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         Dogon Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Dogon: Africa's People of the Cliffs by Walter E.A. Vanbeek, 2001-05-01
  2. Dogon by Bedaux, 2004-01
  3. Sacred Symbols of the Dogon: The Key to Advanced Science in the Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphs by Laird Scranton, 2007-10-12

21. The PIA Committee
and has just finished a project on dogon rock art with the africa Department of the ofknowledge production about the past and indigenous peoples, and the
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/pia/cttee.html
Papers from the Institute of Archaeology
pia
The PIA Editorial Committee
Julie Eklund , Treasurer Julie has a BA from the University of Montana in anthropology/archaeology/art history. She earned a MSc in Principles of Archaeology from the Institute in 2000 and is currently a research student involved in the conservation of human remains. She has served as a research assistant in many Institute projects, including the European Commission sponsored Environmental Control of Salts project, the English Heritage sponsored Rock Art Pilot Project, and the excavation of a late Classical period Greek cemetery on the island of Astypalaia. Other interests include improving collaboration between archaeologists and conservators and site presentation and management issues. Julie joined PIA for volume 13. Aloisia de Trafford , Reviews Editor Aloisia first came to the Institute of Archaeology as a Masters student (MA Archaeology 1997). She is now carrying out PhD research. Her research focuses on conceptions of the body in Egyptian mortuary texts and archaeology. Her more general interests include theoretical approaches to the body, gender, literacy and orality in early complex societies, particularly in the ancient Near East and central Mediterranean. She has been involved in field projects in Egypt, Malta, Sardinia and Syria. She has served on the PIA editorial Committee since March 2000. Fiona Handley , Subscriptions Fiona completed her undergraduate degree in archaeology at the University of Southampton in 1995, and then came to the Institute of Archaeology to do a MA in Archaeology. Fiona's research interests are wide ranging, covering Egyptian Roman and Islamic textiles and basketry, the archaeology of the African Diaspora, the presentation of the past to the public and the anthropology of tourism. She is currently a research student at the Institute of Archaeology working on contemporary presentations of transatlantic slavery to the public. She is involved in the archaeological and archival work of the Cane River African Diaspora Archaeology Project, Louisiana, USA, and is the textiles specialist on the University of Southampton's Myos Hormos-Quseir al-Qadim Project, in Egypt, on the Red Sea coast. Fiona joined the PIA Editorial Committee in 2001 as the Subscriptions Editor.

22. NativeWeb Resources: Anthropology & Archeology
so awareness of a people's indigenous art, visual resources, traditionally associatedwith living peoples and communities last house of iron, dogon, africa, 157.
http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/science/anthropology_archeology/
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  • Resource Database
    ... Science
    Resources: 44 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    African Archaeology Internet Resources Africa
    Internet resources related to archaeological sub-regions of Africa and the Near East.
    More sites on archnet.uconn.edu
    AKAN of Africa - Cultural Symbols Project Africa
    The art of a particular culture can reveal ever changing human images and attitudes, so awareness of a people's indigenous art, visual and cultural symbols can become an important medium for cross-cultural understanding.
    Anthro.Net
    A Anthropological Search Engine.
    Anthropologist in the field - Laura Tamakoshi South Pacific
    South America
    UT-LANIC
    More sites on www.lanic.utexas.edu
    US - Southwest
    More sites on www.nmculture.org

    23. Early History Of Africa
    See examples of the dogon). indigenous plants include African yams, African rice,bulrush millet, finger millet peoples around 6500 and 8500 BC developed pottery
    http://www.princetonol.com/groups/iad/lessons/middle/history1.htm
    ART HOME Program Goals Lesson Plans Year Plan ... To top of page Early History of Africa History of Africa Internet Lesson Reasons for Art Images of African Art ... Bibliography Africa . Third Edition. Indiana: Indiana University Press. Aspects of Early History and Prehistoric Africa Oral traditions were often not reliable and had to be decoded and studied within the wider cultural context. Different societies had different traditions. Those with centralized power and hereditary dynasties had selected individual entrusted with the memorization of history the griots (known as Jelis ... among the Manding groups) Archaeology Every ethnic group has legend on the beginning of history how ancestors arrived in their present area. (See examples of the Dogon). Others simply say that their present day location is the original homeland. Traditions of migration are most common and useful in understanding a great deal of African history particularly the emergence of dynasties and interactions between different groups. The movement of people contributed to the spread of new ideas and technology. There is a degree of similarity between widely separated societies. Common in the element of traditions in the formation of state is the role of the environment.

