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         Sudan Culture:     more books (55)
  1. Sudan (Cultures of the World) by Patricia Levy, 1997-01
  2. Living with Colonialism: Nationalism and Culture in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan by Heather J. Sharkey, 2003-03-18
  3. Five Women of Sennar: Culture & Change in Central Sudan by Susan M. Kenyon, 2004-02
  4. Port Sudan: The Evolution of a Colonial City (State, Culture, and Society in Arab North Africa) by Kenneth J. Perkins, 1993-04
  5. Culture and Context in Sudan: The Process of Market Incorporation in Dar Masalit (Suny Series in Middle Eastern Studies) by Dennis Tully, 1988-06
  6. Culture & Context in Sudan (Suny Series in Middle Eastern Studies) by Dennis Tully, 1987-08
  7. Mice Are Men: Language and Society Among the Murle of Sudan (International Museum of Cultures Publications) by Jonathan E. Arensen, 1993-07
  8. A Strategic Assessment of Sudan, 2000 edition (Strategic Planning Series) by The Sudan Research Group, The Sudan Research Group, 2000-04-25
  9. Cultural Policy in the Sudan (Studies & Documents on Cultural Policies) by Muhammad Abd al-Hayy, 1982-07
  10. The story of Egypt and Sudan (Global culture series: know your world) by Queenie M Bilbo, 1972
  11. Date culture in Sudan by Silas Cheever Mason, 1925
  12. Rescuing Sudan ancient cultures: A cooperation between France and the Sudan in the field of archaeology by Francis Geus, 1984
  13. People and Cultures of the Ethio-Sudan Borderlands (Michigan State University, East Lansing, Committee on North)
  14. The Kerma culture, around 1730-1520 B.C: A note on ancient Sudan civilization by Mubarak B Al-Rayah, 1971

101. 1987 NUBIAN EXHIBITION: BROCHURE
Upper Egypt soon grew wealthy and its culture expanded again into Nubia, whererenewed and a closely related culture was established in northern sudan,
http://oi.uchicago.edu/OI/PROJ/NUB/NUBX/NUBX_brochure.html
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THE NUBIA SALVAGE PROJECT
ORIENTAL INSTITUTE MUSEUM
NUBIA - "Its glory and its people"
1987 EXHIBITION: BROCHURE
FEBRUARY 1 thru 28, 1987
Presented by: THE ORIENTAL INSTITUTE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO and the OAK WOODS CEMETERY ASSOCIATION In the Tower of Memories, Oak Woods Cemetery, Chicago
By BRUCE WILLIAMS, Research Associate
Exhibition Brochure Cover Exhibition Credits Exhibition Introduction To the ancient Mediterranean world, the land south of Egypt was a territory of mystery and legend. Wealth and exotic products came from there. It was the home of the Ethiopians, whom Homer called blameless and stories about its great achievements endured to tantalize the modern world. This land, which now includes Nubia, is a land of enormous distances, and its exploration was long impeded by problems of transport and political unrest. In the last hundred years, Nubia has slowly yielded its secrets, its vanished peoples, abandoned cities and lost kingdoms brought to light by the excavator and copyist of inscriptions. This exhibit is a selection of objects recovered over twenty years ago by the Oriental Institute Nubian Expedition in the effort to rescue archaeology from the rising water behind the Aswan Dam. The land of Nubia is a desert divided by the river Nile. For want of water and rich soil, most of Nubia has never been able to support a large population for long periods. However, some of Africa's greatest civilizations emerged here, centers of achievement whose existence was based on industry and trade. Because they did not write their own languages until very late in ancient times, we know these centers and their people largely through their archaeology and what the Egyptians and Greeks said about them.

102. Darfur
model of riverain sudanese culture to which pupils were expected to aspire, reflects the frustrations and cleavages in sudan s political culture.
http://www.sudanupdate.org/REPORTS/PEOPLES/Darf.htm
Reports : Peoples Darfur The three and a half million people living in Darfur region, geographically isolated and neglected by central government in Khartoum, have been adversely affected by conflict since the early 1980s. The relatively peaceful equilibrium between its ethnic groups has been destroyed by environmental degradation - the spread of the desert and the effects of the Sahel drought - coupled with the divide-and-rule tactics of central government and the influx of modern weaponry. Members of the elites of the major ethnic groups are engaged in a struggle for political status, and failing to tackle the underlying problems of equitable allocation of water and land. Meanwhile outside access to the region is now so tightly controlled that detailed information about the current plight of the indigenous people is increasingly difficult to obtain. Darfur was an independent sultanate until 1917, when it was the last region to be incorporated into the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. The Arabic word Dar roughly means homeland, and its population of nearly four million is divided into several Dars; not only of the Fur people, as its name suggests, but also of several other communities, determined by livelihood as much as ethnicity. These ecological and social distinctions are more meaningful than the administrative divisions imposed by government. Ethnicity is not in itself clear-cut, given the long history of racial mixing between indigenous "non-Arab" peoples and the "Arabs", who are now distinguished by cultural-linguistic attachment rather than race.

