Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Migrant Odyssey
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| "Our existence as Palestinians challenges a whole universe that supports the occupation" | 09 Sep 2024 | 00:45:13 | |
Can standing on a rooftop in a refugee camp be the starting point of a journey toward empowerment and change? This episode of "Migrant Odyssey" features Manal, a dedicated social worker and the founder of the Kayani Foundation, that support Palestinian women and girls through the values of family. She takes us through the harrowing history of her family, the struggles of her parents, and the poignant memories of her grandmother, whose stories and a cherished memento profoundly shaped her path. | |||
| Maqluba: the upside down dish that is life on the West Bank | 05 Jun 2024 | 00:45:59 | |
Life on the West Bank is upside down for Palestinians. They have little of rights on their land that they have lived on for centuries. The towns that they do live in cannot grow because they are being strangled by encroaching Israeli settlements. East Jerusalem, internationally designated as the Palestinian capital - is not. A journey that should take minutes takes hours and hours. The places where the are supposed to be safe - are not. | |||
| This is what Resilience looks like: Okello Joseph's Life from Refugee to Filmmaker | 13 Sep 2023 | 00:37:34 | |
Prepare yourself for a gripping narrative that will take you from the conflict-stricken areas of South Sudan to the mud-walled houses of Kakuma refugee camp, and ultimately to the heart of Germany. Our guest, Okello Joseph, shares his riveting journey of survival, struggle, and success in today's episode. His story is a testament to human resilience and the fierce belief of his value as a human being and film maker. | |||
| Mohammed Salim's Journey: Grit and Hope in the World's Largest Refugee Camp | 03 Aug 2023 | 00:22:03 | |
Journey with us as we peel back the layers of life in the world's largest refugee camp - Cox's Bazaar, Bangladesh, through the lens of one of its residents. Mohammed Selim Khan, a Rohingya refugee himself, unravels the life he has known since 1992, dealing with the loss of his parents and facing the daily struggle to survive. Not only does he wear the hats of a fire safety instructor and journalist in the camp, but Mohammed's captivating photos have earned him recognition in the Rohingya Photo Competition. | |||
| Deng Dak Malual: unbounded leader | 12 Jul 2023 | 00:27:55 | |
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| "Even If what stays of Gaza is rubble. The rubble will be my home" | 22 May 2024 | 00:28:49 | |
This episode is extraordinary not just because Tareq - a young man from Gaza - has an extraordinary story to tell, but because as he tells it , one can hear each stage of his life unfiltered. He is able to express what Tareq the child felt long before his adult self understood the years' long blockade -seige- under which his city lived. And when we hear his story of when he first had to go to Jerusalem, we hear the shock of his treatment - as if it were happening to him today. Tareq more than tells his story, he relives it. And so will you. | |||
| Rowan from the West Bank: "I lost my sense of fear - and that's scary." | 31 Mar 2024 | 00:57:19 | |
Imagine navigating the complex layers of survivor's guilt while fostering a beacon of innovation amidst the ricochet of conflict. Join us as we welcome Rowan, a resilient Palestinian businesswoman and engineer from the West Bank, who shares an intimate portrayal of life under occupation. Her vivid narratives reveal the deep cultural and spiritual significance of Ramadan, the ingenuity required to thrive as an entrepreneur in the Middle East, and the unwavering commitment to humanity that defines the Palestinian spirit. The tapestry of her story is woven with threads of hope and the stark realities of living amidst ongoing strife in Gaza. | |||
| We're not the cause of the wars that we flee. So why punish us as if we are? | 19 Mar 2024 | 00:34:09 | |
Stellah Nikuze is the daughter of Rwanda genocide survivors. Born and brought up in the Kyaka 11 refugee camps in Uganda, she has emerged as a fierce advocate of refugees and the voiceless. | |||
| Sofia's odyssey: From Ukraine to Berlin via London and Israel | 14 Feb 2024 | 00:39:52 | |
This is the story of Sofia - a Ukrainian refugee now living in Berlin. After living in Israel , she and her Israel husband went back to Ukraine a few months before the war with Russia in 2022, to be with her mother and grandmother.All too quickly she found her life turned upside down. | |||
| The Survival Centre: The Berlin Trauma Centre helping refugees survive their survival. | 14 Jan 2024 | 00:32:10 | |
Refugees seek refuge and shelter. Safety from being brutalised, from the trauma of witnessing and experiencing acts of terror and horror. But also a haven where they can retrieve their sense of humanity and self worth, without being spat on for their religion, skin colour or "foreign" accent in their new homes. E-Mail: mail@ueberleben.org Or take a look at similar organizations in your country, your city or your town and see where you can help or be helped. | |||
| Zoya: Palestinian warrior for peace and kindness | 03 Dec 2023 | 00:40:02 | |
This is the story of Zoya, born into a world of upheaval, chaos, and strife and raised in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon - as was her father and grandfather. Equally important, this is also the story of a young woman's journey to transform her harsh reality into a journey of resilience, compassion, and leadership | |||
