FEATURES
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The Jewish community in Poland almost died out after World War II. Milowit Kuninski explores the reconciliation that has made a rebirth possible.
01 February 1997
Caux's history made it the ideal place for a high-level symposium on reconciliation. Mary Lean reports.
01 October 1996
Mpho Mashinini grew up amidst the tensions and Y' traumas of Soweto. He was a prominent activist in the United Democratic Front and the Mass Democratic Movement. Inevitably he found himself in conflict with the white authorities and was jailed several times. Today he is a deputy director of Operation Hunger, a relief and development organization. He is interviewed by Peter Hannon:
01 April 1992
Kenneth Noble visits a scheme, inspired by the Prince of Wales, that is helping young British people find a sense of purpose in life.
01 November 1991
China in the Nineties continues to be a source of fascination and controversy. Some observers concentrate entirely on human-rights issues and the events of Tiananmen Square in 1989. Others speculate on the future international influence of a country with one fifth of the world's population. James Hore-Ruthven recently visited the city of Tangshan, flattened by an earthquake in 1976. He tells one woman's story of suffering and of Rebuilding earthquake city
01 November 1991
Through creating a meaningful avenue of self-expression, Johnson says, teenagers learn how to direct themselves; and one of the most important goals of BTA is to restore young Black men's sense of a positive self-image.
01 October 1991
Professor Eduard Kellenberger witnessed one of the great scientific breakthroughs of the century. He talks to Alan Channer about genes, ethics and society.
01 August 1991
Because Japan has thought only about her own peace, values such as freedom, justice and order, which can be shared with other countries, have become secondary.
01 August 1991
Jean-Jacques Odier offers a French perspective on an international movement to save the family.
01 July 1991
The Indians wanted to be respected by the Government and left alone to control their own affairs; the Sandinistas believed they could be interwoven into the fabric of the new revolutionary Nicaragua. Their interests were on a collision course. In 1981 armed conflict broke out.
01 April 1991
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