Tales of our world's most unusual events, odd objects, and obscurities.
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Inuit Podcasts
Daily update on what's making headlines in Indigenous country across Canada and beyond.
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INUNA – ’Nuissani´ katersortarfik. INUNA podcastiuvoq kalaallisut oqaasilik, taanna kalaallinut Danmarkimi najugaqartunut tusarnaagassatigut katersuuffiuvoq. Kalaallit Danmarkimi inuuneranni assigiinngiiaassuseq, aamma kinguaariiaat akornanni podcastini oqaluttuarineqarlunilu saqqummiunneqartassaaq.INUNA-p tusarnaartartut peqatigalugit, maanna pisut, inuit ataasiakkaat inuunerisa oqaluttuassartaat, kalaallillu akornanni ataatsimut immikkullu misigisartagaat sammisassavai.‘Nuissani’ katersort ...
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Face to Face, hosted by Dennis Ward, is a one-on-one interview show putting the spotlight on First Nations, Inuit and Métis people that are making an impact in society.
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At Crow Reads, Rayanne Haines interviews intersectional writers, publishers, agents and editors from across Canada. Crow Reads is recorded on Treaty 6 territory the traditional home of the Metis, Inuit and First Nations people. Crow Reads focuses on providing a variety of perspectives and experiences across the literary landscape in Canada all with the eye to offering something new and interesting to our listeners as they think about developing literary careers.
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Stories from Indigenous public servants
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WXPN's live performance and interview program featuring music and conversation from a variety of important musicians
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RezXperts features a Canadian Indigenous - Aboriginal perspective in todays world, providing interviews, commentary, and discussion on current affairs, news, politics, culture, lifestyles, and more.
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Change makers from across Canada celebrate Indigenous voices and cultures as they share the stories of First Peoples and the land. To Join our community and learn about our media training opportunities and special online events: Subscribe: https://goodinfluencefilms.com/podsubscribe Support: www.goodinfluencefilms.com/podcasts
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ᓂᐱᕗᑦ, ᐃᓄᐃᑦ ᓄᓇᖃᑎᒌᑦ ᓇᓚᐅᑎᑯᑦ ᑐᓴᕐᓴᐅᓚᕐᓂᐊᑐᑦ CKUT 90.3FM ᑯᑦ ᒪᓐᑐᔨᐊᓚᒥ. ᖃᓪᓗᓇᑦ ᓄᓇᖓᓂ ᓯᕗᓪᓕᐸᑦᓯᐊᒥ ᑐᓴᕐᓴᐅᓚᕐᓂᐊᑐᖅ ᐃᓄᓐᓄᑦ ᐊᐅᓚᑕᐅᓗᓂ ᐊᒻᒪᓗ ᑲᑎᑎᑦᓯᔪᖅ ᐃᓄᓐᓂᑦ ᖃᓪᓗᓇᓂᒥᐅᓂᑦ. ᑐᓴᕐᓂᔭᕐᑐᑦ, ᑐᓴᕋᑦᓴᓂᑦ ᐅᖄᔪᑦ, ᐅᓂᑲᑐᐊᑐᑦ ᐊᒻᒪᓗ ᐊᐱᕐᓱᑕᐅᔪᓂ ᑐᓴᖃᑦᑕᓚᖓᒐᑦᓯ ᐅᓪᓗᒃ ᐱᒋᐊᓚᕐᑐᖅ ᐅᑦᑐᐱᕆ 6, 2015 CKUT 90.3FM ᑯᑦ ᒪᓐᑐᔨᐊᓪᒥ. ᐃᓚᐅᒍᒪᕖᑦ! ᐅᖃᐅᓯᑦᓴᖃᕐᐱᑦ, ᓇᓚᐅᑎᒃᑯᑦ ᐃᒻᒥᓂᒃ ᑐᓵᒍᒪᕖᑦ, ᓂᐱᕗᑦᑯᓐᓃᑦ ᐃᑲᔪᕐᑎᐅᒍᒪᕖᑦ ᑐᓴᕐᓴᐅᓂᒃᑯᑦ. ᐃᑲᔪᕐᑎᐅᒍᒪᒍᕕᑦ ᒪᐅᖓ ᐊᓪᓚᕕᖃᒍᓐᓇᑐᑎᑦ [email protected] ᐃᑲᔪᕐᑎᒌᑦ: ᓄᓇᓕᕐᔪᐊᑦ ᐱᕙᓪᓕᐊᓂᖓᓂᑦ ᕿᓂᕐᑏᑦ ᐃᓕᓐᓂᐊᕕᕐᔪᐊᖅ (Concordia University) The Cabot Square Project, CKUT Native Solidarity News ------ Ni ...
