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Witness History

2,017 episodes - English - Latest episode: 27 days ago - ★★★★★ - 853 ratings

History as told by the people who were there.

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Episodes

Burning Man

August 29, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

This week more than seventy thousand people are gathering in the middle of the desert in Nevada for Burning Man - part festival, part counter-culture phenomenon. This year it's the event's thirtieth anniversary - and we've been speaking to founder and Chief Philosophical Officer Larry Harvey about how they first got started. Picture: Dancers at the 1998 'Burning Man' festival create patterns with fireworks in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada just prior to burning a five-story, neon-lit effi...

Fania All Stars - Legends of Salsa

August 26, 2016 08:00 - 9 minutes - 4.14 MB

In August 1973, a Latin music supergroup called Fania All Stars played a historic concert at New York's Yankee Stadium. It helped spread the sound of salsa music from New York to the world. Simon Watts talks to Larry Harlow, pianist and producer with the All Stars, and Puerto Rican salsa DJ, Ray Collazo. PHOTO: Fania All Stars singer Hector Lavoe (Getty Images)

Helmand Convoy

August 25, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.1 MB

In August 2008 a massive military convoy set off across the desert in Helmand carrying a gigantic turbine for a hydro electric power station. Eight years later that turbine is finally being installed - and should help bring electricity to Southern Afghanistan. Monica Whitlock has been speaking to Joe Fossey, then a Major in the British Royal Engineers, who helped get the convoy through. Photo: Major Joe Fossey in Helmand Province. Courtesy of Major Fossey.

The "Don't Die of Ignorance" Aids Campaign

August 24, 2016 09:06 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In 1986 the British government launched the world's first ever public health campaign on Hiv Aids. It was highly controversial and faced considerable opposition from Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Mike Lanchin speaks to former Health Minister, Norman Fowler, whose insistence made the campaign a reality. Photo: Norman Fowler of a poster reading "Aids Don"t Die Of Ignorance," Nov. 1986 (Crown Copyright)

The Dance Theatre of Harlem

August 24, 2016 07:55 - 8 minutes - 4.11 MB

In August 1969, Arthur Mitchell founded the Dance Theatre of Harlem - the first classical ballet company to focus on black dancers. Virginia Johnson, now the organisation's director, was a founder member. (Photo: The Dance Theatre of Harlem, circa 1970. Virginia Johnson pictured back row, third from left. Credit: Marbeth)

The Stockholm Syndrome

August 23, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.06 MB

In August 1973 Kristin Enmark and three colleagues were taken hostage during a bank siege in Stockholm, Sweden. Kristin came to trust one of the kidnappers more than the police, the condition later named the 'Stockholm Syndrome'. Dina Newman spoke to Kristin about her story. (Photo: The hostages photographed as the police opened the bank vault door. Kristin Enmark is in the middle. (Credit: AFP/ EGAN-Polisen)

The Kray Gang

August 19, 2016 18:08 - 12 minutes - 5.55 MB

In August 1982 the notorious London gangsters Ronnie and Reggie Kray were allowed out of prison for their mother's funeral. Though the Kray twins were serving life sentences for murder, their reign of terror and violent crime had seen them mix with London's social elite. Witness has been hearing from Maureen Flanagan, who was Mrs Kray's hairdresser and a close family friend. Photo: Ronnie and Reggie Kray, London 1964 (Photo by Terry Disney/Express/Getty Images)

John Muir and America's Wild Places

August 19, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In August 1916, the US Congress created the National Park Service to protect America's finest landscapes and encourage people to visit them. One of the inspirations for the Park Service was the work of the Scottish-born naturalist, John Muir, whose lyrical writings about the Yosemite Valley gained huge popularity. Simon Watts tells John Muir's story through readings from his work and contributions from Mary Colwell, author of "John Muir: The Scotsman who saves America's Wild Places". PHOTO:...

Conflict over a Tree in the DMZ

August 18, 2016 06:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

On August 18 1976 an American platoon was sent into the DMZ between North and South Korea, to trim a tree that was obscuring the view of a manned checkpoint. Two US soldiers were killed as tensions escalated in the no man's land. Rachael Gillman has been speaking to US army veteran Eugene Bickley about his experiences that day. Photo credit: Getty Images

Studio Ghibli - Japanese Animation

August 17, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In August 1986 the first Studio Ghibli film hit the cinema screens. It would go on to bring Japanese animation to a world audience. Hirokatsu Kihara was a young animator who joined the studio to work on 'Castle in the Sky' its first feature length film. He has been speaking to Ashley Byrne of Made in Manchester about the early days of the great animation studio. Photo: Oscar-winning animator Hayao Miyazaki, one of the founders of Studio Ghibli. Credit: Getty Images.

