Welcome To The Daily Blog Archive Section nonIndo-European and non-Semitic, indigenous tribe of In the Assyrian inscriptionshorses came from kusu (neighborhood of PERSIA OTHER peoplesWATCH EGYPT http://thetribnet.org/blog_archive/blog_archive_january_2005.htm
Extractions: Archive section This is the entire month of entries for January 2005 January 31, 2005 What if it Was a Big Mistake? There are voices crying out against what is happening in the United States today. I wanted to print something from someone else so you wont think Im the only one saying it. The following , from Republican Congressman Ron Paul of Texas, was delivered on the floor of the House of Representatives on January 26, 2005. Ron Paul is a medical doctor as well as a congressman, and a voice of reason in Congress. In this article, he questions the U.S. policy of preemption, military intervention and police powers at home. He raises some insightful questions at the end. There is no way to change the prophetic clock, but at least we can be aware of what is happening. This is a wonderful eye opener and a confirmation of my last series, In Search of Babylon Delivered to the U.S. House of Representatives In medicine mistakes are made - man is fallible. Misdiagnoses are made, incorrect treatments are given, and experimental trials of medicines are advocated. A good physician understands the imperfections in medical care, advises close follow-ups, and double-checks the diagnosis, treatment, and medication. Adjustments are made to assure the best results. But what if a doctor never checks the success or failure of a treatment, or ignores bad results and assumes his omnipotence - refusing to concede that the initial course of treatment was a mistake? Let me assure you, the results would not be good. Litigation and the loss of reputation in the medical community place restraints on this type of bullheaded behavior.
African Art, Trade Beads, Masks, Carvings, Artifacts, Textiles There is an indigenous repair to . . $826.00. Magical Diviner s Object Songye people(?)Democratic Republic Buanga Power Figure)Songye or kusu (?) $500.00. Male http://www.africadirect.com/ccproducts2.php?category=11&pagenum=8&start=210&affi
Saudi Aramco World : Agadez: Sultanate Of The Sahara It has very few indigenous people and they are almost all artisans or soldiers AlQasim Chibba, secretary to the sultan, has heard of kusu s fame. http://www.saudiaramcoworld.com/issue/200301/agadez-sultanate.of.the.sahara.htm
Extractions: Photographed by Kevin Bubriski An Islamic sultanate was usually created, by custom if not by law, on the order of the ruling caliph. The fact that, throughout the lands of Islam, sultanates nonetheless exist today that were never so decreed shows the power of customary rights. The Rihla of the great Tangier-born geographer Ibn Battuta, who came this way in 1352 at the end of his world travels, is a standard reference for West African place names. The fact that he passed through the nearby copper-mining and trading center of Tiggida, but nowhere mentions Agadez, probably signifies that at that time Agadez was not a place of importance. Although modern scholars doubt that Leo indeed saw Agadez himself, his description was surely based on someone's eyewitness account: "Agadez is a walled city built by the modern sultans near Libya," he wrote. "It is the city of Blacks that is the closest to the cities of Whites, excepting Oualet [Oualata, in modern day Mauritania]. Its houses are well constructed in the style of Barbary because their inhabitants are almost all foreign merchants." With caravan routes secured by the sultan, Arab merchants were quick to make their way down from the north. For most of the 16th century, Agadez was the easternmost outpost of the Songhai, a Niger River-based empire centered in present-day Mali. Riverine Songhai is still spoken near Agadez in the town of Ingall.
African Statues, Sculptures, Figures, Fetishes Lineages and clans of the indigenous tengabisi inhabitants own the masks, andonly 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.
EGitti: Borneo - White Water Rafting its indigenous people so when I got the chance to get a bit of taste of this I set off with three friends Taka (Japan), Sean (South africa) and http://egitti.nomadlife.org/2005/03/borneo-white-water-rafting.html
Extractions: @import url("http://www.blogger.com/css/blog_controls.css"); @import url("http://www.blogger.com/dyn-css/authorization.css?blogID=9653105"); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/main.css); @import url(http://www.blogger.com/css/navbar/1.css); BlogThis! The life of Margit Takacs a.k.a Gitti... Random thoughts and structured monthly stories from South East Asia. Enjoy :-) Borneo has been always a mystery of a unique jungle world to me. Documentary movies are showing its tropical flora and fauna, its indigenous people so when I got the chance to get a bit of taste of this experience! I set off with three friends: Taka (Japan), Sean (South Africa) and Nicole (Switzerland) were also all excited about the Borneo discovery! The owner of our backpackers place sent a driver for us to the airport. Kota Kinabalu is around quarter of an hour away but those 15 minutes certainly brought a shocking surprise to us: the locals don't care much about speeding limits and in one of the crossroads the driver of a red car decided to go through the red light and we crashed. Sean and Nicole got some slight injuries and a 6-8-year-old boy got scars on his face due to the glass chips all around. It was said to be 'not serious enough' so there was no inspection of the accident but the experience resulted in paranoia whenever a taxi driver was breaking... 'What a beginning'!
