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         Sudan Culture:     more books (87)
  1. Decentralisation in the Sudan: Decentralisation, ecology, development and reform by Mukhtar Alassam, 1977
  2. Past and present status of contagious bovine pleuropneumonia vaccine: Preliminary results of the keeping quality of T1 strain culture vaccine by Mohamed Abdel Rahim M Salih, 1977
  3. Sudan civilization by Mubarak B Rayah, 1978
  4. A note on the Chinese grass carp: A weed-eating fish for introduction to the Minor Canals of the Gezira (Technical notes on water-use) by Thomas T George, 1976
  5. The Ancient African Kingdom of Kush (Cultures of the Past) by Pamela F. Service, 1998-01
  6. Symbols in Action: Ethnoarchaeological Studies of Material Culture (New Studies in Archaeology) (Volume 0) by Ian Hodder, 2009-03-19
  7. Culture and Change Along the Blue Nile: Courts, Markets, and Strategies for Development (Westview Special Studies in Applied Anthropology) by Lina Fruzetti, Akos Ostor, 1990-01
  8. Conflict and Livelihoodsin The Nuba Mountains ofSudan: Anticipated and Unanticipated Impacts by Jamila Hassan, 2009-07-19
  9. Darfur: Domesticating Coloniality: The Failure of the Nation-state Model in Post-colonial Sudan by Elsadig Elsheikh, 2008-12-12
  10. Sunday in Sudan by Don L Clark, 2010-02-01
  11. Police, politics, and culture in a deeply divided society.(Symposium on Redefining International Criminal Law): An article from: Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by Badi Hasisi, 2008-03-22
  12. Nuer Customs and Folk-Lore (Cass Library of African Studies, General Studies No. 95) by Ray Huffman, 1970
  13. The "Kerma" culture (around 1730-1520 B.C.): A note on ancient Sudan civilization by Mubarak B Rayah, 1983
  14. Die Baumwolle in Ägypten und im englisch-ägyptischen Sudan; by Moritz Schanz, 1913

61. Teaching Jobs
GEN / Web Directory / Africa / sudan / Society and culture (18).SubCategories in Society and culture. History (1). Politics (6).
http://dirs.globalesl.net/cat/69079/
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62. Browsing Regional Africa Sudan Society And Culture Category
Browse Regional Africa sudan Society and culture
http://www.uksprite.com/search/search/Regional/Africa/Sudan/Society_and_Culture/
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Browsing: Regional Africa Sudan Society and Culture Top Regional Africa Sudan Society and Culture
Categories: History
Politics

Slavery

AnwarKing

Information about Sudanese culture.
http://www.anwarking.com/
Preview This Site

British Council : Sudan
Information on facilities and programs. http://www.britishcouncil.org/sudan/ Preview This Site Coalition Against Slavery in Mauritania and Sudan Brief background information to Sudan including slavery, politics, Islam and the status of women. http://members.aol.com/casmasalc/newpage8.htm Preview This Site Human Rights In Sudan From humanrights.about.com

63. Sudan Travel Guide @ TravelNotes.org
sudan Language and culture. Nubian civilization had it's own distinct culture.sudanese Embassies. Embassy of the Republic of the sudan in Tehran.
http://www.travelnotes.org/Africa/sudan.htm
Travel Notes Africa Sudan Travel Guide Add URL
Flag of Sudan The Republic of Sudan is the largest country in Africa, with a total area of more than two and a half million square kilometres. Local Currency
Convert your currency into Sudanese pounds. Countries neighbouring Sudan are: Chad Libya Egypt Eritrea ... Zaire and Central African Republic National Anthem
of Sudan. Food Travel Fiction Health Kids Bios Humor Mags Software Gifts Tech Business Other
News Headlines World News
Directory of newspapers and news sources from around the world. Sudan News Agency
The latest news from Sudan; in English, French and Arabic. Sudan Travel By Rail Most of the major cities and towns in Sudan are linked by rail. By Boat Sudan has over 4,000 km of navigable waterways; nearly half of them are useable all year. By Road Most of the roads are little more than dirt tracks made impassable after heavy rains. A paved road exists between Khartoum and Port Sudan on the Red Sea. By Air Airlines
Sudan Airways has services throughout the country and operates scheduled international flights. Several foreign airlines also fly into Sudan.