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Welcome to U of A Reads: Stories Behind the Stories — the podcast that takes you beyond the book jacket and into the creative heart of the University of Alberta’s finest storytellers. In each episode, we sit down with U of A authors — from celebrated alumni to inspiring faculty and emerging student voices — to explore the passion, process, and personal journeys behind their latest works. From fiction to memoir, poetry to research, discover the experiences, memories, and motivations that shap ...
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Welcome to Three60N, the only podcast where we explore the North today. We're not here to focus on the extreme weather or feats of survival (although those are awesome); we're here to meet and chat with the people leading the way in northern life.
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"Should Inuit and the FNMI cooperate with modern industrialized society to exploit the natural resources of their land such as oil and gas".Based on the book "The Right To Be Cold" By: Sheila Watt Cloutier ...
COLIN WILLIAMS
Welcome to the Colin Williams podcast, where amazing things happen. Cover art photo provided by Chris Marquardt on Unsplash: https://unsplash.com/@chrismarquardt
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Red Waves is a series of documentaries, interviews, and stories, including fresh cuts from CFUV's other Indigenous podcasts all produced by CFUV's Indigenous hosts, producers, and volunteers. From Indigenous art, artists, politics, activism, housing, to plants and land defence. Red Waves was introduced with support from the Community Radio Fund of Canada, the only organisation mandated to provide financial support to Campus and Community Radio Stations in Canada.
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Inuit Throat Singing. What is it? How is it done? How has it changed? What does it mean?
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With the Ullumi column, Isabelle Chapadeau shares her knowledge of northern art, nature, education and Indigenous cultures, along with issues of the day important to Inuit. Ulluqatsiarit, have a good day!
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From the top of North America in Iqaluit, Nunavut, Canada, we are the Smoke Break Podcast. Three modern day Inuit, Bernard Choquette, MisterLee Cloutier-Ellsworth & Simeonie Kisa-Knicklebein want to tell the world what it is like to live in the Arctic.
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A track-by-track podcast on the space rock band HUM. “Stars” isn’t their only song. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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The Anonymous Eskimo Podcast is an Indigenous podcast devoted to uplift Indigenous peoples, with a mission to send hope to those struggling with the negative stigma placed upon mental health issues, the disease of alcoholism, and drug addiction. To also bring awareness to the MMIWG2S & MMIP crisis. Through guests sharing their experiences, inspiration, strength, and hope. I want to break the stigma that is associated with indigenous people, mental health and recovery. Host: Ralph Sara
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The Howling Diaries: Everything you need to know about Northern Inuits and dogs in general
Fireborn Northern Inuits
Welcome to "The Howling Diaries," your go-to podcast for everything about Northern Inuit Dogs and dogs in general! Join us as we delve into the fascinating world of this unique breed, sharing essential care tips, breed insights, and the joys and challenges of dog ownership. Whether you're proudly owned by a Northern Inuit, would like to find out more about them or a dog enthusiast, this podcast is for you! So lets talk dog unplugged! In each episode, we will cover: Breed Overview: Discover t ...
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Award-winning podcast featuring interviews with the world’s greatest adventurers, immersive travel documentaries recorded on location, deep dives into cultures around the world, and inspiration for how to life to the fullest. Hailed as “inspiring storytelling” by the New York Times, and “Ear candy for listeners” by the Washington Post, past guests include Conrad Anker, Ed Stafford, Kristine Tompkins and many more legends of travel and adventure.
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A ten-minute weekly audio update in English of what's happening North of the Arctic Circle. No ads. If you enjoy the show, you can support us by buying a shirt here: https://rorshok.com/buy/ Learn more about the Rorshok Updates here: https://rorshok.com/ Thank you!
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Welcome to the Cryptid Catalog! Your place where creepy parents and strange kids can learn all about the things that go bump in the night together! Every other week Korina and Killian open the Cryptid Catalog to explore all that the world of the paranormal has to offer!
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A dive into the characters, stories, traditions, food, and everything else surrounding the Christmas season all over the world. Each episode ends with a passage from The Lost Years of Santa Claus book, recounting stories that fill gaps in the Santa Claus mythos and answer questions about the man himself and his real story.
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We’re committed to ensuring extreme medicine education can reach all medical, healthcare and supporting professionals working in austere environments. With regular updates, our team brings you the latest from across the broad spectrum of extreme medicine disciplines, including expedition, space, remote, pre-hospital and humanitarian medicine as well as a range of topics across performance and non-technical skills. Enhance your ability to tackle challenges with new skills you can take home or ...
