Ethnologue: Bibliography Of Ethnologue Data Sources Heijdra, Martin. 1998. Who were the laka? 1955. The indigenous languages ofLatin America. 1959. africa Its peoples and their culture history. http://www.ethnologue.com/ethno_docs/bibliography.asp
Extractions: Abbreviations ... Policies Abas, Hussen, ed. 1985. Lontara: Majalah Universitas Hasanuddin No 28. Ujung Pandang: Percetakan Lembaga Penerbitan Universitas Hasanuddin. Abrahams, R. G. 1967. The peoples of Greater Unyamwezi, Tanzania. London: International African Institute. Acton, Thomas and Donald Kenrick, eds. 1984. Romani Rokkeripen Todivvus. London: Romanestan Publications. Addleton, Jonathan S. 1986. The importance of regional languages in Pakistan. Al-Mushir 28:2.55-80. Adelaar, Karl Alexander. 1985. Proto-Malayic: The reconstruction of its phonology and part of its lexicon and morphology. Alblasserdam: Offsetdrukkerij Kanters B. V. Adler, Max K. 1977. Pidgins, creoles, and lingua francas, a sociolinguistic study. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag. Adler, Max K. 1977. Welsh and the other dying languages in Europe. Hamburg: Helmut Buske Verlag. Agard, Frederick B. 1975. Toward a taxonomy of language split, Part One: Phonology. Leuvense Bijdragen 64.3-4:293-312. Agard, Frederick B. 1984. A course in Romance linguistics, Vol. 2: A diachronic view. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
Trekking..Main..2002 An eco tour operator committed to exciting, exotic and adventurous travel that respects the environment indigenous peoples, and of course, you. All profits go to charity. It's the highest mountain in africa and one of the largest South africa. A combination activity adventure with walking and pony The whole area of laka Manasarovar and Mt. http://www.nkf-mt.org.uk/trekking.htm
Extractions: Muir's Tours Trekking Hills, mountains, fells, himal - If they are there we walk them. Our main activity in Asia, north America, south America and Europe is walking up and down them. Please let our trip planners help you plan your next trip, whether it be Fully Supported or Tea House/Hut/Hostel style, we are happy to help. Young or mature, we have a hill for you. See Jasmine (aged 6 months) on the way down her first hill. Grading System A selection of our trips :- Machu Pichu was connected to the capital city of Cusco and other cities by well constructed paths. The Inca Trail to Machu Pichu is the most famous trekking route in South America and because of this much damage has been done and the Inca council now only allow limited numbers of groups and no back packers. The climate is relatively mild all year round, with heavy rains from November to March, and dry, hot weather from April to October. The terrain is fairly rugged, with many gullies and streams fed by glaciers which eventually pour into the Urubamba River. The river has formed a deep valley which runs through the granite base of Vilcabamba for more than 40 km providing a variety of ecosystems. The natural surroundings are impressive and the balance achieved between nature and the Inca architecture is striking. 10 days - camping for 4 nights Itinerary Bolivia The area around La Paz is arid with deserts, cacti, and dry terrain, with snow-capped mountains close by, such as Mt. Illimani (6,400m / 21,000 ft) providing the background. Not far away is the beautiful village of Copacabana located on the shores of Lake Titicaca from where we set out for the Isla del Sol, where we spend a little time to acclimatise for various treks or climbs. The village is steeped with religious history, not only for Bolivia's Catholics, but also for the ancient Inca.
