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A
For
coming,
we
still
have
folks
coming
in.
We
really
appreciate
your
participation
on
our
speaker
series.
The
speaker
series
was
initiated
by
our
chief
Deborah
lamb
to
allow
different
folks
to
understand
some
of
the
things
that
are
somehow
some
things
actually
interact
within
inp
and
also
how
technology
is
being
used
for
just
day-to-day
things,
and
we
have
the
opportunity
today
to
hear
about
that,
because
our
title
is
called
fearless
Inc.
Fearless
Inc
is
the
subject
for
both
Sylvia
Duarte
and
TuneIn.
A
Das
TuneIn
das
is
a
writer
from
Bangladesh
and,
as
you
know,
it's
a
very
volatile
country
and
because
of
his
social
positions,
he
has
been
persecuted.
He
recently
had
to
leave
his
country
in
april
of
this
year
and
now
he's
here
with
seeking
asylum
with
Eichorn
USA,
which
is
a
organization
which
provides
asylum
to
writers
and
locally.
We
have
him
here
with
city
of
asylum,
because
city
of
a
solemn
is
the
local
pittsburgh
division
of
Eichorn
Sylvia
duarte
is
the
deputy
director
of
city
of
asylum,
and
she
also
is
the
editor
for
Sam
Sonia
way.
A
Sam
Sonia
way
gives
voice
to
persecuted
writers
who
are
here
and
also
writers
who
are
in
other
countries
who
cannot
have
their
voices
heard.
But
Sam
Sonia
way
magazine
allows
their
voices
to
be
heard
across
the
country
and
gives
them
a
connection
from
country
to
country
and
allows
all
of
those
people
to
share
in
their
thoughts
and
ways
that
they're
using
to
overcome
in
justices
in
their
country.
I'd
like
to
introduce
Sylvia.
B
Thank
you
so
much
when
it
is
a
pleasure
to
be
here.
We
really
hope
you
can
know
more
about
the
organization
and
get
involved
impossible
if
you
find
a
way
after
this,
so
thank
you
so
much
for
having
us
well
I
will
talk
first
about
a
little
bit
about
city
of
asylum
them.
Then
I
will
talk
about
some
sony
away
and
then
the
three
of
us
to
hint
Nandini.
That
is
the
interpreter
and
myself
we
are
going
to
sit
here.
B
So
city
of
asylum,
like
wednesday,
is
an
organization
that
provides
sanctuary
to
particular
writers,
so
they
can
continue
to
write
under
voices
are
not
silent.
We
want
it
now.
We
already
had
six
writers
from
different
countries.
We
started
in
2004
and
the
whole
depth.
Sorry,
the
writers
have
two
years
program:
they
have
an
asst
type
and
they
have
the
house.
They
have
medical
and
legal
assistance.
So
that's
the
main
mission
of
city
of
asylum,
and
we
do
that.
B
All
of
that
we
do
it
in
some
Sonia
way
street,
that
is
in
the
north
side
of
Pittsburgh,
but
we
also
because
the
organization
has
grown
organically
in
a
different
way.
So
we
also
provide
programming
for
the
community
until
now
represented
300
musicians
and
writers.
Not
all
of
them
are
persecuted
and
they
come
just
to
read
to
play
in
peace,
for
some
of
them
stay
longer
in
residences,
and
they
have
come
from
60
different
countries.
All
of
our
events
are
free,
and
now
we
have
the
program
just
to
give
you
an
idea.
B
In
2013
we
had
13
events
this
year
from
January
tuna
to
September.
We
are
going
to
have
55
events
from
September
2016
to
September
2017.
We
are
going
to
have
125
events,
so
that's
a
lot
and
one
of
the
reasons
we
are
increasing.
That
much
is
because
we
are
moving
to
our
new
cultural
center
that
is
going
to
be
located
in
North
Avenue,
where
the
former
masonic
temple
was.
So.
Are
you
familiar
with
the
garden
theatre?
Yeah?
B
Well,
that's
does
the
building
everybody
recognized
so
does
the
sizer
is
like
a
beautiful
building
and
that's
what
we
are
gonna
be
is
in
the
basement.