Bibles in US Schools

August 16, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In 1963 a third of schools in the US had to change their rules on Bible reading after a Supreme Court decision. It all began when a teenager refused to read the Bible in class. 16 year old Ellery Schempp took his school to court accusing them of violating the first amendment by forcing him to read the Bible at the start of every school day. It challenged the principle of a separation of church and state enshrined in the US Constitution. Claire Bowes has been speaking to him for Witness. Pho...

The murder of Federico Garcia Lorca

August 15, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.04 MB

In August 1936, the great poet and dramatist, Federico Garcia Lorca, was murdered by a fascist death squad at the beginning of the Spanish Civil War. Simon Watts introduces archive recordings of friends of Lorca and speaks to the Hispanist, Ian Gibson. This programme was first broadcast in 2010. PHOTO: Federico Garcia Lorca around 1929 (Popperfoto/Getty Images)

Fleeing Deportation to the USSR

August 11, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.11 MB

At the end of WW2, hundreds of thousands of Soviet citizens who had ended up outside the USSR, escaped forced repatriation by the Red Army. Dina Newman hears from one family, originally from Soviet Belorussia, who disguised their ethnic origin and fled to Australia. Photo: Tanya Iwanow with her daughter Tamara, in Sydney, Australia (family archive)

The Nairobi Embassy Bombing

August 10, 2016 06:50 - 8 minutes - 4.06 MB

In 1998, al-Qaeda killed over 200 people in a co-ordinated attack on two US embassies in East Africa. It was one of the first major bombings carried out by the group. We hear from George Mimba who was working in the embassy in Kenya when the attack took place. Photo: Rescue workers at the scene of the Nairobi embassy bombing (AFP/Getty Images)

The Excavation of Masada

August 08, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.09 MB

In August 1963, work started on the excavation of one of Israel's most important archaeological sites - Masada by the Dead Sea, site of a famous mass suicide two thousand years ago. David Stacey was one of the volunteers on the dig. PICTURE: An aerial photo taken on May 13, 2008 shows the ancient hilltop fortress of Masada in the Judean desert (MENAHEM KAHANA / AFP)

The Twin Towers High-Wire Walk

August 08, 2016 07:50 - 9 minutes - 4.12 MB

On August 7 1974, New Yorkers woke to the amazing sight of a figure walking on a cable strung between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Centre. High-wire artist Philippe Petit remembers one of his most daring feats, high above the streets of New York. (Photo: AP Photo/Alan Welner)

American Air Traffic Controllers' Strike

August 05, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.11 MB

In August 1981 President Ronald Reagan fired more than 11,000 air traffic controllers. The strike, which was illegal under American law, lasted just two days, but it was to become a watershed moment in labour relations in the US. Witness speaks to John Dwyer, one of those sacked, and to Ken Moffett, who was involved in trying to settle the dispute. (AP Photo/Dave Pickoff)

Lebanon's Baalbek Festival

August 05, 2016 07:41 - 9 minutes - 4.17 MB

The Middle East's oldest arts festival was first held n the ancient Roman ruins of Baalbek in eastern Lebanon in the summer of 1956. Some of the greatest names in music, theatre and dance performed there - Margot Fonteyn, Ella Fitzgerald, Herbert von Karajan, the Lebanese singer Fairuz. Witness talks to Mona Joreige whose aunt helped to organise the first Baalbek festival, and who was herself part of the organising committee for more than 20 years. (Photo: Syrian singer Mayada al-Hinnawi pe...

The Reclusive JD Salinger

August 03, 2016 22:53 - 9 minutes - 4.26 MB

It is 65 years since the publication of JD Salinger's classic novel The Catcher in the Rye. But as the book's fame grew, Salinger himself became more and more reclusive, eventually ceasing publishing altogether. Witness hears the story of how, more than 30 years later, a professor of American literature, Roger Lathbury, almost convinced the great man to change his mind. (Photo: JD Salinger in 1951, five years before the publication of The Catcher in the Rye. Credit: Little, Brown & Co/AP)