64. JEWISH ROOTS IN SUDAN
religious in nature a war of Islamic imperialism against largely Christian SouthSudan. It is also a cultural war of Arab dominated culture against African
http://www.jewishpost.com/jewishpost/jp0202/jpn202e.htm
JEWISH ROOTS IN SUDAN
By: William Levi Ochan Ajjugo
When most people think of Judaism in black Africa, they think of the so-called Falashas, Bet Israel, Ethiopian Jews who have kept the essentials of biblical Judaism despite being isolated geographically from other Jews for thousands of years. The Falashas are in fact the tip of the iceberg. Judaism came to Africa long before Islam or even Christianity, itself an early arrival. Hebrews have been in Africa hundreds of years before the exodus from Egypt. So influential was ancient Judaism in northern and eastern Africa that anthropologists have devised a test to tell whether a given tribe or people has Hebraic roots: It does so if males are circumcised at age of 1 or earlier. I am from South Sudan, the largely Christian, African portion of the Sudan, which has long been dominated by Arab Muslims to the north, in Khartoum. I am from a tribe called the Madi, and while we did not retain Judaism as thoroughly as did the Falashas in neighboring Ethiopia, I am amazed as I look back at how many of our customs seem to have come from the Hebrew Scriptures. Among Christians and non- Christians like, one G-d was worshipped. As in the Book of Leviticus, blood sacrifices were offered or sins. The worst sins required the sacrifice of a sheep, the ones below these a boat, and the "least" sins a chicken. A hereditary group of elders or priests decided which to sacrifice, and presided over these and other ceremonies.

65. Resilience And Culture/Ethnicity Examples From Sudan, Namibia, And Armenia., Gro
Resilience and culture/Ethnicity Examples from sudan, Namibia, and Armenia. TitleResilience and culture/Ethnicity Examples from sudan, Namibia, and Armenia.
http://ericae.net/ericdb/ED417860.htm
From the ERIC database
Resilience and Culture/Ethnicity Examples from Sudan, Namibia, and Armenia.
Grotberg, Edith H. Abstract: Title: Resilience and Culture/Ethnicity Examples from Sudan, Namibia, and Armenia.
Author: Grotberg, Edith H.
Note: 11p.; Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the International Council of Psychologists (55th, Padua, Italy, July 21-23, 1997).
Publication Year:
Document Type:
Research Report (143); Conference Paper (150)
Target Audience: Practitioners and Teachers
ERIC Identifier:
Clearinghouse Identifier:

This document is available from the ERIC Document Reproduction Service
Descriptors: Child Rearing; * Children; Coping; * Cultural Differences; * Cultural Influences; Foreign Countries; Mental Health; Parent Child Relationship; Parenting Skills; * Personality Traits; * Resilience [Personality] Identifiers: Armenia; Ethnic Differences; *International Resilience Project; Namibia; Sudan http://ericae.net/ericdb/ED417860.htm

66. SUDAN ART CULTURE
Who is on the web, Our objectives. Art culture African Continent. sudan ARTISTS*. MUSEUMS GALLERIES, PHOTOGRAPHY, THEATRES, VIRTUAL GALLERIES, BACK HOME.
http://www.whoisontheweb.com/african/sudan_art_culture.html

