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521 Sentences With "homelands"

How to use homelands in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "homelands" and check conjugation/comparative form for "homelands". Mastering all the usages of "homelands" from sentence examples published by news publications.

If Christians abandon their homelands, there will be nothing left.
The flags of the students' homelands hang in the cafeteria.
The historical Cartier illegitimately claimed many Indigenous homelands for France.
"Our family has left behind a trail of homelands," Hemon writes.
Millions of migrants have fled war and poverty in their homelands.
That is one of the traditional homelands of the Yazidi minority.
An estimated 60 million worldwide are fleeing their homelands, Miro said.
The traditional leaders that oversaw the homelands still hold significant sway.
Burdens lift as the horrors of their homelands are left far behind.
Today much of the most concentrated poverty is in the former homelands.
"This is the horror they face in their homelands," stated Al Hussein.
But what you can't see is how bad their homelands really are.
Many say they are fleeing economic distress and violence in their homelands.
THE WORLDWIDE count of people forced from their homelands has increased sharply, again.
Those seeking asylum must show authorities they have credible fear in their homelands.
Many left their homelands because of troubles like starvation, lawlessness and religious intolerance.
In one sense, they are no longer acclimatized to playing in their homelands.
Zughaib's paintings speak to the void created in homelands when people are displaced.
Many had to wait months before being reunited with them in their homelands.
"While those who arrived were refugees -- people who were being killed in their homelands because of who they were -- the world did not yet have a legal concept for people who needed safe refuge outside their homelands," the group says.
Both families moved to Amsterdam to escape anti-Jewish Nazi persecution in their homelands.
From 21, under apartheid, 3.5m blacks were forcibly moved to isolated reservations called "homelands".
Homelands: Four Friends, Two Countries and the Fate of the Great Mexican-American Migration.
Everything that happened to the homelands of refugees, it could happen in your hometown.
The loss of their Palestinian, Syrian or Iraqi homelands makes Jordan's refugees ready converts.
All the medalists are major champions who shouldered huge medal expectations in their homelands.
At least a dozen parents were deported back to their homelands without their children.
The homelands for non-whites were only a small percentage of the total land.
That sent the curator to the Cheyenne homelands in Oklahoma to seek their opinion.
Indigenous homelands across the West, the Republicans believed, rightfully belonged to white American farmers.
Through their valor and sacrifice, they secured our homelands and saved freedom for the world.
Individuals, like their homelands, bear imperfectly hidden scars from "the vicissitudes of power and dislocation".
None of these groups would likely agree willingly to self-deport from their traditional homelands.
That's one of the hardest facts to reconcile: These are Europeans attacking their own homelands.
Hundreds have called it quits and signed up to be voluntarily repatriated to their homelands.
They include everyone from infants to the elderly, fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands.
Even in its spiritual and practical homelands, liberalism has coexisted awkwardly with the domain of cruelty.
Under the formalised racism of apartheid 3.5m blacks were forcibly moved to isolated reservations called "homelands".
After the end of the war, the freed slaves were unable to return to their homelands.
With each of these, ISIS has proven its intent to eradicate Christianity from its ancient homelands.
Calling illegal alien minors and young adults "dreamers" is to say their homelands are lost causes.
He noted that he had expected deeper interest from a country considered one of punk's homelands.
Despite the dire conditions in Moria, migrants continue to flee violence or poverty in their homelands.
Illustrated by Leo Espinosa The other kids in Lola's class recall their homelands, but she doesn't.
Blacks had to carry passbooks and get permission to leave the homelands in search of work.
By conservative estimates, some 200 million citizens will be forced to flee their homelands by 2050.
There is home-country bias in listings, with issuers more likely to list in their homelands.
Security is serious; many of the refugees who pass through here are hunted in their homelands.
Couples with immigrant parents say they are hesitant about traveling to their familial homelands to celebrate.
The migrants, most from Honduras, say they are fleeing economic misery and violence in their homelands.
Its figure includes state land and plots tilled by black subsistence farmers in the old homelands.
Deporting us to homelands we barely remember or don't remember at all would be an enormous hardship.
On Festival Day, be sure to check out the "Love and Homelands" reading and discussion at 1pm.
Most of those that are, nevertheless, exported illegally from their homelands end up in China and Vietnam.
Hundreds of millions, if not billions of people could become climate refugees, as their homelands become uninhabitable.
Before World War II, our laws gave almost no protections to migrants forced to flee their homelands.