Jacqueline Du Pre

August 02, 2016 08:23 - 8 minutes - 4.08 MB

In August 1965, at the age of just 20, the British cellist Jacqueline Du Pre recorded the Elgar cello concerto with the London Symphony Orchestra conducted by Sir John Barbirolli. It became one of the most famous classical recordings of the 20th Century. Du Pre's career was cut short less than a decade later by multiple sclerosis. (Photo: Jacqueline Du Pre in rehearsal)

The University of Texas Shooting

August 01, 2016 07:52 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

On 1 August 1966, student Charles Whitman shot dead 14 people and injured another 32 in America's first mass shooting at a university. Witness speaks to Ray Martinez, an off duty police officer who rushed to the campus and confronted the gunman. (AP Photo)

Spying for America in Russia

July 29, 2016 07:50 - 10 minutes - 4.65 MB

In July 1977, CIA case officer Marti Peterson was detained and deported from the Soviet Union for spying. She was the handler for Alexandr Ogorodnik, one of America's top Soviet moles at the time. It was her first assignment for the US intelligence agency. Peterson speaks to Witness about her cloak and dagger life in Moscow at the height of the Cold War. Photo: the KGB building in central Moscow (NIKOLAI MALYSHEV/AFP/Getty Images)

The Tangshan Earthquake

July 28, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

On 28 July 1976, one of the deadliest earthquakes in modern history hit the city of Tangshan in north-eastern China - killing hundreds of thousands of people. We speak to eye-witness Yu Suyun. (Photo: A building in Tangshan after the earthquake. Credit: National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration)

Meeting Picasso

July 27, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In the summer of 1951 a young art historian met for the first time one of the greatest painters of the modern era. John Richardson recalls getting to know Pablo Picasso in the south of France. Photo: AFP/Getty

The First CIA Coup in Latin America

July 26, 2016 07:50 - 9 minutes - 4.53 MB

In 1954 a group of army officers, supported by the CIA, overthrew the elected government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala. It was the first CIA-organised coup in Latin America. President Arbenz's son, Juan Jacobo, remembers the family's flight into exile. Photo: Army officers opposed to President Arbenz go over a map of the territory on their push to Zacapa and then to Guatemala City, July 1954. (AP Photo)

The First CIA Coup in Latin America

July 26, 2016 07:50 - 9 minutes - 4.53 MB

In 1954 a group of army officers, supported by the CIA, overthrew the elected government of Jacobo Arbenz in Guatemala. It was the first CIA-organised coup in Latin America. President Arbenz's son, Juan Jacobo, remembers the family's flight into exile. Photo: Army officers opposed to President Arbenz go over a map of the territory on their push to Zacapa and then to Guatemala City, July 1954. (AP Photo)

Race Riots in Liverpool

July 25, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.08 MB

In July 1981 race riots broke out on the streets of Liverpool. It was the first time that British police used CS gas to control civil unrest in mainland Britain. Witness has been hearing from a man who took part in the riot. (Photo: Lines of police with riot shields face a group of youths during riots in the Toxteth area of Liverpool, July 1981. Credit: Keystone/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The Beilis Case: an Anti-Jewish Trial

July 22, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.08 MB

In 1913, Mendel Beilis, a Jew from Kiev, was accused of a "ritual murder". The trial became a focus of anti-Semitic rhetoric in imperial Russia and attracted attention around the world. Dina Newman reports. Photo: Mendel Beilis in 1913. Credit: Topfoto.

The Death of Bruce Lee

July 20, 2016 07:50 - 9 minutes - 4.12 MB

On 20th July 1973 the film star and martial arts legend Bruce Lee died suddenly in Hong Kong. He was just 32 years old. Ashley Byrne has been speaking to his friend and fellow martial arts expert Dan Inosanto about his life, and sudden death. Photo: Bruce Lee. Credit: AFP

Medicare

July 18, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In July 1966, US government health insurance programme Medicare came into force, providing limited free health insurance for the over 65s. Ted Marmor was assistant to Wilbur Cohen, one of the architects of the plan. He speaks to Witness about his memories of that time. PICTURE: President Lyndon B Johnson signs the Medicare Bill with Harry S Truman in Independence, Missouri on July 30, 1965. (AP Photo)

Dutch Elm Disease

July 15, 2016 14:56 - 9 minutes - 4.22 MB

In the mid 1970s an epidemic of the fungal infection, Dutch Elm disease, killed millions of Elm trees in England, and changed the British landscape forever. Witness talks to tree pathologist Dr John Gibbs who was at the centre of the attempt to save them. Picture: Dr John Gibbs and a colleague at the Forestry Commission pump fungicide into an elm tree in St James' Park in London during the fight against Dutch Elm disease. (Credit: Keystone/Getty Images)