| Running with Blood | 26 Oct 2023 | 00:44:46 | |
This is the story of Janvier Hafasha – originally from the Rutshuru zone of north Kivu in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and now living in the Kyaka refugee settlement in Uganda. Janvier is one of nearly 400,000 people (according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs) who have been terrorized out of Rutshuru, most of them fleeing to Uganda. Janvier is much more than a refugee. He is an extraordinary leader who, despite suffering almost unimaginable personal tragedies, has gone on to co-found an organization that nurtures and develops children in the Kyaka refugee camp– ensuring that they are not only fed but that they heal and grow stronger by learning to share their stories and by protecting those who have disabilities and are even more vulnerable than they are. | |||
| Decoding the Narrative: Peter Ruhenstroth Bauer on the Global Refugee Crisis and Germany's Response | 03 Oct 2023 | 00:27:20 | |
Ready to have your perspective shaken and stirred? Join me, Stephen Barden, as I sit down with Peter Ruhenstroth Bauer, the Head of the UN's Refugee organization in Germany. I hope this episode will help provide a global perspective of the massive migration of people in the world. I hope, too, it will break down those assumptions so many of us in the richer countries hold. | |||
| One stitch - A World of Meaning | 28 Jan 2025 | 00:49:56 | |
This is the story of Hajar - a young woman with Palestinian and Lebanese parents - who understands that her people are woven together - not just by ideologies or politics or even the yearning for a safe homeland but by their stories. The stories of their humanity, eccentricities, intimacy and tenderness. Stories that are embroidered into every part of their lives. | |||
| Ahmad's story: from sight to insight | 02 Mar 2025 | 00:48:16 | |
Ahmad Jaafil shares his story of extraordinary and persistent willpower, He talks matter of factly about his severe and rare eye disease and the horrendous struggle to try and save his sight- in Lebanon and then the USA. If you want to know, in painful detail, what it's like for a family to do everything and more to heal their young son, this episode will do that for you. And it's also a story of - fierce determination and huge will - of a young man who went from being seen as "hopeless and weak" by his classmates to being named student of the year - of the power of acceptance of what is, but not of what can be Help support Waves to Home (www.wavestohome.org) and amplify the stories of all uprooted people around the world. And, please do tell us what you think and feel about Migrant Odyssey. We need your support. We love your feedback | |||
| Kejsi Hodo and the "invisible" referendum to change Italy's citizenship laws | 25 May 2025 | 00:44:55 | |
| Lex Takkenberg - 30 years in the most scrutinised of all UN agencies | 21 Apr 2025 | 00:54:36 | |
From the frontlines of one of the world's most enduring humanitarian crises comes a story of extraordinary dedication. Dr Lex Takkenberg takes us through his extraordinary four-decade journey working with refugees and displaced persons, including thirty years with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA). | |||
| All Good Stories Start with our Grandmothers | 27 Mar 2025 | 00:54:48 | |
| Ruchira Gupta: "Where are all the girls?" | 29 Jul 2025 | 00:48:50 | |
Stephen Barden talks to Ruchira Gupta, lifelong activist against human trafficking - especially the trafficking of women. This extraordinary woman not only founded a global organization to protect and educate sexually trafficked women and their daughters but, through her work with the United Nations, has driven changes in global laws on human trafficking and drawn up rules of behaviour for the peacekeepers themselves. In this episode we hear how she started on her campaign decades ago when she was covering a story in Nepal and discovered there were no girls in village after village. Her question "Where are all the girls", set her on a path that she's following to this day. | |||
| Sudan: Ethar, the lemon tree, the meandering donkey and 70 years of war. | 19 Oct 2025 | 01:16:06 | |
A sandstorm birth, a village donkey named Kajol, and a gun barrel to the head during the Khartoum Massacre—Ethar’s story pulls you straight into Sudan’s living history and insistently asks a hard question: 70 years of warfare has changed nothing, so where does real change begin? We open with a clear, human overview of Sudan’s long arc of coups, civil wars, Darfur’s horrors, and the power struggle between the SAF and RSF, then step into a home where a Ministry of Justice mother and a communist father model how to disagree politically while being totally aligned morally and ethically. That paradox becomes a compass as Ethar learns to push back—against assumptions, about her religion, her beliefs, her capabilities and her country. As Ethar, reminds us, the wars in Sudan were never for the people - but for power. And her stories in this episode have people at their core - her family, her neighbour who rescued her from a mob, her friend who saved her life. And Ethar herself, who insists that change only comes when ordinary people's daily lives are tangibly changed for the better. Village by village, town by town, person by person. Please help support the show: by sharing with your network; by making a small contribution and by sending us feedback. | |||