Tre #Donne, tre storie di straordinario coraggio: Sadaf, attrice iraniana sfuggita alla repressione del regime; Giorgia, sopravvissuta a vent'anni di violenze domestiche; Sediqa, attivista afgana in fuga dall'apartheid di genere imposto dai talebani.
#Speciale Tg1 - #Sopravvissute - Puntata del 13_10_2024 ore 23_40 _ Rubrica del Tg1
#Crime #TrueCrime #Documentari #Documentario #Reportage #Cronaca #CronacaNera #DivinumCrime #DonneCoraggio #Femminicidio #ViolenzaSulleDonne #ViolenzaDomestica #Regime
#Speciale Tg1 - #Sopravvissute - Puntata del 13_10_2024 ore 23_40 _ Rubrica del Tg1
#Crime #TrueCrime #Documentari #Documentario #Reportage #Cronaca #CronacaNera #DivinumCrime #DonneCoraggio #Femminicidio #ViolenzaSulleDonne #ViolenzaDomestica #Regime
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TVTrascrizione
00:00:25The fact that children are victims as much as we women
00:00:29of the violence we suffer.
00:00:35I lived isolated, I had no friends of my own, I was afraid to tell people why
00:00:40then in recent times the threats also began.
00:00:46Leonde Association, good morning.
00:00:48We are an anti-violence center, so the lady pushed her and grabbed her by the neck.
00:00:57Invisible, invisible to others, often invisible to themselves.
00:01:05It happens that the woman is erased because of the violence she suffers until she
00:01:10he manages to have the opportunity to come out with great strength and courage.
00:01:17Survivors.
00:01:22Patriarchal culture and misogyny are not the only problems of gender violence
00:01:27in Afghanistan.
00:01:29We also have the Taliban and ISIS, who mainly target emancipated women.
00:01:36Especially the Hazaras.
00:01:38This is why terrorists blow up Hazara schools and buses.
00:01:42They kill every form of progress for women.
00:01:45they prohibit any expression of emancipation.
00:01:48It is a horror that unfolds in the silence of the world.
00:01:56The reason for the greatness of the women, life, freedom revolution is the strength of women.
00:02:03The regime often says that women who do not want to wear the veil have no morals.
00:02:08And we, during the protests, instead shout
00:02:11I am a free woman and you have no morals.
00:02:15Woman, life, freedom.
00:02:17Suddenly they started shooting
00:02:19and I was hit by 156 lead pellets.
00:03:00An Italian woman, Giorgia Fuleo, an Iranian girl, Sadaf Bakbani,
00:03:05She is an Afghan woman, Sedika Mostak.
00:03:09What do three women who don't know each other have in common?
00:03:25A thousand thanks.
00:03:50I can say that I have lived two lives as one ended let's say in 2014 with the end
00:03:57the one I thought was my love story and the other began when I turned to the
00:04:03anti-violence center. From there my rebirth begins again. Those who find themselves in these situations
00:04:11He doesn't realize what's happening. It's happening all around us and we find ourselves like
00:04:17within such a suspended bubble. My story, like that of all the other women victims,
00:04:24of violence then we are the ones who close ourselves off as non-existent in the eyes of others so as not to have
00:04:33discussions. How can a great love turn into a nightmare? I met him when I was going to the last
00:04:41After high school I wanted to continue my studies and enrolled in architecture but I gave up
00:04:47almost immediately because his jealousy was what led him to follow me. I couldn't confide in him.
00:04:54to some university colleagues. After a few months I myself gave up my studies. The matrix
00:05:00of violence is always the same. It is the culture that leads man to consider women not
00:05:06equal to itself, it is subordinate, it is tameable. We live in Sicily, I still have today
00:05:12women in consulting, I am a criminal lawyer and many times women report a story
00:05:19family in which their mothers for example in whom they confided over the course of the
00:05:23years they said but you have to understand, that's your husband, you have a role. But this role required
00:05:29a shut up if he says shut up, don't work because you have to stay home with
00:05:33Children. It's hard to recognize yourself in an abusive relationship.
00:05:39In Italy, according to ISTAT, almost 7 million women have suffered physical and sexual violence.
00:05:46Those most affected are partners or exes, then relatives and friends. Women kicked,
00:05:53Remorse, punches, the same fate is suffered by foreign women. You are the anti-violence center.
00:06:00older, more historic than Palermo. What have you been observing in recent years?
00:06:08In 2023 we had more than a thousand contacts, more than 400 women were supported and approximately
00:06:15300 were physically supported in a process of exiting the violence that they have
00:06:20I decided to undertake it. I am Dante. It's a constant. Knowing how to read the indicators
00:06:25of risk in a story that is told by a woman who suffers violence, we can
00:06:30Also activate the safety net. According to Istat, 81% of people are women.
00:06:37Harassed and blackmailed at work. Lozze reports that the largest gender pay gap
00:06:44It is recorded in Italy. Women graduates earn on average 58% of the salary of men.
00:06:51their male peers, a discrimination that also affects the search for work.
00:06:57At work, it's the same story as what happens at home.
00:07:03The continuous issuing of condemnatory sentences by the European Court is evident to all.
00:07:09of human rights against Italy, which is accused of being sexist, of issuing
00:07:14moralistic sentences regarding women who suffer violence, because it is recognized
00:07:19that there is still no widespread and homogeneous professional training on the part of those subjects
00:07:24who then have to judge and issue sentences.
00:07:34Living in Iran is very difficult and will only get worse, both for women and men.
00:07:45men. My passion is acting, but the regime defines it as a dirty art, however
00:07:52civil society doesn't think about this.
00:07:58Do you remember your childhood games?
00:08:01I often played with the boys, with water guns, and I was judged by the neighbors who
00:08:07they said, but what kind of family lets her play with the boys? But luckily my
00:08:13My family never judged me and left me free.
00:08:19This show is called My Three Sisters.
00:08:26What did you stage?
00:08:29I was lucky. I met Iranian director Ashkan Khatibi on the street, who put
00:08:36my story, that of many women victims of violence, is on stage.
00:08:40How long have you been running away from here to Italy?
00:08:44Since December 27, 2023, miraculously the regime has not intercepted me and I have managed to leave
00:08:52the country. As women we must speak, we must raise our voices. I speak as a representative
00:09:00of Iranian women who suffer violence.
00:09:06I brought to the stage the life story of Sadaf Pagbani, which demonstrates the living conditions
00:09:12Iranian women. I worked for almost ten years with Generation Z, the very young
00:09:19which I am convinced will free us from the Iranian regime. The Donna Vita Libertà movement is
00:09:25It was created by them and they carried it forward without being intimidated. Generation Z
00:09:31Today it is just a click away from the globalized world, it wants to break the mold, it does not give up,
00:09:37They want to lead the change. They are bold young people and they are the ones who have infected me with
00:09:44their courage. How many times have you experienced violence in Iran? If we're talking about psychological violence,
00:09:59as a female gender, from the moment you become aware of being a woman and enter
00:10:05In society. If we talk about the physical one, from the moment you have an identity, you form yourself as a girl.
