again.
22:22It is too late.
22:40Our past shapes who we are today, even if it does not define us.
22:48It is about knowing our roots, our heritage, what makes us, us.
22:59And only by looking back, can we understand where our future may lie.
23:10To be continued...
23:40No matter how tough life gets, there must be time for relaxation.
23:59The rehearsals for Giselle are grueling, so the troupe has specially arranged a day of leisure
24:04at a resort in the suburbs for the performers.
24:06Aside from the three older performers in the troupe, all the other performers are in
24:15their early 20s.
24:16They earn very little from dancing ballet, but the pressure from their exhausting training
24:21and uncertain career paths doesn't hold back their youthful vitality and joyful laughter.
24:27Here we go!
24:28Here we go!
24:29Here we go!
24:30And here we go!
24:35Alexander Bahman has been working at the theatre since Soviet times.
25:00He's Mukhamid's teacher and colleague. He's also the art director of the Giselle production.
25:22The date of the big show is fast approaching.
25:25All the troupe members clearly realise that being able to take part in a show like Giselle is an opportunity and an honour.
25:33Each department of the theatre is busy with preparations for the final show, and even Alexander joins in the work, designing and creating costumes and props.
25:51Of course, most important of all is overseeing the young dancers' rehearsal in the studio.
26:07One of them was left.
26:12Sitora said that it was 26th of Ukraine.
26:15Is there anyone else?
26:17No, little Sitora.
26:20Samira is not today.
26:22Samira is the most famous.
26:23A voice and a voice.
26:24Samira is the most famous.
26:25I'm sure he's got a voice and a voice and a voice in the background.
26:26He's got a voice and a voice.
26:27He's got a voice and a voice in the background.
26:28Now he's got a voice, and he's got a voice.
26:29I was just a part of one thing, one of the things that I wanted to do was I wanted to do a lot of work and then I wanted to do a lot of work and then I wanted to do a lot of work.
26:59and the other people who are in the world are not the same.
27:04The theory is very difficult.
27:06We are happy to make sure that we are in the same way.
27:11We are in the same way, the same day, the same day, the same day.
27:14We are happy and happy.
27:16We are happy to see you.
27:30While the dancers are perfecting their performance, the orchestra is rehearsing hard too.
27:36Music and dance must be flawlessly integrated to attain the work's full artistic charm.
27:47Giselle is a tragic love story and portrays the contradictions between the idealistic world and the reality of life.
27:54The themes of life and death and darkness and light can be found throughout it.
28:11On a summer evening, the square outside the theatre is a great place to relax and enjoy the cool air.
28:17But Mukhamid still has work to do.
28:20At night, Mukhamid works as a substitute teacher at a kindergarten dance class.
28:30Working non-stop from morning to night is an enormous challenge for his stamina.
28:35But the extra 80 US dollars a month is additional income that he simply can't pass up.
28:40The month will be over soon and Mukhamid still doesn't have his rent money ready.
28:54He decides to borrow some money from his aunt.
28:58The month will be over soon and Mukhamid still doesn't have his rent money ready.
29:03He decides to borrow some money from his aunt.
29:06Mukhamid's aunt.
29:17Mukhamid's aunt's shop is in the city centre and specializes in selling handicrafts from China.
29:23Mukhammed's aunt's shop is in the city center and specializes in selling handicrafts from China.
29:37His aunt has business connections in China and can buy direct from the source there.
29:46Most Tajiks have never been to their country's eastern neighbor.
29:50It's through trinkets like these that they first learn a little about the country on the other side of the Pamirs.
30:20I'd like to bring them to you, so that you've been working with him a little bit.
30:25Good, good.
30:27I'm going to say, well, he's not going to be a big deal.
30:29It's plastic.
30:30Yes.
30:31Yes.
30:33Just when Mukhammed is about to break the question of borrowing money from his aunt,
30:37he changes his mind and decides not to.
30:42Oh!