    24. African Imagery - Photography In Africa - Books
    on the religious customs of several dozen peoples, combining stunning the cultureof the intensely spiritual dogon. in the hands of indigenous photographers as
    http://www.africanaperture.com/books/photo.htm
    HOME Environment Documentary Galleries ... The World's Best PHOTOGRAPHY: Africa, art, culture, diversity, environment, travel, humanity.
    Submit your site

    Sensual Africa, By Joe Wuerfel (Photographer)

    In/Sight: African Photographers, 1940 to the Present
    Photography books In/Sight: African Photographers, 1940 to the Present By Okwui Enwezor (Editor), Danielle Tilkin, Octavio Zaya, Clare E. Bell (Contributor)
    This survey of African photographers accompanies an exhibit of the same name at the Guggenheim Museum in New York City. The production quality is excellent, as is the selection of photographs (from museums, archives, and private collections). Each of 30 African photographers (some of them Afrikaners and other Caucasians) from many religions and nationalities are represented by a small sampling of his of her diverse output, only hinting at the work being done in Africa during the last half of this century.
    Mon Afrique: Photographs of Sub-Saharan Africa
    By Pascal Maitre, Calixthe Beyala (Preface), Jean-Claude Nouveliere
    For more than 20 years, Maitre has made sub-Saharan Africa his beat, producing rhapsodically beautiful pictures while frankly documenting the vast subcontinent's political turbulence. His photos ravish the senses because of his painterly handling of light and color, regardless whether what they depict is chilling, endearing, fascinating, or merely reportorial. Maitre displays the pictures geographically, in four sections simply called "Western Africa," "Central Africa," "Eastern Africa," and "Southern Africa."

    25. Template
    In this indigenous rural culture the woman is the artist It includes a chapter onthe dogon, master mask makers ethnic groups which make up the peoples of africa
    http://urbanafreelibrary.org/cdblhimo.htm
    The Urbana Free Library
    Children's Department
    Black History Month Books
    African American Picture Books Back to Books! Books! Books! African American Picture Books
    The Urbana Free Library Children's Department
    This list includes children's fiction by and about African-Americans.
    Ackerman, Karen.
    By the dawn's early light.
    Barber, Barbara E.
    Saturday at The New You.
    Allie's basketball dream.
    Barrett, Mary Brigid.
    Sing to the stars. Belton, Sandra. Best, Cari. Red light, green light, mama and me. Bogart, Jo Ellen. Daniel's dog. Brown, Margaret Wise. Baby animals. Bunting, Eve. Flower garden. Caines, Jeannette Franklin. Just us women. Carlstrom, Nancy White. Wild, wild, sunflower child Anna. Carr, Jan. Dark day, light night. Chocolate, Deborah M. Newton. On the day I was born. Clifton, Lucille. Everett Anderson's goodbye. Coleman, Evelyn. White socks only. Cooke, Trish. Mr. Pam Pam and the Hullabazoo. Crews, Donald. Bigmama's. Shortcut. Dragonwagon, Crescent. Half a moon and one whole star. Home place.

    26. The Lifebridge Foundation - Grantees
    Spiritual and Secular Approaches to Poverty in africa. five part television serieson indigenous peoples of the Siberian shamans and hunters, the dogon of Mali
    http://www.lifebridge.org/gran-cul.htm
    The Lifebridge Foundation Representative
    Grant Recipients:
    PRINT MEDIA ORGANIZATIONS
    HERON DANCE
    52 Seymour St.
    Middlebury, VT 05753
    Tel: 888-304-3766 / 802-388-4875
    Fax: 802-388-6148
    Email: heron@herondance.org
    Web: www.herondance.org
    Rod MacIver, Publisher Heron Dance
    Heron Dance is a newsletter focusing mainly on people working on environmental issues; their spirituality, and the sacrifices and rewards involved in their work of service to the community. Heron Dance was awarded grants for general operating expenses. NEW YORK OPEN CENTER 83 Spring Street New York, New York 10012 Email: NYOC@aol.com Web: www.opencenter.org Walter Beebe, Ralph White, Directors-at-large The New York Open Center is a holistic learning center committed to spiritual, social and ecological growth. At its deepest level, it is dedicated to the development of religious and cultural tolerance and appreciation. LAPIS is a triannual journal launched in June, 1995 by the New York Open Center. Its central purpose is to identify and decipher broad movement and change in human affairs and to report on initiatives involving global and holisitic thinking. A seed money grant was awarded to the New York Open Center for the launch of