We
are
going
to
have
the
offices
of
city
of
asylum.
In
the
first
floor,
you
can
imagine
it
like
in
three
squares,
so
in
the
left
we
are
going
to
have,
a
restaurant
is
Casa.
Lula
is
coming
from
New
York
City,
so
they
are
opening
a
branch
here.
A
we
are
really
excited
about
that.
B
Then
we
are
going
to
have
a
space
for
performances
in
the
middle
I
need
the
right.
We
are
going
to
have
a
bookstore
that
is
going
to
be
specialized
in
translation,
so
we
are
really
excited
about
it
and
a
good
thing
about
the
center
is
that
if
we
have
big
events,
we
can
like
move
everything,
including
the
shelves
they
have
wrapped
and
we
put
them
in
the
corner.
So
all
the
space
is
for
performer
performances
and
of
course,
if
you
want
to
have
a
glass
of
wine
or
cheese,
you
can
do
that.
B
Oh,
that
city
of
asylum,
that's
what
we
have
city
of
asylum
Esther
to
the
magazine
in
2009,
and
it's
Sam,
Sonia
y
dot
org
to
consider
the
others.
These
are
the
houses
that
are
located
in
some
sony
away.
This
is
in
ansonia
way
street.
This
is
where
the
writers
live,
and
that's
why
the
magazine
has
that
name,
because
we
also
provide
sanctuary
to
persecuted
writers,
but
in
a
virtual
way
online.
Is
that
understandable,
I
guess
at
this
point,
because
I
have
like
a
really
English
accent?
You
are
you
are
thinking.
Where
is
she
from?
B
I
am
from
Guatemala
and
my
background
is
as
a
journalist.
So
that's
why
I
am
I
started
to
work
in
the
magazine
many
years
ago,
so
the
first
article
we
did
was
in
2009,
and
so
it
was
everywhere
in
in
media.
That
bloggers
were
persecuted
in
Cuba,
and
maybe
you
have
heard
about
the
money
Sanchez
that
is
really
famous,
but
also
it
was
a
name
that
before
was
not
mentioned.
It
was
Orlando
part
Orlando,
whispered,
oh,
and
that,
like
really
like,
captured
my
attention.
B
I
was
like
who
is
this
guy
and
because
both
of
them
were
participating
in
a
peaceful
protest
and
they
were
kidnapped,
they
were
beaten,
and
so
the
news
was
everywhere,
but
I
wanted
to
interview.
Orlando
I
can't
tell
you
how
difficult
was
to
connect
with
him.
I
had
to
contact
some
friends
in
Spain,
then
some
friends
in
Miami
at
the
end
we
could
be
contact,
but
the
story
of
Orlando
you
are
going
to
see
it
through.
The
presentation
is
that
this
was
just
the
beginning.
B
Then
he
was
part
of
different
projects
in
the
magazine
that
you
are
gonna
see.
So
this
was
2009.
Until
now
we
already
published
more
than
one
thousand
articles
and
we
have
excerpt
in
fiction,
poetry,
nonfiction.
We
also
have
interviews
cartoons,
videos,
music,
so
it's
at
the
beginning.
We
were
publishing
just
five
monthly
issues,
but
you
know
that
online
things
don't
move
that
way.
B
So
what
we
do
is
really
we
interview
the
writers
sometimes
for
to
wait,
sometimes
for
a
month
or
longer,
so
we
have
really
complete
interviews,
and
that
has
been
great
because
they
are
like
a
source
material
for
big
publications,
so
like
The,
Guardian,
The,
Huffington
Post
of
PBS
have
picked
those
stories,
those
interviews
and
they
do
their
own
story
based
on
that
now
journalists,
they
don't
research
that
much
so
does
really
comfortable
for
them.
I
mean
it's
really
important
for
the
writers,
because
otherwise
they
are
not
going
to
be
known.
B
We
also
have
a
lot
of
multimedia
different
formats
of
multimedia,
we
publish
I,
would
say
like
two
per
month.
