
The Documentary Podcast
2,046 episodes — Page 1 of 41
An animal exodus
Introducing: Not By The Playbook - Why it is never too late
Return to Khartoum: War, loss and hope
Mika Obanda: Mosaic art
Searching for Soldier Dad: Ep 1. Love story
A 93 year old president gets a deputy
Sir David Attenborough
Befriending the man who killed my family
Russia's 'nyet' to the internet
13 Minutes Presents: Artemis II: What’s next for Nasa's Artemis mission?
Artist Joan Eardley
Serbia: Under The Canopy
For the love of dogs
Mapping Epstein's global connections
My social life as a wheelchair user
A church without walls
Atomic crossroads: Poland's nuclear future
In Our Time: The Mariana Trench
Driving Against Net Zero
Neha Vyaso: Crafting consent in Bollywood
Introducing: The Climate Question: China's green energy revolution
Inside the Mugabe dynasty
Meet the preppers
Faith and revolution in the Philippines
Under the influence of AI
Introducing Searching for Soldier Dad
In Iceland's Defence
The Last Dance Floor in Chernobyl
Patti LuPone: Taking the stage at Carnegie Hall
Counting the soldiers dying for Russia
Experiences of miscarriage
Jamaica: Shaken, not broken
Back to books: Sweden’s digital backlash
Surviving my daughter's killing
Pakistan: Hospitals putting children at risk of HIV
Helping prisoners become better parents
British Queen Elizabeth II's century of fashion
Bringing India's daughters back home
Hopes for a 'fragile' Middle East ceasefire
Your questions answered about Artemis II and space travel
Freddie’s second verse
The battle for Hungary
The Extractor
Albania: Land, money and the sea
Chef Rodolfo Guzman: Chilean summer menu
Growing up black in a white family – the truth behind my birth

The woman fighting IS in Somalia
The global activities of the Islamic State group are now believed to be run from the semi-autonomous region of Puntland in the north-east of Somalia, where IS fighters are entrenched in the caves and harsh mountainous terrain of the area. But many locals there do not support IS and are committed to fighting back against the group. For BBC News Somali, Sahnun Ahmed spent time embedded with the Puntland Defence Force, one of the groups resisting the militants, and witnessed the operations of their fighters, including one female fighter determined her children will not grow up in the shadow of IS. Israel is home to around a quarter of a million Iranian Jews, who first began arriving in the country in 1948 and then came in bigger numbers following Iran's Islamic Revolution of 1979. Many in the community (including younger generations born in Israel) remain closely connected to their Iranian heritage, while embracing both cultures. The US and Israel's war with Iran, however, has left Iranian Jews in a difficult position, caught between homeland and adopted home. BBC Arabic's Michael Shuval has been talking to Iranian Jews in Israel.

Surviving a shark attack
Shark attacks on humans are rare, but they are slowly on the rise in Australia where all our guests are from. In this episode, they share the terrifying moment when they realised they were under attack. For Brett Connellan in New South Wales, it was an encounter with a Great White. “Out of nowhere I get hit with this immense force from my right side and this force was so strong it threw me off my surf board,” he says. “I landed in the water and before I could even look around and figure out what had happened I look down and see this shark biting into my right leg. This for me is that distinct moment when time just stops.” Brett is joined by fellow survivors Justine Barwick and Dave Pearson. Together the share their stories and discuss life, death and why they ultimately feel lucky. This episode of The Documentary, comes to you from BBC OS Conversations, bringing together people from around the world to discuss how major news stories are affecting their lives.

God, grief and the chatbot
When Megan Garcia travelled to Rome, she carried with her a mother’s grief. At the Vatican she met the Pope and asked him to pray for her son Sewell, who died last year at the age of 14. In the months after his death, Megan discovered Sewell had been spending hours talking to an artificial-intelligence chatbot, which he believed was a real person for more than a year. He formed a deep emotional attachment to it, confiding in it about his life and feelings. Megan believes that relationship played a part in her son’s death. She is now pursuing legal action against the company behind the chatbot, arguing that safeguards for young users were inadequate. The company disputes the claims. But rather than losing her belief, Megan turned to prayer and devotion to the Virgin Mary, finding comfort in the idea of a mother who also knew the pain of losing a child. This episode of The Documentary, comes to you from Heart and Soul, exploring personal approaches to spirituality from around the world.

The Saltmakers
In India's Gujarat state lies the Little Rann of Kutch, a sprawling salt marsh desert where temperatures soar to 50 degrees Celsius. This harsh landscape is home to the Agariyas, nomadic tribal families who have harvested salt here since the 16th Century. For eight months of every year, they migrate to this harsh environment, living in temporary shacks and pumping briny groundwater into vast pans where it evaporates into gleaming, sturdy crystals. This traditional practice, responsible for 75% of India's salt production, is now under a grave existential threat. Seasonal cycles, predictable for centuries, have become erratic. Unexpected rains and sudden cyclones frequently wash away months of intensive labour, leaving families in mounting debt. Despite providing an essential global commodity, these workers earn three percent of the salt's final value, living without running water or basic sanitation.Hope emerges through innovation and activism. Scientists at the Central Salt and Marine Chemical Research Institute are introducing new types of pan linings and solar-powered pumps to reduce costs and increase yields. Activists like Pankti Jog fight for land rights, healthcare and education, establishing mobile schools in old buses for the next generation. Yet, the future remains a gamble. While some children dream of becoming teachers or police officers, many feel tethered to the salt by heritage and lack of choice.