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  • 17 ore fa
Qatar e Cile collaborano per piantare semi di eredità e pennellate di tradizione

Nel villaggio costiero di Matanzas, in Cile, i volontari del programma Years of Culture dei Qatar Museums si uniscono alla popolazione locale per ripristinare le piante autoctone e dipingere un murale che celebra il patrimonio culturale del Qatar e del Cile.

In collaborazione con Media City

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI : http://it.euronews.com/2025/10/15/qatar-e-cile-collaborano-per-piantare-semi-di-eredita-e-pennellate-di-tradizione

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00:00La idea è fare una muestra botanica di la flora nativa che cresce principalmente in la zona conterra.
00:11La idea è avere questa muestra come una forma di insegnare e insegnare, soprattutto a tutti i bambini,
00:18per che aprendano a cuidare e a riconoscere la flora nativa di questo luogo.
00:23Fers, flowers and forest shrubs.
00:32This is Matanzas, a small fishing village two and a half hours away from the Chilean capital of Santiago.
00:39It's home to some of the country's most diverse collections of native plants.
00:43It was also in this region where the English naturalist Charles Darwin explored in the 1800s
00:49that would help build the foundations of his famous theory of evolution.
00:57This was the very coastline that Darwin navigated some centuries ago.
01:03But the native plants that line Matanzas have been fortifying the cliffs long before his voyage.
01:09And today, Ignatia Echeveria is leading a group of volunteers to repopulate those indigenous shrubs.
01:16La idea un poco è di fare una muestra botanica di la flora nativa che cresce principalmente in la zona conterra.
01:28La idea è di avere questa muestra come una forma di insegnare e insegnare, soprattutto a tutti i bambini,
01:36per che aprendano a cuidare e a riconoscere la flora nativa di questo luogo.
01:41The workshop is focusing on replenishing native plants with two main objectives,
01:49to create a biological corridor by attracting insects, birds and other animals,
01:55and to strengthen the soil along the coast.
01:57Ignatia and her team are joined by volunteers from Qatar Museum's Years of Culture Initiative,
02:22who are ready to get their hands dirty, knowing it's for a greater cause.
02:29I think we can learn a lot from this community in observing their relationship with the land
02:33and the way they treat it and the way they interact with it.
02:35There's a lot of respect and love and feeling of, you know, like it's a two-sided relationship.
02:40The land gives us, so we give it back with so much love and respect.
02:43And that's a value I want to take back home with me.
02:46In the background of the tree planting workshop is another hands-on initiative.
02:52But instead of plants, volunteers are using paint.
02:56Street art has been a canvas for self-expression in Chile since the 1970s.
03:01Everywhere you turn, it's hard not to spot vibrant artwork like these.
03:05And today, volunteers from Qatar are leaving their mark on these walls.
03:10But beyond the art, you'll find that they reflect something much deeper.
03:16We try to find elements from the culture of Chile.
03:22We have here the seaweed and some of the creatures that are available here in the nature.
03:30And also from Qatar, we have the oryx, we have the palm tree, we have the boat,
03:35and we have the falcon, the camel, and other elements.
03:40Soha and her peers have found that despite being thousands of kilometers apart
03:44and separated by oceans and land masses, there are more similarities than differences between Qatar and Chile.
03:52Actually, we have in Qatar culture the sadhu, the sadhu fabric, which is really a remarkable fabric in Qatar.
03:59And we found the same, similar fabric here in Chile, which is, looks like the same like sadhu.
04:08Humans are connected all over the world.
04:12Let's focus on the similarities and not the differences because we are human.
04:16Every stroke of Soha's brush will now become enshrined and remembered as a lasting legacy of this cultural exchange,
04:27just like the shrubs and trees being planted by her fellow volunteers that will hopefully grow more roots of shared knowledge.
04:34Nearly 200 years since Darwin's voyage to South America,
04:38the plants he documented are being kept alive through initiatives that repopulate the species in the wild.
04:45And while it's taken root amongst the local population,
04:48partnerships with the international community allow the seeds of knowledge to be planted around the world,
04:54one tree at a time.
04:56Soh.
04:56Grazie a tutti.
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