WISE Uranium Project - Site Map Anglo American Corp. of South africa Ltd. Anglogold Ltd for Global Justice indigenous peoples and Uranium Mining Post-War Disaster for Environment and Health (laka Foundation) http://www.sociamedia.nl/~wise/uranium/map.html
Green Mountain Circle Works Index Mossi, I56. South africa, III110. indigenous peoples IV815. Indonesia I1010,III1210. Labyrinths IV215, IV67, IV85. laka (Goddess) IV815. http://members.aol.com/Firebearer/cwkindex.html
Extractions: GREEN MOUNTAIN CIRCLE WORKS INDEX KEY: Volume:Issue:Page We also have an on-line Table of Contents that begins with Volume I, Issue 1; this includes article author names, which the index does not. Back issues are available in hard copy (all except I:1-2), zipped ascii files (from Sep 1998 to May 2001), or zipped html documents (from June 2001 to present) for a $2 donation. (I:1-2 were private prototypes and are available only to BUUC members, and III:10-11 were combined.) To order, go to News Extra! Return to BUUC's main page Abuse: II:9:8 Academy Awards: III:4:11 Acosta, Eric: III:5:11 Activism (see also eco-activism): IV:3:14, IV:4:4, IV:5:1 Adulthood rites: IV:5:4 Advice (column): II:6:5, II:9:5, II:11:12, II:13:5 Adler, Margot: III:1:10 Affinity Groups (AGs): II:13:2 Africa: II:13:4 Afghanistan: IV:7:10 African Indigenous Peoples: African traditional faiths: III:2:10 AIDS: II:7:12 AIDSamma: II:7:12 Air (Element): II:4:6, II:4:7 Akron Area Interfaith Council (OH): IV:1:14, IV:4:14, IV:6:10 Alabama: I:7:7, III:10:14, III:10:8
Extractions: Rapporteur, pursuant to Commission resolution 1996/14 Introduction 1. At its fifty-first session, the Commission on Human Rights, aware of the growing practice of the dumping in African and other developing countries by transnational corporations and other enterprises from industrialized countries of hazardous and other wastes, adopted resolution 1995/81 in which it noted with grave concern that the increasing rate of illicit dumping of toxic and dangerous products and wastes in developing countries continues adversely to affect the human rights to life and health of individuals in those countries, and decided to appoint, for a three-year period, a special rapporteur with a mandate to:
AFRICA - Tanzania Country Close-Up settled by northern Bantuspeaking peoples who brought Tanzania Christian 45%,Muslim 35%, indigenous beliefs 20 Lake Nyasa; and to the west, laka Tanganyika http://www.pbs.org/wnet/africa/explore/sahel/savanna/countries/tanzania_print.ht
Best Kept Secrets: 2002 / RootsWorld Recording Review Micheal Stone takes another look at some music from Central America Southern Mexico took refuge among the indigenous Carib people, who absorbed also heard on Paranda africa in Central America, noted interchange between indigenous and african peoples in the New http://www.rootsworld.com/reviews/stone-centam.shtml
Extractions: Until fairly recently, one had to hunt for roots music from southern Mexico and Central America, but the diverse titles surveyed here signal the region's registry on the world-music radar screen. For starters, The Rough Guide to Central America presents 13 artists, 17 tracks and a range of contemporary styles from Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica. With some minor oversights, the sampler highlights "Latin America's best-kept secret," as the album notes call the region's varied styles. The album notes call the Afro-Amerindian Garifuna the makers of "some of the region's most dynamic music," a view that demands consideration. Garifuna history presents a case study in the genesis of hybrid cultures out of the displacement and violence of the New World colonial adventure. In 1635, Spanish ships carrying kidnapped Africans for sale into West Indian plantation slave labor wrecked in the eastern Caribbean near the island of St. Vincent. Survivors swam ashore and took refuge among the indigenous Carib people, who absorbed the escapees. The cultural amalgam that resulted, the Garifuna or Black Carib, produced a musical tradition combining powerful vocals with a dense percussive base. Defeated in the British takeover of St. Vincent in 1797, the Garifuna were exiled to the Caribbean coast of Central America, settling from Nicaragua to Belize. As a population never enslaved, the Garifuna maintained palpable West African elements in their music, which builds around a three-drum ensemble clearly aligned with African percussive traditions on both sides of the Atlantic. The Garifuna garaón drum ensemble includes the lead primera or heart drum, the counter-rhythmic segunda or shadow drum, and (usually) the steady bass-line tercera. Additional instruments include turtle-shell percussion, claves, bottle percussion and a variety of shakers and scrapers drawn from the Amerindian music of St. Vincent. Garifuna musicians have expanded their instrumental array with European additions, while also incorporating English, Jamaican, French, Haitian, Spanish and Latin American folk elements.
MYTHOLOGY indigenous peoples. Latin America. Amazonian peoples Andean peoples (Ecuador,Peru, Bolivia, northern Chile). NEAR EAST For Egypt, see under africa. http://www.greatdreams.com/myth.htm
Extractions: MYTHOLOGY APOLLO APHRODITE ARES ARTEMIS ... Childrens Mythology By Carol Hurst CHARON CUNEIFORM Day of Rest and Atonement, Azazel, Jarmo, Jericho, and Mythology EGYPTIAN GODS ... Icarus in Flight By Boris Vallejo INDEX to THE SECRET DOCTRINE Internet And Greek Mythology JAYNE'S EGYPTIAN RESEARCH PAGE JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS ... ZETA TALK - VISOGOTHS A B C D ... Time . calendars, clocks, cycles, attitudes toward time. Nature Spirits of the World Australia's Aboriginal Peoples Old Europe The Wheel of the Year ... Samhain (Halloween) Mexico, Day of the Dead Archival Page Currently, this covers from May 26, 1999 to August 31, 1999. This page for teachers (or for those who homeschool) contains links to mythology, folklore, and general sites with data and lesson plans for grades K-12. Cross-cultural, Multi-regional, Interdisciplinary Collections Beginning with "The Voice of the Shuttle: Web Page for Humanities Research," this section looks at very large and comprehensive collections.
