Missing father, disabled sports, sun: Hello Brest!

Hello everyone ! How are you this Friday, May 3, 2024? Today we celebrate the birthdays of the actor Frédéric Bouraly (64 years old) who plays José in the series “Scènes de households” and of the journalist Nathalie Renoux (53 years old). Besides, it’s World Press Freedom Day. The opportunity to remember that it is threatened in all four corners of the world and that journalists are subject to a lot of pressure, even here.


The weather: it’s better!

Take some sun, a few spoons of clouds, mix and let it sit all morning. Then cross your fingers and hope it stays that way! Here’s today’s weather recipe. As for the temperatures, they fluctuate between 10 and 14 degrees: it’s still not the time to take out the shorts. And, as summer approaches, don’t hesitate to put a cap, sunglasses and a jar of sunscreen in your bag for your future outings. If possible not the one opened last summer. As a reminder, skin cancer is common in Brittany. Not all clouds filter all UV rays. Today, the UV index is 5. So we take advantage, but we think about our health.


Traffic in real time: calm

How appreciable… There will surely be more traffic on Monday! Traffic is once again fluid this Friday. Be careful this evening, between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m., near the Penfeld Exhibition Center where the “Lords of the sound, the music of Hans Zimmer” concert is taking place: it could get busy.


Sentence of the day

“When some people think of disabled sports, they think of the Olympic Games and tell themselves that it’s not for them. But that’s not it at all.”

It is signed Stéphane Lansonneur, president of Handisport Brest. He discusses, for Le Télégramme, his fight in favor of disabled people.

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Stéphane Lansonneur, president of Handisport Brest, during the adult disabled football tournament which took place in Lambézellec on Saturday April 27. (Photo Le Télégramme)

Today’s story

“My mother was blonde with blue eyes, a Brestoise from Saint-Marc. Until elementary school, I didn’t realize I was different. I felt hyper French, hyper Brestois. But I also felt like an impostor,” says Gurvan Kristanadjaja. Already the author of two investigative books, the journalist delivers his first novel entitled “Amok, my father”, in which he recounts the quest for his Indonesian father, who disappeared from his life when he was 4 years old.

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Gurvan Kristanadjaja and Andrée Laot, known as “Mamie Gégé”, heroine of this novel largely inspired by the real life of this Brest family, in the Saint-Marc district. (Photo Le Télégramme/Rémy Quéméner)

#French

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