30:46No.
30:47I'll sit, sit, and then I'll get up.
30:50Yes.
30:51Yes.
30:52Yes.
30:53Yes.
30:54Yes.
30:55Yes.
30:56Yes.
30:57Yes.
30:58Yes.
30:59Yes.
31:00Yes.
31:01Yes.
31:02Yes.
31:03Yes.
31:04Yes.
31:05Yes.
31:06Yes.
31:07Yes.
31:08Yes.
31:09Yes.
31:10Yes.
31:11Yes.
31:12Yes.
31:13Yes.
31:14Yes.
31:15Yes.
31:16Yes.
31:17Yes.
31:18Yes.
31:19Yes.
31:20Yes.
31:21Yes.
31:22Yes.
31:23Yes.
31:24Yes.
31:25Yes.
31:26Yes.
31:27Yes.
31:28I attend a few hours of the interview, and they tell me what did he do?
31:37He does not know him.
31:41He does not know him.
31:44However, I have a great idea of thinking about it.
31:48I have a lot of help.
31:51I have a lot of fun.
31:54I have a lot of fun.
31:58I have a lot of fun.
32:02I have a lot of fun.
32:14Precise control of one's body requires constant training, day in and day out.
32:19Whether they are students or experienced veterans, performers must constantly hone their skills.
32:34On one wall of the dance studio, there is an oil painting of their predecessor, Malika Sobirova,
32:40who was once the world's top Giselle performer.
32:43Dancing as part of the Tajikistan ballet troupe is a hard-earned honor.
32:59The troupe member Lusana will play Giselle this time.
33:13The young performers are willing to discuss things with Muqamat even if they are unrelated to work.
33:22The Muslim holiday of Ayd al-Attar is right around the corner.
33:31Muqamat has to discuss rehearsal details in advance with Malika.
33:36Sascha told me yesterday to go to Malika.
33:37I'm going home.
33:38I'm home.
33:39I'm home.
33:40I'm home.
33:41I'm home.
33:42With his mother's birthday also coming up, Muqamat has prepared a special gift for her.
33:55I'm home.
33:56I'm home.
33:57I'm home.
33:58I'm home.
33:59I'm home.
34:00I'm home.
34:05With his mother's birthday also coming up, Muqamat has prepared a special gift for her.
34:10In a while?
34:11I'm home.
34:12I'm home.
34:13It's all for you.
34:15I have the library for a while.
34:16What?
34:17No.
34:19How about you?
34:20You're paying your salary.
34:21That's why you do not be zoomed?
34:23I will spend a hundred dollars waiting to visit.
34:26The village is never sold.
34:28I was leaving.
34:29Do you want to go to my house?
34:31Yes.
34:32The man is doing the house?
34:33I'm home.
34:35Why are you doing the house?
34:37I'll get you.
34:39I'll get you.
34:40I'll get you.
34:42Yeah, I'm going to get you.
34:43You want to get OK?
34:44OK.
34:45It's OK.
34:46OK.
34:47I'll get you.
34:48It's OK.
34:49Good evening.
34:50I'm gonna thank you.
34:51Good evening.
34:52Good evening.
34:53Good evening.
34:54I'm a friend of mine.
34:57I'm a friend of mine.
34:59I'm a little bit older.
35:02I'm a friend of mine.
35:05I was a young woman.
35:12I was a young woman.
35:15I was a young woman.
35:16My mother had a strong number.
35:20I was a young woman.
35:23I had a young woman.
35:25I was a young woman.
35:28Ayd al-Adha is a three-day national holiday in Tajikistan.
35:36Mukamed's mother's birthday this year will fall during the festival.
35:44So it will be a big event for their family.
35:47Everyone has been preparing all day.
35:53Children love the festival the most.
35:55According to custom, they can go to all neighbors' homes to get candy.
36:25Taking a stroll through the streets of Dushanbe can leave visitors feeling a variety of emotions.