00:10:21and you begin to become beautiful. When you recognize yourself in your identity as a woman, violence
00:10:35It begins. When you decide to be beautiful, to wear nail polish, to take care of your hair and wear
00:10:46beautiful clothes and good perfume, because they, the regime, are against beauty, against joy and
00:10:55They hate laughter, they hate seeing a woman happy. Two years ago, civil unrest broke out in Iran after
00:11:09the assassination of Masa Amini by the Tehran regime on September 16, 2022.
00:11:22The girl is 22 years old, of Kurdish-Iranian origin and these are her last images. She had been arrested by the
00:11:32moral police for the misplaced veil, but the list of Iranian girls tortured, raped, killed
00:11:40it's long.
00:11:49In 2019, Chilean women, with a protest song that became the world anthem of feminists, denounced
00:11:57the rapes of dissident women who took to the streets against the government.
00:12:02Who's to blame, where were they comfortable?
00:12:06Is it you, is it our despair?
00:12:10Is the tiglia a June?
00:12:14Is this our punishment?
00:12:16You are the murderer!
00:12:19You are the rapist!
00:12:21I can't understand the logic. A solo singer in Iran is illegal.
00:12:41So I was forced to emigrate to Canada in 2012.
00:12:59I couldn't even say my last goodbye to my father who was dying in Iran, otherwise
00:13:04they would have arrested me.
00:13:09No, I'm not an activist. I'm just a solo singer with a passion for music.
00:13:16And I hope that one day women in Iran will be free to act, dance and sing.
00:13:39What scares the Iranian regime if a woman sings?
00:13:47This is one of those things that really can't be explained.
00:13:50A woman's voice can lead a man into sin, as can a lock of hair.
00:13:56of a woman can lead a man into sin, or the parts of the body, the forms of a woman.
00:14:03Not only does it offend the woman, but above all it offends the man, because it withers the man to the level
00:14:09of an animal. This is why many people find these laws offensive.
00:14:27There are regions in Iran where perfume is even banned, because they claim that
00:14:34A woman's perfume could stimulate a man sexually.
00:14:40I remember I was in middle school when I was arrested by the morality police and
00:14:45They took me to a cell with other women.
00:14:47Why?
00:14:48Why we remove the veil.
00:14:50We reject it.
00:14:54The last time I was arrested again exactly where Masamini had been arrested
00:15:01by the morality police a year earlier, right in the same Tehran metro station,
00:15:06because I was wearing a long skirt, but I didn't have any trousers underneath.
00:15:10The reason is always the same.
00:15:12That you didn't cover your body parts well, that you didn't cover your hair well.
00:15:19They took me to a cell and then took pictures of me, forcing me to get up
00:15:24the skirt to show off my legs and document, prove that I wasn't wearing pants.
00:15:30And I have undergone these treatments many times for the same reason and like me many
00:15:36other women.
00:15:42The book by Narges Mohamadi, Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner, says exactly this.
00:15:51The more you lock us up, the stronger we become.
00:15:55What is the crux of this testimony?
00:16:00Narges Mohamadi, detained for years in the fearsome Evin prison, in the women's section,
00:16:07she still manages to make herself heard by reporting sexual violence against very young girls
00:16:13women who are arrested and then taken to that prison.
00:16:24Narges Mohamadi, Nobel Peace Prize 2023, engineer, journalist and human rights activist
00:16:32humans, she was arrested 13 times, tortured until a few days ago, whipped.
00:16:39From inside the prison he denounced the white torture that the Iranian regime applies
00:16:45to female prisoners, depriving them of their senses, sounds, and spaces.
00:16:50What is white torture?
00:16:53It refers to the solitary confinement cell.
00:16:56It's a kind of tomb, there's only room to lie down.
00:17:00Women engineers, artists, and professionals fighting for freedom.
00:17:05I have a severe iron and vitamin D deficiency.
00:17:08Yes, before the arrest I was in treatment, but in prison I was not even allowed to have
00:17:13my pills.
00:17:14In prison, things get worse because you are deprived of normal living conditions.
00:17:19It was terrible to imagine my children in an orphanage.
00:17:22I was really going crazy.
00:17:24They were small and I was forced to leave them on the street.
00:17:28The loneliness and silence were the worst things.
00:17:31They were driving me crazy.
00:17:33For six months I had no news from anyone, neither my mother nor my two children.
00:17:40I was about to go crazy.
00:17:42The investigator had told me that was my grave.
00:17:47And 34 female dissidents in Evine prison went on hunger strike in the second
00:17:53anniversary of Masamini's murder.
00:17:57500 people are victims of the regime's repression of the protests.
00:18:034 boys hanged.
00:18:06You managed to prevent the hanging of an Iranian rapper who had Tumaji.
00:18:14She had written songs specifically for women's freedom.
00:18:19He is currently in prison.
00:18:21Yes, Tumaji is the symbol of a revolution.
00:18:25With his words, with his songs he invited all civil society, he supported all
00:18:30those people who have suffered violence, attacks, rape, torture and mistreatment inside
00:18:36and outside the prisons, on the streets and in the squares in all these years.
00:18:40Tumaji is the symbol of a people who demand rights, equality and who have no intention
00:18:45to stop even in the face of the unheard-of acts of violence that the regime continues to carry out
00:18:51from February 16, 2022.
00:19:03We put pressure on the Iranian government, but we put pressure on Western governments
00:19:08with which the Iranian government continues to have relations and trade.
00:19:12Well, if you can carry on a commercial exchange, then you have a moral obligation to put it at the centre
00:19:17of the debate, including respect for human rights and respect for life.
00:19:29This photo is the first time I started working as an obstetrician in an American hospital
00:19:39in Kabul and then this photo is a meeting with Afghan women.
00:19:46Sedika Moshdak, 38 years old, you were born in Kabul, Afghanistan.
00:19:53What does it mean to be born female in that society?
00:19:59In Afghan society, when a girl is born it is always a suffering.
00:20:04For an Afghan family, a baby girl is a pain.
00:20:07Discrimination, many inequalities compared to male children.
00:20:12A woman will have to rely only on herself, resigned to doing everything alone.
00:20:18Being a Hazara woman means two sufferings.
00:20:21The first because she is a woman.
00:20:23The second because he belongs to an ethnic minority, Shiite, at the center of a centuries-old genocide.
00:20:2920 million killed in a century and a half.
00:20:33I am Hazara.
00:20:34This means becoming a target of the Taliban and terrorists.
00:20:42The Hazaras are an open-minded, studious, and hard-working people.
00:20:46We Hazara girls feed on books and study like bread.
00:20:51We love scientific research and publications.
00:20:54My friends were killed while studying for university admission.