There is a huge discussion about what kind of land tenure we need in the former homelands.
Many stay for a long time, their status regularly extended because of continued turmoil in their homelands.
Blacks were assigned to small patches called "homelands" scattered around the country, largely based on tribal affiliation.
Most descendants of immigrants stop identifying with their ancestral homelands and simply think of themselves as white.
Some elements of this pilot parallel real-life stories of refugees fleeing their homelands in recent years.
Western nations must open their doors to those whose best option for survival is leaving their homelands.
In turn, they have sent a warning back to relatives and friends in their homelands: Don't come.
Photos show the harrowing journey thousands of migrants have made to escape their homelands for the US
Another group of IS militants likely intends to return to their homelands in Europe and the Caucasus region.
Europeans might have simply preferred to only breed and sustain the dogs they brought over from their homelands.
The Ghana-based filmmakers rethink Mortal Kombat as the story of Kitana, a princess whose homelands are invaded.
Eighty-three U.S. deportees to Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador reportedly have already been murdered in their homelands.
They hope to escape conflict or persecution in their homelands and make better lives for themselves in Europe.
But the U.S. has also moved on exiles that were conspiring against the governments in their homelands. Gen.
They fear deporting Central American families will send them back to their homelands to again face violent crime.
Under the agreement, Costa Rica will only take in those deemed too vulnerable to remain in their homelands.
Regional officers also arrested immigrants with little prospect of deportation because their homelands habitually refuse to accept deportees.
The values and habits these new Americans bring from their own homelands help explain some of this success.
In other words, the goal will be to create incentives for people to stay — not leave — their homelands.
He sketched the idyllic future he planned to create with separate homelands for Bosnia's Serbs, Muslims and Croats.
She has also curated the forthcoming exhibition Homelands: Art from Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan at Kettle's Yard, Cambridge.
In the past, successful African writers often first gained renown abroad, yet weren't widely read in their homelands.
Most workers, he said, keep silent rather than risk being sent back to the poverty of their homelands.
Now they're banning armed groups in Myanmar that defend ethnic groups' homelands against domination by the central army.
For many people DNA offers a chance to identify and reconnect with ancestral homelands and understand familial histories.
Throughout the journey, the migrants slowly started telling their stories from their homelands: Cameroon, Egypt, Senegal, Mali, Algeria.
Expatriate novels often reveal far more about their characters' homelands than they do about their presumably exotic destinations.
Neither the rulers of countries intervening in their homelands, either directly or through proxies, nor their own officials.
ISIS threatens all of our nations, not just Iraq and Syria, but in our own homelands as well.
Like Imad, Houda's story reflects particularly rough conditions that force millions of people from their homes and homelands.
He said 82,166 migrants from Honduras, Guatemala and El Salvador had been returned to their homelands in 2018.
Thor and Black Panther share the defining character trait of a pledge to their homelands and their people.
Trump correctly believes that criminal aliens should be returned to their homelands, not returned to the streets of America.
And if they are desperate to escape their murderous homelands, what is the best response of the United States?
While blacks account for 80 percent of South Africa's population, the homelands comprise just 13 percent of the land.
Then there are the roughly 20m South Africans in the former homelands, who have next to no property rights.
Many migrants making the journey north are seeking to escape the violence and poverty that prevail in their homelands.
The researchers emphasized that DNA should not be the only tool for tracing remains back to their ancestral homelands.
Swedes and Norwegians left their homelands to escape grinding poverty, restrictions on religious freedom and the compulsory military draft.
The first immigrant Muslims moved to the United States looking for the democracy and opportunity lacking in their homelands.
They also  murdered over 6900,2628 Yazidi men and boys and expelled over half a million from their ancestral homelands.
Both the Australian and the Norwegian barely mention their own homelands and focus on Europe and the United States.
The imposing work by Ivorian artist Koko Bi is meant to show the strength of Africans outside their homelands.
A growing number of people have been streaming north from Central America, fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands.
Still, FIFA elections may be closer to traditional democracy than those from certain countries ever experience in their homelands.
But indigenous groups had no intention of handing over their homelands to be sold or distributed to white Americans.
"We've already been forced out of our homelands in Nebraska," Pawnee Nation Executive Director Andrew Knife Chief told reporters.
When writing about artists whose history and homelands are marked by wars based on ethnic difference, the narrative looms larger.
"They want to go back and take their homelands, and we want to support them in doing that," he said.