36:32Located on the Silk Road, the Tajik capital is a serene and majestic city.
36:47Although it retains much of its Soviet-era feel, changes are quietly taking place.
36:53Traditions are carefully maintained, although residents also hope for a brighter future.
37:00have been looking for a future of the festival, which has been on the other side of the city.
37:07The festival is a great place for the festival.
37:10It is a great place for the festival to be the family of the festival.
37:17For Polna return home, everyone has prepared gifts for Makhamid's mother.
37:38I was just waiting for a mic and I turned to my wife at a breakup.
37:46She was so tired.
37:48I was so tired, I was so tired.
37:52I am tired.
37:54She was so tired.
37:58it
38:00go over
38:02it
38:04,
38:06i
38:08they will
38:10it
38:15I
38:17but
38:20I
38:22I
38:24like
38:26Salaman Baal.
38:28I'm not going to die.
38:34I'm not going to die.
38:36I'm not going to die.
38:44My father is the best man in the world.
38:48I have a lot of fun.
38:50I have a lot of fun.
38:52I am not going to die.
38:54Let me see.
38:56I'm not going to die.
38:58Let me die.
39:01Mouse.
39:06Mama.
39:08Mama.
39:10In the family photo, Amin's father is absent, and he's still doing construction work in
39:32Russia.
39:33Over a million people out of Tajikistan's population of 9 million are away in Russia.
39:39Most of them do manual labor there.
40:09We're going to pay for that.
40:11Here're my hands.
40:12Here is my hands.
40:13And here is our hands.
40:16Here's my hands.
40:18I'm ready for the lunch
40:26I'm hungry
40:30We're eating
40:48On the last day of the festival, the children pester Mukamed to take them to an amusement park.
41:18Oh!
41:46What do you think of the family?
41:50My father is here, he is the way she does.
41:54He is living in Trap.
41:57Because he is living in Trap.
42:00Everyone does not his life.
42:02I need to Shirley for the time.
42:04I need to make.
42:06And my father is one of his children.
42:08His family needs to be a child and his son and I will get back to him.
42:12What's his life?
42:16Oh, yeah.
42:17Oh, yeah.
42:18Come on.
42:19Come on.
42:20Come on.
42:21Come on.
42:22Come on.
42:23Come on.
42:24Come on.
42:25Come on.
42:26At the last rehearsal before the big show, everyone is extremely focused.
42:43All the hard work they've put in over the past few months is about to be put to the test.
42:50The hands are here, Olya.
42:52They're very strong.
42:54And the hands are on the other side.
42:56And the hands are on the other side.
42:59And the hands are on the other side.
43:02They're very soft.
43:03The right hand is on the other side.
43:06It's very soft.
43:09It's very soft and good.
43:16Mukhamid is playing the main male role in the production, Duke Albrecht.
43:21He is awakened by Giselle and saved by her.
43:32Mukhamid is just like this in real life.
43:35The main role in the ballet is his Giselle.
43:37It has allowed him to gain a footing in Dushanbe and has given him a life goal.
43:42The
43:45after all,
43:48he's got two Genauges.
43:51Oh,
43:52shortly after,
43:53he seems very strong.
43:54Godfennis is making it look so good.
43:55During this game.
43:56The skushing moment has returned us together.
43:57It was a good scene when anything was wrong.
43:59Look at the moment,
44:00Chuck Wiggins became real.
44:05After the rehearsal ends, Mukamed makes a special trip to Malika Soberova's grave in the hope that this revered Tajik ballet dancer will help ensure the success of their performance.
44:35The day of the big show has finally arrived. In the backstage dressing room, Mukamed is meticulously making his final preparations.
45:05Here we go, Mukamed.
45:08Yes!
45:10Here we go.
45:12Here we go.
45:14As the audience file in, the young performers backstage have trouble hiding their excitement and nervousness.
45:26Fortunately, the ballet troupe also has experienced veterans like its art director and conductor, so all the preparations backstage proceed in an orderly fashion.
