
Holy Surf! - Once Upon a Wave – DW – 07/25/2025
It was filmed on the coasts of Tahiti, Hawaii and California.
Surfing is a sport that's far more than just a game: It's also the expression of a culture.
In this case, it is the culture of a people who live with and on the water - the Polynesians. The art of riding the waves is their ancient heritage.
Surfing was on the verge of extinction almost a century ago - a thorn in the side of Christian missionaries.
It owes its resurrection to a handful of young runaways, businessmen and rebellious young men and women from all over the world. Their stories are told here. Surfing grew in popularity around the world, and eventually became a competitive sport, earning a place in the Olympics.
DW English
SAT 16.08.2025 – 11:03 UTC
SAT 16.08.2025 – 22:03 UTC
SUN 17.08.2025 – 05:03 UTC
Lagos UTC +1 | Cape Town UTC +2 | Nairobi UTC +3
Delhi UTC +5,5 | Bangkok UTC +7 | Hong Kong UTC +8
London UTC +1 | Berlin UTC +2 | Moscow UTC +3
San Francisco UTC -7 | Edmonton UTC -6 | New York UTC -4

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Int'l Business Times
3 days ago
- Int'l Business Times
Too Much Too Young?: Swimming's Dilemma Over 12-year-old Schoolgirl
Swimming is a sport well used to talented teenagers, but Yu Zidi's participation aged 12 at the world championships has sparked debate about how young is too young. The prodigious Chinese schoolgirl is not just making up the numbers at the event in Singapore this week. Yu qualified for Monday's final of the 200m individual medley and came fourth, missing out on a remarkable medal by just 0.06sec in what is not considered her strongest event. The race was won by Canada's Summer McIntosh -- she competed at the Tokyo Olympics as a 14-year-old and last summer in Paris won three golds at age 17. Yu was at it again on Wednesday in Singapore, racing alongside comparative veteran McIntosh to reach the finals of the 200m butterfly. Yu, who turns 13 in October, will also race in the 400m medley later this week. The Chinese prodigy, who discovered swimming aged six as a way to cool off in China's roasting summers, has drawn historical comparisons to Inge Sorensen. At 12, the Dane was the youngest-ever winner of an Olympic swimming medal after her bronze at the Berlin Games of 1936. More recently, there was Bahrain's Alzain Tareq, who was 10 when she competed at the swimming world championships in Kazan, Russia, in 2015. Unlike Yu, however, she never came close to a medal. Asked this week if she was a "genius", Yu replied: "No, not really. It's all the result of hard training." While Yu's performances have been impressive and could well yield a medal, not everyone thinks she should be competing in Singapore. Some in the sport have raised questions about the impact on Yu mentally and physically of high-level training and competing at an age when she is still developing as a person. Under current World Aquatics rules, the minimum age is 14 but younger swimmers can compete at the championships if -- like Yu -- they are fast enough. Christian Hansmann, sports director of German swimming, called her participation in Singapore "questionable". "Putting a girl of 12 in front of a world championship crowd of 5,000 spectators, with the high pressure from the media and the coaches, is far too early in my opinion," said Hansmann, who has children of a similar age. French swimmer Lilou Ressencourt admitted it "pisses me off to be beaten by a girl 10 years younger than me" and said she was surprised by how fast Yu is at such a young age. She too fears for Yu's physical and mental well-being. "I'm 22 and handling world championships, even French championships, can be difficult," Ressencourt told AFP. "I tell myself that at 12, you have a heavy responsibility... it's not normal at 12 to have that kind of pressure." Yu's presence in Singapore could force a rethink of the rules at World Aquatics, the sport's governing body. Executive director Brent Nowicki admitted they had been surprised that someone as young as Yu had been fast enough to qualify. Nowicki said World Aquatics "feel quite good about where we are with our safeguarding approach in our sport", but admitted that Yu could force a re-evaluation of its rules. "She's great. I mean, there's a big future there for her. Hopefully there could be good things that could happen out of this, and it could be great," he said. But he added: "Obviously we have to make sure that that's what it is, right? We don't want to tip that balance and go the other way, and we have to be careful about that." Many other sports have wrestled with the same age issue. In 2022, ice skating's governing body voted to raise the minimum age for senior competition from 15 to 17, months after an Olympics drug scandal involving Russian teenager Kamila Valieva. Katarina Witt, who was 18 when she won Olympic skating gold at the 1984 Sarajevo Games for East Germany, said the change was "primarily protecting the female athletes from their sometimes over-ambitious managers". China's swimmer Yu Zidi prepares to start a semi-final of the women's 200m individual medley AFP


DW
5 days ago
- DW
2036 Olympics: The possible impact of Qatar's bid – DW – 07/29/2025
