Re: NATURALTRIM THE DIET Indiana Indianists Indians (Asian) indigenous peoples Indirect rule Intonation Intuition Inuit Arctic peoples of Canada Kaska Kasm see Kasem kassena see Kasem http://www.sweepersonline.com/forum/posts/2392.html
Extractions: #3- You will have all the Support, Personal Confidence, and Privacy, that DIETS WORLD is famous for. The Products you want are at http://www.dietsworld.com If you would prefer to place your order by the Toll Free 800#, or you have any questions, please e-mail us at trimbay@hotmail.com , or call our Office anytime at (845) 856-4805.
Project MUSE - Information to a vague notion of indigenous culture as an houses traditional among the Dagomba, kassenaNankanni, Dagarti site of the All-African peoples Conference of http://worldshakesbib.com/journals/africa_today/v047/47.2hess.html
FGC Education And Networking Project Coverage includes any aspect of africa, its peoples, their homes, cities, Female genital cutting among the kassenaNankana of Northern Ghana the http://www.fgmnetwork.org/reference/biblio.html
Extractions: This collection documents the evolution of medical and scientific thinking and practice relating to women's health from 1818-1990s. There are small amounts of material on such topics as abortion, birth control, childbirth, eugenics, female genital mutilation, lactation, infant mortality, marriage instruction, mental hygiene, motherhood, nutrition, obstetrics, sexuality, sterilization, and AIDS. Types of materials include articles, books, advertisements, clippings, research materials, reports, surveys, pamphlets, and newsletters from a wide range of authors ranging from misogynist to feminist.
Extractions: - original sounds from Lobi Tribe as my nokia recorded one evening: first sample (WAV, 70KB) and second sample (WAV, 34KB) National Geographic published my article about African spiritual world photos from Cape Coast released National Geographic published my article about marriage poles of Lobi tribe photos from Larabanga, Lobi and Talensi people, Mole National Park and Breno beach released ... diary updated again on my way.. last time I had chance to visit indigenous tribe of Siberut Island and was amazed about the tribal people, their culture and their life. when trying to plan trip for this year, I decided, once again, not to choose tourist destination, but rather place where I could learn more about indigenous people and their beliefs. after going through several books and interesting web sites I bumped into interesting information. somewhere in the sahel, on the border between burkina faso and ghana, there is one tribe living, that was never colonized even when rest of the west africa was bowing to "white man".
Black History Most of these Central African peoples construct granaries, With the Westernizing of African cities, much indigenous architecture has been lost, http://www.britannica.com/Blackhistory/article.do?nKeyValue=384737
African Masks African peoples often symbolize death by the colour white rather than Having conquered the indigenous peoples, the Lunda gradually assimilated with them http://www.vub.ac.be/BIBLIO/nieuwenhuysen/african-art/african-art-collection-mas
Extractions: (of variable age, artistic quality, and degree of authenticity) Many African societies see masks as mediators between the living world and the supernatural world of the dead, ancestors and other entities. Masks became and still become the attribute of a dressed up dancer who gave it life and word at the time of ceremonies. The sculptor begins by cutting a piece of wood and leaving it to dry in the sun; if it cracks, it cannot be used for a mask. African sculptors see wood as a complex living material and believe each piece can add its own feature to their work. Having made certain the wood is suitable, the sculptor begins, using an azde to carve the main features, a chisel to work on details and a rough leaf to sand the piece.
African Statues, Sculptures, Figures, Fetishes Lineages and clans of the indigenous tengabisi inhabitants own the masks, and only the large group of Baule people/tribe from Ivory Coast in Westafrica http://www.vub.ac.be/BIBLIO/nieuwenhuysen/african-art/african-art-collection-sta
Extractions: (of variable age, artistic quality, and degree of authenticity) Clicking on a small photo brings you a bigger photo. Some of the pieces are available (for exchange for instance). The attributions of the origin of the objects is based on their stylistic characteristics and/or on the data provided by the seller and/or experts, but of course certainty cannot be reached. 1. Bamana / Bambara / (Baumana) / (Banbara) people/tribe from Mali, West-Africa 1.1. Female janiform figure in the style of the Bamana / Bambara / (Baumana) or the neighbouring Marka/Warka and Bozo tribes/people Information about Mali and the art from that country can be found on the WWW: http://www.vmfa.state.va.us/mali_geo_hist.html Information about Bamana/Bambara ceremonies and art can be found for instance in the following sources: Jacques Kerchache, Jean-Louis Paudrat, Lucien Stephan, L'art et les grandes civililitations: L'art africain. Paris : Editions Mazenod, 1988, 620 pp.