WISE Uranium Project - Site Map of South africa Ltd. Swedish Greens motion for Global Justice indigenous Peoplesand Uranium Mining; War Disaster for Environment and Health (laka Foundation http://www.antenna.nl/wise/uranium/map.html
Rat Haus Reality By Title Listing, "A-D" Statement, The Year of the indigenous peoples (1993), in the UN Biopiracy PatentsBased on indigenous Knowledge of India; and Health, by the laka Foundation, 5 http://www.ratical.org/rhrIndex/titleA-D.html
August 1999 on the lands of and by indigenous peoples in Canada Australia, and in subSaharanAfrica.) Thus, the laka Foundation, Ketelhuisplein 43, 1054 RD Amsterdam, The http://hlp.home.igc.org/docs/uranium.htm
Extractions: These are not nuclear weapons per se but rather radiological weapons which also have a chemically toxic effect similar to that of other heavy metals. These weapons have already been used in Kuwait, Iraq, Serbia and Kosovo (unconfirmed reports have mentioned Bosnia, but this is still under investigation). It is estimated that between 14-17 countries now have depleted uranium weapons in their arsenals and this proliferation is expected to continue. It is a matter of the utmost urgency that international agreement banning the manufacture, use or sale of these weapons be achieved as quickly as possible, before they are used again. Their use is a gross violation of humanitarian law. The proliferation and trafficking of these weapons should be forbidden because it increases the potential for long-term human rights violations, including damage to the human genome itself.
First Parish Of Sudbury is often the tradition of the indigenous people of Generations of tribal peoples mademeanings and created rituals So laka, the goddess who invented hula, was http://www.fpsudbury.org/kl/earth102702.htm
Extractions: First Parish of Sudbury Sunday Worship October 27, 2002 Rev. Katie Lee Crane with Steve Johnson Huna The Ways of the Native Hawaiians Think not that all wisdom is in your school. -Huna proverb OPENING WORDS Rev. Katie Lee Crane [Katie Lee explains that our opening words are a partial translation of the words that Steve Johnson will chant at the centering silence; he will be explaining more about the meanings behind these words throughout the hour.] Kane, come and position yourself above me Possess me, put me in order, rearrange me. As you do, I am in a state of centered calmness . Throw yourself toward me. Possess me, pierce me, fill me up until I am satisfied, Oh Kane, supremely strong guardian. I take on your form . Chalice of clay, ground us in the earth. Flame of fire, kindle our compassion, ignite our passion Elements of our worship, root us, stir us, calm us, free us. When the first Europeans landed on Hawaii, the native Hawaiians were amazedthey spoke, but they did not breathe! The Hawaiian word for breath is Ha , so Europeans were known as haole they do not breathe.
Depleted Uranium for Environment Section IV indigenous peoples Victimized by Declaration of indigenousAntiNuclear Summit excerpt IV Report from laka Foundation, Netherlands http://internettrash.com/users/socialjustice/du.html
Extractions: UNMIKM After analyzing the environmental impact of depleted uranium ammunition used in Kosovo in 1999, the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) today said the risks associated with the substance were " no cause for alarm ," but recommended precautionary measures to guarantee that the areas struck by DU remain risk-free. "These scientific findings should alleviate any immediate anxiety that people living or working in Kosovo may have been experiencing," said UNEP Exec.Dir. Klaus Toepfer
Extractions: DAGOMBA HISTORY, CULTURE, RELIGION, ECONOMY Please click on the bulleted headings to toggle text. Arhin, Kwame, Traditional Rule in Ghana, Past and Present, SEDCO, ISBN 9964 72 033 5 no date. 43 Succession to Dagbon 'skins.' 'Skins' are material symbols of traditional political office in the northern and upper regions, just as stools are symbols of traditional political office in central and southern Ghana. . . The state of Dagbon . . . was basically a union of autonomous states, with the head of one of them elevated above the others as the 'first among equals.' . . . the Na of Yendi was Na of all Nas. 44 . . . the officials of the Na's court differed from those of ohene's court in being predominantly eunuchs. Bowdich, T. E., Mission from Cape Coast to Ashantee 1819 (notes) 177 7 days from Sallagah NE according to the Moors through the Inta town of Zongoo is Yahndi (Yendi) the capital of Dagwumba. 178 Yahndi is described to be beyond comparison larger than Coomassie, the houses much better built and ornamented. Ashantees lost themselves in the streets. The King Inana Taquanee, has been converted by the Moors, who have settled there in great numbers. The markets at Yahndi are described as animated scenes of commerce, constantly crowded with merchants from almost all countries of the interior. Horses and cattle abound. Yahndi is named after the numeral one, from its pre-eminence.