In the former homelands and communal areas, where over a third of people live, individuals cannot own formal property titles.
Instead of looking at the short-term financial advantages, tribes from across Alaska stand against any destruction to our homelands.
Above all, Adivasis were her great love: India's indigenous tribal communities whose forest homelands are increasingly targeted by mining consortiums.
Why is the root such a compelling metaphor for thinking about our connection to ancestors, homelands, and the earth itself?
We have outsiders coming into our homelands, making decisions about our future, and they are refusing to listen to us.
Most of its staff arrived in Austria as refugees, often after harrowing journeys from their homelands in Africa or Asia.
What that should tell us is that immigration enforcement alone will not halt the exodus of people fleeing their homelands.
While blacks account for 80 percent of South Africa's population, the former homelands comprised just 13 percent of the land.
His ruling will likely expose thousands of women, children, and LGBTQ asylum-seekers to danger or death in their homelands.
Many of these mothers-to-be have come to America to escape poverty, violence, and even death in their homelands.
Israel closed the camps in 2018 after accepting thousands with conditions and deporting others to third countries or their homelands.
The current exhibition at Kettle's Yard in Cambridge, Homelands: Art from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan, therefore, is a timely undertaking.
Women's golf doesn't lack charismatic stars, but they are foreign-born players whose influence is most evident in their homelands.
While blacks account for 80 percent of South Africa's population, the former homelands comprised just 47 percent of the land.
They all said they were seeking an end to the suffering in their homelands which have been torn apart by conflict.
Their mosques seek practical solutions; whether that is foreign financing, or unsophisticated clerics from their homelands who will accept modest remuneration.
She said after talking to dozens of detainees that many of them are escaping dire or deadly conditions in their homelands.
There, they have begun applying for asylum, citing continued fears of persecution or violence in their homelands, including Somalia and Eritrea.
The exodus of refugees arriving in Germany, fleeing their war-torn homelands, has sparked debates on their integration into German society.
Last month it protested comments attributed in the media to Trump that characterized the homelands of some immigrants as "shithole" countries.
In the meantime, you are obsessed with sending a militia to turn back thousands fleeing from murderous violence in their homelands.
On that very day, a new Constitution came into effect, sweeping away the homelands and all other legal trappings of apartheid.
The Far Shore: Navigating Homelands at Dearborn's Arab American National Museum commemorates the 100th anniversary of the armistice in November 1918.
As his human rights involvement grew, Mr. Bernstein led several organizations to aid dissidents whose works were suppressed in their homelands.
"ISIS remains a serious threat to the stability of the region, our homelands and other parts of the globe," he added.
But Modi's ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) argues the bill will protect minorities fleeing religious persecution in their homelands.
Homelands: Art from Bangladesh, India and Pakistan continues at Kettle's Yard (University of Cambridge, Castle St., Cambridge, UK) through February 2.
The 1913 Native Lands Act made it illegal for Africans to acquire land beyond these reserves, which became known as "Homelands".
Several people in the classroom cheer when they see their homelands, unaware of why they've become the subject of this latest lesson.
From 1948, under the National Party's system of apartheid, millions of blacks were forcibly removed from their land and dumped in "homelands".
In the rhino's homelands, they say, extra patrols, fences and harsher penalties have helped curb poaching in the past couple of years.
For one, it would entail possibly millions of people uprooting from their homelands to head for a desert hundreds of miles away.
The 1913 Native Lands Act made it illegal for Africans to acquire land outside of these reserves, which became known as "Homelands".
The Asian variety has dwindled due to lack of prey, hunting, farming, industry and the building of human infrastructure across its homelands.
Millions have fled their war-ravaged homelands in search of safety, causing political turmoil in a continent still recovering from economic disasters.
Last month at Sadler's Wells in London he was movingly evoked in "Patrias" (meaning homelands), a flamenco show created by Paco Peña.
The 211.8078 Native Lands Act made it illegal for Africans to acquire land outside of these reserves, which became known as "Homelands".
"Droughts and floods have caused or exacerbated crises from Syria to Guatemala, leading to waves of migrants fleeing ravaged homelands," noted Green.
These are the kind of people fleeing persecution in their homelands who typically won asylum in the United States over the years.
Immigrants brought tastes for the foods of their homelands, and in some cases (like avocados and mangoes) these tastes have became mainstream.
This current crop of vanguard global pop stars are often almost as popular here as in their homelands, if not more so.