00:21:00They wanted to become doctors, engineers to help our society.
00:21:07Personally, I was lucky because I had a father who supported me in my studies,
00:21:12in my professional and social commitment.
00:21:15And when I got married I was free to choose my husband, who supported me in everything.
00:21:2215 years ago, it was unthinkable for a woman in Afghanistan to be able to freely choose who to marry.
00:21:29My father, a Hazara, gave me the freedom to do so at a time when women,
00:21:34who was going to marry a stranger chosen by others,
00:21:37only the day and time of the wedding were communicated.
00:21:42In Afghanistan, the right to education is denied to women,
00:21:46forbidden to work, to have social roles, but also forbidden to speak in public or sing.
00:21:53Three million secondary school students are excluded from classes.
00:21:58Girls are educated until they are 12 years old and approximately 20% of them are married off before they are 15.
00:22:06years.
00:22:09Today, gender apartheid reigns supreme, in the silence of the world.
00:22:13If a woman has been divorced by her husband or has become a widow, her fate will be to beg for life.
00:22:22Women in Afghanistan today count for nothing, they are only breeders of children.
00:22:28We are not things that have a price.
00:22:35They sold us once for a gun and twice for a bag of rice.
00:22:42We can't say what we want in this song either.
00:22:49I sell my son for a piece of bread
00:22:55And I feel like hell, I can't believe it's true.
00:23:02Actress Mary Streep denounces Taliban violence against women in Afghanistan to the UN.
00:23:11Today in Kabul cats and squirrels can run free in the parks,
00:23:18but women are forbidden by the Taliban.
00:23:22Birds are free to sing, but women are not allowed to.
00:23:27This is the subversion of natural laws.
00:23:32Afghan women fleeing to Europe will now be entitled to political asylum.
00:23:38The Court of Justice of the European Union has established this,
00:23:42with a recent ruling dated October 4th.
00:23:47What is Amnesty International asking for?
00:23:50We are calling for gender apartheid to finally become an international crime.
00:23:55Systematic violence against women must end,
00:23:59the structural and organized violence of the governments that hide them
00:24:03away from the eyes of everyone and everything.
00:24:08In Afghanistan, there aren't even mannequins in shop windows anymore.
00:24:13to represent women.
00:24:14They have been removed from all workplaces,
00:24:17they have been erased from schools, from the streets, from any public place.
00:24:21In Iran, all women are paying with their physical, mental and psychological health.
00:24:27to the fight to achieve equal dignity, equality, freedom and rights.
00:24:32We need to be on their side.
00:24:36From Afghanistan, forgotten women invade social media with their songs.
00:24:45They protest against the Taliban's criminal laws that prohibit them from speaking.
00:24:50and every minimum right.
00:24:52They break the guilty silence of the states that remain to watch.
00:25:02A jealous love, a possessive love, which however I thought was only precisely
00:25:10for the great affection we both had for each other.
00:25:15For me it was the fulfillment of a dream.
00:25:18So I didn't see these manifestations of his as a form of possession.
00:25:24Is it a closing circle, Giorgia?
00:25:27Yes, it's a circle that is getting tighter and tighter, quickly, but we victims
00:25:34we don't realize it.
00:25:35We don't realize it because then it becomes normal.
00:25:39Had she given up working?
00:25:42Yes, I had given up working right away.
00:25:45If she had resisted or, let's say, claimed her right, there would have been a fight.
00:25:56Yes, absolutely.
00:25:58So I preferred to always remain in the shadows and therefore, in the end, sometimes not even have my name.
00:26:05Giorgia's romantic relationship was focused on being the woman of, the companion of.
00:26:15So I was identified that way.
00:26:18All the people we met very often, maybe even knew my name,
00:26:23but they didn't remember it and it didn't matter.
00:26:25Because otherwise it would have meant how this person remembers your name.
00:26:30So, we enter this mental mechanism, that is, we enter this mental mechanism
00:26:35from which we think we cannot escape, so that becomes our life.
00:26:40They lose their name because if their abusive partner or husband calls them, they call them idiots
00:26:47either come here or call them with a whistle, we understand well that the name has already been removed abundantly.
00:26:53Afghan women had to fight for the right to their own names.
00:27:02That's right.
00:27:03In small villages, in small towns, the woman is known as the daughter of, the sister of, the wife of.
00:27:11The mother's name and surname must not be revealed to other men.
00:27:16Otherwise it is considered a shame.
00:27:19I'll tell you an episode.
00:27:21Male colleagues and acquaintances, to laugh and tease each other, said
00:27:25I know your sister's name, I know your mother's name.
00:27:30Naming one's mother and sisters is considered an insult.
00:27:36A disgrace.
00:27:38In the final years of the Afghan Republic, before the Taliban invaded the country in 2021,
00:27:43we women, with a massive information campaign called Where is my name,
00:27:48we managed to have our mother's name recognized on the identity card.
00:27:55We could have decided to do it.
00:27:57As feminists, we have fought for years for our self-determination in Afghanistan.
00:28:02But when the Taliban took power in 2021, with the end of the Afghan Republic,
00:28:08everything was lost.
00:28:14I want to tell you something that is very important to me.
00:28:18When I fled to Italy, I realized that my children's documents are linked to my documents.
00:28:25It's beautiful.
00:28:27In Afghanistan, as a mother, I was unable to collect my children's documents.
00:28:32The Taliban gave their documents only to my husband.
00:28:35The children are male.
00:28:38You should know that until recently Iranian husbands did not call their wives by name,
00:28:44but they called it the house, because they believed it was their property.
00:28:50For example, today I went shopping with the house, at the supermarket.
00:28:55Many men in Iran today still think this way, also because the laws support them.
00:29:00Husbands tell their wives how they should dress and what they should do.
00:29:07On the other hand there are also women who think that this is love and if the man is not jealous
00:29:13and possessive, they think they are not loved.
00:29:16We fight gender stereotypes a lot because they are the ones that create the conditions.
00:29:21How many women are convinced that raising children is solely the mother's prerogative?
00:29:29Almost all of those who have not become aware over the years of equal roles within the relationship.
00:29:36But even today we hear it said apart from the historical moment in which there is a sort of sponsorship to the
00:29:43go back home,
00:29:44to have children, to take care of the home.
00:29:48That's exactly the risk.
00:29:50You can choose to be a housewife and only take care of your children, but it has to be a choice.
00:29:54Woman, life, freedom!
00:29:57For the jury, for all of them, not one, less!
00:30:01According to WHO and the World Bank, women die mainly due to domestic violence,
00:30:07more than cancer, more than malaria, more than road accidents.
00:30:11What were his days like?
00:30:13I would wake up, wake up the kids, then make breakfast, take them to school,
00:30:20I came home, cleaned, prepared lunch, picked them up from school, we came home, did the homework.
00:30:27A life of deprivation, deprivation that could even mean going to the supermarket twice in a row.
