Description
Max Pearson presents a collection of this week’s Witness History episodes from the BBC World Service.
It’s 10 years since the world’s deadliest outbreak of Ebola started in West Africa. We hear from a survivor and discuss the legacy of the epidemic with the BBC's global health reporter Tulip Mazumdar.
Plus, the first World War Two battalion to be led by an African-American woman. Major Charity Adams’ son tells her story.
We hear about the group of men arrested in Egypt in 2001 at a gay nightclub who became known as the Cairo 52.
We also hear about the avalanche on Mount Everest which killed 16 sherpas carrying supplies 10 years ago.
Finally, the train service between India and Bangladesh that lay dormant for 43 years which rumbled back into life in 2008.
Contributors:
Yusuf Kabba – an Ebola survivor from Sierra Leone
Tulip Mazumdar - the BBC's Global Heath reporter.
Stanley Earley – son of Major Charity Adams
Omer (a pseudonym) - arrested and imprisoned at a gay club in Cairo
Lakpa Rita Sherpa - helped recover bodies after the avalanche on Mount Everest in 2014
Dr Azad Chowdhury – on the inaugural Friendship Express
(Photo: Liberian Health Minister Burnice Dahn washes her hands at a holding centre for Ebola patients in 2014. Credit: Getty Images)
We hear about the half-clay, half-grass exhibition match between Rafael Nadal and Roger Federer. Argentinean creative entrepreneur and tennis fan Pablo del Campo tells Uma Doraiswamy how he made the iconic court possible in May 2000. Fiona Skille, professor of Sports History at Glasgow...
Published 11/16/24
We hear about Polish war hero Irena Sendler who saved thousands of Jewish children during the World War Two.
Expert Kathryn Atwood explains why women’s stories of bravery from that time are not as prominent as men’s.
Plus, the invention of ‘Baby’ – one of the first programmable computers. It was...
Published 11/09/24