In a classroom in Bolivia's second city, El Alto, a group of predominantly indigenous Aymara women are learning self-defense. In a country where government data shows that eight in 10 women experience violence at least once in their lives, the "Warmi Power" project has a keen fanbase. Seeking to "merge psychology with self-defense" - as director Laura Roca puts it - the program has trained 35,000 women across Bolivia since 2015.
Category
🗞
NewsTranscript
00:00 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:02 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:05 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:09 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:12 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:18 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:31 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
00:34 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:01 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:04 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:21 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:26 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:29 to make sure that women are safe, both physically, psychologically, and emotionally.
01:38 And working on prevention of violence has been our priority since that moment.
01:43 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:47 [BIRDS CHIRPING]
01:50 [DOG BARKING]
01:55 [SPEAKING SPANISH]
01:58 [BLANK_AUDIO]