A russian air force south africa air force amazigh berber peoples political berberflags amazonas samoa america american indigenous peoples antigua and http://www.fotw.ca/flags/keyworda.html
Extractions: corunna province (galicia, spain) a i regimental flags of the imperial russian army (ca. 1803) a ok subdivisions of the soviet union a.r. appelqvist ab shipping companies' house flags (sweden), a-f azerbaijan in the soviet union aaland islands aaland islands (finland) aaland islands yachting club ensign (finland) finland: husband flags, page 1 aaland 'finnish' flag of the aaland islands (finland) 'swedish' flag for aaland islands (finland) triband for the aaland islands (finland) aappalaaroq greenland (denmark) aarau aarau commune (aargau canton, switzerland) aarau district (aargau canton, switzerland) aarburg aarburg commune (aargau canton, switzerland) aargau aarau district (aargau canton, switzerland) aargau canton (switzerland) baden district (aargau canton, switzerland) bremgarten district (aargau canton, switzerland) ... zurzach district (aargau canton, switzerland) aarhus denmark - aarhus aav abaco bahamas (the) abashiri abauj borsod - abauj - zemplen county (hungary) abemama kingdom of abemama (kiribati) aberdeen aberdeen, scotland (united kingdom)
Marweb, Moteur De Recherche Du Maroc: Arts_et_culture/Berebere of North America and North africa, and produces The berber Tamazight Movement inMorocco and Algeria Nations Working Group on indigenous peoples, in Geneva http://www.marweb.com/Arts_et_culture/Berebere/page3.htm
Extractions: Annuaire et Moteur de recherche du Maghreb Arabe Moteur de recherche Annuaire d'entreprises Petites Annonces Revue de presse ... Berebere : Page 3 Top Arts et culture Berebere : Page 3 Sites Mouvement culturel berbère Tamazgha - Documents, informations et liens sur l'Afrique du Nord (Tamazgha), le peuple Amazigh et sa culture A collection of resources on North Africa, the Amazigh people and their culture. Tamazgha, a Collection of Resources on North Africa - the Amazigh (Berber) People, their Language and Culture. Tamazight en Los Paises Del Magreb - from Africa International No. 19. In Spanish. Tankra tamazight, la renaissance amazighe - Site dédié à la culture amazighe (berbère) Tankra Tamazight: - La Renaissance Amazigh. Deals with the language, literature, and movement. Tazzla Institute for Cultural Diversity. - A non-profit, charitable and educational organization, which conducts research on indigenous people of North America and North Africa, and produces Public Access Television documentaries and program. The Berber Tamazight Movement in Morocco and Algeria,
GeographyIQ - World Atlas - Africa - Mauritania - Historical Highlights Hassaniya, a mainly oral berberinfluenced Arabic dialect which and 'black' Moors(the enslaved indigenous class seek a dominant role for the S-Saharan peoples. http://www.geographyiq.com/countries/mr/Mauritania_history_summary.htm
Extractions: French colonization at the beginning of the 20th century brought legal prohibitions against slavery and an end to interclan warfare. During the colonial period, the population remained nomadic, but sedentary black Africans, whose ancestors had been expelled centuries earlier by the Moors, began to trickle back into southern Mauritania. As the country gained independence in 1960, the capital city Nouakchott was founded at the site of a small colonial village, the Ksar, and 90% of the population was still nomadic. With independence, larger numbers of ethnic Sub-Saharan Africans (Haalpulaar, Soninke, and Wolof) entered Mauritania, moving into the area north of the Senegal River. Educated in French language and customs, many of these recent arrivals became clerks, soldiers, and administrators in the new state. Moors reacted to this change by increasing pressure to Arabicize many aspects of Mauritanian life, such as law and language. A schism developed between those who consider Mauritania to be an Arab country (mainly Moors) and those who seek a dominant role for the S-Saharan peoples. The discord between these two conflicting visions of Mauritanian society was evident during intercommunal violence that broke out in April 1989 (the '1989 Events') but has since subsided. The tension between these two visions remains a feature of the political dialogue. A significant number from both groups, however, seek a more diverse, pluralistic society.