00:30:34or be class representative for my daughter because I wanted to show off, rather than...
00:30:41He told her this, he accused her.
00:30:45You want to show off, so I gave up the simple role of class president to my daughter in first grade.
00:30:53I got to a point where I almost didn't cook anymore because what I prepared wasn't good enough.
00:30:59and therefore he was carrying something already prepared.
00:31:02A continuous, denigrating result of everything she did.
00:31:08Yes, absolutely.
00:31:08Dinner too.
00:31:09Yes, even about dinner, about raising children, maybe it could have been that thing that was granted that perhaps he would not have granted.
00:31:17Then in the end I said to my daughter, look, instead of going out yourself, have friends come to your house so we're more
00:31:22Don't worry.
00:31:23Every day a step backwards.
00:31:25A step back so that the worst wouldn't happen, let's say, a reprimand, maybe a scolding.
00:31:32But could she wear low-cut dresses?
00:31:37Let's say it was better to avoid them.
00:31:39Then I was always at home like that.
00:31:41When we went out we were together, so let's say that maybe it was possible having him next to us, yeah, yeah.
00:31:50But always without showing off too much, always remaining ten steps behind.
00:31:57Well, then everything comes by itself.
00:32:00I mean, it was me who didn't wear makeup anymore, it was me who didn't take care of myself anymore.
00:32:04Because he was afraid.
00:32:05Because yes, I avoided it.
00:32:08Sometimes I didn't even dye my hair, I had a little regrowth, maybe I wanted to do it.
00:32:14He told me no, but you're fine like this, don't worry in the end.
00:32:17To erase my person to always put what he wanted first.
00:32:26On November 3, 2022, you participated in the demonstration for the death of Hadis Najafi, killed at the age of 20 because she was fighting
00:32:37for the freedom of Iranian women.
00:32:40What happened?
00:32:43It was the fortieth day since the killing of Hadis Najafi.
00:32:48There was a call by word of mouth to remember her at her grave, all of us, young protesters.
00:32:56Hadis had been buried in Karaji.
00:32:59Iranian police forces closed all the entrances to the cemetery and above our heads suddenly there are
00:33:07drones and helicopters whizzed by.
00:33:09They blocked the exits because they wanted to arrest the protesters gathered there for Hadis Najafi.
00:33:17We were forced to escape through a disused underpass.
00:33:22So I jumped into this underpass.
00:33:26I was shouting death to the Islamic Republic, death to Kamenei.
00:33:31Suddenly they started shooting and I was hit by 156 lead pellets.
00:33:39I was in shock, I looked dead on the ground, I was covered in blood everywhere and if someone hadn't carried me
00:33:47I would have died if I dragged myself away from there.
00:33:51How did you feel at that moment?
00:33:56I thought my end had come.
00:33:59I wondered how many girls had already been killed and if there was any point to it.
00:34:05In these 29 years of living in Iran, the pain of the lead pellets in my body is the least of my pains.
00:34:15Lead kills, it poisons the body.
00:34:20How many surgeries do you have to do to get these pellets out?
00:34:28Yes, I know, lead poisons, but the doctors in Milan told me that they cannot extract them all, some
00:34:34they are very deep and close to the vital organs.
00:34:39So far they have drawn six of these dots and will have to decide for the others.
00:34:47I will have to live with these pellets in my body, as my father did, who has some of the bullets from the
00:34:54Iran-Iraq war still in his body.
00:34:57What sacrifices to make your mark in society?
00:35:03I graduated as a midwife.
00:35:06Mortality among women and newborns during childbirth in Afghanistan is very high.
00:35:11I suffered a lot from gender discrimination in my studies.
00:35:16And the whole context around me came crashing down on me.
00:35:20My father was my shield, he was a great man.
00:35:23I worked nights at the hospital and people said the worst things to me.
00:35:27Go get married, go.
00:35:30I was able to demonstrate that a woman could work successfully even at night.
00:35:36Then I joined the board of directors of the National Chamber of Commerce.
00:35:40It was a male-dominated environment and they tried to hold me back from playing the role.
00:35:45It was a revolution because I helped women entrepreneurs develop their businesses.
00:35:51and finally managed to export their products abroad.
00:35:55The Chamber of Commerce became a bridge between Afghan women entrepreneurs and the outside world.
00:36:01Imagine that my emancipation also cost me death threats.
00:36:05Concrete threats.
00:36:08Yet they didn't stop me.
00:36:10I have always worked for the advancement of women and girls.
00:36:16During one of the people's public initiatives in Zadar, what did ISIS do?
00:36:25There were thousands of us, including deputy ministers, political leaders, children and families.
00:36:31I was in the front row.
00:36:32Suddenly the terrorists opened fire on the audience.
00:36:42One of the worst scenes of my life.
00:36:44Innocent children, women, people massacred, they shot at the defenseless.
00:36:52130 million women worldwide have undergone genital mutilation, including disfigurement with acid in Bangladesh.
00:37:00According to the UN, 30% of British women suffer abuse from their partners.
00:37:05In the United States, 700,000 women are raped every year.
00:37:10In France the average is 90,000 and most do not report.
00:37:15But the most violent country for women is India.
00:37:18Rape, molestation and sexual slavery, in addition to women being burned, living in the house because of dowry.
00:37:26Najiba Bahar, Master's Degree in Computer Science in Japan.
00:37:29She had been hired at the time of the Republic by the Afghan Ministry of Oil.
00:37:34She was murdered on a bus in 2017 along with other Hazara schoolgirls by a suicide bomber.
00:37:40But on August 15, 2021, the Republic fell into the hands of the Taliban.
00:37:47I fell into a dark well.
00:38:07In one night my political, social and feminist commitment, along with millions of other women, crumbled into a
00:38:14moment.
00:38:16To become aware means to go to the breaking point.
00:38:2020 years before the breakup, my parents were kept in the dark about everything.
00:38:26Why was she silent?
00:38:28Yes, I was silent. I faked a headache, I faked feeling sick.
00:38:33We're staying home tonight, I'd rather be on Christmas Eve, I feel sick, I have too much of a headache, let's leave early.
00:38:39Here, try to make sure that everything was as calm as possible.
00:38:43Invisible. Invisible to others, often invisible to herself until she manages to have with great strength and
00:38:51courage the chance to come out.
00:38:53The chador covers the entire woman, showing only the face and sometimes the hands.
00:38:59And that means a woman must be invisible.
00:39:03And Iranian women don't accept this; they are increasingly visible and continue to make their voices heard.
00:39:10The women who report are survivors of violence.
00:39:13Because they are women who have had great strength to resist violence.
00:39:19In 2023, there were 118 femicides, one every three days.
00:39:27As of the beginning of 2024, there are 65, but the data are approximate.
