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[Minerva Cuevas: Bridging Borders]
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The term "political activist" is problematic.
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I think the challenge is to
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stop using the references to activism
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because everybody has this agency
to react to daily life
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and therefore generate political actions.
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--[NEWS CORRESPONDENT]
At the U.S.-Mexican border,
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--a fence separates two worlds.
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--Poverty to the south.
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--Wealth to the north.
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[CUEVAS] In general, I think my work
is the research I do.
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I planned a project for the
Mexican and U.S. border.
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My general idea was:
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If there is a border, there could be a bridge.
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I had never been in the area of the Rio Bravo.
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I learned that the historical border
is the deepest part of the river.
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At the end I found an area that was
a kind of natural bridge.
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And I decided to use the rocks
in that part of the river
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to cross from the U.S. to Mexico and back.
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I was marking the rocks with limestone
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just to make a sign of the crossing.
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You could see this dotted line going
across the Rio Bravo.
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With the installation,
there were elements related to walking--
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like walking sticks
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and books talking about the Chihuahuan desert.
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The act of walking from south to north
was the most political act you could do.
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[NEWS CORRESPONDENT]
President Trump's proposed wall
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along the U.S.-Mexico border
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could cost nearly 22 billion dollars.
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As first reported by Reuters,
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it could take about
three-and-a-half years to build.
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[CUEVAS] You learn about the border
through media.
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It's connected to limits or control.
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Violence is a very strong element
in this perception
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of what's the border.
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Along the river, you have some border patrols;
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but, there were no signs.
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The whole area was free of any fence or wall.
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Not witnessing anything connected to that
kind of mediatic violence,
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it's the first liberation.
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You realize that what is intimidating
is the desert itself.
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Lately, I've been invited as part of talks
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that have to do with climate change
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or urban development
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and the idea of
"the artist as an activist."
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There is this expectation of one action
generating a lot of change.
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Books and projects can be important,
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but they won't be a solution.
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The problems or the crisis in the world
is generated by everybody.
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So it has to be also a massive reaction
what changes reality.
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[CROWD CHANTING] No ban, no wall!
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No ban, no wall!
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No ban, no wall!
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No ban, no wall!
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[CUEVAS] Nationalism nowadays is linked to
violence and the Other
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and the differences between communities
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rather than some kind of uniting element
that is more necessary nowadays.
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The wall wouldn't stop immigration.
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The wall only reinforces this original imaginary
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that's connecting the border with violence.
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In fact, it would empower human trafficking.
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It seems that the reactions are now
getting a little bit more extreme
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in terms of rethinking what's being human
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and what do we want from not only politics
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but from our daily lives.
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How do we want to confront our reality.