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"Best Podcasts of 2022" - Financial Times On a January night in 1978, a white light burned through the sub-Arctic sky. It was Cosmos 954, a nuclear-powered Soviet espionage satellite that had malfunctioned and fallen to earth. As the satellite disintegrated, it scattered dangerously radioactive debris across the vast traditional lands of the Dene, Métis, and Inuit in the Northwest Territories of Canada. Operation Morning Light tells the story of the Cosmos 954 disaster, its impact on the lan ...
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Host Marco Werman and his team of producers bring you the world's most interesting stories that remind us just how small our planet really is. The World, the radio program, is heard each weekday on over 300 public stations across North America.
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Tar Sands Diplomat is a satirical thriller set at the Canadian diplomatic mission in Brussels. After a Russian prostitute dramatically murders the Canadian mission's star diplomat with an Inuit statue, Macgregor is plunged into a world of spooks, Big Oil, Russian oligarchs and eco-hacktivists that leads him back to a well-connected Canadian oil company and the Prime Minister's Office in Ottawa. Author Keith Halliday was formerly the twelfth most senior diplomat at the Canadian Mission to the ...
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Welcome to Spaced Out Radio—your nightly journey into the realms of the paranormal, UFOs, ghosts, cryptids, Sasquatch, and Dogman. Broadcasting live from the heart of the unexplained, our show dives deep into the mysterious and the supernatural, exploring the strange, the unknown, and the phenomena that defy conventional understanding. Each night, host Dave Scott leads you through encounters with extraterrestrial visitors, sightings of unidentified flying objects, chilling ghostly apparition ...
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37th & The World is the official podcast of the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs (GJIA), the flagship publication of Georgetown’s School of Foreign Service. In this podcast, we dive into key global trends and speak directly with the experts working on these critical issues. Our undergraduate and graduate student editors host conversations with scholars and practitioners on the subjects they find important and engaging. To read articles published by GJIA, please visit: gjia.georget ...
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Welcome to Friends Who Argue, a podcast for the litigation bar brought to you by The Advocates’ Society and hosted by our Young Advocates' and 10+ Standing Committees. Friends Who Argue features intimate conversations with advocates from across Canada, who will share stories from their journeys as advocates. As litigators, we live in an adversarial world but we all have one thing in common - we are officers of the court who are passionate about the profession of law and advocating for our cl ...
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We’re back and better than ever—and with a brand new name too! Welcome to Between the Headlines (formerly Eutopya Podcasts), a youth-led channel digging into the untold (and not so untold) stories from around the world.
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As Indigenous People, we embody remarkable resilience and unwavering determination, and we deeply understand our profound connection to the land, water, animals, and plants. Despite the disruptive forces of colonization and residential schools, we are reclaiming our identities. The desire to learn our language and songs, participate in ceremonies, and reconnect with the land is a testament to our strength. As an environmental organization, Keepers of the Water witnesses the far-reaching impa ...
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Welcome to A Radical Act of Hope. In this series, Inuk climate advocate Siila Watt-Cloutier brings us into her world. A world where melting ice isn’t just a symptom of climate change—it’s a disruption of memory, identity, and rhythms of life in the North. She takes us from her home in the Arctic to the frontlines of international climate justice, alongside those who have been speaking up—and holding steady—for decades. Siila Watt-Cloutier is one of the most important climate justice voices o ...
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We learn about many interesting subjects from Penny and her handsome co-host, Kevin the Goat.
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Travel, at its best, changes the way we see the world. Join us each week as we dig into stories from people who took a trip—and came home transformed. Travel Tales by Afar is your ticket to the world, no passport required.
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Helen Wilkinson and Caroline Somos host Love to Sew, a fun weekly podcast about making clothes, sewing community, and small business. They talk about their passion for sewing a handmade wardrobe and their daily lives as creative entrepreneurs. Listen to interviews with indie business owners and inspiring sewists who totally understand your obsession with sewing.
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TYMSYY is a multi-lingual podcast on global Indigenous experiences that aims to bring forward and center Indigenous researchers, professionals, creators, activists and their stories. We hope to bring personal and communal stories to encourage critical conversations on Indigenous issues, promote Indigenous knowledges, build relationships, and enhance collaborations, contributing to the development and practice of Indigenous internationalism. Hosted by Sardana Nikolaeva and Masha Kardashevskaya
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Podcast for History 1715 Visual Culture: Looking at the Past at the University of New Brunswick with Dr. Erin Morton.
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The best Historical Variety Show on the web! Get your monthly dose of historical knowledge injected directly into your brain. Join our discord: https://discord.gg/tYYcQV5YVB
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The Mythology & Fiction Explained podcast is a weekly show that aims to cover all sorts of Mythological tales and crazy fiction. Many of these episodes have come from the popular Youtube channel Mythology & Fiction Explained.
