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61. Share The Worlds Resources - Content
By the standards of indigenous African medicine, Manica healers recognize a Swantz, L. 1990 The Medicne Man among the zaramo of Dar es Salaam.
http://www.stwr.net/modules.php?name=Content&pa=showpage&pid=181

62. 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

63. Common Mental Disorders Among Those Attending Primary Health Clinics And Traditi
between biomedical and African indigenous health practitioners succeed? Swantz, L. (1990) The Medicine Man Among the zaramo of Dares-Salaam.
http://bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/content/full/183/4/349
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This Article Abstract Full Text (PDF) Submit a response ... Citation Map Services Email this article to a friend Related articles in BJP Similar articles in this journal Similar articles in PubMed ... Download to citation manager PubMed PubMed Citation Articles by NGOMA, M. C. Articles by MANN, A. The British Journal of Psychiatry
The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Common mental disorders among those attending primary health clinics and traditional healers in urban Tanzania
MDIMU CHARUA NGOMA, MD, DIH, MPhil Department of Psychiatry, Muhimbili University College of Health Sciences of the University of Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania MARTIN PRINCE, MD, MRCPsych and ANTHONY MANN, MD, FRCPsych Section of Epidemiology, Institute of Psychiatry, London, UK Correspondence: Mdimu C. Ngoma, 187 Parrswooodd Road, Didsbury, Manchester M20 4RR, UK Declaration of interest None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.

64. Connie Popek, Bookseller At Antiqbook.com
64300 STURTEVANT, WILLIAM C. Native Americans The indigenous People of p0684 SWANTZ, LLOYD - The Medicine Man Among the zaramo of Dar Es Salaam
http://www.antiqbook.com/boox/connie/books53000.shtml
Connie Popek, Bookseller
155 Secor Road, Otego, NY 13825, USA
607-431-9870 tel, 607-431-2538 fax Email: ppopek@stny.rr.com Search our books Search Antiqbook Search on this page Click on booknumber for full information : STAHL, DEAN - The World of Dolphins
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65. New Acquisitions: LC Class "G"
W. Title The medicine man among the zaramo of Dar es Cook the archaeology of therecent indigenous past in and physical activity in older people / edited by
http://132.235.47.196/libinfo/news/2004-06/g.htm
Library News:New Acquisitions Lists
June 2004
Library of Congress Class G: Geography, Anthropology, Recreation
New Acquisitions Main Menu June 2004 Menu Page Jump to beginning of list
GA Mathematical geography, cartography GB Physical geography GC Oceanography GF Human ecology GN Anthropology GR Folklore GR Manners and customs GV Sports and recreation
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Author: Worboys, Michael. Title: GIS : a computing perspective / Michael Worboys, Matt Duckham. Publication Info: Boca Raton : CRC Press, c2004.

Call Number: Title: Thermal remote sensing in land surface processes / edited by Dale A. Quattrochi and Jeffrey C. Luvall. Publication Info: Boca Raton : CRC Press, [2004?]
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Author: Bergman, Edward F.

66. Malawi Mission
One of the highest population densities in africaabout 33 people per square mi (85 However, this return to indigenous social systems is resulting in
http://www.geocities.com/redmondrose/AfricaFacts.htm
Out Of Africa With all her wondrous beauty there is something else coming out of Africa that isn't so beautiful at all. Africa is still a very primitive continent. It's a place where the strong surviveLive and Let Die. Anything goes. And when they come to the USA, their ethnic heritage doesn't change here either. In fact, this is a much better hunting ground that ever the savanna was. There are so many easy pickings in our suburbsespecially with the elderly. And most other third world countries see the USA the very same way. I get almost NO e-mail. Not even spam! When I do, this is the kind of solicitation I get. I have a lot of them too. When we bring these people to the US to do service work for the elderly, and disabled we have just a bit of a problem. We are the weak and according to their cultural normto be exploited. This is true for most coming in from third world countries. The morals and ethics in the USA just don't apply. They don't get it. The think is: Americans are stupid. Whose to see if I take? Whose to tell if I intimidate. Do it. Why not? Malawi Warrior
or
Warlord Is this man now providing home health care for your grandmother? Remember we all get old eventually.