45:50When you have a theatre, you can speak to your artist, how do you feel?
46:01What's your name?
46:02What is your name?
46:04Where are you?
46:05Where are you?
46:07Come on.
46:09I'm standing.
46:12The theatre is by no means full. Most residents of Dushanbe do not have many opportunities
46:27to see live ballet. Perhaps only with a substantial improvement in the overall economic situation
46:33will arts in the city really be able to flourish.
46:40The theatre is also very good. Even though it is very good at the time I am involved in the theatre.
46:54The theatre is also very good and I am a good friend of mine.
47:01Where we can't get away from the high school,
47:05we have mapped out many experiences in college.
47:09We never know how to do it,
47:11and we can't let them know what it is.
47:16We are still in the outskirts of the world,
47:19but we are doing good things as well.
47:23We are just doing it.
47:27As the show draws to a close, the tragic romance between its two main characters reaches its conclusion.
47:38With Giselle's help, Duke Albrecht escapes his doom and is given a new chance at life.
47:50Light and shadow, reality and fantasy, intertwine both on and off stage.
47:57I have no idea what my life is, even if I don't want to.
48:06I have no idea why my life is a dream.
48:09I have no idea why my life is a dream.
48:11I am no idea why my life is a dream.
48:57The cold wind sweeps across the plateau at a pasture 4,500 meters above sea level.
49:12A mountain marathon is about to begin.
49:20Wandering in northern Tibet and western Sichuan, a herd of Tibetan wild asses are the protagonists
49:27of the game.
49:41The wild asses move in clusters.
49:43The males walk in front, the females in the rear, keeping the youngsters in the middle
49:48for their protection.
49:49They are excellent runners with a top speed of 45 kilometers per hour.
49:58The movement strengthens their cohesion as a group and keeps their young from falling
50:05behind, showing no fear to their enemies.
50:09In the Yushu and Gulag Tibetan autonomous prefectures of Qinghai and the Alton Mountains of Xinjiang,
50:26Tibetan wild asses can be spotted from time to time.
50:31They are a first class state protected animal.
50:46These clever creatures are experts at finding water sources.
50:54This is a pasture at 4,800 meters above sea level.
50:59For every 100 meters of altitude rise, there are significantly fewer water sources and meadows.
51:07Other animals have learned to follow the Tibetan wild asses.
51:12Even in the harsh winter, they can always find fertile meadows and abundant water sources.
51:23Therefore, the wild ass has earned the title of guide in the highland.
51:29Adult wild asses can grow up to 2 meters in length while running.
51:34The air resistance is greatly reduced by their running posture.
51:39This allows them to easily cross shallows, swamps, rocks, and cliffs.
51:55They are social animals that feed on plants.
52:00Each family relies on the amount of water and grass in the area to determine the population size.
52:15The alpha male of the herd is responsible for fighting and ensuring the group's livelihood.
52:21They are used to wandering all around.
52:30By eating alpine grasses, meadows, and mosses, their neural activity is enhanced.
52:38With excellent hearing and sense of smell, along with keen eyesight, they are able to detect a threat more than 600 meters away.
52:51Once danger approaches, they quickly flee to sea.
52:57As a result, it's hard for any other species to approach them.
53:19They are strong but timid.
53:21In this pristine ecological environment, various wildlife resources are well preserved.
53:30The nature reserve offers them a sanctuary to live and thrive.
53:42This vast area has become a paradise for the wild asses.
54:00The nature reserve has worked in μ–΄λ–‘izehi noise.
54:01Now I'm supposed to be in the main travel space.
54:03In this podcastフγƒͺγƒΌγ‚Ί and the faces ofars where the wild asses Herx bildung doesn't Χ™Χ›Χ•Χœ for Israel.
54:06As an activist system hasε½’ored over 19066th ofransitry.
54:13In
54:24the United States of the United States ofurf France.
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