00:39:33Giulia Tramontano, Giulia Cecchettin, Giulia Donato, Melina Marino, Sara Ruschi, Floriana Floris, Sofia Castelli, Annalisa Fontana.
00:39:49The list of femicides is very long.
00:39:53The more we talk about it, the more those who live in a condition of risk, of discomfort, find the strength to be able to do it in their own way.
00:40:01He turns to speak because he feels there is an answer.
00:40:04This was not the case in particular with the Giulia Cecchettin case.
00:40:08The phone calls increased, girls called saying but I have a schoolmate, a classmate, a
00:40:14my friend,
00:40:14which in my opinion, given what happened, could be at risk.
00:40:18That is, requests to be heard have increased in order to have at least some comfort, as is also happening on the occasion of the 8th
00:40:25March, November 25th.
00:40:27What's happening?
00:40:28Hearing a story that you somehow recognize yourself in and seeing that that story can have an outlet
00:40:35in terms of listening, of support,
00:40:37even concrete help and punishment of those who commit violence, gives great help.
00:40:45You can name violence, which is a very, very difficult thing for women.
00:40:49As for Serena, her recent entry into Giulio's house is better to be protected,
00:40:57until the waters calm down, also because we learned that he tried to get involved
00:41:04contact with her.
00:41:05He followed me, he spied on me, he intercepted, in short, what could have been the phone calls I made,
00:41:12in short, he was always trying to understand what was happening inside the house when he wasn't there.
00:41:21Was she locked up at home?
00:41:23Yes.
00:41:24What did she discover in the house one day while she was cleaning?
00:41:29He discovered bugs, microphones, in short, that were recording what was happening inside my house.
00:41:43Maybe I would call my sister, tell her something and then in the evening maybe when he came home he would definitely listen again.
00:41:50and then he would bring all these things up in my mind.
00:41:54Did he also discover a microcamera?
00:41:56Yes, let's say my house was a bit strewn, sometimes I wondered why when I talk on the phone
00:42:02with my mom
00:42:03Suddenly he might show up at home.
00:42:06I asked myself, let's say with you, the reason for this thing, in short there was a slightly more serious argument, in short, than the
00:42:12other.
00:42:13Naming domestic violence means naming the failure of a family project.
00:42:35Giorgia Puleo's testimony is the same as that of millions of invisible women who suffer gender-based violence.
00:42:42and they don't make any noise, they escape the statistics, they go unnoticed and they are the majority.
00:42:51From there arises the problem of naming violence, because naming domestic violence
00:42:56it means naming a failure of a family project for which the woman is often solely responsible.
00:43:03Therefore, the woman who reports the malfunctioning of the family reports herself in these social contexts.
00:43:17Can an Iranian woman stand up against an abusive husband?
00:43:23Is there an oncologist here?
00:43:24It is very difficult to report domestic violence in Iran, because the woman must have 3-4 witnesses called wise men.
00:43:34Of course, domestic violence never happens in front of 3-4 wise men.
00:43:40So it's very difficult to prove that way.
00:43:43Then there is social custom.
00:43:47A popular proverb says
00:43:49The woman goes to her husband's house wearing a white dress and must go out wearing a white dress.
00:43:57It is meant the shroud when one dies.
00:44:01Parcofis, parole, san sergeti, posotti!
00:44:05Parcofis, parole, san sergeti, posotti!
00:44:10The woman gets a divorce only if the man grants it to her, because the Iranian court recognizes all the rights of the
00:44:17males by denying them to women.
00:44:19It is the courts themselves that discriminate against women.
00:44:23In Iran the laws are misogynistic.
00:44:26Just think that a father who kills his daughter does not go to prison, but if he kills his son
00:44:35Yes,
00:44:35because a woman's life is worth half of a man's life.
00:44:41What is gender-based violence?
00:44:44I think every day about the violence we women suffer, including sexual harassment and rape.
00:44:54I think rape is not just about two bodies,
00:44:58but you can rape a woman just with a look and verbal violence.
00:45:04We Iranian women have so much to say about the looks and words of the men who brutally hit us.
00:45:13We talk a lot about sexual freedom and also about the freedom to self-determine how and when to develop one's own
00:45:21sexual freedom,
00:45:22but if there is no consent, that is always violence.
00:45:25I can also decide to go out with four friends in the evening and drink and even get drunk.
00:45:31That doesn't mean that if I say no, it's no.
00:45:34A centuries-old war has been fought over the control of women's bodies, a war that has never ended.
00:45:41Women's right to self-determination is not so obvious.
00:45:46We meet an Iranian photographer at the Accademia Filarmonica Romana on the occasion of the day dedicated to Iranian women.
00:45:57What is the women's body in Iran?
00:46:02It's something that is basically prohibited.
00:46:06Yes, the bodies of every person who identifies as a woman, I mean even a trans woman or a person
00:46:16non-binary.
00:46:17And so they are just forbidden to exist.
00:46:23You came to Italy and gave vent to your artistic talent.
00:46:27Yes, I came to Italy and I said ok, this is the place, I have to start expressing myself as I want and
00:46:34speak out loud.
00:46:40As an artist, couldn't you have created this photographic exhibition on women's bodies in Iran?
00:46:50There is the possibility here and in my country there is not.
00:46:55Did you bring beauty to Iran?
00:46:57I always had colored hair, but I wore a veil, but not completely covered.
00:47:05They threatened me.
00:47:06The moral police?
00:47:07Yes, yes.
00:47:08They threatened my sister and I, who was 8 or 9 years old at the time.
00:47:13First they told her you have to wear the veil, these things.
00:47:17Then I started arguing and they told me ah but you too, because at the time I also had blue hair.
00:47:22I resisted.
00:47:24Luckily they left, they went away.
00:47:27At this moment in Iran there is a theocracy that has understood that women are the real driving force of
00:47:36change.
00:47:37Even Iranian men understood this.
00:47:41Creating a military force, called the so-called moral police, which has nothing to do with morality, is not to respect a dictate
00:47:49religious.
00:47:50Everyone knows it.
00:47:51It's just to make women understand that they can't aspire to their rights.
00:48:00Do you want to believe in God? They tell us.
00:48:02And then you have to wear a veil and you must not touch a man.
00:48:06You must pray and read the Quran.
00:48:08I think that religion is really a joke and that we need to know ourselves well,
00:48:14because if you know yourself thoroughly, then no one will be able to use that need against you.
00:48:21The female education rate is very high, surpassing men at university level.
00:48:27and they try to keep up with the times, with the rest of the world.
00:48:33And this means that they no longer want to be confined to a domestic environment and to menial jobs.
00:48:42And this is frightening, because they are bearers of change, of life and freedom.
00:48:52Erasing women is one of the stupidest things, it's impossible.
00:48:57Women are pioneers.
00:48:59Despite so many girls killed, boys left blind by bullets,
00:49:03the women, life and liberty movement will not stop.
00:49:10As a man, as a director, as an artist, who is a woman for you?