67. Project MUSE - Information
the Luguru, Kutu, Kwere, and zaramo, who, interestingly The indigenous PoliticalSystem of the Sukuma and People and Production in Late PreColonial Tanzania.
http://worldshakesbib.com/journals/africa_today/v048/48.4gunderson.html
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68. Utamaduni: An Advanced Level Course In Swahili Language And Culture
named after the dogoli drum of the zaramo people in Tanzania kaburu 5/6 1/2 boer, A Dutch colonist (or descendant) in South africa
http://african.lss.wisc.edu/utamaduni/glossary.htm
Home
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Kamusi Yetu Alfabeti: A B C D ... Z A alfabeti -a kienyeji indigenous, local, traditional -a kitaalamu scholarly (cf. mtaalamu -a kiungu divine (cf. mungu -a kutupwa extreme -a mbeleni -a nyongeza supplementary, additional aarifiwa be informed (also: arifiwa ; from Arabic; cf. maarifa taarifa abudu worship (from Arabic; cf. ibada acha leave, leave behind (cf. achana achia achilia mbali achana leave each other, separate (cf. acha achana naye achana naye leave him/her alone (cf. acha achana achia achilia mbali achia leave off , bequeath , leave someone something (cf. acha achana achana naye achia ... achilia mbali achilia mbali let alone, never mind (cf. acha achia ada 9/10 fee (from Arabic) adabu 9/10 manners (from Arabic; cf. adibisha adibu adesi 9/10 lentils (from Arabic) adha 9/10 discomfort, trouble (from Arabic; cf. udhi udhi 5/6 udhia udhika adhabu 9/10 punishment (from Arabic; cf.

69. Important Educational Leader
In Bantu languages, such as Swahili, people from the Zigua tribe are called Later, some of these groups were either assimilated into the indigenous
http://www.warsantimes.com/page2.htm
Important Educational Leader Continues to lead Lincoln International High School is preparing for its tenth year of creatively educating our young people. From the time Lincoln first opened its doors in 1996 until this summer it has been known as Abraham Lincoln High School But now with a new building in downtown Minneapolis , new programs and some very talented and skilled new staff, the school has a new name. Lincoln International High School is free to all students as part of the Minneapolis Public Schools system. It serves students from Africa Asia , Central and South America , and Europe Last year, Lincoln students came from 19 different countries and spoke 16 different languages. The largest percentage of the school's students is Somali and Oromo. Most of the school's teachers come from countries around the world as well. The school has always taken pride in its ability to help the students who come to Lincoln feel safe, welcomed and valued for the gifts they bring from their different and wonderful cultures. Lincoln has a great history as one of the first and largest schools set up to serve immigrant and refugee students who want to go to school and earn their diplomas.

70. Africa TodayFrom Dancing With Porcupines To Twirling A Hoe
Today one of my people trapped a hedgehog. I didn t know, The IndigenousPolitical System of the Sukuma and Proposals for Political Reform.
http://iupjournals.org/africatoday/aft48-4.html

71. The Somali And East Africa Thread - The Dustbin (This Is Where You Find The Tras
im glad so many people r finally realising wat dese east african gyals have got!!1 ting dat bugs me doe iz da constant arguement dat somalians,
http://www.blackchat.co.uk/theblackforum/forum28/1395-5.html

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Search by username The Black Forum 2 - The Blacknet Village Dustbin The Dustbin (This is where you find the trash)
The Somali and East Africa thread Moderated by: safetyblitz Raven Miss Brighter Days LadyDay ... athaba Topic closed
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Author Post arab princess
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Joined: Location: Posts: Mana: Lock onto the Village Radio Posted: Wednesday January 21st, 2004 17:15 Able wrote: ok to Arab princess, you have all the right in the world to share your views but you do not have the right to bash the Somalians. You might percieve your people to be the best and the "most beautiful" but there are many out there that would disagree. I am one of those who disagrees. You are on here running a one person Sudanese appreciation party, stating "I think the sudanese people are the best or the most beautiful". When they were never even brought up. Yes you love your people there is nothing wrong with that, but there is no need to bash or hate on other groups of people to get your point across. I'm sure many Somalians WOULD NOT be pleased with being called a sudanese, or consider them to be very beautiful.

