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The Dynamic Speeches of Emperor Haile Selassie 1 illuminate a real leadership that embraced diversity and cooperation, enriched by a global perspective. These speeches detail the persistence, determination and good governing drive with which Haile Selassie pursued international relationships, to which history cannot fail to testify. It is hoped that through those reproduced herein, the reader will get a fair picture of His Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia.
The Dynamic Speeches of Emperor Haile Selassie I illuminates a real leadership that embraced diversity and cooperation, enriched by a global perspective. These speeches detail the persistence, determination and good governing drive with which Haile Selassie pursued international relationships, to which history cannot fail to testify. It is hoped that through those reproduced herein, the reader will get a fair picture of his Majesty Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia. Dibu H. Wolde was President of Ethiopian Cultural Television in Denver, Colorado, as well as Founder and Executive producer of ENBS, community based T.V. programming in Washington, D.C. Wolde was one of the organizers of the leading Ethiopian orthodox church in Los Angeles, California, as well as the founder of Saint Mary Ethiopian Orthodox Church in Denver, Colorado. Today the church is thriving,and the idea has spread worldwide. Ethiopians feel more at home now in their adopted land. Wolde has written on western culture and civilization for newly arrived Ethiopian Immigrants, coordinated cross-cultural awareness and integration into western culture, and taught Ethiopian language (Amahric) for the Ras Tafarian community in Hartford, CT. Wolde served in the United States Peace Corps in Bolivia, South America, from 1999 to 2001. He authored two Micro-Enterprise Development texts and compiled local historical accounts of Peace Corps volunteer experiences for use in business education classes.
This book is the first systematic cross-disciplinary survey on the use of Jamaican English in Ethiopia, describing the dynamics of language acquisition in a multi-lectal and multicultural context. It is the result of over eight years’ worth of research conducted in both Jamaica and Africa, and is a recognition of the trans-cultural influence of the “Repatriation Movement” and other diasporic movements. The method and materials adopted in this book point to a constant spread and diffusion of Jamaican culture in Ethiopia. This is reinforced by the universalistic appeal of Rastafarianism and Reggae music and their ability to transcend borders. The data gathered here focus on how an Anglophone-based Creole has developed new speech-forms and has been hybridized and cross-fertilized in contact situations and by new media sources. The book focuses on the use of Jamaican English in four particular domains: namely, school, street, family, and the music studio. Its findings are drawn from an exceptional range of sources, such as field-work and video-recordings, interviews, web-mediated communication, artistic performance and relevant transcriptions. These sources highlight five topics of relevance—language acquisition and choice; English and Jamaican speech forms; hegemonic and minority groups, Rastafarian culture and Reggae music—which are explored in further detail throughout the book. These salient features, in turn, interface with the dynamics of influencing factors, reinforcing circumstances, significance and change. The book represents a journey to the “extreme-outer circle” of English language use, following a circular route away from Africa and back again, with all the languages used (and lost) along the slavery route and inside the plantation complex developing into creolized speech forms and Creoles. Such language use is now making its way back to Africa, with all the incendiary creativity of Reggae and resonant with Rastafarian language.
Enlightened Aid examines the intellectual and political origins of Point Four, the first American aid program for the developing world, and the economic and diplomatic implications of its operations in Ethiopia.
This is a transnational history of the activist and intellectual network that connected the Black freedom struggle in the United States to liberation movements across the globe in the aftermath of World War II. John Munro charts the emergence of an anticolonial front within the postwar Black liberation movement comprising organisations such as the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the Council on African Affairs and the American Society for African Culture and leading figures such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Claudia Jones, Alphaeus Hunton, George Padmore, Richard Wright, Esther Cooper Jackson, Jack O'Dell and C. L. R. James. Drawing on a diverse array of personal papers, organisational records, novels, newspapers and scholarly literatures, the book follows the fortunes of this political formation, recasting the Cold War in light of decolonisation and racial capitalism and the postwar history of the United States in light of global developments.
JAMAICA: Teal blue waters, sandy beaches, scintillating cuisine, globally renown rum and Blue Mountain coffee. One hundred fifty years under Spanish rule and then three hundred years under English dominion. Early spectacular hotels, then spectacular all-inclusives resorts. Hippies came to Negril and made it the “Capital of Casual.” Bob Marley spread reggae music worldwide and became a major tourism promoter for the island adding to the glitz from the English celebrities of the 1950s who came to the North Coast. Errol Flynn, Ian Fleming, and Noel Coward attracted jet setters to the island as did fictional super spy James Bond, Agent 007. Tourism growth and development, measured and conservative, free-flowing and exuberant – all existing in a dynamic, remarkable and one-of-a-kind setting. Jamaica, a cacophony of sights and delights. Ya mon, come to Jamaica, an island paradise that has it all.