SILEWP Subject Index indigenous peoples Rights Act The indigenous peoples Rights Act morphology featuresof Tadaksahak or berber or Songhay on a Global Scale West africa The speech http://www.sil.org/silewp/indexes/subjects.asp
Africana.com: Gateway To The Black World.Screen Name Service to explore panberber identity among indigenous cultures throughout North africa,including the the cultures of the berber peoples, an occasion http://www.africana.com/DailyArticles/index_20010326.htm
Africana.com: Gateway To The Black World.Screen Name Service population south into what is now subSaharan africa. The berber peoples of the westernSahara region have faced European rivals or from the indigenous nomads. http://www.africana.com/Articles/tt_383.htm
Marweb, Search Engine: Arts_and_Humanities/Cultures_Groups of North America and North africa, and produces The berber Tamazight Movement in Moroccoand Algeria, new Nations Working Group on indigenous peoples, in Geneva http://www.marweb.net/Arts_and_Humanities/Cultures_Groups/page3.htm
Extractions: Morocco and Maghreb Search Engine and Directory Directory Search Engine Yellow pages Classified ads News and reviews ... Cultures Groups : Page 3 Top Arts and Humanities Cultures Groups : Page 3 Web Sites Libyan Amazigh Site. new - Site to promote the development of the Amazigh identity, culture and language. In English. Mouvement culturel berbère new Tamazgha new - Documents, intrainings et liens sur l'Afrique du Nord (Tamazgha), le peuple Amazigh et sa culture A collection of resources on North Africa, the Amazigh people and their culture. Tamazgha, a Collection of Resources on North Africa new - the Amazigh (Berber) People, their Language and Culture. Tamazight en Los Paises Del Magreb new - from Africa International No. 19. In Spanish. Tankra tamazight, la renaissance amazighe new - Site dédié à la culture amazighe (berbère) Tankra Tamazight: new - La Renaissance Amazigh. Deals with the language, literature, and movement. Tazzla Institute for Cultural Diversity. new - A non-profit, charitable and educational organization, which conducts research on indigenous people of North America and North Africa, and produces Public Access Television documentaries and program. Thamazight.
:: View Topic - Lies, Deceptions And Revisionism Discrimination of the Arabmuslim invaders against the indigenous berber populationof North africa As with other indigenous peoples in the world, berbers are http://forum.faithfreedom.org/viewtopic.php?t=1036
B island (saint vincent) berber canarian nationalist flags flags in south africa bogota santafé bolivia south american indigenous peoples tarija province http://www.flags-by-swi.com/fotw/flags/keywordb.html
Extractions: Keywords beginning with a b c d ... communes of luzern canton (switzerland) ba'ath party syria baarland borsele (the netherlands) baarle-nassau baarle-nassau (the netherlands) backside vexillology - flags with different backsides bacon bremen (germany) bremen (germany) bacs kiskun kecskemet (hungary) bacs-kiskun bacs - kiskun county (hungary) badajoz town of olivenza (extremadura, spain) baden communes of aargau canton (switzerland) historical german states badge british solomon islands colonial flags of saint vincent and the grenadines hirdmarinen - badge newfoundland (canada) bahamas bahamas (the) flags made on competitions new zealand railways the bahamas during the colonial period ... turks and caicos bahawalpur bahawalpur (british india) bahia bahia (brazil) bahr el ghazal sudan - provinces bahrain bahrain bahrein qatar baja california del sur baja california del sur (mexico) baja california baja california (mexico) bakongo bakongo people (uganda-dem. rep. congo) baku azerbaijan: historical flags, 1917-1918
The Berber Tamazight Movement In Morocco And Algeria berber crisis across North africa raises the However, the berber crisis in Moroccoand Algeria important questions, including the rights of indigenous peoples. http://www.amazighworld.com/News/Reports/AmazighMovement/berber-1.html
NativeWeb Resources: Speeches, Articles & Essays Culturel berbere (berber Cultural Movement), berber, africa, 699. by AbdenourAugustinBenyahia, berber Cultural Movement We the indigenous peoples of the http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/law_legal_issues/speeches_articles_essays/
Extractions: Home Login Contact Us Resources for Indigenous Cultures around the World Resources Community Services About Us Resource Center Internet Links Nations Index Geographic Region Index Search the Site ... Top 5 Percent Hosted Resources Hosted Pages NativeLaw News NativeTech Site Information Get your FREE EMAIL @NativeWeb.Net! Community About Us Hosting Information ... This category includes speeches, articles, essays, book notices and reviews dealing with indigenous peoples' legal issues. Resources: 76 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits A Brief History of the Ainu People (Japan) Ainu Asia by Koichi Kaizawa (from NativeNet) More sites on bioc09.uthscsa.edu A Second Century of Dishonor : Federal Inequities and California Tribes United States A report prepared by the UCLA American Indian Studies Center; by Carole Goldberg-Ambrose, J.D. and Duane Champagne, Ph. D. More sites on www.sscnet.ucla.edu Abuses Against Natives in Asylum in S. Dakota Lakota US - Central Did you know...that Drapetomania - the insane urge of a slave to run away from a slavemaster - was thought to be the only type of mental illness affecting slaves? Did you know... that the federal government established a fully segregated asylum for "insane Indians" in Canton South Dakota? Pemina Yellow Bird is a psychiatric survivor activist who has begun to explore the history of Native People in U.S. mental health systems. Download her manuscript: "Wild Indians: Native Perspectives on the Hiawatha Asylum for Insane Indians."