72. Stylus - African Studies From Nordic Africa Institute
African Financial Institutions in Historical Perspective The InconvenientIndigenous. Remote Area Development in Botswana, Donor Assistance and the
http://styluspub.com/books/books.aspx?type=pubcat&str=NAI&id=91

73. Julkaisut
Zakat in PreColonial Sub-Saharan africa. A tentative Survey.Part Three C.Seithy L. Chachage Land, Forests and People in Finnish Aid in Zanzibar Some
http://www.valt.helsinki.fi/kmi/julka.htm
Kehitysmaatutkimuksen laitos JULKAISULUETTELO
Institute of Development Studies LIST OF PUBLICATIONS Ajankohtaista
Hakemisto

Julkaisut

Kirjasto
...
SOME OTHER PUBLICATIONS

INTERKONTIN KIRJOJA ; INTERKONT BOOKS (ISSN 0359-307X) No 11 HOSSAIN Masud Regional Conflict Transformation: A Reinterpretation of South Asian
Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC).

Helsinki 2002. 198 pp. ISSN 0359-307X, ISBN 952-10-0527-0 No 10 SEPPÄNEN, Maaria: Global Scale, Local Place? The Making of the Historic Centre of
Lima Into a World Heritage Site.
Helsinki 1999 146 pp IBSN 951-45-8482-1 No 9 MICKELS KOKWE, Gun: Helsinki 1997 194 pp ISBN 951-45-7551-2 No 8 COWEN, Michael - MACWILLIAM, Scott:

74. Preliminary Program Friday Sessions
Fadhili Mshana, Georgia College State U, zaramo Mganga’s Mkomolo A How African Christians Recast the Ways of the People (Imikhuba Wesintu) in
http://www.africanstudies.org/PrelimFridaySessions05.htm
Individuals indicated by an asterisk (*) have been invited by the ASA Board of Directors, the Program Committee,or the Local Arrangements Committee to serve in a multiple capacity. Session III
Friday, 8:30 A.M. A.M. (III-A13) Influences of Constructions of Masculinity on Sexual and Legal Behavior

Chair: Margrethe Silberschmidt, Institute of Public Health, U of Copenhagen
Margrethe Silberschmidt, Institute of Public Health, U of Copenhagen, Constructions of Masculinities and their Influence on Male Sexual Behaviour in the Context of Poverty and HIV/AIDS in Urban East Afrca
Scott London, Randolph-Macon College, Performing Masculinity in the Family Courts: Manhood and Hybridity in Senegalese Family Dispute Narratives
Discussant: Lisa Lindsay, U of North Carolina
(III-B9) Healing through the Visual and Textual in African Arts
Co-Chair: *Cynthia Becker, U of St. Thomas
Co-Chair: Andrea Frohne, Cornell U
Shannen Hill, U of Denver, Miniature, Monument, Marking: Saint Biko the Radiant in South African Healing
Andrea Frohne, Cornell U, Contemporary Ethiopian Art, Healing Texts, and Transnational Identity

75. Ramadan
In African Traditional Religion God is someone who created the earth and thenmoved far The zaramo people of the Tanzanian coast feel the obligation to
http://imb.org/cesa/stories/Ramadan/Ramadan.htm

76. BANTU LANGUAGES - LoveToKnow Article On BANTU LANGUAGES
Swahili is a somewhat archaic Bantu dialect, indigenous probably to the EastAfrican coast south of the Ruvu (Pangani) river, which by intermixttire with
http://55.1911encyclopedia.org/B/BA/BANTU_LANGUAGES.htm
BANTU LANGUAGES
BANTU LANGUAGES. The greater part of Africa south of the equator possesses but one linguistic family so far as its native inhabitants are concerned. This clearly-marked division of human speech has been entitled the Bantu, a name invented by Dr W. H. I. Bleek, and it is, on the whole, the fittest general term with which to designate the most remarkable group of African languages. 2 From this statement are excepted those tongues classified as semi-Bantu. In some languages of the Lower Niger and of the Gold Coast the word for fowl is generally traceable to a root kuba. This form kuba also enters the Cameroon region, where it exists alongside of -koko. Kuba may have arisen independently, or have been derived from the Bantu kuku. etymology of word-roots is concerned. Further evidence of slight etymological and even grammatical relationships may be traced as far west as the lower Niger and northern and western Gold Coast languages (and, in some word-roots, the Mandingo group). The Fula language would offer some grammatical resemblance if its suffixes were turned into prefixes (a change which has actually taken place in the reverse direction in the English language between its former Teutonic and its modern Romanized conditions; cf. offset and set-off, upstanding and standing-up ). The legends and traditions of the Bantu peoples themselves invariably point to a northern origin, and a period, not wholly removed from their racial remembrance, when they were strangers in their present lands. Seemingly the Bantu, somewhat early in their migration down the east coast, took to the sea, and not merely occupied the islands of Pemba and Zanzibar, but travelled as far afield as the Comoro archipelago and even the west coast of Madagascar. Their invasion of Madagascar must have been fairly considerable in numbers, and they doubtless gave rise to the race of black people known traditionally to the Hovas as the. Va-zimba.