00:49:24It all begins with the woman and ends with the woman.
00:49:28The essence of a woman is everything that comes from her life and her beauty.
00:49:35This is why Iran, where women are erased, is a dead country, where life does not exist.
00:49:43Think of a ray of sunshine reflecting on a woman's hair
00:49:46and compare it to a ray of sunshine touching a black chador.
00:49:52The difference between day and night.
00:49:55What are the punishments for a woman who breaks the law?
00:50:02Women are punished even without trial.
00:50:05Many years ago, unmarried couples were arrested
00:50:09and were punished with 74 lashes each.
00:50:14If a woman in Afghanistan today reports her husband because he abuses her, what happens?
00:50:24There is Sharia, whatever the husband's actions.
00:50:28The woman is helpless, she cannot resist, she is her husband's property.
00:50:34The Western occupation of Afghanistan lasted 20 years.
00:50:38to support the Democratic Republic of Afghanistan against terrorism.
00:50:43But after the withdrawal, on August 15, 2021,
00:50:47The Taliban have regained power without any resistance from the democratic Afghan government
00:50:53who, by fleeing, abandoned the population to the violence of terrorists.
00:51:00It has been more than a thousand days since the Taliban took power.
00:51:04My friends who remained in Kabul can no longer work or study.
00:51:09Only a small percentage of women can work in the healthcare sector.
00:51:14But they earn 5,000 afghanis, about 90 euros a month, because they are women.
00:51:19They are underpaid, they have to wear the veil.
00:51:21In other regions, women wear the burka and cannot go out without being accompanied by a man.
00:51:28After 20 years of freedom, this is a nightmare.
00:51:30It's called gender apartheid, it's a crime.
00:51:33Women in Afghanistan have also been erased from the world
00:51:37and despite arrests and torture suffered by women activists in Afghanistan,
00:51:41they continue to protest.
00:51:44And the UN recently met with the Taliban without women at the table.
00:51:49Unacceptable and terrible.
00:51:52Afghanistan is a catastrophe after the withdrawal,
00:51:56admits today, at the end of his mandate,
00:51:59NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg
00:52:02in an interview with CNN.
00:52:04Who convinced her to start a revolution?
00:52:10I definitely owe everything to my daughter.
00:52:12The one closest to me, also because it's the biggest.
00:52:15The one he had taken.
00:52:16How much is mine today?
00:52:17Today he is almost 28 years old.
00:52:19She opened my eyes and told me
00:52:20Mom, look, everything you go through,
00:52:24we see it, we feel it.
00:52:25So we are tired of seeing you suffer,
00:52:28we are tired of suffering with you,
00:52:30we're tired of hiding under the beds
00:52:33for fear that something bad will happen,
00:52:36of younger children,
00:52:38maybe keep your hands over your ears
00:52:40to avoid listening.
00:52:42And there I became even more aware
00:52:45and pushed by her,
00:52:47that he told me every day
00:52:48Mom we have to go,
00:52:50Mom, if you don't tell the grandparents, I'll tell them.
00:52:52My daughter was and is like the others,
00:52:55but still today she is my conscience,
00:52:57It's my absolute strength.
00:52:59Then she got pregnant.
00:53:02Given the situation in the family,
00:53:04I didn't want to give birth to another child
00:53:07in those conditions.
00:53:09I decided that I wanted to have an abortion,
00:53:11he did not agree with this decision,
00:53:14in short, I didn't push myself,
00:53:15then I fell to the ground.
00:53:17I went to the hospital,
00:53:18I said of course that I didn't know I was pregnant,
00:53:22I lied,
00:53:23I thought that maybe it was a slow burn due to other situations.
00:53:29I was hospitalized,
00:53:30in short, I underwent the curettage,
00:53:33well that's how it is,
00:53:34the child left, let's say, on his own.
00:53:40Can an Iranian woman decide to have an abortion?
00:53:45He can only do it illegally,
00:53:47because abortion is prohibited.
00:53:49If the woman is reported,
00:53:51is severely punished.
00:53:57For the Taliban, abortion is a grave sin against God.
00:54:00The woman cannot have an abortion and no hospital performs it.
00:54:08I lived in isolation,
00:54:09I didn't have any friends of my own,
00:54:12I had no direct contact, maybe even with my sisters.
00:54:17I was afraid to tell you why too
00:54:19in recent times,
00:54:20in short, given this beginning of the rebellion,
00:54:25then the threats began too.
00:54:29My eldest daughter
00:54:30started to go against a bit
00:54:33and he scolded her,
00:54:35he put it aside.
00:54:36When I said enough, it's over, I'm going away,
00:54:38he told me
00:54:39but you're 42, where are you going without me?
00:54:43No one will ever catch you,
00:54:45you won't even have a job,
00:54:47because at your age with four children
00:54:48who will ever hire you to work?
00:54:50The only thing you can do is go out on the street
00:54:54and there you will surely be able to earn money.
00:54:59At that moment
00:55:00I took courage in both hands and said
00:55:02even if I go on a road,
00:55:04It will definitely be better than staying here with you.
00:55:11I picked up the phone and called my father
00:55:14and he himself took us and brought us to his house.
00:55:18I too began to understand slowly
00:55:19that all these faults that I had
00:55:21they weren't really that bad
00:55:24to blame on me.
00:55:26You are living a deception.
00:55:27Yes, we are living a deception, we really think we are what they paint us as,
00:55:33one thinks that there is absolutely no way out of this situation.
00:55:37And she came to her parents at the Leonde anti-violence center in Palermo.
00:55:44Yes, I called and inside I said
00:55:47but what on earth do I have to say?
00:55:50Leonde Association, good morning.
00:55:52We are an anti-violence center.
00:55:54Ok, ma'am, are you feeling up to it right now?
00:55:56to tell me about the episodes of violence?
00:55:59Instead that call lasted a couple of hours.
00:56:02because then I started to talk so freely
00:56:05everything that had happened to me
00:56:07and what was happening to me at that moment, my state of mind.
00:56:10At this moment she is repeating the words to herself continuously
00:56:13that he told her all these years.
00:56:15But we need to, let's say, reconnect with the resources she has within herself.
00:56:19You don't need libido to name violence.
00:56:24These fights happen in front of the children.
00:56:27What does he tell her?
00:56:28So, ma'am, you pushed her and grabbed her by the neck?
00:56:32Okay, ma'am.
00:56:33Madam, please take care of yourself,
00:56:34You don't have to say you called a shelter, okay?
00:56:37Whatever happens, ma'am, you have to call 911, okay?
00:56:41Listen, we'll make an appointment with a receptionist.
00:56:45All services at the anti-violence center are free.
00:56:48I found a wonderful operator on the other end.
00:56:52Don't worry, ma'am, it's obvious that he was failing at parenting.
00:56:57and then the threat of taking his children away.
00:57:00Asking for help doesn't mean having your children taken away.