    27. Films & Video Recordings On AFRICA
    Drabo In an eighteenth century dogon village, the communism, apartheid in South africa,discrimination in and the associations of indigenous peoples who seek
    http://www.info.library.yorku.ca/depts/smil/filmographies/africa.htm

    AFRICA
    Last updated October 2001
    The films and videorecordings listed below are owned by York University Libraries and available for academic use by the York University community. Requests for these materials can be made in writing, by telephone, or in person to the
    125 Scott Library
    York University
    4700 Keele Street
    North York, Ontario M3J 1P3
    E-Mail: imagelib@yorku.ca
    Telephone:416-736-2100 ext.33324
    Fax:416-736-5838 Fall/Winter Hours: Summer Hours: Please note the following abbreviations: MP : 16mm film VC : VHS videotape VC 3/4 : 3/4" videotape
    Table of Contents
    GENERAL
    AFRICA SERIES 52 min. each 1984 RM Arts Prod. 1. DIFFERENT BUT EQUAL VC #1206 and #4494 Traces the early history of the continent noting that some of the world's greatest prehistoric civilizations had their origins in Africa. 2. MASTERING A CONTINENT VC #1207 and #4494 Examines how African farmers created a viable way of life in an often hostile environment. 3. CARAVANS OF GOLD

    28. Africa Bibliography
    indigenous African Institutions Ardsleyon-Hudson, NY Transnational from the artand artifacts of its peoples. 1992 Covers meeting the dogon, Fulani, Tuareg
    http://members.tripod.com/~HistoricalNovelists/africa.htm
    Africa Bibliography
    all periods
    Gross geography often has nothing to do with cultural lines. That is, the fact that Africa can be easily delimited as a continent by the Suez canal does not mean that it does not consist of several cultural or even racial zones at different epochs. Especially, up until about 600 CE Northern Africa was racially as well as culturally distinct from Sub-Saharan (black) Africa. While there was a Nubian conquest of Egypt, it was fairly short lived, temporarily replaced but did not breed out the uppermost classes, and the Egyptians remained a Semitic rather than Negroid people. Remarks about "Cleopatra being black" are simply silly, since she wasn't even Egyptian, but Macedonian Greek of an inbred royal line, with a narrow, prominently bridged nose. The Tuaregs still show the strongly Europid background of the Libyans and Numidians, who absorbed the Vandals as well. This is primarily a bibliography for Sub-Saharan Africa, which had often more contact with Arabia or India than with its own northern shore. While it will include the Tuareg and the Meroitic Empire, you will have to go to other bibliographies for the earlier peoples of North Africa. Search for Books at
    barnesandnoble.com

    29. Listings Of The World Science Social Sciences Anthropology
    Post Review A report on the dogon pastoral society A ethnography on the Hausa peopleof africa. worldwide provided by the indigenous peoples Specialty Group.
    http://listingsworld.com/Science/Social_Sciences/Anthropology/Cultural_Anthropol

    30. Africa Bibliography
    Ayittey, George B. N indigenous African Institutions Ardsleyon from the art and artifactsof its peoples. Society, 1992 Covers meeting the dogon, Fulani, Tuareg
    http://home1.gte.net/bastetka/africa.htm
    Africa Bibliography
    all periods
    Gross geography often has nothing to do with cultural lines. That is, the fact that Africa can be easily delimited as a continent by the Suez canal does not mean that it does not consist of several cultural or even racial zones at different epochs. Especially, up until about 600 CE Northern Africa was racially as well as culturally distinct from Sub-Saharan (black) Africa. While there was a Nubian conquest of Egypt, it was fairly short lived, temporarily replaced but did not breed out the uppermost classes, and the Egyptians remained a Semitic rather than Negroid people. Remarks about "Cleopatra being black" are simply silly, since she wasn't even Egyptian, but Macedonian Greek of an inbred royal line, with a narrow, prominently bridged nose. The Tuaregs still show the strongly Europid background of the Libyans and Numidians, who absorbed the Vandals as well. This is primarily a bibliography for Sub-Saharan Africa, which had often more contact with Arabia or India than with its own northern shore. While it will include the Tuareg and the Meroitic Empire, you will have to go to other bibliographies for the earlier peoples of North Africa. Ayittey, George B. N