1916: Central Asia Rebels Against the Russian Empire

July 14, 2016 08:00 - 9 minutes - 4.4 MB

In 1916, Muslims in Central Asia rose up against Russian imperial rule. The revolt was brutally supressed. Tens of thousands of Central Asians were killed, and hundreds of thousands fled to China. Dina Newman reports. Photo: Nomadic Kirghiz family, circa 1911. (Credit: Sergei Prokudin-Gorskii, Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, Prokudin-Gorskii Collection)

Child refugees from the Spanish Civil War

July 13, 2016 08:00 - 8 minutes - 4.1 MB

At the height of the Spanish Civil War, thousands of Basque children were evacuated to safety in Britain. In 1937, Herminio Martinez was sent away by his parents at the age of seven. It was 23 years before he saw them again. Herminio Martinez talks to Witness about his memories of the evacuation and the reunion with his family. The programme was first broadcast in 2011. PHOTO: The Basque children arriving at Southampton in 1937 (Hutton Archive/Getty Images)

The Nestle Boycott

July 12, 2016 07:50 - 9 minutes - 4.15 MB

In July 1977 US campaigners launched a boycott against Nestle over the sale of baby milk. The action was prompted in part by a publication by the British campaign charity, 'War on Want' of 'The Baby Killer' report. It highlighted problems arising from the use of baby milk formula in the developing world. We hear from the author of the report about his findings and his meeting with Nestle. Photo: Mother and baby feeding in Kenya 1975. Courtesy of BBC Panorama.

The Mumbai Train Bombings

July 11, 2016 07:52 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

In July 2006, seven coordinated explosions tore through packed commuter trains in Mumbai. More than 180 people died and hundreds more were injured. Witness speaks to one man who was travelling home on one of the trains, and survived. Photo: Railway workers clear the debris of the first class compartment of a local train which was ripped open by a bomb (SEBASTIAN D'SOUZA/AFP/Getty Images)

War in Slovenia

July 08, 2016 14:09 - 8 minutes - 4.09 MB

Over ten days in June and July 1991, the Yugoslav federal army tried to stop the tiny republic of Slovenia from becoming the first republic to break away from the former Yugoslavia. The country's then foreign minister, Dimitrij Rupel, recalls those days of Slovenia's war of independence and how it was a precursor for the greater, more bloody conflict to come. Photograph: a Yugoslav army tank on the Croatian/Slovenian border behind a road sign daubed with a peace symbol, 3rd July 1991 (Credi...

Executions in Cuba

July 07, 2016 07:52 - 9 minutes - 4.14 MB

In July 1989 four of Cuba's highest-ranking army officers were convicted of drug trafficking and executed by firing squad. The case sent shock waves through the communist island, but was seen by some as a show trial of opponents to the rule of Fidel Castro. We hear from the daughter of Col. Antonio de la Guardia, one of the officers involved. (Photo: Still from a local TV broadcast of the trial of Col. Antonio de la Guardia (left) and his twin brother Brigadier General Patricio de La Guardi...

The Sale of London Bridge

July 06, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.04 MB

In July of 1967 London Bridge was put up for sale. It was sold to an American millionaire who had it dismantled and transported to the USA where it was rebuilt, stone by stone, in Arizona. (Photo: American entrepreneur Robert P McCulloch, standing in front of London Bridge as it is dismantled, ready for transportation back to America, 1968. Credit: Jim Gray/Keystone/Getty Images)

Denmark's second EU Referendum

July 05, 2016 06:50 - 9 minutes - 4.18 MB

In 1993, Denmark held a second referendum on greater EU integration, after a previous vote failed. But angry anti-EU demonstrators took to the streets of the capital, and riots followed. We speak to the former foreign minister who campaigned for a 'Yes' vote, and a former activist who protested against any Danish involvement in the EU, but who has since changed his mind about Europe. Image: Riot police in Copenhagen after Denmark voted Yes to ratify the Maastricht Treaty in May 1993. (Credi...

Born on the Fourth of July

July 04, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

Alan Johnston talks to the former US Marine and peace activist Ron Kovic about two moments that changed his life forever - one on the battlefield, and one at an anti-war protest in Washington. He became famous when his life story was made into a Hollywood film.