77. Notable Books Program Listings
Power of Regeneration among the zaramo of Tanzania by Dealing with alcohol indigenoususage in Australia, New and history among an Andean people by Abercrombie
http://nt.library.msstate.edu/notable/list.asp?keyword=1

78. Project MUSE
As in other parts of SubSaharan africa, Sukuma-Nyamwezi culture is based on When people moved away from the dense villages to dispersed settlements in
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/africa_today/v048/48.4gunderson.html
How Do I Get This Article? Athens Login
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This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Gunderson, Frank D. "From "Dancing with Porcupines" to "Twirling a Hoe": Musical Labor Transformed in Sukumaland, Tanzania"
Africa Today - Volume 48, Number 4, Winter 2001, pp. 3-25
Indiana University Press

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79. CAA | Publications | Dissertations In Progress 1998
American Displays of African Material Culture in the 1990s (California at Mshana, Fadhili, Society, Culture and Identity zaramo Wood Sculpture as
http://www.collegeart.org/caa/publications/AB/dissertations/begun98.html
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Dissertations in Progress, 1998 Egyptian, Ancient Near Eastern, and Classical Art Early Christian, Byzantine, and Medieval Renaissance Baroque and 18th-Century European ... Art Criticism and Theory Egyptian, Ancient Near Eastern, and Classical Art Burns, Bryan, "The Impact of Imports: Effects of Mediterranean Trade in the Late Bronze Age Argolid" (Michigan at Ann Arbor, J. Cherry) Flusche, Laura, "Etruscan Domestic Architecture of the Orientalizing, Archaic and Classical Periods" (Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, E. Hostetter) Gee, Regina, "The Vatican Necropolis: Ritual, Status, and Social Identity in the Roman House Tomb" (Texas at Austin, J. Clarke, P. Davies) Hendrix, Elizabeth, "Ancient Paint on Early Cycladic Sculpture" (N.Y.U., G. Kopcke) Hleck, Lisa Hughes, "Late Republican Funerary Reliefs of Freedmen Outside the City of Rome" (Indiana at Bloomington, W. E. Kleinbauer) Lovette, Celeste, "Travels and Traversals in Hellenistic Architecture" (Columbia, R. Brilliant)

80. SOMALI BANTU - Their History And Culture
Other southeast African tribes represented among the Bantu refugees include the The Bantu people are ethnically and culturally distinct from the Somali
http://www.culturalorientation.net/bantu/sbpeop.html
culturalorientation.net -home
SOMALI BANTU CULTURE PROFILE CHAPTER C ONTENTS P REFACE ... ORDER A PRINT COPY SCROLL TO: Place in Society Social Structures People Many Bantu refugees can trace their origins back to ancestors in southeast African tribes who were enslaved in the 18 th century by agents of the Sultanate of Zanzibar. These ancestral tribes include, among others, the Makua and Yao of southern Tanzania and northern Mozambique; the Ngindo of southern Tanzania; the Nyasa of southern Tanzania, northern Mozambique, and northern Malawi; and the Zaramo and Zigua of northeast Tanzania. Other southeast African tribes represented among the Bantu refugees include the Digo, Makale, Manyawa, Nyamwezi, and Nyika. The Bantu slated for resettlement, especially those who fled the once forested Juba River valley, are politely referred to as Wagosha ("people of the forest") or Jareer (term used to describe Africans with hard or kinky hair). Derogatory terms to describe the Somali Bantu include

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