Right
writer's
block
is
the
name
of
the
series
and
there
are
videos
with
the
writers
that
come
to
city
of
asylum,
and
we
talked
with
them
basically
about
craft
with
the
writers
that
come
to
visit
city
of
asylum.
So
until
now
we
have
100
more
or
less
writer's
block,
and
it's
really
cool
because
sometimes
will
repeat
the
questions.
So
now
we
are
in
them.
B
B
Of
course
we
have
infographics.
We
have
a
slide
shows
that
happened
really
well
received
by
the
public.
Then
we
started
to
use
google
hangout.
I
know
I
am
sure
you
are
familiar
with
and
we
call
it
X
I'll
hang
out,
you
know
when
these
riders
leave
their
country,
they
blows
a
lot
of
things,
I
guess,
starting
with
the
family,
but
between
these
things
they
lose
the
opportunity
of
being
with
their
partners
with
their
peers
to
other
riders
from
their
country.
B
B
So
what
we
did
in
exile
hang
out
but
to
put
together
writers
from
the
same
country
in
a
conversation,
so
they
can
talk
about
those
things,
but
we
have
to
consider
that
these
riders
are
really
in
different
countries,
so
one
can
be
in
Sweden,
the
other
one,
the
other
one
in
the
United
States,
but
the
other
one
in
Spain
and
the
other
one
in
Mexico,
but
they
coincide
in
this
space.
We
have
done
it
with
turkey,
with
Cuba,
with
Venezuela
twice
and
with
it.
B
On
was
that
under
understandable
we
also
have
a
section
with
columns,
so
you
can
see
here
some
of
the
colonies
we
have
had.
This
has
been
really
important.
Sometimes
a
the
main
media.
Don't
have
the
news
we
have
because
the
writers
are
in
their
country,
many
of
them
so
I
like.
If
you
have
time,
I
will
really
invite
you
to
go
and
see
them
and
with
them.
B
Something
that
have
happened
is,
of
course,
some
sonia
way
connected
writers
with
new
audiences,
and
this
is
really
important
for
them,
because
he's
giving
them
a
space
aid
to
create
awareness
it
to
call
attempt
to
bring
attention
of
the
of
the
pony
oils
or
of
the
public
opinion,
but
also
something
that
we
didn't
think
before.
What
has
happened
is
that
some
sony
away
has
connected
the
writers
with
their
own
networks.
B
B
He
came
to
Pittsburgh,
he
spent
with
all
six
months
and
we,
but
he
select
16
different
writers
that
never
were
published
in
English
before
so
we
publish
them
in
the
magazine
in
English
in
Spanish,
then
we
printed
as
an
anthology,
and
so
you
can
look
at
in
amazon
and
eat
there,
and
we
are
really
proud
of.
That
is
the
first
book
of
city
of
asylum.
B
So
I
have
been
mentioning
orlando
espero
in
different
times
and
is
because
I
will
say
the
key
is
one
of
the
writers
that
cap
juice
all
the
opportunities
that
city
of
asylum
and
some
sonya.
Why
offer
so?
He
has
been
interviewing
interviewed.
He
has
published
an
excerpt.
She
has
been
a
columnist,
a
resident,
the
editor
of
the
ontology
and
also
a
participant
of
the
google
hangout
hello.
C
My
name
is
orlando
ricardo,
LA,
so
I
make
fiction,
writer,
blogger
and
independent
a
journalist
in
a
country
where
journalists
is
under
attack
by
the
form.
I
have
been
collaborated
with
some
sony
avoid
magazines
since
a
several
years
ago,
as
a
columnist
and
also
was
able
to
participate
in
the
very
exciting
experience
of
preparing
an
anthology
of
q1
fiction.
C
New
trends,
if
you
pooped
on
what's
called
a
generation
year,
sir,
and
compile
the
work
of
x,
16
young
pigeon,
draggers,
mainly
from
Havana
to
the
opportunity
of
having
a
platform
like
Samson
magazine,
is
very
important
for
for
Friday's
mini
conjures,
especially
where
freedom
species
compromise
that
can
cure,
but
in
many
other
countries
are
many.
