Комментарии:
put the names of the people on the screen please
ОтветитьThe interviewer leaves much to be desired. Eager to talk, not so to listen. Surely he's not touring to tell people his views, but instead to observe and capture.
Ответить❤this has been a wonderful series! Very heartfelt and not too touristic. It's very interesting learning about the people and culture and how they exist together with nature and each other. Real world.
Ответитьberber muslims not arabs
ОтветитьAnyone know what song the Flamenco artists are playing in the beginning? I feel it in my soul and need to know what it is lol
ОтветитьWhy did you ignore Syria in your Mediterranean documentary !? It's the oldest country in world and influence the whole Mediterranean including Andalusia where it got it's name from
ОтветитьWhat a shame to mar such a fine documentary with the part where the photographer showed his great photographs, presented in that atrocious, mangled format with the out-of-focus sides. Booo👎🏾
ОтветитьI hope the desicion makers in europe are listening to farmers like these. Sounds like increasing the amount of trees in water scarce regions should be high on our list.
ОтветитьVery interesting and informative documentary. If ur channel shown in urdu language, we can easy understand
ОтветитьI recently read an article about Flamenco and here's a funny thing I bet you didn't know: Flamenco has been accepted by the Spanish culture only with great reluctance.
Historically, several layers of Spanish society fought tooth and nail to supress Flamenco for various reasons. To this day there are Spaniards who feel that it's an invasive pop-cultural phenomenon that isn't really Spanish at all, and that has been cultivated primarily due to the attention of tourists, which is not entirely untrue. In fact, Flamenco was popular with foreigners long before it was a widespread phenomenon in Spain, particularly in France.
Later, after Spain had been suffocating economically under Franco, Flamenco was deliberately launched by the central government as a tourist magnet with Flamenco schools being founded and so on, as part of an attempt to re-establish Spain as an attractive travel destination.
So yeah, Spanish culture is a thing of great complexity, as is the Flamenco itself.
Haha! Investigative journalism! they could not be any misinformed about Andalusian heritage and history! What do I know, I'm only from there! It is not even Islamic influence, it is North African influence. Not everything boils down to Arab and Islamic. North Africans are diverse both in ethnicity and religion. Majority are Amazigh, indigenous peoples of North Africa, Tarik Ibn Ziyad, was amazigh, and yet all assume the Arabs influenced it. They are also Jews and Jewish, Africans, Ghanaians, Mauritanians, etc.
ОтветитьMoroccan house not Arab house 🧐
ОтветитьIf this place was in Arabia and the whites conquered it, there would be an anti-white campaign, they would start talking about how many people were killed and how bad the whites are, but this is Europe that the Arabs conquered And considering today's trends, we are only talking about what the whites have done.
ОтветитьI’m from andalucia 🇪🇸
ОтветитьViva Espana! Viva El Rey!! Desde Alta California!! 🇪🇸
ОтветитьInteresting. I didn't know Arabs were so influential in Andalusia.
ОтветитьVery stereotypical documentary
ОтветитьThanks for this great job👏
ОтветитьDry beautiful and passionate
ОтветитьSultan Bayezid saved one hundred fifty thousand Jews from Spain throughout 1492, and settled them in centers such as Constantinople, Amasya, Salonika and Safed.
He took many measures for these Jews to live openly and prosper and decreed laws with grave punishments for those who disturbed them.
Tens of thousands of Jews who had fled Portugal, Italy and
Holland were forced to relive their ordeal years later in Spain,
treated as third-class people in many places they went, force- fully baptized or thrown out. Many of those who first escaped to these lands later took refuge in the Ottoman Empire. The road Bayezid opened was followed by later sultans, and the period's wealthiest Jewish familiesthe Nassis and Hamons first among them-moved to the empire. They brought much
to the Ottoman Empire's political and scientific worlds, many
as viziers and physicians.
The Nahmias brothers' printing press was the first in the Ot- toman Empire and the greater Middle East.
The Alhambra Decree of 1492 was one the greatest man-made human tragedies in recorded history following the Holocaust during World War II and the decades of massacres and op- pression in Palestine.
The same year as the Alhambra Decree, Columbus set foot in the New World, setting the stage for the Spanish to begin the centuries-long slave trade, carrying tens of thousands of Afri- cans to the New World while also destroying the civilizations of the Aztec and Inca.
Despite the undeniable role lslamic scholarship had in aiding the exploration of the Americas, it is left out of history books the world over, and the cultural inquisition continues.
The rhetoric of there being a Christian Europe is unfortu- nately the greatest success-for lack of a better word-of the inquisitions of the late Middle Ages continuing in the twen- ty-first century.
The children of the crussaiders are still the same (even those who now are atheist, like in the Netherlands,France), evil just like in the days of genocide on Jews and Moslims in Andulicie and 40-45, believe me nothing nothing changed.
The bottom line is that Europeans in the south don't need and don't want to be submerged by Arab or African immigration
ОтветитьI was there... Luck 💔
ОтветитьYou are a good team, you create very good films.
ОтветитьI visited Andalusia this past July BEAUTIFUL PLACE AFFORDABLE DELICIOUS FOOD la gente fueron muy amigable me gusto todo great job DW
ОтветитьIslam is incompatible with Europe
ОтветитьThe Arabic influence consists of recent Moroccan immigration and their shops and tea houses
ОтветитьI really want to go there now, thanks DW
ОтветитьMind Begs the Question:
Hitler - Jews unsafe to German Identity
If Govts - Muslims unsafe to Western Identity
Following on footsteps of Hitler,Neo Nazi,No?
Great tour, scenic view, warm people, thanks for the delivery of this video.
ОтветитьBeautiful places to see but I don't think that I would love the house which can be rotated.☺ it still costs a lot of electricity.
ОтветитьFunny, I just came back from a 2 weeks trip through Andalusia and this pops up :)
ОтветитьBeautiful pictures! Stupid voice over!
ОтветитьBeautifull...Gracias.
ОтветитьClass! Bravo 👍👍
ОтветитьIt’s sad that you missed Sevilla or Córdoba and all the other provinces in general. Andalucía is so beautiful and rich of culture.
ОтветитьAndalucía es una de las regiones más interesantes de España. La naturaleza, la cultura, el clima, la comida y la gente de la región andaluza son particularmente atractivas entre las culturas mediterráneas.
ОтветитьVisiting the Costa Del Sol is on my bucket list for sure!
ОтветитьI'm from the north,, but i'd love to visit the south sometime.... I love their culture so much, it's very unique
ОтветитьAndalusia- The Alchemist ❤️
ОтветитьThis trip series are awesome please more . It feels I'm in there . Thanks to creator who thought this video . God bless you .
ОтветитьIt's funny how she says Granada is all about inclusivity and the fact is that the local government has for many years been PP, a right wing party with racist and xenophobic stances regarding immigration. The image sold of Granada in the video is so biased. It's a beautiful place, but far from ideal
ОтветитьNice report, thank you!
ОтветитьUnfassbare Ideologische Propaganda: Das Deutsche Staatsfernsehen addressiert alles was die Ideologie hergibt: Migration, Diversität und Nachhaltigkeit sind ja so Wichtig: Das Land ist am Ende.
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