Ukraine's Wartime Ultra-Nationalists

June 30, 2016 11:00 - 9 minutes - 4.14 MB

In 1941, far-right Ukrainian nationalists declared an independent state. They expected Hitler to support them, but their hopes barely lasted a week. They ended up fighting against the Poles, the Russians, the Germans, and fellow Ukrainians who disagreed with them. Dina Newman speaks to an OUN member. Photo: a youth with his face painted with the colours of the flag of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) carries a portrait of Stepan Bandera, the founder of the UPA, during an ultra-nationalist...

The Great Plague

June 29, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4 MB

In the summer of 1665, London was gripped by one of the worst epidemics in its history. The outbreak later became known as the Great Plague. Witness hears eye-witness testimony from the time, including an account by famous diarist Samuel Pepys. (Photo: The angel of death presides over London during the Great Plague of 1664-1666, holding an hourglass in one hand and a spear in the other. Published in The Intelligencer, 26 June 1665. Credit: Hulton Archive/Getty Images)

The Khobar Towers Bombing - Saudi Arabia

June 28, 2016 10:53 - 8 minutes - 4.09 MB

On June 25th 1996 a huge truck bomb was planted at a US housing complex in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. Hundreds of people were injured and 19 US servicemen were killed. Witness speaks to two survivors of the attack, who's lives were forever changed as a result of what happened at Khobar Towers. (The aftermath of the Khobar Towers bombing June 1996: Credit; Getty Images.)

The Cuyahoga River Fire

June 28, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.04 MB

In June 1969 the heavily polluted Cuyahoga River, in Ohio in the USA, caught fire. It became a national embarrassment and inspired new laws to protect the environment. Hear from one of the local officials who had to try to clean it up. (Photo: The Cuyahoga River, Cleveland, Ohio)

Forced Sterilisation in Peru

June 27, 2016 07:57 - 8 minutes - 4.06 MB

Between 1996 and 2000 more than 280,000 women were sterilised in Peru, many of them against their will. Most of the women were from poor indigenous communities. The sterilisations were carried out as part of a controversial family planning programme launched by the country's populist president, Alberto Fujimori. Witness has spoken to one of the women who was sterilised and to a Peruvian doctor who refused to take part in the scheme. Listeners may find some of the accounts in this progr...

The Bobbitt Story

June 23, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.07 MB

On 23 June 1993 a young wife cut off her husband's penis in a frenzied attack. She was Lorena Bobbitt - he was John Wayne Bobbitt - and their story was soon a talking point all over the world. Ashley Byrne has been speaking to John Bobbitt's lawyer, Greg Murphy, about the case. (Photo: John Wayne Bobbitt arriving at court. Credit:AFP/Getty Images)

Space Crash

June 22, 2016 15:09 - 9 minutes - 4.14 MB

Michael Foale was on board the Mir space station when a resupply vessel crashed into it in June 1997. It was worst collision in the history of space flight and it sent Mir spinning out of control. Michael was one of the three astronauts on board who had to try to repair the damage and get the space station back on course. Photo: Mir Space Station. Credit: Getty Images.

Black in the USSR

June 20, 2016 08:00 - 9 minutes - 4.27 MB

Robert Robinson, a Jamaican born engineer, was recruited to work in the USSR from a factory in Detroit in 1930. Having had his US citizenship revoked, he spent 43 years unable to leave the Soviet Union. Dina Newman tells his story, using BBC archive. (Photo: Robert Robinson in the 1920s. Source: BBC archive)

The Fall of Paris

June 17, 2016 12:49 - 9 minutes - 4.3 MB

In June 1940, German forces, having swept across Belgium and Holland, and into France, were closing in on Paris. In the face of the German army, millions of French, Dutch and Belgians had taken to the roads in one of the biggest exoduses of people the world had ever seen. Witness talks to Daphne Wall, who lived in Paris in 1940 as a young English girl and whose family joined the exodus south as Paris fell. Photograph: the Nazi leader Adolf Hitler visits the Eiffel Tower following the occupa...

Smoking and Lung Cancer

June 16, 2016 07:50 - 8 minutes - 4.06 MB

It was not until the 1950s that British researchers first connected cigarette smoking with the huge rise in people suffering from lung cancer. Initially, scientists had thought pollution was a much more likely cause. Hear an archive interview with Sir Richard Doll who carried out the original studies and Sir Richard Peto who worked with him. This programme was first broadcast in 2013 (Photo: A man smoking a cigarette. Credit: Press Association)