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అల్లు అర్జున్ సినిమాలో నిన్నే పెళ్లాడతా హీరోయిన్ - త్రివిక్రమ్ శ్రీనివాస్
తెలుగులో అగ్ర హీరోలతో కలిసి నటించిన టబు.. అల్లు అర్జున్ తదుపరి చిత్రంలో కీలక పాత్రలో కనిపించనుందని సమాచారం. ఈ సినిమాకు త్రివిక్రమ్ దర్శకత్వం వహిస్తున్నాడు.
అల్లు అర్జున్ తదుపరి చిత్రంలో నటిస్తున్న టబు
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Published : Mar 22, 2019, 5:43 PM IST
స్టైలిష్ స్టార్ అల్లు అర్జున్ ప్రస్తుతం త్రివిక్రమ్ శ్రీనివాస్ దర్శకత్వంలో ఓ సినిమా చేస్తున్నాడు. ఇందులో అందాల తార టబు ఓ కీలక పాత్రలో నటించనుందని సమాచారం. తండ్రీ కొడుకులు అనుబంధం నేపథ్యంలో వస్తున్న ఈ చిత్రానికి 'నాన్న..నేను', 'పార్థు' అనే టైటిల్స్ పరిశీలిస్తున్నారు.
హారికా అండ్ హాసిని క్రియేషన్స్ పతాకంపై నిర్మిస్తున్న ఈ సినిమాకు దేవీశ్రీ ప్రసాద్ సంగీతమందిస్తున్నాడు.
టబు మొదటిసారిగా 'కూలీనెంబర్ 1' చిత్రంతో టాలీవుడ్లోకి అరంగేట్రం చేసింది. నాగార్జునతో కలిసి 'నిన్నే పెళ్లాడతా' చిత్రంలో నటించి మెప్పించింది.
స్టైలిష్ స్టార్ అల్లు అర్జున్ ప్రస్తుతం త్రివిక్రమ్ శ్రీనివాస్ దర్శకత్వంలో ఓ సినిమా చేస్తున్నాడు. ఇందులో అందాల తార టబు ఓ కీలక పాత్రలో నటించనుందని సమాచారం. తండ్రీ కొడుకులు అనుబంధం నేపథ్యంలో వస్తున్న ఈ చిత్రానికి 'నాన్న..నేను', 'పార్థు' అనే టైటిల్స్ పరిశీలిస్తున్నారు.
హారికా అండ్ హాసిని క్రియేషన్స్ పతాకంపై నిర్మిస్తున్న ఈ సినిమాకు దేవీశ్రీ ప్రసాద్ సంగీతమందిస్తున్నాడు.
టబు మొదటిసారిగా 'కూలీనెంబర్ 1' చిత్రంతో టాలీవుడ్లోకి అరంగేట్రం చేసింది. నాగార్జునతో కలిసి 'నిన్నే పెళ్లాడతా' చిత్రంలో నటించి మెప్పించింది.
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Berlin - 20 March 2019
1. Exterior of synagogue
2. Berlin lawmaker Raed Saleh walking outside synagogue
3. SOUNDBITE (German) Raed Saleh, heads Berlin's Social Democrats and is a lawmaker in the city's government:
"Berlin was once already the place that managed to tear down walls. Today you have to tear down the walls in people's heads. Berlin used to tear down actual walls, the walls between East Berlin and West Berlin, East Germany and West Germany, Eastern Europe and Western Europe, if you will, the Eastern world and the Western world. And today you have to tear down the walls of hatred, the walls of intolerance, the walls of radicalism."
4. Close of Menorah
5. Interior of synagogue
6. Bima, elevated platform used as podium
7. Star of David
8. Pan from hands to Jewish worshipper Jonathan Marcus speaking
9. Close of Kippa
10. SOUNDBITE (German) Jonathan Marcus, fifth-generation German member of Fraenkelufer synagogue:
"We need space for all kinds of activities. When we have a bigger event and celebration, the space is bursting at the seams. You may have seen the prams standing outside, we always have to be careful they are not blocking the paths here, it gets very narrow very quickly and you can't do several things at the same time."
