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She fled Saudi Arabia after family threats but can US immigration laws protect her?
There is a new kind of asylum seeker fighting for refugee status in the United States - women fleeing their home countries because of violence from their own families. We meet a woman who felt her brothers’ beatings, only to find her case stuck in the American legal system. Then, we hear from a German journalist who left her home - reflecting on the way her country is accepting Syrians who left their homes.
We visit a Vietnamese engineer who was forced to start from scratch in the United States. Now he is reconnecting with his homeland through one of America’s favorite seafoods - shrimp. Also, the story of a poem that bears the name of a female Chinese poet, even though it was written by a white American man. Plus, an American baseball player explains how he helped make Haruki Murakami one of the most famous Japanese writers in history.
Photo: Many women like ‘Nina’, fled from Saudi Arabia after facing threats from her family. Credit: Alison Yin)
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Clips
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How a German Emigrant Feels About Syrian Immigrants
Duration: 04:32
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The Former Refugee Who Became an Engineer - and Shrimper
Duration: 03:50
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The US Baseball Player Who Inspired a Japanese Novelist
Duration: 04:28
Broadcasts
- Sat 19 Sep 2015 04:32GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service
- Sat 19 Sep 2015 13:32GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service
- Sat 19 Sep 2015 19:32GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service except East and Southern Africa & West and Central Africa
- Sat 19 Sep 2015 22:32GMT³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ World Service East and Southern Africa
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Boston Calling
How the world looks through American eyes, and the myriad and unexpected ways that the world influences the United States.