Once the Union Army removed Apaches and Navajos from their homelands — the plan went — miners would lay claim to the Arizona diggings.
And not long after Jackson's second term ended, most Indians had been removed from their ancient tribal homelands in the American South.
TPS applies to people who would face extreme hardship if forced to return to homelands devastated by armed conflict or natural disasters.
They are both run by and primarily serve refugees and other displaced people, many of whom know each other from their homelands.
Guyanese and Guyanese-American artists explore the often overlooked space that immigrants inhabit between their homelands and new vistas — the liminal space.
Young said the Republican approach could result in youths being sent back to their homelands, which they would likely only flee again.
Photo: Liza LizarragaFor Lizarraga, traveling to her ancestral homelands isn't just about discovering new things about herself, but also about honoring her ancestors.
Mr Sellner uses the Twitter hashtag #remigration to "encourage" African and Asian immigrants to reverse the brain drain by returning to their homelands.
Thus we learn that when slave ships crowded with people stolen from their homelands sank, it was not a total loss for shipowners.
Millman, from that advocacy group, blamed the human smugglers whom desperate people resort to in order to escape dire straits in their homelands.
Mr Giraldo, the Queens insurance agent, says such resilience can be expected from people who often have survived harder times in their homelands.
Raed Saleh, a Palestinian-German Social Democrat politician in Berlin, said new and old Arab migrants had very different perceptions of their homelands.
They passed laws of return (Germany, Israel, Eritrea) that privileged ethnic nationals from diaspora communities over resident minorities who lived in their homelands.
Climate change isn't just destroying people's homes but their homelands, and there soon might not be any nation within which to move internally.
Istanbul offers an attractive combination of a Muslim-majority city, close to their homelands, with sophisticated communications infrastructure and a relatively tolerant atmosphere.
Before final approval, the United States subjects each applicant to a second investigation, searching for any evidence of crime in their former homelands.
They also happened to provide a cheap labor pool for workers who could be expelled back to the homelands if they got uppity.
Many left Jewish rituals behind, in large part because of anti-Semitism and corrupt rabbis in their homelands, while clinging to Judaism's ethical teachings.
I grew up in Miami, which counts among its residents many immigrants who have sought refuge from the corrupt political systems destroying their homelands.
These territories are the homelands of the Yezidi and Christian populations, and the presence of sectarian militias prevents them from resuming their lives there.
In the case of Africa, the migrants coming to the U.S. are largely economic, driven out of their homelands because of lack of opportunities.
Raaum added that he didn't like the phrase "ancestral homeland" in general, since modern humans likely had multiple homelands scattered around the African continent.
Finally, our magazine followed the vacations of families around the world as they embarked on voyages within their homelands — stories punctuated by stunning photographs.
Arguing that conditions in their homelands have improved, Trump is also winding down Temporary Protected Status, which protects around 300,000 immigrants from ten countries.
Advocacy groups, in the past, have used the caravans to draw attention to the migrants' plight and the state of affairs in their homelands.
After January 2018, when President Trump referred to some immigrant homelands as "shithole countries," I desperately tried to shield my parents from the news.
The conviction for war crimes was taken as a sign that politicians and military officials could be held liable for conduct outside their homelands.
In their new countries, the enslaved people would fashion their own cultures, a curious synthesis of their homelands and the spaces they now occupied.
By and large, however, even within their security establishments, few see a genuine imminent risk of overwhelming Russian conventional military attack on their homelands.
Its players are taller and bulkier now after years of bemoaning their lack of the size needed to topple rivals from Rugby's traditional homelands.
We have maps showing migration routes of where they came from and where they're at in Oklahoma or where their actual homelands are now.
With "The Detailed Interview" app, users select questions for actors portraying migrants from Syria and Guinea as they explain why they fled their homelands.
Both of our publications had recently offered compilations of the best in contemporary theater that their respective homelands had to offer, each numbering 25.
Refugees, who are often fleeing war or political persecution in their homelands, are generally categorized separately from other legal immigrants to the United States.
Soldiers of many races, tongues and homelands had come together as an American army, offering the world a great "lesson in democracy", Coolidge went on.
Sandra worries about crime and that people who leave their homelands for the US may encounter the same dangers here they are trying to escape.
Migrants, meanwhile, leave homelands that offer few job prospects, low wages and the dangers of conflict, political instability and modern day slavery, the study said.
But the global figure, which comprises 25.9 million refugees, 41.3 million people uprooted within their homelands, and 3.5 million asylum-seekers, is "conservative", it said.