11. Various of people in synagogue praying, some in costume for the Jewish holiday of Purim
12. Cantor singing
13. Various of Jewish community gathering, some in costume for the Jewish holiday of Purim
14. SOUNDBITE (German) Jonathan Marcus, fifth-generation German member of Fraenkelufer synagogue:
"Indeed in the last ten years or so, things changed fundamentally, and for the better. Everyone who knew the synagogue before often had worries about how the synagogue would go on, if there are enough people who have the energy to get it all back on its feet. Now we have people from all over the world here."
15. People praying
16. Cantor singing
17. Various of Jewish community, some in costume for the Jewish holiday of Purim
18. SOUNDBITE (English) Nirit Bialer, 40-year-old Israeli business development manager:
"I think it's great that Berlin enables us to work together, actually, people of different faiths, of different backgrounds and to have such a project being done here - the rebuilding of actually Juedisches Zentrum, Jewish Center, here in the center of Berlin in this neighbourhood of Kreuzberg also."
19. Raed Saleh walking towards synagogue
20. Window of synagogue
21. SOUNDBITE (German) Raed Saleh, heads Berlin's Social Democrats and is a lawmaker in the city's government:
"In the end this synagogue is more than just a synagogue: It's a sign for togetherness of religions, cultures and traditions. It's actually a kind of message, a kind of confession. We want a colourful Germany, a colourful Europe, a tolerant Europe."
22. Sign with historical information and headline (German) reading; "The synagogue at Landwehr canal"
23. Exterior of synagogue
STORYLINE:
Raed Saleh was five years old when he left his Palestinian village in the West Bank for a better life in Germany.
Now, at age 41, the Muslim has become one of Berlin's top politicians and is spearheading efforts to rebuild a synagogue in the German capital that was destroyed by the Nazis 80 years ago.
What may sound like utopia in many other parts of the world where hostilities between Muslims and Jews run high, has become a reality in Berlin: Jews, Muslims and Christians have joined forces to rebuild what once used to be one of the city's biggest synagogue and has in recent years become home to a vibrant and diverse community for Jews from across the world.
Fraenkelufer synagogue was opened as an orthodox house of prayer in 1016 and could house up to 2,000 worshipers at the time.
In 1938, however, five years after the Nazis had come to power in Germany, they destroyed parts of the building during the Night of Broken Glass, or Kristallnacht, in which synagogues, Jewish stores and homes were vandalized across the country.
In the Holocaust that followed, the Nazis and their henchmen murdered 6 million Jews across Europe.
Today, only the so-called youth-synagogue of the building remains in the middle of what has become a mostly Arab and Turkish immigrant district known for its many mosques, tea houses and kebab stands.
Nonetheless, the small synagogue has attracted a growing number of young Jewish families who have moved to the German capital in recent years from Israel, the United States, the former Soviet Union, South America and Australia.
Saleh, who heads Berlin's Social Democrats and is a lawmaker in the city's government, said he met up with some of the temple's members over hummus and falafel a while ago and asked them how he could help support the growing community.
The answer was clear: they asked for more space.
Saleh promised to turn his words into action last year and now chairs a diverse board of trustees including Jews, Christians and Muslims, who will try to raise the estimated 24 million euros (27.3 million dollars) needed to rebuild the temple's main building.
There are no architectural blueprints yet, but lots of enthusiastic supporters, who hope to have collected enough donations to break the ground five years from now.
One of them, Nirit Bialer, a 40-year-old Israeli business development manager, who moved to Germany 13 years ago, said she can't wait for her dreams of a cultural center within the synagogue to become real.
So far, Saleh says reactions to the project have been overwhelmingly positive - even though Berlin is not always known for smooth relationships between its Palestinian and Jewish communities and has seen several high-profile anti-Semitic attacks by Muslims last year.
But there seems to be a sense - at least among the more moderate religious groups in Berlin - to help each other practice religion fully and in peace with even some Muslim communities announcing they would collect money for the synagogue in their mosques after Friday prayers.
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