Many
writers
have
had
the
opportunity
to
get
to
know
each
other
from
countries
that
are
so
remote
you're
nothing.
They
are
just
one
click
from
distant
for
one
another:
Ethiopia
Vietnam,
War,
much
Cuba,
United,
States,
Venezuela,
even
China.
C
C
Generation
Year
Zero,
compiled
by
some
sony
away
magazine
when
I
was
creating
with
a
product
in
pittsburgh,
may
have
been
published
in
English
or
in
any
other
language,
before
the
possibility
of
being
included
in
this
and
Tory.
So
it
was
like
a
gate
not
for
access
to
another
audiences
or
letting
the
world
know
which
are
the
new
trends.
C
B
After
we
publish
the
interview
today,
ontology
with
Orlando,
we
of
course
wanted
to
publish
the
books
of
the
writers
of
city
of
asylum,
the
books
that
put
them
in
trouble
in
their
country.
So
we
publish
the
books
of
cadmar
from
Burma
Jacob
kadali
from
Iran
Israel
centeno
from
Venezuela
and
one
yarn
from
China.
We
didn't
publish
or
SEO
Castellanos
at
that
time
because
he
was
already
published
by
new
direction.
B
But
that
means
that
all
the
writers
that
we
had
before
to
him
happy
in
published
and,
of
course
he
is
going
to
be
published
in
the
future,
and
but
so
we
publish
them
in
amazon
and
it
was
great
and
it's
a
really
important
tool.
If
they
go
to
universities,
they
have
something
to
share
with
the
students
the
students
can
read
and
it's
good
for
presentations
is
great,
but
city
of
asylum.
We
don't
have
a
distribution
method.
We
are
not
that
so.
B
I
was
like
really
personal
for
me
was
something
that
I
wanted
to
do
so
I
was
contacting
different
publishing
houses
and,
at
the
end,
for
new
media
that
is
based
in
LA.
They
say
we
are
going
to
do
it.
So
the
jack
of
all
sorry,
the
book
of
Jack,
of
the
dolly
from
Iran
was
already
published.
Rituals
of
restlessness
and
in
December
the
conspiracy
from
Israel
centeno
from
Venezuela
is
gonna,
be
published.
E
I'm
David
shook
the
founding
editor
of
phony
media,
a
non-profit
media
company
dedicated
to
publishing
new
voices
in
translation,
very
exciting
about
our
recent
partnership
with
sevilla
asylum
Pittsburgh
and
our
new
imprint
featuring
titles
written
by
their
writers
in
residence
past
and
present,
the
first
of
which
I
have
here
now
rituals
of
restlessness.
By
a
gubbio
dolly
we
have
an
emphasis
on
lesser
translated
languages
like
weger
and
Lingala
about
to
publish
our
first
novel
from
the
esperanto,
and
we've
published
a
fair
number
of
exiled
and
persecuted
writers
as
well.
E
So
we're
very
excited
about
this
new
partnership
with
city
of
asylum,
publishers,
group
West.
Our
distributor
is
the
largest
book
sales
and
distribution
company
in
the
United
States.
It
represents
over
100
independent
client
publishers,
including
major
independent
houses
like
grove,
atlantic
and
faber
and
faber,
in
addition
to
their
full
service
distribution.
They
also
help
us
with
our
digital
books,
both
in
terms
of
production
and
distributing
them
online.
B
So,
besides
that,
we
are
also
the
hub
for
the
international
city
of
refugees,
network
icon
that,
when
mentioned
before,
they
are
based
on
Norway
and
they
have
50
different
houses
in
Europe
and
two
of
the
city
of
asylum
in
the
United
States
belong
to
that
Network.
We
are
the
ones
the
headquarters
of
them
in
the
United
States,
but
all
the
riders
of
icon
are
invited
to
come
with
them
Sony
away,
and
we
went
to
Paris
to
do
it
officially
to
announce
the
partnership.
So,
but
it's
really
interesting
for
me,
it's
like!
B
Sometimes
we
don't
know
that
in
this
city
really
are
happening,
a
lot
of
things
that
are
completely
internationally.
So
well
this
just
to
finish.