AIO Keywords List Mali The African country, for Mali of India, use Mali (Indian people); Mali empire Tribal peoples see Adivasi (India), Ethnic groups, indigenous peoples http://aio.anthropology.org.uk/aio/keywords.html
Extractions: Abagusii see Gusii Kenya Aban see Shor Abandoned settlements Abashevo culture Abbasids see also Islamic empire Abduction Abelam Abenaki North American Indians (Algonquian) Northeast Abetalipoproteinaemia Abidjan Ability Abkhazia Abnormalities ABO blood-group system Abolitionists Abominable snowman see Yeti Aboriginal studies Abortion Abrasion Absahrokee language see Crow language Absaraka language see Crow language Absaroka language see Crow language Absaroke language see Crow language Absolutism see Despotism Abu Hureyra site Abusir site Abydos site Academic controversies see also Scientific controversies Academic freedom Academic publishing see Scholarly publishing Academic status Academic writing Academics Acadians (Louisiana) see Cajuns Accents and accentuation Accidents see also Traffic accidents Acclimatisation Accra Accreditation Acculturation see also Assimilation Acetylcholine receptors Achaemenid dynasty (559-330 BC) Achaemenid empire Ache see Guayaki: Acheulian culture Achik see Garo Achinese language Achuar Achumawi Acidification Acquiescence Acquired immune deficiency syndrome see AIDS Acronyms Action theory Acupuncture Adam and Eve Adamawa emirate Adapidae see also Notharctus Adaptation Adat Adena culture Adhesives Adipocere Adisaiva see Adisaivar Adisaivar Adivasi Adjectives Adjustment (psychology) Administration see also Government, Management, etc.
Extractions: Philomena Nyarko, Peter Wontuo, Alex Nazzar, Jim Phillips, Pierre Ngom, and Fred Binka Physical geography of the Navrongo DSA The Navrongo DSS site is in the Kassena-Nankana District of the Upper East region of Ghana (Figure 22.1). The district lies between latitudes 10°30' and 11°00'N and longitudes 1°00' and 1°30'W and covers an area of 1675 km along the GhanaBurkina Faso border. It measures roughly 55 km × 50 km and has an altitude of 200400 m above sea level. The land is fairly flat, and passing through it from Burkina Faso is the White Volta River, which feeds Lake Volta (the worlds largest artificial lake) in the Volta region, south of Ghana. Figure 22.1. Location of the Navrongo DSS site, Ghana (monitored population, 141 000). Navrongo Health Research Centre, Navrongo, Ghana.
DatelineHealth-Africa.net Abstract Background The kassenaNankana District (KND) of northern Ghana lies Do people have enough control over Full Details. africa Potential http://www.datelinehealth-africa.net/betav1.0/researchreports/researchreports.as
Extractions: Job Community Algeria Angola Azores Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Canary Is. Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo Cote d'Ivorie Dem. Rep. of Congo (Zaire) Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea - Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Lybia Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Réunion Rwanda Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe Algeria Angola Azores Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Canary Is. Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo Cote d'Ivorie Dem. Rep. of Congo (Zaire) Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea - Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Lybia Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Réunion Rwanda Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe
WWSF - Women's Section Of the world s 1,3 billion poor people, it is estimated that nearly 70% are women. africa. 2001. Laureate from Burkina Faso, kassena Femmes Batisseurs http://www.woman.ch/women/1-introduction.asp
Extractions: Nomination Guidelines Rural women comprise more than one quarter of the total world population. 500 million women live below the poverty line in rural areas. Women produce 60-80 per cent of basic foodstuffs in sub-Sahara Africa and the Caribbean. Women perform over 50 per cent of the labour involved in intensive rice cultivation in Asia. Women perform 30 per cent of the agricultural work in industrialised countries. Women head 60 per cent of households in some regions of Africa. Women meet 90 per cent of household water and fuel needs in Africa. Women process 100% of basic household food stuffs in Africa. " Rural women the world over are an integral and vital force in the development processes that are the key to socio-economic progress. Rural women from the backbone of the agricultural labour force across much of the developing world and produce 35-45% of Gross Domestic Product and well over 50% of the developing world's food. Yet, half a billion rural women are poor and lack access to resources and markets " (Geneva Declaration for rural women 1992).
