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Through poetry, dance, shared scientific evidence and one medical doctor’s personal story of overcoming disordered eating, depression, and other diseases, here is a testament that true lasting healing is possible. Whatever your health goal or challenge might be, this book provides the roadmap.
Tumi & Tau is a friendly and inspiring story filled with good morals for both children and adults to follow. This is an adventure that stimulates the imagination. It also focuses on a number of life lessons, the largest being that regardless of how different you are or how lost you feel in this world, life shows you that you are always worthwhile. Tumi is an amazing and special child who has a blue skin, a loving heart, and a way of improving the lives of those around him. Tumi is bullied by a group of children from school known as the Nasties. He has difficulty in coping and consequently lacks self-confidence. Under the guidance of his special friend Tau, who is an enormous lion that has magical powers and great wisdom, Tumi is taken to the Pastel Pink Planet. Unbeknown to him, he is on a magical mission, and in doing so, he regains his confidence and learns that many obstacles can be overcome with love, kindness and care.
After Tumis dream experience, he regains his confidence and self-belief. Tumi and his friends, the Wizbiz Kids, undertake a special mission to teach the bullies, also known as the Nasties, the benefits of kindness and being caring. With encouragement from Tau, the wise and magical lion, Tumi and the Wizbiz Kids show the Nasties that there is more to friendship than cruelty and bullying. This story aims at teaching children to empower themselves using tools of love and compassion. After years of carrying childrens best interests at heart and understanding their behaviour, the author aims to show children that we live in a world filled with possibilities and solutions, as opposed to a world filled with obstacles and problems.
"Do you think one night could change everything?" "The night we met did." Anchored Hope is a chart-topping rock band, whose music and members have captured the hearts of all their fans. After a chance encounter with their vocalist, a regular guy is thrust into a world of paparazzi, rumors, and the chance of his own dreams becoming reality. He soon discovers that beneath the chaos called "fame" is a melody he's never heard before and would give anything to hear again. Read by over 180,000 on Wattpad, comes the re-write of The Meeting- a riveting tale of what happens when "coincidence" becomes "fate." The Meeting takes readers on a journey of sorrow, love, vulnerability, heartbreak, purity, forgiveness, and faith. It's been praised by readers as "fantastic and pure," and "an outlier," amongst others expressing their wish it could be a movie. The Meeting is best read with a heart full of hope in heart and a cup of tea in hand.
The present songbook is an anthology of the songs (in the order of composition) of Shrii Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar known as Prabha'ta Sam'giita. In February 1982, Shrii Sarkar gave to the world the gift of Neohumanism. Neohumanism is in fact a renaissance of the 7500 year old Principle of Social Equality (Sama Samaja Tattva) propounded by Lord Shiva. Neohumanism expands the scope of humanist concern to include the plant, animal and earth realms. Neohumanism focuses its efforts on controlling the baneful consequences of narrow sentiments such as geo (geographical) sentiment, socio (religious/ethnic) sentiment and humanist sentiment. It is the intensity of devotion (bhakti) or mystical love (Ishq-e-haqiqi) that gives the Neohumanist the capacity to rise above these sentiments, the ability to enlighten others about them, and the capacity to fight these sentiments. Neohumanism liberates people from their limitations and doubts and fills them with courage, determination and limitless love.
Critiquing the positioning of children from non-dominant groups as linguistically deficient, this book aims to bridge the gap between theorizing of language in critical sociolinguistics and approaches to language in education. Carolyn McKinney uses the lens of linguistic ideologies—teachers’ and students’ beliefs about language—to shed light on the continuing problem of reproduction of linguistic inequality. Framed within global debates in sociolinguistics and applied linguistics, she examines the case of historically white schools in South Africa, a post-colonial context where political power has shifted but where the power of whiteness continues, to provide new insights into the complex relationships between language and power, and language and subjectivity. Implications for language curricula and policy in contexts of linguistic diversity are foregrounded. Providing an accessible overview of the scholarly literature on language ideologies and language as social practice and resource in multilingual contexts, Language and Power in Post-Colonial Schooling uses the conceptual tools it presents to analyze classroom interaction and ethnographic observations from the day-to-day life in case study schools and explores implications of both the research literature and the analyses of students’ and teachers’ discourses and practices for language in education policy and curriculum.
This volume presents a typological/theoretical introduction plus eight papers about ergative alignment in 16 Amazonian languages. All are written by linguists with years of fieldwork and comparative experience in the region, all describe details of the synchronic systems, and several also provide diachronic insight into the evolution of these systems. The five papers in Part I focus on languages from four larger families with ergative patterns primarily in morphology. The typological contribution is in detailed consideration of unusual splits, changes in ergative patterns, and parallels between ergative main clauses and nominalizations. The three papers in Part II discuss genetically isolated languages. Two present dominant ergative patterns in both morphology and syntax, the other a syntactic inverse system that is predominantly ergative in discourse. In each, the authors demonstrate that identification of traditional grammatical relations is problematic. These data will figure in all future typological and theoretical debates about grammatical relations.
"This is a searingly honest book by someone who really knows his subject. Goodman is sympathetic to the attempts at transformation in my beloved motherland. The message of this book applies just as easily to the United States, where the fault lines run very deep, too. And the U.S. has been trying to solve these problems a great deal longer than the new South Africa."—Archbishop Desmond Tutu "David Goodman's vivid, intensely personal, and unobtrusively erudite book is irresistible reading for anyone who cares about South Africa."—Adam Hochshild, author of King Leopold's Ghost "A gem of a book. An excellent introduction to the intricacies of South African politics and society."—Gail M. Gerhart, Foreign Affairs "A sequence of truths shown through the lives of eight contrasted citizens, this book reveals our new South Africa with the startling accuracy of flashes of lightning on a stormy night—and with the apartheid storm over, a remarkable rainbow of hope can be seen."—Donald Woods, author of Biko
Shaped around the stories of one extended family, their friends, neighbours, and community, Pandemic Kinship provides an intimate portrait of everyday life in Botswana's time of AIDS. It challenges assumptions about a 'crisis of care' unfolding in the wake of the pandemic, showing that care - like other aspects of Tswana kinship - is routinely in crisis, and that the creative ways families navigate such crises make them kin. In Setswana, conflict and crisis are glossed as dikgang, and negotiating dikgang is an ethical practice that generates and reorients kin relations over time. Governmental and non-governmental organisations often misread the creativity of crisis, intervening in ways that may prove more harmful than the problems they set out to solve. Moving between family discussions, community events, and the daily work of orphan care projects and social work offices, Pandemic Kinship provides provocative insights into how we manage change in pandemic times.
The second book in NEW YORK TIMES and USA TODAY bestselling author Jenny Nimmo's new series chronicling the origin and the adventures of Charlie Bone's magical ancestor, the Red King!Timoken, a magician king, has found a new home in a castle in Britain. But when an evil steward takes control of the castle, he imprisons Timoken and wreaks havoc on surrounding villages. With the help of Gabar, the talking camel, Timoken escapes and embarks on a quest to find and rescue his friends, and build himself a kingdom to call home for good.In this brand-new series, bestselling author Jenny Nimmo takes readers on an extraordinary quest with one of her most powerful and mysterious characters, the one who started it all for Charlie Bone.