These
are
some
of
the
language
we
have
been
translated,
and
this
is
where
we
are
popped,
focusing
our
efforts
of
fundraising
to
bring
more
translation,
much
more
translator,
so
we
can
publish
more
and
more.
This
is
a
little
bit.
What
Sam,
Sonia
way
is
and
I
don't
know.
I
would
prefer
that
we
start
with
to
him,
and
we
have
questions
and
the
at
the
end.
B
If
that's
ok
for
you,
so
this
is
to
hit
us
and
we
instead
of
asylum,
are
really
lucky
to
have
him
here.
If
talking
does
returns
to
Bangladesh,
he
will
be
killed
since
2013.
He
has
been
the
target
of
fundamentalist
groups
who
have
been
murdered,
free
thinking,
bloggers
and
editors,
often
in
public
and
in
broad
daylight.
B
Tokine
is
a
particular
writer,
but
he
also
his
a
poet
who
has
authored
7-port
recollections,
the
sun
and
the
brother
of
women
who
have
faced
gender-based
discrimination,
he's
a
lover
of
his
nation's
literary
culture.
He
comes
from
Bora
hell,
a
city
in
south
central
Bangladesh
that
has
produced
many
other
free
thinkers
like
him.
In
several
ways
his
life,
personal
and
professional,
has
coincided
with
the
rise
of
fundamentalist
in
Bangladesh.
In
this
interview
we
are
going
to
talk
about.
With
this
conversation.
B
D
I've
been
interviewed
by
quite
a
few
people,
and
very
often
I've
been
asked
about
bangladesh,
and
I
somehow
I
felt
that
everybody
has
been
misunderstanding.
My
beautiful
country
I
would
like
to
say
that
in
the
beginning
that
our
the
situation
in
my
country
is
not
similar
to
what
you
see
in
Iraq,
Syria
or
Afghanistan,
we
still
do
not
have
any
civil
war
in
Bangladesh.
D
I
come
from
a
very
beautiful
country
called
Bangladesh
from
Southeast
Asia.
It
is
a
plane
land
in
the
Delta
between
the
Ganges
River
and
the
Brahmaputra
River,
and
it
is
surrounded
and
trespass
by
rivers.
We
have
six
seasons,
we
have
greens
all
around.
There
are
about
68,000
villages
in
Bangladesh,
the
population
is
160
million
and
there
is
ninety-four
percent
Muslims.
The
remaining
six
percent
includes
Hindus
Christians
and
Buddhists.
Paddy
or
rice
is
our
staple
food,
and
we
have
India
Myanmar
and
the
Bay
of
Bengal
on
three
diff
on
the
three
sides
and
we
love
fish.
D
B
You
to
him
I
think
that
that's
really
enlightened
for
us,
but
also
I,
would
like
to
discuss
with
your.
You
can
tell
us
more
about
the
reasons
why
you
are
here.
Why
now
you
are
a
writer,
you
oxide.
We
know
that
not
everything
is
one
color,
it
has
different
sites,
but
we
want
you
to
explain
about
this
side
that
brought
you
here.
Malala.
D
I
have
come
here
to
express
freedom
of
speech.
I
had
started
writing
around
2000
and
I
had
started,
editing
and
writing
for
different
papers
and
magazines
around
2000
that
time.
The
jamaat
islam
sponsored
like
coalition
government,
along
with
the
BNP,
had
come
into
power,
but
they
supported
politic
politics
that
is
laden
with
religious
background
or
religious
favors,
and
so
at
that
time
they.
D
Were
trying
to
control
the
writing
and
because
of
their
views,
the
political
views
v
writers
we
wanted
to
protest.
We
took
up
to
writing
against
against
the
state-sponsored
politics
that
the
state
politics,
that
sponsors
different
religious
groups
and
that
looks
down
upon
minorities
now
in
2013
and
actually
at
that
time,
I
was
once
officially
unofficially
arrested
and
I
was
a
help
for
24
hours
and
I
was
also
tortured
by
the
police.
I
still
carry
the
marks
of
those
injuries
that
was
given
to
me
from
the
by
the
police.