67. Building A Culture Of Peace Within The Context Of War
sudan, and sudanese in exile, the topic of Canada’s involvement in the situationin sudan was discussed. The need for developing a “culture of peace” was
http://renewalfellowship.presbyterian.ca/channels/r00164-6.html
Home Page News Prayer Chain Channels ... TalkLine
Building A Culture Of Peace Within The Context Of War
By Judy McCallum
    Fall 2000 Channels, Vol. 16, No. 4 Judy McCallum is a member of Knox Church, Spadina, Toronto ON, and is on the Renewal Fellowship Board. Sudan has had a lot of exposure recently in the news, raising questions and posing an ethical dilemma to Canadians. We have been forced to consider the ethics of Canadian business involvement in a country undergoing civil war and what the responsibility of Canadians might be when we are linked to war in another country. How - or should - we be involved? I had the privilege of spending two months in Sudan this spring, working with the Fellowship for African Relief, and was given a glimpse into the ravages of war on a country. Before I left for Sudan, I knew many facts, especially that the war in Sudan is a result of many interrelated factors. I knew that the war has religious roots: Muslim vs. Christian, and that the current government has declared Jihad against the southern Christians. I also knew that the war has ethnic roots, the primarily Arab North vs. African South, and economic roots, the South is rich in natural resources including oil. And finally I knew that the instability of the whole region (the Horn of Africa) contributes to the ongoing war in Sudan. After two short months living and working in Khartoum, I realized that the issues are even more complex than I had initially thought. The government is not just oppressing the South, but also anyone who doesn't agree with its interpretation of Islam. Therefore both Northerners and Southerners are suffering. Moreover, the fighting is not only between the North and the South, but there is also fighting within the South between different ethnic groups.

68. Sudan III Stain Of Cells In Culture
sudan III Stain of Cells in culture. From Katherine Brittingham zkcb5@hotmail.com .Histonetters, I am doctoral student working in an Immunology lab.
http://www.histosearch.com/histonet/Oct00A/SudanIIIStainofCellsinCul.html
Sudan III Stain of Cells in Culture
From: Previous Message Next Message

69. Cell Culture Sudan III Vs Oil Red O Staining
cell culture sudan III vs Oil red O staining. From Gayle Callis uvsgc@msu.oscs.montana.edu .I know a lady who did the Churukian
http://www.histosearch.com/histonet/Oct00A/cellcultureSudanIIIvsOilr.html
cell culture Sudan III vs Oil red O staining
From: I know a lady who did the Churukian Oil red O that was discussed last week or so on cell cultures with excellent results (seen in Science magazine on stem cell publications and advertisements in the past couple of years, her work!) It was less messy than a protocol with propylene glycol, easier to rinse off excess stain from cell cultures, and stains beautifully with hematoxylin counterstain with excellent brilliant red contrast to the blue counterstain. Oil Red O can also be purchased in small quantities from Aldrich, sister company to Sigma, and maybe a bit cheaper from Fisher or VWR if you have a term contract agreement from these companies. Gayle Callis Veterinary Molecular Biology Montana State University Bozeman MT 59717-3610 406 994-4705 406 994-4303 Previous Message Next Message

70. Crimes Of War > Sudan Magazine
is the precondition for the realization of that capacity… The elimination ofa culture is tantamount to the elimination of a people. In sudan, the war
http://www.crimesofwar.org/sudan-mag/sudan-hale.html
Magazine Home Masthead Contributors Magazine Archive ...
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum
Sondra Hale,
Randolph Martin,

Senior Director for Operations, International Rescue Committee
Join the discussion
April 2002 The takeover of the National Islamic Front government in 1989, and its drive to Islamize a country that is only partly Moslem, has not only led to massive killing, starvation displacement , and pauperization of the Dinka and Nuba populations in southern Sudan. There also has been a systematic drive to eliminate their religions, languages, legal systems, and customs. I believe we need to broaden our theoretical framework beyond the 1948 UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide to include the concept of what I describe as "cultural genocide." The original draft of the Convention contained a more inclusive definition of genocide: "the destruction of the specific character of the persecuted `group’ by forced transfer of children, forced exile

71. AdmiNet - Sudan
top, Agriculture. top, Finance. top, Law. top, Art, culture. sudanese Music; sudanArt Gallery; NUBIAN WALLPAINTINGS. top, Health. sudan Medical Directory. top, Environment.
http://www.adminet.com/world/sd/
thtml> u AdmiNet world new info ...
Thanks