    31. Ufology101
    Legends of indigenous peoples around the world make this pretty clear, particularlythose of the dogon tribe in africa, who knew about the existence of Sirius
    http://www.stardog2012.homestead.com/ufology101.html
    This web site was created for FREE at www.homestead.com. Visit www.homestead.com to get your free web site - no programming required. Javascript is either disabled or not supported by this browser. This page may not appear properly. www.Stardog2012.net UFOlogy 101 - The Stardog Overview It is my sincere and exhaustively researched opinion that one cannot even begin to make sense of what is happening on Planet Earth without understanding the UFO phenomenon. But there is such an extensive amount of information out there, that the beginning UFOlogist can easily feel overwhelmed by it all. Another problem is that some of the information is indeed bogus - there's tons of disinfo and misinformation out there. Therefore it is up to the individual seeker to discern which information seems logical and resonates with truth.
    The key to sorting through all this information is not to try and take it in all at once - UFOlogy is a cumulative process. Ever since my original UFO sighting in Sedona, AZ in the spring of 1997 - see The Secret Origin of Agent Stardog - I have endeavored to research EVERY aspect of the phenomenon and it is this cumulative research, along with the inner knowings that began activating in my consciousness in 1997, which formulates my views.

    32. Colonization Of The Earth From Galactic Perspective
    On the Earth, we have the curious terms, indigenous peoples, aborigines, and NativeAmericans, and so For instance, just as the dogon in africa are from
    http://www.soaringspiritwithtears.com/journal/EarthHistory.html
    History of Earth: One Perspective, Part I Every day, I am trying to bring together a few more pieces of the Earth puzzle. If there are those who do not care to read these posts, let me know and I'll create a separate list for those who are interested.
    On the Earth, we have the curious terms, "indigenous peoples, aborigines, and Native Americans," and so forth. These are the descendants of those who are truly of and from the Earth; the rest of us are foreigners from other parts of the Universe.
    Our histories are as varied as the creation myths would suggest and not all "Native Americans" are from Earth. For instance, just as the Dogon in Africa are from Sirius B, the Cherokee are from the Pleiades.
    The so-called "cradle of civilization" is an ethnocentric view of planetary history that does not address other realities on the Earth. Moreover, it is an eccentric patriarchal effort to explain events and intellectual achievements in terms that are more relevant to certain groups on the Planet than they are to others.
    Likewise, the major authoritative literature of different cultural traditions represents the truth such as it is understood by those groups rather than as accepted generally or as it pertains to those who are not descended from the same seeds.

    33. Diversity, Jobs, Advancement
    dogon Village tidbits african American careers and jobs Work for africa Take timeout to IMDiversity - for north America's indigenous peoples in particular;
    http://robtshepherd.tripod.com/diversity.html
    Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated
    You Can Get That Job You Want
    Seize the day
    Career and Diversity LINKS to check
    Achieving Prosperity, Advancing Profits
    Diversity Training Group . Addressing gender equity, diversity training, sexual harassment. Academic Diversity Search - Facilitating the placement of qualified minorities and women in academic positions Advisor's Companion (Bob Greenman) Journalism Education - "Multiculturalism and diversity are not fads or catch words, nor are they politically correct terms. They are what our country is all about and has always sought to be." Affirmative Action and Diversity - from the Univ. of California, Santa Barbara Affirmative Action - a tool that can help - from the University of Rhode Island Affirmative Action Resources from the Univ. of Maryland American Association for Affirmative Action - dedicated to the advancement of affirmative action, equal opportunity, and the elimination of discrimination. African American Business Alliance - Dedicated to Improving the financial structure of the African American business community! Black Business Journal Online - African American Executive Stanley O'Neal named to lead top brokerage firm of Merrill Lynch.