NativeWeb Home Culturel berbere (berber Cultural Movement), berber, africa, 684. by AbdenourAugustinBenyahia, berber Cultural Movement We the indigenous peoples of the http://www.nativeweb.org/resources.php?name=Speeches, Articles & Essays&rid=102
Untitled had not been translated into the language of the berber tribes who were with literacy,that in many parts of africa the indigenous peoples understood the http://www3.sympatico.ca/ian.ritchie/ATSC.Chapter2.htm
Extractions: CHAPTER 2: SOCIAL CONTEXT OF AFRICAN THEOLOGY 1: Socio-Historical Survey Ancient Egypt developed the first of the great civilizations of world history. Egypt had already a long and illustrious history by the time ancient Greece reached its apex, and it is well established that Greek thinkers acknowledged their debt to ancient Egypt. Much has been written on Egypt and it need not be repeated here, except perhaps to mention that much current African and African-American scholarship is currently in the process of reappropriating Egypt as a specifically African civilization, in which the Cushites and black peoples of southern Egypt played a major role. The "Afrocentric Hypothesis", as advanced by Cheik Anta Diop and his more recent African-American exponent, Molefi Asante, states that Egypt was the source of all the significant cultural ideas of the civilizations which followed it, Persia, Greece, Rome, etc., and that all of these ideas came from an African source in Egypt and the southern Nile region (see Diop 1954, 1974 and Asante 1987). While some of the more extreme ideas of the "Afrocentrists" remain controversial in historical scholarship, they are bringing the role of black Africa in the ancient world out of obscurity into the realm of debate, which in itself advances the achievement of Africans and has shed light on the manner in which Euroamerican scholarship has systematically denied and suppressed information about Africa's past greatness, a greatness which included the empires of Egypt, Nubia, Ethiopia, Mali, Songhay, Timbuctoo, and Zimbabwe.
CSOC208.htm WWW Virtual Library to indigenous Resources for africa to find links for the !Kung,Akan, Amazigh/berber, Masai,Tamazight, Hadzabe peoples, Ogoni, Oromia http://library.ups.edu/instruct/bachmann/csoc208.htm
Extractions: Comparative Sociology 208 University of Puget Sound Collins Memorial Library Popular Press Sources via the Web Africa News provides fairly comprehensive to current news from and about Africa it links to reporting from more than 40 African news organizations. Search by topic, country, or region Channel Africa presents a collection of news items from Africa, compiled from shortwave,satellite, and Internet radio broadcasts by Channel Africa. Read, listen, and/or watch: Video, audio, and text files about music, sports, money markets, and news are available. To go directly to English language resources, click on Programmes in English . (RealPlayer is required for media files. If you don't have it, Download RealPlayer from Sun Microsystems.) Browse the list of all newspapers in Africa, or search by the following countries: Algeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Namibia, Nigeria, South Africa, Swaziland, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe. Electronic Journals and Newspapers on Africa is a directory of links to electronic journals and newspapers about Africa on the Internet, arranged alphabetically and presented by the Department of African Studies at Columbia University. A short description of each journal and newspaper is included.
Morocco's Berbers Battle To Keep Their Culture to a UN conference on racism and indigenous peoples' rights in Durban, South africa,to make the case for official recognition of the berber language, shrugs http://www.sjsu.edu/depts/linguistics/news/berber.htm
Extractions: By Peter Prengaman San Francisco Chronicle 3/16/01 Rabat - A war of words over the Berber and Arabic languages is heating up in Morocc, Threatening to divide the kingdom in much the same way the battle between French and English speakers has divided Canada. Berbers were Morocco's first inhabitants, and today they are still the majority, accounting for about 60 percent of Morocco's 30 million citizens But when it comes to speaking their views, they are treated like a minority by the members of the dominant Arab culture. "More than 40 years after independence (from France), the government still doesn't want to teach the Berber language and preserve or promote the culture," says Ahmed Lachgar Agwilal, a Moroccan-born San Franciscan who is a representative of the Amazigh (Berber) Commission for Development and Human Rights in America. "If you want to be Moroccan," he says, "you have to speak this language." The government disagrees.
