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In the turquoise waters of southwestern Madagascar, the Vezo people have fished for generations using hand-built pirogues and ancestral knowledge of the ocean. But as industrial fishing encroaches, and stocks dwindle near the shore, families are forced to venture farther—and deeper—into uncertain waters.

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00:17Daho
00:18Bhezu
00:18Velumampuan
00:20Ay
00:20Amelia
00:20Kinyeni
00:21Yaza
00:22Fia
00:23Daho
00:24Bhezu
00:24Medina
00:26Piana
00:26Ritati
00:26Ay
00:26Velumampuan
00:27Yakin
00:28Tumeta
00:28I'm a new father and I got a new girl with me.
00:32I'm only a young son.
00:34I'm a new girl.
00:37He's a new girl.
00:38I'm a new girl.
00:43I'm a new man.
00:45I need a new girl.
00:50Here's a new girl.
00:54They are alive. We must be at the same time, but we must have a human life.
01:02They are alive. We must have a human life.
01:07They are alive. They are alive.
01:14It's hard to take care of you.
01:17If you don't have the money, you can't pay attention.
01:22You can't pay attention to your homes.
01:26But you can't pay attention to your family.
01:30Mission鮮 Breed
01:37Just let me know how I got my housework on the grass,
01:44And let me know how I got my wood.
01:51I want to know how I got my wood on my way to the grass.
01:58We'd have to think about it, like I said,
02:03the whole town is around here.
02:06We got to help.
02:09We get to work with the family.
02:12The family members are getting to work,
02:14so we had to come together.
02:16And we have to be able to help.

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