Extractions: Zaire Zaire From the northern end of Lake Tanganyika to Lake Edward are a number of groups that share cultural and political features among themselves and with the interlacustrine Bantu-speaking peoples of Rwanda, Burundi, southwestern Uganda, and northwestern Tanzania. Most live at an altitude of 1,400 meters or more with a handful sited in the lowlands. Whereas all are cultivators, those in the highlands proper also raise cattle, primarily for milk and milk products; the few lowland groups that are unable to raise cattle have turned, like their forest neighbors, to hunting and fishing. The highland Bantu-speakers have known, possibly as early as the fourteenth century, the presence of centralized states ruled by members of specific descent groups thought to have come from the interlacustrine states to the northeast. Traditionally, only one of their number, the Furiiru, were organized into a single, relatively small state. More often there were several states, for example, among the Shi, that despite their small size carried the heavy apparatus of royal family, court officials, and hierarchy of chiefs. A degree of ethnic consciousness overriding membership in specific states developed during the late 1950s and early 1960s. The clearest example of the situational character of this consciousness came in 1964 when Shi irregulars joined the national army in opposing a rebel group passing through their territory because the rebels were perceived as outsiders led by Kusu.
AllRefer.com - Zaire - Ethnic Groups | Zaire Information Resource Tetelakusu of Kasai-Oriental and Maniema, and related groups. Throughout1993 violence continued in Shaba, and indigenous ethnic groups in http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/zaire/zaire166.html
Extractions: Zaire Zaire According to Mobutu's diagnosis, "tribalism," or ethnic politics, was one of the First Republic's major ills. The Manifesto of N'Sele and other major statements of "authentic Zairian nationalism" declared overt promotion of ethnic identity to be illegal. Steps taken against tribalism included suppression of institutional arenas in which ethnicity could be mobilized, apparent exclusion of overt ethnic patronage within the state, and prohibition of the articulation of ethnic ideologies. The first step included dismantling electoral assemblies and political assemblies, which was accomplished during the Second Republic regime's first year. The bewildering assortment of political partiesmore than 200 of them had taken part in the 1965 ballotingwas swept away by the stroke of a pen. They were replaced by a single party, the MPR, "the nation politically organized." The twenty-one provincettes were recombined, ultimately becoming eight regions (plus Kinshasa), which became mere administrative subdivisions of the recentralized state. First Republic politicians had sustained their clientele through the open use of the resources of the state for patronage. Particular ministries had become ethnic fiefdoms, both at the central and provincial levels. Local administrators were named at the provincial level, with ethnic criteria frequently paramount. Most of these practices were swept away by the new regime's total centralization of power. The state remained a vast patrimonial domain, but the distribution of benefits was above all a presidential prerogative. Functionaries in the command hierarchy of the territorial administration were posted outside of their ethnic zones as a matter of principle. Ministers were frequently rotated, inhibiting the entrenchment of particular ethnic groups in given departments.
Africa Mozambique, Flag of Mozambique, Portuguese (official), indigenous dialects note Kiswahili (Swahili) is the mother tongue of the Bantu people living in http://www.ethiotrans.com/africa.htm
Extractions: Ruwanda County Flag Language Support Algeria Arabic (official), French, Berber dialects Yes Angola Portuguese (official), Bantu and other African languages Yes Benin French (official), Fon and Yoruba (most common vernaculars in south), tribal languages (at least six major ones in north) Yes Botswana English (official), Setswana Yes Burkina Faso French (official), native African languages belonging to Sudanic family spoken by 90% of the population Yes Burundi Kirundi (official), French (official), Swahili (along Lake Tanganyika and in the Bujumbura area) Yes Cameroon 24 major African language groups, English (official), French (official) Yes Central African Republic French (official), Sangho (lingua franca and national language), Arabic, Hunsa, Swahili Yes Chad French (official), Arabic (official), Sara and Sango (in south), more than 100 different languages and dialects Yes Congo, Democratic Republic of the
The Needs Of Minority And Diverse Audiences -- 1998 Report WLRHFM, Huntsville offers programming for African-American and Native American featuring Native Americans and indigenous peoples from around the world. http://stations.cpb.org/system/reports/minority/1997/min25.html
Extractions: Public Broadcasting's Services to Minorities and Other Groups (1997) Many public television and radio stations devote a substantial portion of their resources to create and broadcast programs to meet the needs of their communities and audiences. In contrast to commercial stations, which mostly undertake local production to the extent they can sell it to advertisers, public stations create local programs to the extent they determine a community need, often guided by the advice and suggestions of a Community Advisory Board. The board typically includes representatives of all ethnic and racial groups living in a station's service area. The following state-by-state snapshot of some of the activities and programs undertaken by public radio and television licensees to serve diverse audiences highlights the kinds of efforts pursued by public broadcasters to serve and enrich their own communities. It is not a definitive guide to such efforts and is by no means exhaustive, either in its listing of stations providing such services or in its descriptions of the programs and services provided by any one station to minority and diverse audiences. To jump ahead to a particular state, click on the name below.