Conference Booklet includes an overview of the native peoples, organizations, and The Chamoru language,the indigenous language of the greeen vine was sacred to laka, goddess of http://www.louisville.edu/~rnstcl01/American Conference-html - Booklet.html
Extractions: Leon Shenandoah, Head Chief Onandaga In the Cree teachings, "The Listening" means more than anything else to us. The Cree Indian people learn how to listen to the environment, to the wind, to the rocks. We learn how to listen to everything. Some of the elders are saying that our young people need help to get back to "The Listening." This is everything in the Cree teachings. Our young people have forgotten. White people forgot how a long time ago. They all need to come back and learn how to do this. There can be no real respect unless we learn how to listen to each other, not to hear what we want to hear, but to hear the truth. Vernon Harper , Eighth Fire Cree Nation THURSDAY EVENING Thursday, May 14, 1998 FRIDAY MORNING Grand Ball Room Moderator Evangeline Parsons-Yazzie Speaker: Ted Vaughn , Yavapai LANGUAGE RENEWAL AND CULTURAL REVITALIZATION CONCURRENT SESSIONS B reathitt Room: Paper and Demonstration Session Friday 9:30-10:25 a.m.
Joseph Kenny OP THE SPREAD OF ISLAM , Ch. 10 This state was later called Katsina laka or Gwangara/Wangara It is inhabited by severaldirty and crued peoples. of the Nupe to restore their indigenous dynasty http://www.op.org/nigeriaop/kenny/nwafr/a10.htm
Extractions: Message: Please, PLEASE, don't call me a stoopidhead. I think I'm going to cry...anything but stoopidhead. And you're right, those brains are very, very small...like a pea!!! From: Soldier To: american stoopidheads Subject: u dont get it Date: Fri Dec 13 21:20:52 2002 Message: stuuped americans HA! each dot represents a muslim brain so i put billions of them. notice how they are smaller than a pea stooppids? . Allah . Abdual . me . mohammad . osama . one-eyed mullah etc. From: ricrok and blozzard
Recap: Like To Recap On Some Of My Great Postings... For the hundreds of millions of indigenous peoples from this Truth About AmericanTerrorism of the Afghan peoples. The Dutch laka Foundation estimates that this http://www.earthcam.com/terrorattack/messages/2690.html
Cameroon/Cameroun Bibliography Translate this page in the Life of Certain peoples of Southern Fiye Nkwi, Mbi Crater and Shum laka Rock-Shelters. CameroonRelations Between the State, indigenous Businessmen and http://www.geocities.com/markdelancey/CamerounBibliography.html
Extractions: Agriculture and Pastoralism Alary, Véronique. "L'utilitarisme en question: les cacaoculteurs face aux risques," in Le désarroi camerounais: l'épreuve de l'économie-monde edited by Georges Courade, pp. 89-109. Paris: Karthala, 2000. Ayisi-Mbala, J.P. The Role of Goats in the Economic Development in Cameroon . Ph.D., Leeds (UK), 1981. Bol Alima, G. Studies on Double Cropping of Maize in Yaoundé, Cameroon . Ph.D., London (UK), 1978. Boutrais, Jean. "L'agro-élevage des Peuls de Ngaoundéré (Adamaoua camerounais)," in L'ethnicité peule dans des contextes nouveaux: la dynamique des frontières edited by Youssouf Diallo and Günther Schlee, pp. 161-89. Paris: Karthala, 2000. Grangeret-Owona, Isabelle. "La fertilité des terres bamiléké dans tous ses états," in Le désarroi camerounais: l'épreuve de l'économie-monde edited by Georges Courade, pp. 45-69. Paris: Karthala, 2000. Hallaire, A. "Les transformations d'un système de production chez les paysans-montagnards du Nord-Cameroun, ou les dangers du mimétisme'," in Le développement rural en questions. Paysages, espaces rureaux, systèmes agraires: Maghreb, Afrique noire, Mélanésie
Www.sarockdigest.com/archives/issue_170.txt the others being Judith Sephuma, Don laka and Dizu Of Questions' was recorded withthe Proud peoples' Band to WIMSA (Working Groups of indigenous Minorities of http://www.sarockdigest.com/archives/issue_170.txt