00:57:03So then I went there, I started this journey that I thought would last a short time,
00:57:09I thought that within a few sessions I could heal, so to speak,
00:57:14from what was my evil.
00:57:15In reality, it took me at least a couple of years before I was able to find myself again.
00:57:22Because the most beautiful thing that can happen in an anti-violence center
00:57:26it's that we focus only on ourselves,
00:57:29so on what we are,
00:57:31on what we wanted to be and were not.
00:57:36In Iran there is a lot of prejudice against actresses.
00:57:42When the protests broke out,
00:57:44The other actresses and I have decided that we no longer want to act veiled.
00:57:51And so we staged clandestine shows everywhere.
00:57:56With a free underground theater,
00:57:58without subjecting ourselves to the regime's censorship.
00:58:02We young people live a free night life in Iran,
00:58:06without a veil, but as illegal immigrants.
00:58:16Here are some glimpses into Sadaf Bagbani's underground life.
00:58:21when he lived in Iran.
00:58:23Likewise, millions of young Iranians
00:58:26they live freely, hidden from the dictatorship.
00:58:36An example of the regime's misogyny on set.
00:58:44I'll give you some examples to make you understand how actresses, women,
00:58:48are cancelled in Iran.
00:58:51On the movie's billboard
00:58:53the female protagonist cannot be portrayed,
00:58:56but only the male protagonist.
00:58:59It is forbidden to take close-ups of the actresses.
00:59:04It is forbidden to film the actresses' faces up close,
00:59:08or their details.
00:59:10An actress on set cannot run in front of the camera,
00:59:14he sanctioned the Tehran regime,
00:59:16why do breasts move
00:59:18and this could stimulate men's instincts.
00:59:21An actress on set cannot lick ice cream or candy.
00:59:26It's forbidden in the cinema and so on.
00:59:28This makes the actresses on the set
00:59:30cannot represent the truth,
00:59:33must deviate from everyday reality
00:59:35and therefore cannot relate to the viewers
00:59:39in an authentic way.
00:59:43She is an Iranian lawyer, living in Italy
00:59:47and reports sexual violence
00:59:50that the protesters, the women who protest,
00:59:54but even children suffer in prisons.
00:59:57The brave young men and women
00:59:59they had the courage to talk about it.
01:00:04Unfortunately it is a tool
01:00:06above all to take away the dignity of these people,
01:00:11to violate their soul.
01:00:19Once out of prison
01:00:21they couldn't bear it
01:00:24and process this violence
01:00:26and took their lives.
01:00:27Today the demonstration has changed its form.
01:00:30But women today just don't wear the veil,
01:00:34going down to the square, singing, playing
01:00:37what the Islamic regime does not allow,
01:00:42demonstrate their protest.
01:00:45Demonstrations in the streets of Iran
01:00:47Today they are done in this way.
01:00:50I know for sure that during the demonstrations
01:00:53more than a thousand people of different ages
01:00:55they were blinded by the pellets
01:00:57and from bullets fired by the police.
01:01:00They are girls and boys
01:01:02who need to be treated.
01:01:04Doctors do not take responsibility
01:01:06to help them and care for them
01:01:08if they go to the hospital,
01:01:10because otherwise the regime will arrest them.
01:01:13Have you found solidarity here in Italy?
01:01:18Yes, I received a lot of solidarity
01:01:21when I testified my life
01:01:22on stage in the theatre in Milan.
01:01:25I have many fans on social media
01:01:26and I have a duty to testify
01:01:28the treatment of women in Iran,
01:01:30gender-based violence.
01:01:34How many girls
01:01:35did he save from the regime?
01:01:38I played a role in the rescue
01:01:40of 20 men and 12 girls,
01:01:43persecuted,
01:01:44people like Sadaf
01:01:45who are forced to leave the country
01:01:47to undergo surgery.
01:01:49We were lucky
01:01:51to have arrived in Italy.
01:01:52May Sadaf be here,
01:01:54that our show
01:01:55has been successfully supported
01:01:57from the Italian public
01:01:58and they are inviting us
01:01:59in many Italian cities.
01:02:01We need others
01:02:02they put themselves in the shoes of those who suffer.
01:02:05The Iranian community
01:02:07he tried to bring
01:02:10in a legal manner
01:02:11with visas,
01:02:12often for reasons
01:02:13of medical care.
01:02:15But unfortunately there are also others
01:02:16who choose
01:02:17to come to Italy
01:02:19with these boats
01:02:21that cross the sea
01:02:23and they arrive in Calabria
01:02:25or in Sicily.
01:02:26Some have even been
01:02:27accused of being
01:02:29of the smugglers
01:02:30or collaborators of the smugglers.
01:02:31And we on these occasions
01:02:33we try to offer
01:02:35legal advice.
01:02:36With the war in Ukraine
01:02:38and Hamas' attack on Israel
01:02:40of October 7th
01:02:41many things have changed.
01:02:43Europeans now
01:02:44they feel more
01:02:45in danger
01:02:46and they closed the doors,
01:02:47the borders.
01:02:49I currently have 17 requests
01:02:50of injured people
01:02:51in the revolution
01:02:52in progress
01:02:53who would like to come to Europe
01:02:54but at the moment
01:02:55the roads are closed.
01:02:59Taliban
01:02:59They threatened to kill me.
01:03:01They told me
01:03:02you are hunted.
01:03:10Immediately after
01:03:12the invasion
01:03:13of the Taliban
01:03:14she left
01:03:16like all other women
01:03:18with families
01:03:20your homes
01:03:22and you started
01:03:24to hide from you.
01:03:25why your names
01:03:27of public women
01:03:29they were
01:03:30in the lists
01:03:31of all
01:03:31public offices
01:03:33so they were hunting you.
01:03:36The first protests
01:03:37of women
01:03:37they were in Herat
01:03:38September 3, 2021
01:03:40in Kabul.
01:03:41I went down to the square
01:03:42and the BBC
01:03:43he asked me
01:03:43a reportage
01:03:44to be published.
01:03:47My telephone number
01:03:49he started to turn
01:03:50in too many hands
01:03:51and it was intercepted
01:03:52from the Taliban
01:03:53who threatened me
01:03:54of death.
01:03:54They told me
01:03:55you are hunted.
01:03:56So thank you
01:03:57to an Italian journalist
01:03:58with which
01:03:59I communicated via social media
01:04:00I managed to escape.
01:04:03The journalist
01:04:04he put us in touch
01:04:05with the Afcei
01:04:06and thank you
01:04:07to the Italian ambassador
01:04:08in Pakistan
01:04:09we fled from Torkham.
01:04:11Early October
01:04:13of 2021
01:04:13I, my husband
01:04:14and my three children
01:04:16we arrived safely in Rome.
01:04:19They welcomed us
01:04:20Baptist pastors
01:04:21Antonella Scuderi
01:04:22and Ivano De Gasperis.