Turkish Daily News on nature is important in myriad indigenous religions throughout called partialautobiography by people who witnessed Bye Birdie (Gencligin Tatli kusu) 1960 http://www.turkishdailynews.com/old_editions/12_08_97/feature.htm
Portland Independent Media Center Artists Unite With Sustainable Vision Inspired by indigenous world views and culture kusu, 01.02.2003 1230. in your own hands and look to the people around you http://208.151.246.109/en/newswire/archive203.shtml
Extractions: resources contact about volunteer ... questions images audio video all categories portland metro united states global 9.11 investigation alternative media animal rights anti-racism arts and culture bikes/transportation community building corporate dominance drug war economic justice education election fraud environment forest defense genetic engineering government health homelessness indigenous issues labor legacies media criticism neighborhood news police / legal political theory social services sustainability technology youth katrina aftermath save the biscuit no new sprawlmarts s24 mobilization cheney protests may day post-selection actions oregon elections 2004 selection 2004 o14 bush protests indigenous day a13 bush/kerry visits biodevastation 2004 stop starbucks march 20, 2004 workers freedom ride wto cancun actions a21 bush protests wto sacramento gop conference week of bombing m20: day x m15: day of action a22: bush protest english espanol ONGOING FEATURES 9.11 investigation
Date Wed, 28 Jun 2000 235617 -0500 (CDT) From (ANE Digest) To of impoverished indigenous people all over the globe to loot antiquities. Thus the word kusugwan/gudu-gwan/ buffalo could mean strong beast or http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/ANE/ANE-DIGEST/2000/v2000.n183
Extractions: Subject: Re: ane bar again Louise Hitchcock wrote: > > >He argued in favor of the illicit antiquities trade, and misrepresented > >the positions of the AOS, the AIA, and ASOR regarding publishing > >unprovenanced objects. > > What would you expect from a magazine that publishes ads from antiquities > dealers? Intelligence, integrity, and editorial independence. Does the LA Times endorse every candidate that buys a campaign ad in its pages? - Peter T. Daniels grammatim@worldnet.att.net Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2000 06:43:49 -0400 From: "Peter T. Daniels" Subject: Re: ane bar again - Original Message From: Louise Hitchcock To: "Peter T. Daniels" Sent: June 27, 2000 11:06:19 PM GMT PD>> He argued in favor of the illicit antiquities trade, and PD>> misrepresentedthe positions of the AOS, the AIA, and ASOR PD>> regarding publishing unprovenanced objects. >What would you expect from a magazine that publishes ads from > antiquities dealers? That's funny, because I recall at least one Shanks editorial (and I think two)recently that warned against collecting both from the ethics perspective and from the forgeries perspective. - - Mark Rostien Drexel Hill, PA mjrost@usa.com FREE Personalized Email at Mail.com Sign up at http://www.mail.com/?sr=signup Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2000 15:59:23 +0200 From: Cynthia Edenburg Subject: Re: ane ANE: BAR and antiquities trade Someone suggested that would-be collectors be satisfied with photographs. I would think that would apply here (below) as well. Or is there something in the handling of the actual piece ....? > The wonderful dust-gathering potsherds are kept in university and > museum basements, not because of their value (or lack of) as display > items. They are kept because they are primary data uncovered from > excavations and surveys ... Leo D. Bores, M.D. Medical Research Director Ophthalmic International, Inc. voice: 480-837-6810 FAX: 480-837-6870 Date: Wed, 28 Jun 2000 10:00:23 -0400 From: "Papalas, Anthony John"
ChavScum Forum - Fuck Ya'z All.. My friend, Franco, comes from Peru and the indigenous people have been eatingthem forever. LestaCrew, kusu o taberu na, baka ketsunoana! http://www.chavscum.co.uk/forum/archive/index.php/t-5751.html
Extractions: We BiN RAISIN KingBreezer 20-02-2005, 03:55 PM Ffs, haven't people grown out of emulating and exaggerating chav posts to make chavs look worse? This is getting tedious now, it is patently obvious you are faking, do us all a favour and go out. You may even meet real people and 'interact' face to face... 20-02-2005, 03:56 PM spin ya stinken fat crack skids plummies...what you sayin, i has my rights an youz dont hav no rights ta speak fuckin zip..ere fuckin ere..I have decided to post here and completely ignore this pathetic waste of space. Erica Da Chavette*BLING* 20-02-2005, 04:00 PM
