时间:2019-01-16 作者:英语课 分类:2007年VOA常速英语(十月)


英语课
By Nick Wadhams
Nairobi
03 October 2007


Nairobi is home to some of the world's biggest slums, and more than half of its 3 million people live in them. Many in the slums don't even have electricity, so it was quite an event recently when a white screen went up, the speakers were turned to full blast and dozens of children saw the first episode of Slum-TV. Nick Wadhams has the story from Nairobi.


On the giant screen, a crazed preacher heckles his worshippers, steals their money and loses his parish to a competitor, all within minutes. The crowd gathered in a dirt courtyard applauds and laughs in delight.


This is Slum-TV, a new project that gives a team of kids in Nairobi's slums the video camera to record everyday life and then play it back on the big screen. The first episode told of life in Mathare, one of the largest slums on the planet, and was played after dark in a neighboring slum, almost as big, called Korogocho.


As well as maniacal 1 preachers, the episode featured interviews with people who wouldn't normally get much of a voice: a man who makes donuts, a woman who feeds poor children, another man who makes his living pushing a cart down the street.


In Korogocho, few people have televisions or the electricity needed to turn them on. Earlier this summer, police cut power and water to try to crush criminal gangs in one of Nairobi's slums. The move ended up hurting regular people, particularly women and children, most of all.


Peter Ndolo, one of the organizers, says he hopes Slum-TV will open up worlds for the kids of Korogocho, some of whom hardly ever leave this maze 2 of dirt paths, tin-roofed tenements 3 and shops.


"We are in Korokocho slums and maybe somebody has lived here for the rest of his life," he said. He doesn't know about Mathare. We just screened about Mathare, about the informal schools, about the feeding programs, about the business in the slums. So at least they know there is this kind of business."


The United Nations estimates that about a sixth of the world's six billion people live in slums, and certainly in Nairobi's shantytowns, there is little organized entertainment.


Slum-TV is definitely a work in progress. For the first few minutes, the sound fails. But then it's pure magic. The crowd is silent, listening attentively 4, or laughing hard.


Irene Senna, 15,  pauses for a minute to talk about what she saw. She says she appreciated the lessons and the entertainment of the piece.


"It was great. I learned a lot from what I didn't know. I've seen what's been happening to the other side of the slum," she said. "And I've seen some people do things which are not necessary, like stealing from each other."


Slum-TV got initial funding from the Austrian Development Corporation and now most of the producers are members of MYSA, the Mathare Youth Sports Association. They are volunteers looking to gain a skill, like working a video camera, that they can then parlay into finding a well-paying job.


Among the organizers is Sam Hopkins, a Kenyan-born artist. He sits atop a van through the entire show, taking pictures of the kids in the darkness and shouting occasionally to the crew if the sound goes bad or the video needs tweaking.


As he gathers up his crew to leave, Hopkins says Slum-TV is more than entertainment. It is meant to teach lessons to children who sometimes can't go to school. It is meant to teach the production crews who work on it new skills. And it's meant to serve as a living record of the slums.


"We have a Web site where we archive all of the material so people can hear about whatever, how people fry chips in Mathare," said Hopkins. "Because in 10 years time, you know, the language will have changed, chips will have changed, and that's not being preserved in any document. The other side, the guys can go once a month on a screen, see themselves represented. Which is critical I think in terms of how you identify yourself within a society."


Well after the movies end, some children dance in the white light of the projector 5. But they do not linger once the lights are turned out. The slum is a dangerous place at night and has recently seen raids, arrests and killings 6 by police looking to round up members of a mafia-style group known as the Mungiki. Few people, especially children, want to stay very long.


With all that hardship, Ndolo says he's learned a valuable lesson about finding the best way to get kids in the slums to pay attention.


"I am so happy people saw it, people laughed, enjoyed it. They want more, you can see them shouting," added Ndolo. "They want the comedy back. At least now we know what we'll use as a video to pass the message through it. Like if they are so enjoying the comedies, we'll use the comedies to pass the message. So every screening, comedy. This is Peter Ndolo, keep it lock, VOA baby."




adj.发疯的
  • He was almost maniacal in his pursuit of sporting records.他近乎发疯般地追求着打破体育纪录。
  • She is hunched forward over the wheel with a maniacal expression.她弓身伏在方向盘前,表情像疯了一样。
n.迷宫,八阵图,混乱,迷惑
  • He found his way through the complex maze of corridors.他穿过了迷宮一样的走廊。
  • She was lost in the maze for several hours.一连几小时,她的头脑处于一片糊涂状态。
n.房屋,住户,租房子( tenement的名词复数 )
  • Here were crumbling tenements, squalid courtyards and stinking alleys. 随处可见破烂的住房、肮脏的庭院和臭气熏天的小胡同。 来自辞典例句
  • The tenements are in a poor section of the city. 共同住宅是在城中较贫苦的区域里。 来自辞典例句
adv.聚精会神地;周到地;谛;凝神
  • She listened attentively while I poured out my problems. 我倾吐心中的烦恼时,她一直在注意听。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • She listened attentively and set down every word he said. 她专心听着,把他说的话一字不漏地记下来。 来自《简明英汉词典》
n.投影机,放映机,幻灯机
  • There is a new projector in my office.我的办公室里有一架新的幻灯机。
  • How long will it take to set up the projector?把这个放映机安放好需要多长时间?
谋杀( killing的名词复数 ); 突然发大财,暴发
  • His statement was seen as an allusion to the recent drug-related killings. 他的声明被视为暗指最近与毒品有关的多起凶杀案。
  • The government issued a statement condemning the killings. 政府发表声明谴责这些凶杀事件。
学英语单词
0831
aberrant behavior
anti-biological warfare
antizymes
auto-lumbomassage
be barred from
bioscientists
biotin complex of yeast
bipolarmos
black rots
body surfing
bowl vent valve
butenafine
certificate on progress
class or representative action
combining characters
common lead method
cospace
delugeth
description of forest
Diclinixin
diffuse tissue
diphasic strain
Diplosporium
direct dialing-in
Dmitri Dmitrievich Shostakovich
don't rush me
epidemic encephalitis
ethnoculturally
exponential time base
fact-checkers
feudal rush
fiorinia linderae
Fuck it all!
Geluwe
golden image
Gorelovka
guayule rubber (fer-thenium argentum)
Hall angular displacement transducer
harlon
Hassidic
high magnification
high pressure jet
homograft reaction
hot air distributor
IAAG
It never rains but it pours
Ivdel'
left averted photography
look through the fingers at
louzeiro
lower tail coverts
market body
mcilvaine
metaperceptual
Meyer's organ
national labor relations act
nonextended address space
Novadel
nutritional agents
orthopraxy
Ottawa R.
overvolted
Pambula
pathogenic dryness
pernio bullosus
photographic mapping
pissane
potassium phosphate,tribasic
previvation
Priupskiy
pulverized fuel line
ralph bunches
range octagon
rare earth doped glasses
reduced inspection
relations
representation of plans
reserve factor
reset router
reticulated veins
retrospective
root bend test
S. G.
solid state power amplifier
spectral projector
staurolite kyanite subfacies
steel pipe pile
string together
STX
take sb in tow
telluric method
the lid
translate
turbine locomotive
tyre inflator
value voter
valve three way
VITC
wind egg
withered zone
wordmongers