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Talks about Shamanism and Animism, by Nicholas Breeze Wood, editor of Sacred Hoop Magazine - the international magazine about shamanic spirituality.
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Welcome to Second Nature, a podcast about living with ecological grief. Each week, Dr. Ashlee Cunsolo takes us on a deeply personal journey about planetary loss, and what we love, what we have lost, and how we move forward. Through a series of engaging, thought-provoking, and moving conversations with incredible guests from around the world, Second Nature is an invitation to come together to share stories of loss, love, despair, and joy, as we learn how to live with – and embrace – ecologica ...
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Ben's Ukulele Road Trips podcast brings you conversations with locals of visited countries, fun facts, facts less fun but still interesting, and songs !
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Indigenous Greenlanders once wore bold face tattoos that carried deep spiritual and cultural significance. But during the centuries of Denmark's colonial rule, the Inuit tradition of getting face and hand tattoos disappeared. The World's Joshua Coe met an Inuk tattoo artist who is now reviving that Inuit heritage for community members living in Den…
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Dec. 16/25 - An Inuitive Look into 2026 with Holly Hall
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2:53:39Holly Hall is a Canadian intuitive who helps people find their way on a spiritual and etherical path. She's someone who's had the psychic ability since her teenage years. Honing her skills starting at age 21, and gaining relations with clients and people for accurate and accountable readings and knowledge. She comes in to talk about 2026, and what …
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Dec. 10, 2025—Century-old kayak among repatriated Inuit items newly unveiled to public
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8:26Our lead story: Inuit artifacts over a hundred years old—included a hand-crafted, sealskin kayak—are newly unveiled to the public at the Canadian Museum of History shortly after their repatriation from the Vatican.By APTN
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Journey to the Arctic to learn how Inuit families embrace Christmas, or Quviasukvik, with a mix of ancient customs and modern festivities. From winter games to community feasts, from Inuit lore to seasonal adaptations, this episode highlights the warmth, creativity, and enduring cultural identity of Inuit Christmas traditions. Also we highlight the…
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An artistic force in Lebanon, Ziad Rahbani was a composer and musician first and foremost. But he was also a playwright, whose critiques and satires earned him a reputation as the "voice of the voiceless." Rahbani was 69 when he died last July. This story originally aired on July 28, 2025.By Marco Werman
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Charles Kojo Fosu, better known as Daddy Lumba, recorded more than 30 albums in his 60 years of life. His work expanded the repertoire of Highlife, a sound that is considered Ghana's national music. He died in Accra in July. This story originally aired on July 28, 2025.By Marco Werman
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Pope Francis died in April, on Easter Monday, after addressing Catholics from St. Peter's Basilica on Sunday. He was the Church's first pontiff from Latin America, and The World's Matthew Bell reported on the legacy he left around the world. This story originally aired on April 21, 2025.By Matthew Bell
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The 49th Aga Khan, Karim Al-Husseini, died in February in Portugal. Host Marco Werman spoke with Daryoush Mohammad Pour, an associate professor at the Institute for Ismaili Studies in the UK, about the Aga Khan's life and legacy. This story originally aired on Feb. 5, 2025.By Omar Duwaji
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A leading voice in the world of contemporary art, Koyo Kouoh's death in May shocked the art world. The Cameroon-born curator was set to lead the 2026 Venice Biennale, one of the premier art exhibitions anywhere. Alex Greenberger, a senior editor of ArtNews, spoke about her legacy. This story originally aired on May 12, 2025.…
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Sir Geoff Palmer, grain scientist and human rights advocate
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4:28Following the death of Sir Geoff Palmer in June at age 85, tributes poured in from the worlds of brewing, academia and human rights advocacy. Born in Jamaica, Palmer arrived in the UK as a child of the Windrush generation. Palmer was a botanist who brought innovations to grain science and brewing, and used his status to speak out about racial injus…
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Brazilian documentary photographer Sebastião Salgado was best known for his striking black-and-white photos that captured the dignity of his subjects and the eternal beauty of nature. Salgado died in May at age 81. Fred Ritchin, co-author of "Sebastião Salgado: An Uncertain Grace," spoke with Host Marco Werman about the photographer’s life and lega…
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The widely celebrated Argentine American film score composer Lalo Schifrin died in June at the age of 93. Schifrin was best known for penning the "Mission: Impossible" theme music, but his career spanned seven decades and many styles of music. This story originally aired on June 27, 2025.By Jenna Gadbois
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A plane crash in Honduras in March claimed the life of Aurelio Martinez, a popular Honduran musician and politician. Host Marco Werman memorializes Martinez as a singer and songwriter who was one of the best-known champions of Garifuna music. This story originally aired on March 20, 2025.By Marco Werman