Sudan
Links with other countries
  • Embassies and Consulates of Sudan to other countries :
    France
    Germany USA
  • Embassies and Consulates of other countries in Sudan:
    France
  • Foreign Chambers of Commerce and Industry :
The government of Sudan
Parliament Political organisations Cities and Towns Agriculture Finance Law Art, Culture Health Environment Sports Jobs Companies Industry Small and Medium Enterprises Telecom Information Highways Travel, Transportation Chambers of Commerce and Industry Education Universities Press, Entertainment Defence

72. Listings Of The World Regional Africa Sudan Society And
Added Nov25-02; Human Rights In sudan Post Review From humanrights.about.com http//humanrights.about.com/culture/humanrights/msub40.htm- Added Nov-25-02;
http://listingsworld.com/Regional/Africa/Sudan/Society_and_Culture/

73. Sudan Post
Full Story Tribal homes feature sudan pavilion Children perform at the sudanese palmleaves, these structures are part of country's culture, heritage and
http://www.sudanpost.com/
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74. THE GIRL CHILD AND EDUCATION IN SOUTH SUDAN.
With all the telltale signs of impending puberty, she is indeed, lucky than mostof her peers elsewhere in South sudan. If tradition and culture were to be
http://www.ipsnews.net/africa/Focus/sudan/note_3.shtml
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Education in Sudan Index
THE GIRL CHILD AND EDUCATION IN SOUTH SUDAN. BY JOHN GACHIE. Petronas Dutt, a petit and lanky 12-year old girl is all smiles as she answers questions in halting broken English as her classmates giggle with amusement. At her school in Akot in the Lakes Province of South Sudan, she is one of the 80 girls in a school with 220 pupils in a good day and she was enjoying herself. Clad in skimpy threadbare navy-blue skirt and greenish sweater, a size or two smaller than her slender shoulders, Petronas gives nothing away that she is one of the lucky few girl child in South Sudan. Unlike many other parts of South Sudan, Akot and surrounding areas have been relatively peaceful since1998. In the period since 1998 however, her lot like those of other girls in her school has improved. She has managed to move up from grade one to three. She has also escaped from following her elder sisters and brothers to the cattle camps as is the tradition of her Dinka people and most important, has as yet to be sought of as a wife.

75. World Bank Poverty Net Document Library: Sudan
Urbanization, culture, and Helpfulness CrossCultural Studies in England and theSudan (abstract only) September 1, 1995 This paper offers a cross-cultural
http://poverty.worldbank.org/library/region/4/161/
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Data Library ... Africa - Sub-Saharan Sudan New Documents
Urbanization, Culture, and Helpfulness: Cross-Cultural Studies in England and the Sudan
abstract only
September 1, 1995
This paper offers a cross-cultural analysis of helpfulness in urban settings in England and the Sudan. Social psychology research has...
Search Documents
only in Africa - Sub-Saharan only in Sudan Entire library. Documents
Page 1 of 1
(1 entries found) Urbanization, Culture, and Helpfulness: Cross-Cultural Studies in England and the Sudan abstract only
September 1, 1995
Yousif Yousif, and Charles Korte This paper offers a cross-cultural analysis of helpfulness in urban settings in England and the Sudan. Social psychology research has found that although there are no significant differences in helpfulness toward friends and family members in rural and urban settings, people are less likely to help strangers and neighbors in urban settings than in rural settings. The authors examine whether this difference is due to an adaptation to the excessive demands of the urban environment, or to the personalities of urbanites that predispose them to unhelpfulness. England and the Sudan were studied to determine whether the difference in helpfulness could also be cultural. The authors found that the cause seemed to be the pressures of the urban environment, and concluded that urban environments may make it more difficult to build social capital.