    34. AMU CHMA NEWSLETTER #10 (05/25/1993)
    Ethnomathematics recent discoveries about indigenous african mathematics BurkinaFaso), kar (dogon, Mali), tcha on a Drawing Tradition among peoples of africa
    http://www.math.buffalo.edu/mad/AMU/amu_chma_10.html
    AMUCHMA-NEWSLETTER-10 Chairman: Paulus Gerdes (Mozambique) Secretary: Ahmed Djebbar (Algeria) TABLE OF CONTENTS NEWSLETTER #10 Objectives of AMUCHMA Meetings Current research interests Bibliography on Astronomy in Africa south of the Sahara ... back to AMUCHMA ONLINE 2. MEETINGS 2.1 First AMU Symposium on Mathematics Education in Africa for the 21st Century William Ebeid, Chairman of the AMU Commission on Mathematics Education, presented at the First AMU Symposium on Mathematics Education in Africa for the 21st Century (Cairo, Egypt, 5-10 September, 1992) a paper entitled "Research in Mathematics Education in Egypt". He gave an overview on the 240 theses (171 M.Ed. and 69 Ph.D.) in Mathematics Education defended at Egyptian universities in the period 1954-1990. 2.2 Seminar "Mathematics, Philosophy, and Education" Salimata Doumbia (Côte d'Ivoire) and Paulus Gerdes (Mozambique) conducted a workshop on 'Ethnomathematics / Mathematics in the African Cultural Environment' at the international seminar "Mathematics, Philosophy, and Education" (Yamoussoukro, Côte d'Ivoire, 25-29 January, 1993). In one of the plenary sessions of the same seminar, Gerdes presented a paper entitled 'Ethnomathematics as a new research area in Africa'. 2.3 Annual Meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science

    35. Films And Videos On AFRICA
    VC Feature Adama Drabo In an eighteenth century dogon village, the about the women'smovement and the associations of indigenous peoples who seek to
    http://www.library.yorku.ca/SMIL/subjectguides/Area_Studies/africa.htm

    LIBRARY HOME

    SMIL HOME

    COLLECTIONS

    FILMOGRAPHIES
    ...
    MUSIC RESOURCES

    Print this page Library Home Sound and Moving Image Library Subject Guides to Films and Videos Last updated October 2001 The films and videorecordings listed below are owned by York University Libraries and available for academic use by the York University community. Requests for these materials can be made in writing, by telephone, or in person to the
    125 Scott Library
    York University
    4700 Keele Street
    North York, Ontario M3J 1P3 E-Mail: imagelib@yorku.ca Telephone:416-736-2100 ext.33324 Fax:416-736-5838 Fall/Winter Hours: Summer Hours: Monday - Thursday 9 am - 9 pm Monday - Thursday 9 am - 7 pm Friday 9 am - 8 pm Friday 9 am - 5 pm noon - 5 pm Closed Weekends Please note the following abbreviations: MP 16mm film VC VHS videotape VC 3/4 3/4" videotape Table of Contents GENERAL AFRICA SERIES 52 min. each 1984 RM Arts Prod. 1. DIFFERENT BUT EQUAL VC #1206 and #4494 Traces the early history of the continent noting that some of the world's greatest prehistoric civilizations had their origins in Africa.

    36. Www.ladyoftheearth.com/celtic/ws14.txt
    The dogon of W. africa say the on directions The Four Fold Way by Angeles Arriena survey of sacred directions and paths of the indigenous peoples of the
    http://www.ladyoftheearth.com/celtic/ws14.txt

    37. An Artist's Journey From Oregon To Timbuktu - III Spirituality C
    cultural layer to Latin America s indigenous roots modified pond at the outskirtsof a dogon village. Spirituality b. africa, Many peoples, Many Cultures, Much
    http://www.sla.purdue.edu/WAAW/LaDuke/spirituality3.html
    III. SPIRITUALITY b. Africa: Many Peoples, Many Cultures, Much Hope
    Pounded yams and Injera
    African women artists in Latin America? Yes, especially in Brazil, Nicaragua, and the Caribbean nations of Jamaica, Haiti, Cuba, and Grenada. The Afro-Latin heritage, due to the infamous 16th century slave trade, added another cultural layer to Latin America s indigenous roots modified by Spanish colonialism. Intrigued by the artists and their work, I wanted to continue my research in Africa. My contact was Professor Solomon Wangbogie from the University of Benin in Nigeria. He was also a member of the International Society for Education Through the Arts and had responded to my letter of inquiry, "Come to Africa, and I will introduce you to some of Nigeria's wonderful women artists." I did, and he did. I was amazed by the monumental bronze and cement sculptural forms of Princess Elizabeth Olowu, the painted fabrics of Yoruba myths and legends by Nicki Davis, and Susan Wenger's mythical Osun shrine that evolved from Yoruba traditional beliefs. I continued my annual travels from 1986 to 1990 and found many more traditional and modern women artists to interview in Mali, Senegal, Morocco, the Ivory Coast, Kenya, and Egypt. Their art became visible in the U.S. with the publication of