103. South Sudan Comprehension
Uniting the people of South sudan, sharing their pain and cultures with the world.
http://www.geocities.com/southsudancomprehension
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104. Food Drink
Sudanese cooking is extremely simple, with little or no use of spices. Seasoning isgenerally confined to salt and pepper and lemon juice.
http://www.arab.net/sudan/sn_food.htm
Basic foodstuffs are available for purchase in most towns, and local markets are quite well-stocked with fruit, vegetables, peanuts and spices. Despite a recent history of famine and starvation which is now only a memory for large parts of the population, Sudanese people are incredibly hospitable, and will willingly share what little food they have with visitors and travelers. Sudanese cooking is extremely simple, with little or no use of spices. Seasoning is generally confined to salt and pepper and lemon juice. Meals are eaten from a communal bowl, using the fingers of the right hand in accord with religious practice. The most common dishes are as follows (although these are not always available): Meat and poultry. Chicken is usually stewed and served in a broth, while lamb can be skewered as a kebab, or cooked on a bed of coals and served with salad. This dish can also be made with beef and is known as shayya
For those whose taste runs to offal, there is kammonia , a dish made from the stomach of a sheep, stewed and served with onions and tomatoes. Liver and kidney dishes are also popular: kibda is skewered or stewed liver, and

105. African Studies Center | Sudan Page
Annotated directory of links to resources.
http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Country_Specific/Sudan.html
Sudan Page
Other On-Line Resources Related to Sudan
  • Sudan
      The index has been created by The Norwegian Council for Africa, as part of its comprehensive effort to strengthen the knowledge of Africa and African affairs. The projects has been developed in cooperation with the information company Gazette, and wit h financial support from the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  • Sudan (Karen Fung)
      Resources represents part of Karen Fung's "Africa South of the Sahara Electronic Guide". It covers: news, history, geography, etc..
  • Sudan Home
      Comprehensive list of resources that covers: news, history, photos, comics, travel, education, etc.

106. Sudanese Literature, Music, Culture & Education
Welcome to The Sudanese Literature, Music, culture Education Home Page (Updatedon 6/03/1998). Designed by Dr Yousif Hummaida Ahmed
http://www.geocities.com/TheTropics/5379/
Designed by Dr Yousif Hummaida Ahmed This page is hosted free by  GeoCities Guest Book Provision  Search by AAA World Announce Archive  PowerSearch the Web: Since 23 Feb. 1998 You are visitor No Personal Details and Intersets Sudan Geography, Facts, Languages and Politics Sudanese Engineering Society in UK and Ireland (SESUKI) Charitable, Professional and Non-political Activities Sudanese Music (Sound Tracks and Information) New links added on 6/March/1998 Who is Who of Sudanese Writers and Poets General Links, News, Arabic Newspapers, English Newspaper and Job Search Tell Me About Yourself View My Guestbook ... Resources for Kids (Educational Stuff and Games)
Personal Details and Intersets
I have been a member of the Concrete Durability Group , Civil Engineering Department, Imperial College London (UK) . You can know more about UK from UK Directory
My Country SUDAN
Back to the Index
Sudanese Engineering Society in United Kingdom and Ireland (SESUKI)
  • Help Technical Educational Institutions in the SUDAN by Joining (23-Feb.-1998) including Abstractss for Energy in Sudan Workshop - 27/Feb./1998

107. SudanTribune Topics - Latest Articles On Culture...
10 latest articles on culture . Emmanuel Jal and Sudanese music compilationThursday 2 June 2005 0252 From the BBC Radio 3
http://www.sudantribune.com/mot.php3?id_mot=4

108. SudanTribune Article : Symposium Nudges Documentation Of Sudan’s Oral Hist
Osman said he was in sudan to help formulate the country’s cultural project underthe auspices of the UNESCO, which he described as a practical and vital
http://www.sudantribune.com/article.php3?id_article=4788