Extractions: Australian Law Reform Commission Global AustLII Search ALRC Database Search ALRC Home Table of Contents ... Help Scope of this Chapter . In this Chapter the ways in which Aboriginal customary laws can or should affect liability under the general criminal law will be discussed. Three main issues require examination: first, intent and related questions; secondly, existing criminal law defences and their application to Aborigines, and thirdly, the nature and scope of a possible customary law defence. Disparate Ideas of Responsibility . With certain exceptions these issues do not involve the direct translation or transposition of Aboriginal customary laws as such. It is the general Australian law which, generally speaking, insists on fault as an essential basis of criminal responsibility, even assessing degrees of fault for major offences such as homicide. The law defines the range of prescribed harms (eg death, personal injury), but does not attribute criminal responsibility to those who cause such harms in the absence of their intention to cause, or recklessness as to causing, them (or, in certain cases, their blameworthy negligence).
U.S. Congressman Curt Weldon : 7th District Of Pennsylvania if a team of experts worked with indigenous Afghans Air Forces; MGEN Nusret Tasdeler;COL kusu, briefer; Namik one nationality, because we have people who have http://www.house.gov/curtweldon/speechoct2us-russiarelations.htm
Extractions: You are invited to add more languages to the list. Please use the minimum number of words that would be understandable and put the pronunciation in slashes according to (Click link for more info and facts about IPA) IPA transcription if possible. If desired, also add a pseudo-English pronunciation guide for those not familiar with IPA. However, actual pronunciations of the pseudo-English spellings will vary from speaker to speaker. Enclose the "pronunciation guide" in parentheses, separate syllables with dashes, use English words that sound like the syllables if possible, and render the stressed syllable in ALL CAPS.
Project MUSE The Islamic movement has its indigenous roots in Sudanese nationalism and In order to build bridges with the people, kusu organized summer schools and http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/africa_today/v046/46.3ibrahim.html
Extractions: Biographers of Hasan al-Turabi, the leader of the Islamic revival in Sudan, are inclined to see his "fundamentalism" as an expression of the religious traditions of the al-Turabis, a lineage of sufis, Mahdis, jurists, and clerics that came into existence in the seventeenth century. This view obscures the politics of a shrewd thinker with a great ability to respond to and effect change. This article examines al-Turabi's religious ideas as a "theology of modernity" which includes a lucid interrogation of tradition and modernity. Al-Turabi focuses on the concept of ibtila, the challenges posed by God to test Muslims' faith, in constructing a mode of worship worthy of a time of dramatic technological innovations, human mobility, and interconnectedness. In fashioning a theology which applies long-standing religious traditions to the challenges of the modern world, al-Turabi disputes claims of the incompatibility of these two realms.
Christian Persecutions Worldwide indigenous and foreign Christians are now being closely monitored. On theevening of May 23 three masked men entered kusukusu, a village near Ambon. http://nwo-warning.tripod.com/christian_persecution.htm
Extractions: setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded" Search: Lycos Tripod Free Games Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next The Coming Worldwide Persecution of Christians Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye, when men shall revile you, and persecute you, and shall say all manner of evil against you falsely, for my sake. Rejoice, and be exceeding glad: for great is your reward in heaven: for so persecuted they the prophets which were before you. (Matthew 5:10-12 ) Yea, and all that will live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution. But evil men and seducers shall wax worse and worse, deceiving, and being deceived. (2Timothy 3:12-13) For whosoever will save his life shall lose it; but whosoever shall lose his life for my sake and the gospel's, the same shall save it.- (Mark 8:35 ) But before all these, they shall lay their hands on you, and persecute you, delivering you up to the synagogues, and into prisons, being brought before kings and rulers for my name's sake. And it shall turn to you for a testimony. Settle it therefore in your hearts, not to meditate before what ye shall answer: For I will give you a mouth and wisdom, which all your adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor resist. And ye shall be betrayed both by parents, and brethren, and kinsfolks, and friends; and some of you shall they cause to be put to death. And ye shall be hated of all men for my name's sake. But there shall not an hair of your head perish. In your patience possess ye your souls. (Luke 21:12-19 )