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From 2010-2015, José Mujica presided over a period of progressive governance in Uruguay that matched his want-for-nothing lifestyle. He forsook the presidential palace and the chauffeured limousine, saying he would live as the people did. Pablo Brum, the author of "The Robin Hood Guerrillas," explains Mujica's life to Host Marco Werman. This story …
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Yaroslav Simkiv has played the trumpet for over 50 years. But these days, Simkiv has taken on a serious role — bidding a musical farewell to Ukraine's fallen soldiers. From Lviv, Emily Johnson reports. This story originally aired on Feb. 10, 2025.By Emily Johnson
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Raila Odinga, Kenyan power broker and democracy advocate
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3:52Revered Kenyan opposition leader Raila Odinga died in October at the age of 80. He played a pivotal role in institutionalizing multiparty democracy and shaping Kenya’s constitution. But he was also known as a ruthless politician who formed alliances with rivals. Kenyan journalist Ramah Nyang explores Odinga’s legacy in an interview with The World’s…
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He was a top KGB officer who was disillusioned with the Soviet Union. From there, Oleg Gordievsky was recruited by MI6 and became one of the West's most important double agents. Writer Ben Macintyre tells Host Marco Werman what made Gordievsky exceptional. This story originally aired on March 24, 2025.…
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Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o, Kenyan author and dissident
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3:31For nearly six decades, Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o’s writings chronicled the story of Kenya, from colonial rule to troubled democracy. The giant of African literature died in May at age 87. He spent time in jail and exile, writing the first modern novel in the Gikuyu language on prison toilet paper. The World’s Host Carolyn Beeler learns more from Kenyan au…
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Hungarian gymnast Ágnes Keleti made history in the 1950s when she earned a total of 10 Olympic medals, including five golds. But her athletic accomplishment was only part of what made her interesting. When she died in January at the age of 103, The World's Bianca Hillier reported on Keleti's life, both in and out of competition. This story original…
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Maaliaaraq Engell grew up in Greenland and is a member of its Indigenous Inuit community. But she never learned about Greenland's Indigenous history or reasons for Danish control of the territory in Greenlandic schools. Now, as a student at the University of Copenhagen, she explains what she missed out on. This story originally aired on Jan. 17, 20…
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Greenland's former Prime Minister Mute B. Egede emphatically stated this year, “We do not want to be Danish, we do not want to be American. We want to be Greenlandic.” The World's Carolyn Beeler reports from Greenland's capital Nuuk about the independence, and the divided opinions of Greenlandic people. This story originally aired on Sept. 11, 2025…
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Denmark announced plans last winter to re-assess a parental competency test that had earned heavy criticism. The test is based on Danish cultural norms, and when it was given to Greenlandic Inuit parents the result was removing a disproportionate number of kids from their families. Inuit rights campaigner Tina Naamansen told Host Marco Werman last …
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Abandoned village in Greenland sees a revival
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7:19The community of Qoornoq, on a small island off the coast of Greenland, was shuttered decades ago as part of the Danish government's efforts to consolidate Greenland's population. But in recent decades, it's become a summer getaway for former residents. The World's Carolyn Beeler takes us on a visit to Qoornoq. This story originally aired on Oct. 2…
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Greenland's capital of Nuuk opened a new international airport a year ago as part of a larger effort to increase tourism. But with more tourists, there come more headaches. The World's Carolyn Beeler brings us this story from Nuuk. This story originally aired on Aug. 28, 2025.By Carolyn Beeler
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US accepted Greenland's status over a century ago
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2:47President Trump was insistent last winter that US would take over Greenland, one way or another. But Denmark has controlled the island territory for more than a century — an arrangement the US agreed to in a treaty in 1916. Danish journalist Steen Jørgenseen explains that history to The World's Host Marco Werman. This story originally aired on Marc…
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Denmark apologizes for coercive IUD program in Greenland
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7:06Denmark issued a formal apology this fall for forcing Indigenous women and girls from Greenland into using contraceptive devices. Beginning in the 1960s, Danish doctors inserted IUDs into thousands of Inuit women and school-age girls, often without their or their parents' knowledge or consent. Host Carolyn Beeler talks with historian and researcher…
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The Arctic Circle Race in Greenland has been called the toughest race in the world. It’s a three-day, cross-country skiing competition through the mountains above Sisimiut. Reporter Emily Schwing skied the 62-mile race course herself, and has this story. This story originally aired on April 23, 2025.…
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