Extractions: ExhibitionSponsors Slavery dates back to beyond recorded history when mankind went from hunting and gathering to farming for subsistence. From the earliest periods of recorded history, slavery has been found in the world's most "advanced" regions. It was known in Shang-dynasty China (c. 1500-c. 1066 BC) and ancient Egypt and is recorded in the Babylonian code of Hammurabi (c. 1750 BC), the Code of the Nesilim (Hittites)(1650 - 1500 B.C.) and in the Bible (Genesis 9:25-27). The legal codes of Sumer provide documentary evidence that slavery existed there as early as the 4 th c. millennium BC. The Sumerian symbol for slave, in cuneiform writing, suggests "foreign," indicating that the slave is somehow different from the master. The first true slave society in history emerged in ancient Greece between the 6 th and 4 th centuries BC. In slave markets of Athens, Rhodes, Corinth, and Delos, a thousand slaves might change hands in an afternoon. After a major battle, as many as 20,000 captives might go on the block. Aesop, the legendary teller of fables, is alleged to have been a freed Greek slave of the 6
Show Info purchase cultural artifacts of indigenous peoples from around in their arts of africa,Oceania, the carpets, weavings, ceremonial clothes, berber shawls and a http://www.caskeylees.com/info.php
Extractions: This is New York's first major show and sale of ceramics, glass and enamels featuring at least 50 prominent English, European and American galleries/dealers of museum quality antique and contemporary ceramics. Held at the National Academy of Design our exhibitors offer exquisite examples of decorative art objects from the earliest Classical periods to the finest of contemporary Studio Pottery, porcelain, glass and enamels. This stunning show is vetted by a jury of professionals prior to its opening therefore you can feel confident to find the presence of first-class dealers/galleries from around the world displaying both authentic antique art and contemporary ceramics. While everyone is welcome this sale is especially suited for collectors, connoisseurs and museum curators.
Extractions: Global Advisor Newsletter Return to Newsletter Archives T he Languages and Writing Systems of Africa Country Language Script Algeria, Al Djazair, Algérie, (Democratic and Popular Republic of) Arabic, French and a Berber language. Arabic, Latin, Berber Angola, (Republic of) Portuguese is the official language, but a Bantu language is widely spoken. Latin, Bantu Benin, former kingdom, situated in present-day SW Nigeria French and Fon Latin, Fon Botswana, ( Republic of) English is the official language, but the population is mainly Tswana, who speak a Bantu language. Latin, Bantu Burkina Faso or Burkina, formerly Upper Volta French is the official language. Latin Burundi, Republic of Official languages are French and Kurundi (a Bantu language) Swahili is also spoken Latin, Bantu Cameroon (Cameroun) (Republic of) French and English are the official languages. Latin Central African Republic (Republique Centrafricaine) French is the official language, but Sango is the medium of communication among people who speak different languages. Latin Chad
Mass Media And Amazigh (Berber) Identity Among those indigenous peoples who have been dispossessed and were already long establishedin North africa (Shafiq, 1989 to some of the other berber regions of http://jan.ucc.nau.edu/~jar/RIL_10.html
Extractions: Amar Almasude First, this paper describes the Amazigh people of North Africa and threats to their language and culture from schooling and the domination of Arabo-Islamic ideology. Second, it discusses how modern technology is amplifying cultural safeguards, such as folklore, music, and some print media. Then the idea is developed that inherent in these new communication technologies is something more than an amplifier of the traditional, something that may be a new and extremely powerful force for preserving and shaping the identity of cultural minorities. The new technologies are impacting the knowledge and attitudes of individuals, both affirming cultural identity and developing a cosmopolitan perspective in a way that will spread through society. Using an interdisciplinary approach, this paper addresses the question of identity as a historical construct derived from changing sociopolitical and economic environments. This approach is contrary to the traditional sociolinguistic view that considers a language and its speaking community in isolation from constantly emerging forces such as communication technology, including print, analog and digital media, and especially the latest telecommunication systems: satellite dishes and the World Wide Web. The focus of this study is the role played by these forces in confirming the Amazigh identity.