01:04:24With open arms
01:04:25the whole church
01:04:26he helped us.
01:04:28You now
01:04:28are you working?
01:04:30Your husband
01:04:30does he work?
01:04:33Yes,
01:04:33my husband
01:04:34he's a carer
01:04:35and he was a nurse
01:04:36in Kabul.
01:04:36I have concluded
01:04:37the course
01:04:37as an operator
01:04:38social and health care.
01:04:39My daughters
01:04:40they attend successfully
01:04:41the Italian school.
01:04:42We finally have peace.
01:04:45In the center
01:04:46anti-violence
01:04:47they did it to her
01:04:48also provide training
01:04:50because there is the question
01:04:51of work
01:04:52of independence.
01:04:54My luck
01:04:55it was that
01:04:57to do this internship
01:04:58in a company
01:04:59which deals with
01:05:00of tourism.
01:05:06We met
01:05:07on the occasion
01:05:08of an internship
01:05:09at our company
01:05:10which deals with
01:05:12of holiday homes.
01:05:13Through this internship
01:05:14we had the opportunity
01:05:16to see
01:05:16that Georgia
01:05:17as it was
01:05:18going out
01:05:19from a path
01:05:20of violence
01:05:20he also had
01:05:21a capacity
01:05:22to think
01:05:24to the future.
01:05:28What did he tell her?
01:05:29the entrepreneur?
01:05:30He told me
01:05:31but you know it
01:05:31which in my opinion
01:05:32you really are
01:05:33made for this job
01:05:34but why just
01:05:35finish your internship
01:05:37you don't open up
01:05:38your company
01:05:39and we would be
01:05:40your first clients
01:05:41so we would be
01:05:42your first customers.
01:05:43I said impossible
01:05:44there is someone
01:05:45who believes in me
01:05:46he believes in my abilities
01:05:47that I didn't see
01:05:48still at that moment
01:05:49absolutely.
01:05:52Georgia
01:05:52he was flattening us
01:05:54in the relationship
01:05:55with the owners
01:05:55in the care
01:05:56of the houses
01:05:57and then at a certain point
01:05:58he started
01:05:59to supervise
01:06:00of companies
01:06:01of cleaning
01:06:02professional
01:06:03to whom we turn
01:06:04and that however
01:06:04they did not express
01:06:05the quality
01:06:05that we were looking for.
01:06:07At some point
01:06:07I suggested
01:06:08to Georgia
01:06:09to try.
01:06:12And I said
01:06:13well let's try
01:06:15let's see how it goes
01:06:16and so on
01:06:17in June
01:06:18of 2018
01:06:19she was born
01:06:20my company.
01:06:22Georgia
01:06:23today he manages
01:06:24most of it
01:06:25of the wallet
01:06:27of apartments
01:06:28here in Palermo
01:06:29for Wonderful Italy
01:06:30but
01:06:31he also has
01:06:32other customers.
01:06:35How I was
01:06:36I actually helped you
01:06:37to be reborn
01:06:38to have
01:06:39a second chance
01:06:41if not even
01:06:42the first possibility
01:06:43Why
01:06:43he never gave it to me
01:06:44Nobody
01:06:44a first chance
01:06:47I had to give it
01:06:48Me too
01:06:49and then
01:06:49for example
01:06:51Nigerian girls
01:06:52former victims
01:06:53of trafficking
01:06:54they are mine
01:06:55collaborators
01:06:56them too
01:06:56arrived at my company
01:06:58with internships
01:06:58training
01:06:59and then
01:07:00they remained
01:07:01with me.
01:07:02For five years
01:07:03work with Giorgia
01:07:05I have contracted
01:07:06a beautiful thing
01:07:08That
01:07:08they did
01:07:10recognized
01:07:11a real woman
01:07:12which is very
01:07:13workforce
01:07:14you learn
01:07:15perfect
01:07:16we have
01:07:17known
01:07:18we learned
01:07:19Together.
01:07:20Our company
01:07:21has a specificity
01:07:22we were born
01:07:23thanks to a fund
01:07:24of investments
01:07:25with social impact
01:07:26a pioneer fund
01:07:26one of the most important
01:07:27in Italy
01:07:28which is beyond Impact
01:07:29we had
01:07:30the possibility
01:07:30in collaboration
01:07:32with the centers
01:07:34of anti-violence
01:07:34of the cities
01:07:35where we are present
01:07:36to build
01:07:38projects
01:07:38of insertion
01:07:39working
01:07:40and we decided
01:07:42to ask
01:07:42to Georgia
01:07:44to give us a hand
01:07:44to increase
01:07:46the quality
01:07:46of the services
01:07:48of cleaning
01:07:49in many cities
01:07:50we entered
01:07:51even in institutions
01:07:52penitentiaries
01:07:53not only in Sicily
01:07:54but also in Pozzuoli
01:07:56with a group
01:07:56of women
01:07:57wonderful
01:07:58that today
01:07:58thanks to training
01:08:00by Giorgia
01:08:01I'm out
01:08:02they are working
01:08:03for a cooperative
01:08:05social
01:08:06of Naples
01:08:07and this cooperative
01:08:08social
01:08:09thanks to these women
01:08:10he opened
01:08:11a new sector
01:08:11of activities
01:08:12and collaborate with us
01:08:13in Campania
01:08:14She suffered
01:08:16violence
01:08:17of the regime?
01:08:19physics
01:08:20Yes
01:08:21My life
01:08:23had become
01:08:23a hell
01:08:24they had put me
01:08:25in tow
01:08:26an agent
01:08:28wherever I am
01:08:29and my wife
01:08:29let's go
01:08:30we were always
01:08:31accompanied
01:08:31from this agent
01:08:33I was
01:08:34seized
01:08:35in front of my house
01:08:36and locked up
01:08:37they banged
01:08:38my head
01:08:39against the edge
01:08:40of a table
01:08:40for hours and hours
01:08:41I believed
01:08:42to be untouchable
01:08:43because in my
01:08:44profession
01:08:45I was famous
01:08:48think about violence
01:08:49that undergoes
01:08:50who is not known
01:08:52my goal
01:08:53corporate
01:08:54that's exactly it
01:08:54to dedicate
01:08:56to others
01:08:57a part
01:08:58of my
01:08:59of my fortune
01:09:01Here you are
01:09:02my heart
01:09:03it's full of pain
01:09:04for women
01:09:04and the girls
01:09:05in Afghanistan
01:09:06condemned
01:09:07without rights
01:09:08in silence
01:09:09of the world
01:09:10your message
01:09:11to women
01:09:12from all over the world
01:09:14Which?
01:09:16you speak
01:09:18don't stay
01:09:19in silence
01:09:23they want us to believe
01:09:24that we have to
01:09:25to remain silent
01:09:28speak women
01:09:29the word
01:09:30it is sacred
01:09:31thank you all
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