D
Torture
and
I
have
also
received
lot
of
threats
on
phone
and
different
other
ways
like
I
have
received
threats
from
people
who
were
against.
My
writing
are
my
expressing
my
opinions
in
2013,
I
joined
the
char
Bagh
movement
of
the
bar
in
the
boreal
chapter
and
the
char
Bagh
movement
was
formed
in
2013
in
bangladesh
as
a
protest
against
the
violence,
the
rape
of
the
millions
of
the
thousands
of
women
in
the
nineteen,
seventy
one
war
of
the
freedom
movement
of
bangladesh
and
there
and
the
criminals
were
still
at
large.
D
So
I
joined
this
movement
in
the
body
shop
chapter
and
I
became
an
active
member
there
at
that
time.
Secret.
A
many
of
the
writers
came
into
the
hit
list
and
in
2015
in
august,
list
was
published
with
my
picture
and
my
name
in
it
along
with
other
writers,
and
that
is
when
I
situations
real
brave
and
it
became
difficult
for
me
to
be
out
in
the
open
and
I
decided.
It
is
not
safe
anymore,
an
event
underground.
From
there
I
came
to
city
of
asylum,
I
contacted
Catholic
contact
critically,
see.
B
Thank
you
to
him
and
I
have
to
say
that
talking
came
April,
the
second
right
and
April's,
the
third,
the
fourth,
the
fifth
and
the
six.
Someone
was
killings
in
Bangladesh
and
that
hasn't
stopped.
Every
time
that
we
met
to
him
say:
Sylvia
I
have
more
bad
news.
Sometimes
I
saw
them
in
the
news.
Sometimes
they
are
not
reported
in
the
news
and
he
come
with
the
news,
and
so
we
feel
really
privileged
to
have
to
him
here
with
us
and
I
would
like
you
to
him
to
explain
to
explain
us
more
about
the
blogosphere.
D
Is
a
fairly
new
event
going
on
at
had
that
started,
a
new
experience
in
bangladesh
in
2006
is
was
when?
Is
it
the
first
blocking
started
before
that
the
media,
the
print
media
and
the
television
and
the
TV
net,
the
the
film
networks?
They
were
all
controlled
by
the
rich
and
influential
people,
and
very
often
we
have
seen
that
the
rich
and
powerful
they
often
used
this
media
to
manipulate
and
influence
the
popular
views,
but
still
it.
D
The
things
like
lot
of
opinions
were
still
not
reaching
everyone,
and
by
2006,
when
blogging
became
a
very
powerful
media
and
lot
of
writers
started
expressing
their
open
liberal
views
through
this
media
people
started
writing
about
against
the
war
criminals
of
1971
about
the
discrimination
of
the
minorities,
about
the
tortures
on
minorities
they
righted.
They
started
writing
about
women's
rights
and
especially
in
2006
on
words,
from
2006
onwards,
there
were
detailed
writing
started
appearing
in
the
blogs
on
topics
such
as
atheism,
secularism,
LGBT
rights
and
women's
rights.
Basically,.
D
It
is
in
and
and
the
LGBT
community
and
the
atheist
community
can
be
persecuted
under
the
government
under
the
constitution
of
Bangladesh.
Both
are
punishable
crimes,
so
even
writing
about
these
topics
are
equally.
They
are
considered
to
be
equally
bad
and
they
can
be
taken
by
the
police
forces.
Now,
when
the
when
the
terrorist
groups
like
al-qaeda
and
is
started,
contacting
different
the
mullahs
and
the
different
networks
in
Bangladesh
and
they
started
condemning
these
bloggers,
writers
and
they
said
that
these
are
atheists
and
they
have
to
be
killed.
D
Now
al
Qaeda
targeted
the
atheist
bloggers,
whereas
the
ious
targeted
the
minorities
which
who
come
from
the
Hindu
most
Hindu
Christian
Buddhist
communities,
they
could
be
women,
writers
or
they
could
be
from
the
LGBT
community.
He
would
like
to
say
that,
in
from
to
starting
from
2006
onwards,
at
already
16
atheist
bloggers
have
been
murdered.