Hubert Von Goisern - Iwasig 2003 melancholic touch Bil Aka Kora gives a view into the music of these people. As well as in the south of Burkina Faso, the kassena are also indigenous to the http://www.hubertvongoisern.com/iwasig2003/concert3.html
Extractions: news biography music discography ... Page 2 That was the 9th Tuttlingen Honberg-Sommer www.tuttlingen.de 16th July 2003 He is without question one of the most interesting wanderers between the musical worlds. Hubert von Goisern proved that to the visitors in the completely sold-out Honberg-Sommer tent on Wednesday. The reminiscences took a broad area to the days of the Alpinkatzen , with whom the Styrian eared his reputation as the founder of alpine rock. Hubert von Goisern and his fantastic musicians easily managed the leap to world music, interweaving Caribbean, African and even folksy sounds, yodelling and singing and cast the astounded audience under their spell. The Austrian also showed himself to be a versatile instrumentalist, changing casually between electric guitar, diatonic, flute and trumpet. Goisern's honest "Thank you very much, Tuttlingen" came at the end of an almost three hour long concert evening which barely left any wish unanswered. Hubert and the violinist Tuttlingen - Hubert von Goisern sings, coos and yodels about dangerous holy things and about headaches, about African post-harmonica times and about brown beer - and the Honberg audience goes wild. "Wer bin i und wer bist du, und ist es überhaupt so wichtig?" ("Who am I and who are you, and is it really so important?") Hubert von Goisern knows was his countless fans want. And so first of all he brings out the alpine rock with which he became well-known. When he yodels, the tent roof flutters, when he sings his frank love songs, it runs ice-cold down the women's backs, even in the sauna temperatures in the tent. "Wow, that's good!"
Art fully costumed performers in their indigenous context. before a circumcision look nervous; kassena mothers gaze about a unique and colorful peoplethe Wodaabe http://www.griotwoman.com/customer/art/art.html
Ethnologue: Ghana It is an indigenous deaf sign language, also used by many hearing people. KASEM (KASENA, kassena, KASENE) KAS 100000 in Ghana (1995 SIL); http://www.christusrex.org/www1/pater/ethno/Ghan.html
Extractions: Ghana 17,543,000 (1995). Republic of Ghana. Formerly Gold Coast, and British Togoland. Literacy rate 36% (1992 UNESCO); 41% (1977 C. M. Brann). Information mainly from GILLBT 1995, Vanderaa 1991. Data accuracy estimate: A2. Christian, traditional religion, Muslim. Blind population 60,418. Deaf institutions: 20. The number of languages listed for Ghana is 72. ABRON (BRONG, BRON, DOMA) ABR Niger-Congo , Atlantic-Congo, Volta-Congo, Kwa, Nyo, Potou-Tano, Tano, Central, Akan. Most speak and understand Asante Twi well. Speakers of one dialect have less comprehension of Twi. 25% to 50% literate. Largely Muslim. Survey needed. ADAMOROBE SIGN LANGUAGE ADS ] Adamorobe, a village in the Eastern Region. The district capital is Aburi. Deaf sign language . 15% deafness in the population; one of the highest percentages in the world, caused by genetic recessive autosome. The age range of the deaf is evenly distributed. They are considered full citizens. The village has been settled for 200 years. It is an indigenous deaf sign language, also used by many hearing people. Most users have no contact with Ghanaian Sign Language. Agriculturalists, firewood traders. ADELE (GIDIRE, BIDIRE)
Banned And Locked Down! Mali The African country, for Mali of India, use Mali (Indian people) Mali empire Tribal peoples see Adivasi (India), Ethnic groups, indigenous peoples http://p208.ezboard.com/fthefed86933frm1.showMessage?topicID=737.topic
Paradoxia In Africa In africa, the concept of traditional sexual socialisation is voiced in various Among the Yorubaspeaking peoples, girls of better class were almost http://www2.rz.hu-berlin.de/sexology/GESUND/ARCHIV/GUS/AFRICAOLD.HTM