    38. Danish Polar Center
    Anthropologists working in africa, for example, have shown that tribal M., 1998 Protectingthe Arctic indigenous peoples and cultural The dogon and their trees
    http://www.dpc.dk/PolarPubs/Technical/No5Papers/Nuttall.html
    Danish Polar Center Strandgade 100 H DK-1401 Copenhagen K Denmark
    phone +45 3288 0100 fax +45 3288 0101 dpc@dpc.dk News Publications Library Photos Polarfronten About DPC Open Local Menu ... Publications Monographs on Greenland MoG - BioScience MoG - GeoScience MoG - Online shopping MoG - Offline shopping MoG - Titles 1879-1979 MoG - Editorial Board MoG - Info to authors Technical Reports Report # 1 Report # 2 Report # 3 Report # 4 Report # 5 Report # 6 Report # 7 Report # 8 Report # 9 Reports - offline shopping Other publications Greenland Law Reports DPC Annual Report Other - offline shopping Digital on-line Encounters with Wildlife How to Handle a Bear

    39. Mali: Afropop Country -- West Africa, Berber Music, Wassoulou, Griot Music, Afri
    with Fulani (Peul), Bambara, Bobo, dogon, Tamascheck, Soninke, Songhoi, Tuareg andother peoples. of griot music and other indigenous Malian sounds and
    http://www.afropop.org/explore/country_info/ID/2/Mali/
    @import "/afp_main.css"; /* ie */ Home Radio Explore Community ... Back to Country Page Mali
    History runs deep in Mali. In the 13th century, long before French colonizers arrived, the peaceful and productive Malian Empire spread through much of today's West Africa, far beyond the country's present borders. Many different ethnic groups came together under a visionary Manding king, Sunjata Keita, to control the trans-Saharan trade of salt and gold. The empire enjoyed two centuries of peace and glory, and that golden era lives on today in songs and stories. Contemporary Mali is far poorer and more challenged than the Empire at its height, or indeed than the Songhai and Bambara kingdoms that followed Mali and preceded the French colonial era. The Manding now rub shoulders and share scant resources with Fulani (Peul), Bambara, Bobo, Dogon, Tamascheck, Soninke, Songhoi, Tuareg and other peoples. But recalling the inclusive vision of Sunjata, Malians mostly get along and show a respect for cultural diversity unusual in modern Africa. Today, Mali can boast a dazzling variety of ethnic music fusions styles, from the hunter-derived Wassoulou sound of the south, to Bambara, Bobo and Senufo pop from the east, to the other-worldly northern styles, epitomized in the music of Ali Farka Toure. In part because most of these ethnic styles use five-note (pentatonic) scales, listeners find in them clear links to American blues. This is a complex and mysterious subject as full of surprising twists and turns as Mali's seemingly endless stream of pentatonic music styles.

    40. SearchUK - Finds It Fast!
    The dogon Village Provides links to resources for peoples and Cultures of africa- Provides insight the pervasive african and indigenous Indian influences on
    http://www.searchuk.com/Top/Society/Ethnicity/African/
    Home Top Society Ethnicity > African ADULT SHOPPING FINANCE GAMBLING ...
    Learn Afrikaans at Linguaphone UK
    - Languages made easy. We have over 500 courses in more than 30 languages. Whether you want to become fluent or just learn enough to get by on a holiday, visit Linguaphone's UK Web site.
    Travel to Africa
    - UK tour operator (Abta and Atol-protected) offering Safaris and holidays in Africa. Free brochure available. From camps to luxury lodges, beach retreats and exclusive resorts.
    Earth Center
    - Non-profit center, promoting traditional African culture and spirituality.
    Africa Online
    - information source for Africa
    African Lovemix
    - Personals Ads
    European Africa Center for Success and Self Reliance
    - Message boards and suggestions for migrants living in Europe.
    The Dogon Village
    - Provides links to resources for people of the Black diaspora. News, commentary, entertainment, events and more.
    Jerusi's Dominion
    - ethiopian personal webpage, chat rooms, cool pictures, and helpful links
    The Paradox of Swahili Culture
    - The role of Swahili culture and the impact it has had on our society, concerning societal change and transformation.
    African Community International Center
    - An international membership organization focusing on Africa, her people, resources and relationship with the rest of the world.

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