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Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)

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    I have always been super fascinated
    at human's ability to adapt.
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    We are so good at holding
    onto the things that make us,
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    you know, who we are.
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    But if there's anything that
    can throw a wrench in that idea,
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    it's probably 2020.
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    But you do have to admit,
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    it is pretty awesome
    seeing people globally,
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    just sort of figure out
    new ways to survive.
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    Let's just take a second, as an example,
    and we'll get Lebanon.
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    But I'm going to warn you,
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    If you're a vegetarian,
    this is probably going to be rough.
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    CRISIS DIET
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    (Matthew) Since October 2019,
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    Lebanon has been on the verge
    of economic collapse.
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    The revolution will happen!
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    (Matthew) For months,
    protesters filled Beirut streets,
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    demanding an end to the government's
    corruption they blame for inflation,
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    soaring unemployment,
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    and unaffordable food prices.
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    The pandemic only made
    the situation worse.
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    Now, this crisis upon a crisis
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    is even changing
    the way Lebanese people eat.
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    (Maher) We need to start
    slaughtering in a bit.
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    (Matthew) How long have you
    been doing this job?
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    (Maher) I've been a butcher
    since I was twelve years old.
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    (Matthew) For the Lebanese people,
    meat is very important in their diet.
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    - (Maher) Of course.
    - (Matthew) You eat a lot of meat.
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    (Maher) We're very used to meat.
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    Let's say we have meat almost every day.
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    The economy collapsed.
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    So the people can't afford
    to eat meat anymore.
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    I'm one of the people
    in the butchery business
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    who hasn't had sheep in a month.
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    (Matthew) Really?
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    (Maher) It used to be
    Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday,
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    I sell three to four lambs every week.
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    Then we started bringing two, then one.
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    Then I stopped bringing it altogether.
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    It's too expensive
    and doesn't sell enough.
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    (Matthew) Anxiety about money
    has never been higher,
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    meaning for many Lebanese
    meat is now only for special occasions.
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    Like today,
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    when Muslims are preparing
    to celebrate Eid al-Adha,
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    the Feast of the Sacrifice.
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    (Maher) Praised be to Allah, who allowed
    butchering. Allah is the greatest.
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    (Matthew) Traditionally,
    that sacrifice is a sheep,
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    butchered based on Islamic law
    to be Halal.
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    (Maher) Run away.
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    (Matthew) We're outside the butcher shop
    and these guys try to make a run for it
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    but, unluckily for them, they were caught.
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    (Maher) Put it up, please.
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    (Matthew) You slaughter it like that
    to make it [permissible,] right?
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    (Maher) It's all [permissible.]
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    You say, "In the name of Allah,"
    to express the good intentions
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    of the person making the sacrifice.
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    (Matthew) Is it still alive?
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    (Maher) Five minutes. OK.
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    (Matthew) I'm going to become vegetarian.
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    (Maher) Yes, the sight of blood...
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    But it's normal.
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    (Matthew) But it's a good thing
    that one eats meat
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    knowing where it comes from.
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    This is it.
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    This is the filet.
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    (Matthew) Families like the Rida,
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    who can still afford
    a lamb for the holiday,
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    are paying double
    what they did for sheep last year.
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    - Hello.
    - Hi, how are you?
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    - Now it's all here.
    - All of it is in the bags.
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    We will distribute all of these now.
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    (Tharwat) The family that butchered
    the sheep takes a ration.
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    Some for their relatives
    and the rest for the poor.
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    (Matthew) So you've changed
    the way you cook
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    because of the economic situation?
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    (Tharwat) Sure.
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    We started eating more vegetables,
    which is healthier.
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    - We saw this lamb this morning.
    - Yeah.
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    It was moving.
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    Yeah, it was alive.
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    Yummy. It's delicious.
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    How's your Eid this year?
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    There's no Eid this year.
    We haven't felt it.
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    - Why?
    - I mean,
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    - because of the situation.
    - There's no happiness or joy.
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    (Matthew) A 100% increase
    in the poverty rate
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    means life is changed for most in Beirut.
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    (Antoine) Hello.
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    (Matthew) Even for Antoine El Hajj,
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    a celebrity chef who's hosted
    his own daily cooking show
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    for the last 30 years.
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    (Antoine) We'll first be cooking
    cowpeas curry.
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    We're cooking this dish
    for the first time.
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    You're all used to chicken curry,
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    but you're not used to cowpeas curry.
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    (Matthew) How much have Lebanese kitchen
    changed since the coronavirus
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    and the economic crisis?
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    (Antoine) Since the beginning
    of the coronavirus, it's changed a lot.
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    The Lebanese people like meat,
    including myself.
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    I really liked meat.
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    But it's been more than four months now,
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    and I've eaten kibbeh
    (minced meat-stuffed dough) only once.
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    And it's impossible for me-- after hosting
    a daily TV show for 30 years,
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    which everyone watches.
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    These people now can't afford
    an ounce of meat,
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    then I come and work with a kilo of meat.
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    It just doesn't make sense.
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    On the contrary, I want to be helping out
    with the crisis we're facing here.
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    That's why we're using recipes
    that are good and appropriate,
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    and at the same time affordable.
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    Today, we made green pea curry,
    ma'amoul with walnut,
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    and ma'amoul with dates.
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    Today's show has ended.
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    We'll see you in future episodes,
    always on Télé Liban.
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    Goodbye.
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    (Matthew) Lebanon's dire situation
    got even worse in August
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    when a massive explosion in Beirut
    killed more than 190 people,
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    caused billions of dollars
    in property damage,
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    and destroyed the country's largest port.
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    Lebanon had depended on that port
    to bring in 80% of its food.
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    That reliance on imported food
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    had already driven some people
    to find solutions
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    beyond just switching their diets.
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    (Karim) I'm going like,
    I think more than 100 types of foods
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    such as trees, avocados, mangoes--
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    (Matthew) Karim El Hassan
    was a cafe owner in Beirut
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    before closing up his shop
    and returning to his hometown.
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    (Karim) My decision to come back was...
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    merely just for security.
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    I found it really futile to try to seek...
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    a flow of income,
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    so I can use that
    and come and spend it on food,
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    while I can actually just grow my own.
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    So here's my lab--
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    That's a sample of the things
    we process on stock.
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    Eggplant, cucumbers,
    and mekti pickles, some herbs.
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    I don't believe
    a lot of people are content.
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    They're not satisfied
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    and they want to continue
    affording meat and chicken
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    almost on a daily basis,
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    which is so unhealthy and it's abnormal.
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    The system is setting us up for failure,
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    and they're stretching it out
    as much as possible.
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    They're milking us to the last penny.
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    I really fear for the future.
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    I don't think we have
    a bright future coming.
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    You don't have a choice.
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    Either you sit and you fight,
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    or just migrate, leave.
Title:
Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
ASR Confidence:
0.77
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Eating With My Five Senses
Project:
COUNTER SPACE_(CLIPS)_The Issues - (Ep01-Ep08)
Duration:
07:01
Jenny_PM published English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny_PM edited English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny_PM published English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny_PM edited English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny_PM edited English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny Lam edited English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
Jenny Lam published English subtitles for Lebanon Crisis Diet (clip)
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