76. Sudan Breaking News
culture.
http://www.einnews.com/sudan/topsites/index.php3?cat=5012

77. Met Timeline | Sudan, 8000–2000 B.C.
See an abridged list of rulers in sudan and ancient Egypt and Nubia 3700–2800 BC(AGroup) A distinct culture, designated A-Group, develops in Lower Nubia in
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/02/afs/ht02afs.htm
Encompasses ancient Nubia
See also Egypt
See an abridged list of rulers in Sudan and ancient Egypt and Nubia
Nubia covers an area stretching along the Nile valley from the sixth cataract in the south to the first cataract in the north, which marks the southern border of pharaonic Egypt. Because no Nubian languages are recorded before about the second century B.C., the cultures of ancient Nubia are known primarily through archaeological remains supplemented by ancient Egyptian textual references to places such as Wawat and Kush, and to peoples such as the Nehesyu and the Medjayu. The names given to the different cultures and cultural phases have been assigned by modern archaeologists and historians. The A-Group culture is driven out of Lower Nubia by the Egyptians. During this period, Egypt dominates Nubia between the first and third cataracts, conducting periodic raids into Upper Nubia to the south. Egypt's purpose is to control trade in raw materials and to exploit the rich deposits of stone and gold in the deserts of Lower Nubia. To this end, Egyptian trading and mining settlements are established as early as Egypt's Dynasty 4 (ca. 2500 B.C.). In the late Old Kingdom (ca. 2200 B.C.), Egyptian texts document a warlike people called the Medjayu, who live in the eastern deserts of Upper and Lower Nubia. These nomads have alternately peaceful and hostile relations with the more settled populations along the Nile, both in Nubia and Egypt. Highly valued for their military skills, the Medjayu serve as mercenaries in the Egyptian army and desert police force from the late Old Kingdom. The Medjayu, a nomadic people, have left no identifiable archaeological remains earlier than the second millennium B.C.

78. Met Timeline | Sudan, 2000–1000 B.C.
See an abridged list of rulers in sudan and ancient Egypt and Nubia 2200–1500 BC(CGroup) People of the C-Group culture (descendants of the A-Group) begin to
http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/ht/03/afs/ht03afs.htm
Encompasses ancient Nubia
See also Egypt
See an abridged list of rulers in Sudan and ancient Egypt and Nubia
These nomads from the eastern Nubian desert have alternately peaceful and hostile relations with the more settled populations along the Nile, both in Nubia and Egypt. Highly valued for their military skills, the Medjayu serve as mercenaries in the Egyptian army and desert police force from the late Old Kingdom New Kingdom . As with most nomadic peoples, the Medjayu left little in the archaeological record. The only physical evidence attributed to them are distinctive burials, called pan graves, that appear sporadically in cemeteries of Upper Egypt and Lower Nubia beginning in the Second Intermediate Period. Kerma loses control of Lower Nubia at the beginning of Egypt's New Kingdom , when the Egyptian kings of Dynasty 18 begin a series of campaigns against Upper Nubia. By about 1450 B.C., Egypt controls Nubia as far south as the fourth cataract. Upper and Lower Nubia become a virtual colony of Egypt, ruled by a viceroy called the "King's Son of Kush." Egyptian settlements are established, and temples are built to Egyptian gods. The most important center is Napata, near the sacred mountain of Jebel Barkal, just downstream from the fourth cataract, where a temple is built to honor the great Theban god Amun. During this period, the majority Nubian population probably participates in the administration of the Egyptian province of Nubia.
The Art of Ancient Egypt: A Resource for Educators

The Art of Ancient Egypt: A Web Resource

Egyptian Art in the Age of the Pyramids (1999 Exhibition)

Special Exhibitions:

79. Culture Clash
culture Clash. However, even before President Clinton's decision to strike targetsin sudan as well as in Afghanistan, the USA and Osama bin Ladin, the wealthy
http://www.franksmyth.com/clients/FrankSmyth/FrankS.nsf/da5b0adfceafdd9d85256b6c

80. Panapress Official Website
have unearthed granite statues belonging to three monarchs from sudan's Kingdomof Bamako, Mali (PANA) Mali culture Minister and film director Cheick Oumar
http://www.panapress.com/RubIndexlat.asp?code=eng006

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