109. War And Piece:
expands the United Nations Mission in sudan to include the protection of a nofly zone over Darfur, and calls for a presidential envoy to sudan
http://www.warandpiece.com/blogdirs/001980.html
Main
April 29, 2005
The American Prospect 's Mark Leon Goldberg reports the depressing news that the Bush administration is rapidly backtracking from action to stop the genocide in Darfur, and is recently making nice with the Sudanese government. Goldberg writes that on a trip last week to Darfur, Deputy Secretary of State Robert Zoellick vastly lowballed the death count there and refused to call what is occurring in Darfur genocide, as former Secretary of State Colin Powell had already declared it. Africa watchers and human rights activists say Zoellick's equivocating was a very deliberate signal: "Zoellick is not some State Department official acting on his own,” [the International Crisis Group's John] Prendergast told me, “but was deliberately signaling a shift in administration policy." Eric Reeves, the Smith College professor whose analysis of the conflict continues to prove prescient, agrees. Shortly after the press conference, Reeves surmised on his Web site that Zoellick’s comments heralded a new administration strategy meant to forestall the need for a U.S. commitment to humanitarian intervention by downplaying the urgency of the situation. If so, this post-Powell policy is placing the administration on a collision course with Congress. Last week, the Senate unanimously passed the Darfur Accountability Act as part of the Iraq-Afghanistan emergency supplemental appropriations bill. Led by Republican Sam Brownback of Kansas and Democrat John Corzine of New Jersey, the act appropriates $90 million in U.S. aid for Darfur and establishes targeted U.S. sanctions against the Sudanese regime, accelerates assistance to expand the size and mandate of the African Union mission in Darfur, expands the United Nations Mission in Sudan to include the protection of civilians in Darfur, establishes a no-fly zone over Darfur, and calls for a presidential envoy to Sudan...

110. AllAfrica.com Sudan The Beat Of The Mountains
The Nuba Cultural Festival in sudan attracted 10 ethnic groups from the NubaMountains. The festival, which will be held annually in future,
http://allafrica.com/stories/200507220707.html

111. 2005 Sudan Studies Association, Panel 1B
Translation A Vehicle for Peace, Cultural Dialogue and Democracy in the On the positive side of the cultural and linguistic politics in the sudan,
http://www.sudanstudies.org/ssa051b.html
Panel #1B: "Politics and Religion"
Political Violence in the Sudan: From Militancy to Mulitary
Abdullahi Gallab
Brigham Young U, USA
The purpose of this paper is twofold. First, it seeks to develop an approach to the understanding of the violence that marred the Sudanese political life for the last five decades and analyze how this culture of violence have spread among the political actors to include other parties and to become part of their political program. The second purpose arises from an attempt to construct a comprehension of the local processes that have been acting within a tense environment of rivalry among political actors to transform such forms of militancy into a military coup.
Shari'a Law in a Post-Peace (?) Post-Islamist, (?) Sudan
Carolyn Fluehr-Lobban
Rhode Island College, USA
Bumps on the Road to Freedom from Female Genital Cutting
Ellen Grunbaum
California State U Fresno USA Ending female genital cutting requires countless individual decisions to abandon the strongly held traditional practice. Reformers count on the successful development of a new local social consensus that the practice should end. Such consensus, when marked by a public declaration, offers both social support and peer pressure to make the decisions. This study investigates the aftermath of one such public declaration that was made in a community in Bara Province , North Kordofan Sudan , in 2001. The declaration came as a consequence of an FGC Initiative undertaken by a partnership of CARE and the Ministry of Health.

112. Arab Studies Quarterly (ASQ): Gender Politics In Sudan: Islamism, Socialism, And
Full text of the article, Gender Politics in sudan Islamism, Socialism, They also failed to incorporate women s multiple forms of cultural expressions
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2501/is_2_23/ai_77384493
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ASEE Prism Academe African American Review ... View all titles in this topic Hot New Articles by Topic Automotive Sports Top Articles Ever by Topic Automotive Sports Gender Politics in Sudan: Islamism, Socialism, and the State - Review Arab Studies Quarterly (ASQ) Spring, 2001 by Amal Hassan Fadlalla
Save a personal copy of this article and quickly find it again with Furl.net. It's free! Save it. Sondra Hale. Gender Politics in Sudan: Islamism, Socialism, and the State. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1997. Hardcover, 294 pp., glossary, index FEMINIST ANTHROPOLOGISTS HAVE COME a long way in challenging previous models of "women and state" that reduced the histories and experiences of non-western women to mere state repression. Ethnographies from different cultures show that state gender ideologies are not accepted silently. Instead they are continuously contested, negotiated, and often manipulated by women and men to strategically serve their own social and political ends. Sondra Hale's book is a remarkable example of a contemporary feminist attempt to revisit old theories and methodologies dealing with women and state politics.