Having overcome much criticism to host the 2022 World Cup, Qatar has now set its sights on the Olympics. What challenges could it face and what could it mean for other bids? Given the football World Cup was in the country just three years ago, the eight major global championships the country has hosted this year alone, and the Asian Games scheduled to take place in there in 2030, Qatar bidding for the 2036 Olympics feels like the next logical step for the Gulf country. The difference this time around is all about scale. There will be 36 sports on show in Los Angeles in 2028, with a variety of disciplines inside each sport. Then there's also the political aspect of an Olympic Games, which is different to that of a football World Cup. Still, Jean-Loup Chappelet, a professor of public management at the University of Lausanne and Olympic scholar, believes Qatar's history of hosting means they are very capable of hosting a Summer Olympics. "Having the facilities is not the most important for the Olympics nowadays," Chappelet told DW. Instead, he said, there are two key criteria that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) has been looking for in a host country in recent years. "One is political support and the other is popular support. It's more important than the venues. In fact, the venues can be changed, like we have seen a lot in in LA recently and also in Brisbane. So nobody doubts that the venues are available. What is important is political support from the public authorities." Given the average high temperature in Qatar in July is 44 Celciuis (111 Fahrenheit), hosting a Olympics at that time is out of the question. "It would have to be in November, like the World Cup 2022," said the Frenchman, who worked on the bid for the 1992 Winter Olympics in Albertville. "Can we do (that)? It could probably happen, but it's a big problem because the whole sports calendar is organized around the Olympics." Assuming that were possible, then there's also the question of the two aforementioned criteria. Given that national political support isn't likely to be a problem, attention will turn to popular support. An easy way to gauge this is through a referendum, as was held in Germany regarding the mere idea of bidding for the 2036 Chappelet isn't so sure he can see Qatar conducting something similar. "In general, the IOC is satisfied with polls," he explained. "The Polls are conducted by an independent company. So they see what is the (level of) popular support. The problem in Qatar is that the local population is rather small and there's a large migrant population. So the validity of this popular support is to be discussed, for sure." If that support is also secured, there's also the small issue of dealing with neighbors Saudi Arabia. If Qatar won the bid, this would likely prevent Saudi Arabia from hosting the Olympics for many years. But with the 2034 World Cup already confirmed to be in Saudi Arabia, it would seen likely that the kingdom would want to host an Olympics soon after that. Assuming none of that is a problem though, the final hurdle is the impact of the IOC choosing Qatar. "Human rights are quite important" Chappelet said. "Especially for the construction of the facilities, the state and the workers. And so there were big problems there. Qatar made some efforts but the the image-perception of Qatar is not as good as it can be for other countries." Depsite years of criticism though, the World Cup did take place in Qatar. "It's not insurmountable," Chappelet said. "It can be done. Of course they [IOC] will have a lot of criticism, but the question is whether the IOC wants to to to bear all this criticism or whether they will take another less risky path?" Chappelet believes the confirmation of Qatar's bid will force the others into action. "It means they have to rehab a little bit," Chappelet said. Given the heat, the current doping issues and the poor athletes results, Chappelet believes that India is already out of the running. South Korea is also in the mix but the strength of their bid depends on the outcome of municipal voting for the mayor of Seoul next year, while Chile is likely one for the more distant future given it will be Asia's turn. The Games are supposed to rotate every season, and with the 2028 edition to be in North America and 2032 in Oceania, the 2036 Olympic Games should be in Asia or Africa, who have never hosted before. That puts Qatar and Indonesia in a good position, although Chappelet believes Istanbul has a strong chance. "It [Turkey] is a major country, and it has bid several times. It has a booming economy, of course they have problems also like many other countries, maybe with human rights, but it's also a Muslim country, which I think is an argument," Chappelet said. "The Muslim world should get the Games one one day." The final decision is expected to be delayed until 2027 after newly elected IOC President Kirsty Coventry recently said IOC members wanted to be more involved in the selection process and to allow for a thorough review of how previous hosts were selected. "There was overwhelming support from the IOC members for a pause to be done, and a review of the future host election process," Coventry said. "Members want to be engaged more in the process and secondly there was a very big discussion in and around when should the next host be awarded."