Extractions: Growing Up Sexually World Reference Atlas (Oct., 2002) [to Atlas Index [to Main Index Janssen, D. F. (Oct., 2002). Growing Up Sexually . Volume I: World Reference Atlas. Interim report. Amsterdam, The Netherlands [Janssen, D. F. (Oct., 2002). Growing Up Sexually in Sub-Saharan Africa . Interim Excerpt. Amsterdam, The Netherlands] "Easy, easy, many women will weep if you err" "Now unfold your scrotums and sleep in it" "Nyina owe, nyina owe, mayo wandi fuma ingawile nyina owe, nyina owe, nalete cisungu candi, nyina owe, nyina owe" Geographic Index Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso ... Cameroon , Central Africa, Congo Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Ethiopia ... Nigeria , Rhodesia. See Zambia, Zimbabwe Rwanda Senegal Sierra Leone Somalia ... Uganda , Upper Volta. See Burkina Faso Zaire Zambia Zimbabwe Ethnographic Index !Kung !Xo (!Ko), Auin, Ababoua, Abyssinia, Acholi Adamaoua Afar Afikpo Igbo , Ahaggaren. See Taureg Akan , Akela, Akwapim Alur Amhara Amwimbe ... Asaba Ibo , Ashanti. See Akan Atonga , Azande. See Zande , Azimba, Baamba Babunda Bachiga Bafia ... Baganda Bageshu, Bahemba Bahima Bahuana Bahuma Bajoro ... Bajok (Badjok), Bakene
Universität Bayreuth Local Action in africa in the Context of Global Influences Its technology is indigenousautarchic. Its legal organizational form was already http://www.uni-bayreuth.de/forschungsberichte/03/8/3/06/00/engl.html
Extractions: The Humanities Collaborative Research Centre of the University of Bayreuth started officially on 1 July 2000. In its structure and goals the Centre represents a new focus in the Collaborative Research Centres (Sonderforschungsbereiche: SFB) financed by the German Research Council (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft: DFG). The special features of the Humanities Collaborative Research Centre lie in the specific thematic and structural criteria: a transdisciplinary approach, international cooperation and internationalisation of research with regard to the choice of the topic, as well as academic programmes aimed at strengthening support for younger scholars. Fifteen disciplines participate in the Centre: African Languages, Arabic Language, African Art, Development Sociology, Social Anthropology, English Linguistics, History of Africa, Comparative Law/Private International Law, Islamic Studies, Cultural Geography, African Languages Literature, Plant Physiology, Religious Studies, Religious Socialisation, and Social Geography. In addition, the Centre is linked to the University's newly established Bachelor's and Master's degree programmes in Africa-related studies. The aim of the Centre is to examine local action in the context of global influences. 'Local' is understood as a constantly changing social and spatial context. The Centre focuses on current situations, but comparisons are made with past phenomena. In contradistinction to the usual perspective in globalisation paradigms, we emphasize the historical dimension of globalisation processes understanding them as global tendencies. Furthermore, we also do research on the processes of indirect globalisation, that is, processes by which globalisation does not directly affect the local, but rather changes the relationships between local unities. Field research in Africa is basic to the Centre. By way of concrete examples, the various projects will demonstrate how social interactions take on new dimensions and meanings and are transformed because of changing living conditions in African rural and urban communities as a result of globalisation.
Extractions: Philomena Nyarko, Peter Wontuo, Alex Nazzar, Jim Phillips, Pierre Ngom, and Fred Binka Physical geography of the Navrongo DSA The Navrongo DSS site is in the Kassena-Nankana District of the Upper East region of Ghana (Figure 22.1). The district lies between latitudes 10°30' and 11°00'N and longitudes 1°00' and 1°30'W and covers an area of 1675 km along the GhanaBurkina Faso border. It measures roughly 55 km × 50 km and has an altitude of 200400 m above sea level. The land is fairly flat, and passing through it from Burkina Faso is the White Volta River, which feeds Lake Volta (the worlds largest artificial lake) in the Volta region, south of Ghana. Figure 22.1. Location of the Navrongo DSS site, Ghana (monitored population, 141 000). Navrongo Health Research Centre, Navrongo, Ghana.
1991 International Development Research Centre for evaluating the potential of indigenous research; a will participate, through established people committees, in Trials in the kassenaNankana District. http://reseau.crdi.ca/en/ev-30262-201_2-1-DO_TOPIC.html