113. NewsHour Extra Lesson Plan: Sudan -- Efforts To Avert Genocide In The Making
NewsHour Extra story World Recognizes Refugee Crisis in sudan 10 Understandsthe nature and complexity of Earth s cultural mosaics
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/extra/teachers/lessonplans/world/sudan_genocide.html
LESSON: SUDAN EFFORTS TO AVERT GENOCIDE IN THE MAKING
Background, Activities and Critical Analysis
By Joanne Dufour, a classroom teacher and curriculum developer Subject: World History, World Cultures, Contemporary World Problems, Civics, African Studies, Geography, International Affairs, Law
Time: Two class periods - one for gaining an understanding of the current crisis in Sudan; the second for research and sharing Objectives
Students will be able to:
  • Learn about recent events in the country of Sudan and efforts to prevent another genocide Learn about the role of human rights organizations in calling the attention of the world to human rights abuses Explore the legal implications of use of the term "genocide" Appreciate the role of humanitarian organizations and government aid in trying to relieve the misery of those caught up in Sudan's war Learn about efforts to bring to justice those accused of genocide
Background
A civil war in Sudan for the past 20 years has led to the death of 2 million people. However recent events have pointed to what some are calling genocide and there are estimates of 2.2 million at risk of dying in the near future due to inadequate humanitarian relief. The international community has condemned the Sudanese government for setting up obstacles to established relief efforts. Despite a recent cease-fire agreement signed between the government and rebel opposition groups, fighting continues. Materials
  • NewsHour Extra story: World Recognizes Refugee Crisis in Sudan

114. Images From World History: Ancient Sudan: Kingdom Of Meroe (4th C. B.C. To 325 A
Elephants served a military function, but the cultural influence from the the Sudanese language indicates the cultural independence of Meroë from Egypt.
http://www.hp.uab.edu/image_archive/um/uml.html
Ancient Sudan:
(4th c. B.C. to 325 A.D.)
6. Relief from a stand at Wad Ban Naga temple. It shows Queen Amanitare, wife of her co-ruler, Natakamani. The inscription is in both Egyptian and Merotic hieroglyphs, and so is important for knowing how to translate Merotic script. The tendency today to see Natakamani as the principle ruler of Kush probably results from our privileging Roman written sources. 9. The Lion Temple of Naqa. The architectural style is Egyptian. The entrance reliefs show the king and queen striking their enemies. The queen reflects Merotic culture in both her importance being equal to that of the king, but also in her figure style. 10. Rear view of the Lion Temple, Naqa, Meroe. The Kushitic god, Apedemek, with three heads and four arms, is worshiped by the royal family, dressed in the Nubian style. 11. The Lion Temple, Naqa, Meroe. Side view of one of the front pylons, shows in relief the figure of Apedemek, represented as a snake arising from a flower. 9. The

115. The Cultural Orientation Project
Refugees from sudan Cultural Orientation Work Group September 2000 sudan–Acultural profile. Toronto University of Toronto, Faculty of Social Work
http://www.culturalorientation.net/fact_sudan.html
culturalorientation.net Home Resettlement Overseas Publications ... Resources Refugees from Sudan
Cultural Orientation Work Group September 2000 Sudan in Brief
Geography

Located in North Africa, Sudan is geographically the largest country in Africa with approximately 1 million square miles (roughly the size of the U.S. east of the Mississippi). Sudan shares borders with nine countries including Egypt to the North. The Nile River and its tributaries dominate the country, with deserts in the North and a more tropical climate in the South. Population
Sudan has approximately 34.5 million people from as many as 400 different ethnic groups. The North is dominated by Arabic-speaking Muslims. In the South, at least 100 different languages are spoken, and most southern Sudanese follow indigenous beliefs or have become Christians. Education
Currently all curricula follow a strict Islamic model in the Arabic language. In the South, education was formerly offered in English. In the past, boys might have been sent into towns for education, while rural females learned domestic responsibilities in prepara-tion for a good marriage and childbearing. At this time, because of war, government neglect, and the lack of supplies and trained teachers, few schools remain open, and two generations of southern Sudanese children have not received education (USCR, 1999).

116. Crosswalk.com - News - Christian Commentary, Conservative Blogs; Culture, Politi
Sudanese Rebel Leader Killed Days After Peace Deal Swearingin Pro-Life Groupsto Bill Frist Say It Ain t So Editorial The Political Left Gets
http://www.crosswalk.com/news/
Faith Family Fun Community ... Shopping Religion Today weblogs
The Real Face of AbortionChoosing Death Rather Than Life

Albert Mohler
At the national level, the abortion debate is often discussed only in terms of laws, court decisions, and public controversies. In reality, every one of the million-plus abortions performed in America each year comes as a result of a private decision, often made without concern for public analysis. This point is made abundantly clear in a major article published in the September 18, 2005 edition of The New York Times
Churches to Play Key Role in Next 'Left Behind' Flick
Janet Chismar
Left Behind: World at War opens theatrically in churches the weekend of October 21-23. This entirely new distribution system will not only challenge fundamental Hollywood rules, but also provide churches with an enormous opportunity for outreach into their local communities.
A Magic Bullet
- Albert Mohler
A 2003 survey indicated that children and teens who share dinner with their families five or more nights a week were far less likely to have tried alcohol, cigarettes or marijuana.
Is the School Library Safe?

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