Int'l Business Times
6 days ago
- Int'l Business Times
Honkytonk Kenya: Africa's Home Of Country Music
The party is in Kenya, but the vibe is distinctly Americana: a sea of cowboy hats and boots with a soundtrack of whisky-soaked tales about heartbreak and good ol' boys. Kenya has become the unlikely home of a growing country music scene, possibly the biggest in Africa, as testified by the thousands line-dancing in a field in the capital Nairobi this weekend for International Cowboys and Cowgirls Day. The festival crowd went wild for the king of the local country scene, "Sir Elvis" Otieno, as his deep baritone belted out classics like "Take Me Home, Country Roads" mixed with newer hits like "Down to the Honkytonk". Sir Elvis's parents named him after another musical monarch who died a few months before he was born in 1977, and then raised him on a diet of country legends like Jim Reeves and Alan Jackson. "When I started out it was a very tiny genre" in Kenya, he told AFP at the festival. "It's a dream come true to see a crowd like this today." There are links, he said, to local traditions, particularly the story-telling music of the Kikuyu tribe known as Mugithi. "Kikuyu folk music has the same kind of language, they draw from each other quite a bit," said Sir Elvis. "It's really crazy -- so many thousands of miles apart, but the messaging is the same." Anne Anene, 26, still remembers the song that turned her into a country music fan: Dolly Parton's "Do I Ever Cross Your Mind?". "Her songs always speak to me because they always have deep messages, and they usually tell a story of what I go through," said Anene, a customer service representative for a health insurance firm. "I've always hoped to go to Texas or Nashville one day," she added. "I'd like to visit the ranches, I like horse riding, I like the ranch kind of life -- the quiet, the calm." The clothes are also a big part of the appeal. The festival was organised by Reja Manyeki, who runs a clothing and events company called Cowboys and Cowgirls. It was still pretty niche when he opened in 2018 but "now people love country music. It touches all corners (of society). "We do cowboy-themed events, birthdays, weddings, end-of-year parties... Now everyone comes, even schools." Big farming and Christian communities also make Kenya fertile ground for country and gospel music. First to perform at the festival was Samson Maombe who's picked up millions of streams for his Swahili-language takes on Christian country tunes. But for "King George" Gustavo, lead MC of the festival, it's the tales of everyday life that keep him hooked and ensures he listens to Alan Jackson "every single day". Anene, the Dolly Parton fan, says country music is also an escape. "In this world full of confusion, full of drama, country music is the only thing that makes sense to me. It has made me find peace." Sir Elvis is the biggest star of the Kenyan country scene AFP Kenya's country scene has grown in the last decade thanks to live gigs and the popularity of the outfits AFP Shared traditions of farming, Christianity and links to local folk music help explain country's popularity in Kenya AFP