As the world's greatest contributor to climate change, the U.S. cannot ignore its role in creating the environmental problems that force people from their homelands.
Native peoples tended their homelands with sophisticated stewardship based in traditional knowledge, a deep understanding of place grown from long-term relationship with the land.
U.S. officials have said they expect to move out all members of that group by this summer, sending them to their homelands or other countries.
The present absence of a community who didn't make it — the friends and family his parents left behind in their respective homelands — shaped Morgan's childhood.
"It's smack-dab practically in the center of our ancestral homelands," Kelly Morgan, a member of the Standing Rock Sioux and its tribal archaeologist, said.
From the icy north come the Udam, a savage, cannibalistic people that have learned to live off their harsh homelands by feasting on their own.
When the government of one of those homelands collapsed over the issue, three days of looting, arson and bloodshed followed, sending jitters throughout the country.
The Far Shore: Navigating Homelands at the Arab American National Museum amplifies individual immigrant voices, presenting them as fully human rather than as statistical abstractions.
Within a matter of days, these young people went from fearing deportation to homelands some had never known, to having a potential shot at citizenship.
" The ending spells out the installation's intent more clearly: "For the millions who have been forced to flee their homelands to escape violence and discrimination.
Mr. Keam, a Buttigieg supporter, said many immigrants recoil from Mr. Sanders's embrace of big-government socialism because it reminds them of homelands they fled.
New York is in aid-overdrive after hurricanes and earthquakes struck the homelands of two of its largest Spanish-speaking populations, Puerto Rico and Mexico.
Expect to be dropped straight into the cobblestones of the Burgue, a Victorian-era city populated by humans and mythical creatures displaced from their homelands.
The women each bear accents from their homelands: Nirva, who asked that her full name be withheld, fled here from Haiti after the 2010 earthquake.
The 17 million people who reside in the former homelands, a third of the population, are mostly subsistence farmers working tiny plots on communal land.
Joining forces with Waterhouse, the Samish organized a series of gatherings with the Nenets that spanned months and took place in the homelands of both tribes.
"Our city has long stood as a welcoming city, a place of safety and kindness for those fleeing violence and oppression in their homelands," Bieter said.
The bottom line is that a great influx of money, training and combat experience for peacekeepers is likely to have large political consequences in their homelands.
Grumeti's return to Africa was part of The Aspinall Foundation s Back to the Wild program, which aims to help restock ancestral homelands of wild animals.
They will raise and dash expectations pushing and pulling young people toward and away from their hometowns and homelands, toward and away from their desired futures.
Some are even wanted in their homelands, with outstanding extradition requests to remove them from the U.S. so they can be held accountable for their crimes.
Historians had been souring on the slave-owning president whose Indian Removal Act of 1830 commissioned the forced removal of Native Americans from their ancestral homelands.
Now, he says, they fear their way of life is under threat as the government declares swathes of forest in indigenous Karen homelands as protected areas.
But it is also within governments' power to facilitate the conditions that would allow refugees to return to their homelands, to rebuild their lives and communities.
The song distills my family's stories of coming to the US from Pakistan, weaving in larger themes about promise, leaving for one's love, and lost homelands.
The bill before parliament formalises the current political system in the homelands with a clause allowing traditional councils to enter partnerships with any "body or institution".
Blacks and mixed-race South Africans were removed from cities and pushed into townships or homelands -- land allotted to non-whites, according to their ethnic identity.
MOGALAKWENA, South Africa (Reuters) - A new power struggle is unfolding in South Africa's old homelands between global mining giants, traditional leaders and an impoverished rural populace.
The bill before parliament formalizes the current political system in the homelands with a clause allowing traditional councils to enter partnerships with any "body or institution".
Making the deal even more unusual, Australia has agreed to take in an unspecified number of Central American refugees who fled gang violence in their homelands.
Mr. Trump has criticized the asylum system, under which certain kinds of people facing persecution in their homelands can seek safe shelter in the United States.
Trilobites Researchers are examining the genetic data in seized elephant ivory to trace it back to the animals' homelands and connect it to global trafficking crimes.
Maria Givens is an enrolled member of the Coeur d'Alene Tribe (Schitsu'umsh) in northern Idaho and resides on Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Ute homelands in Boulder, Colorado.
And next year, Ms. Schamis is hoping to organize a trip for the students to visit England and Sweden, the family homelands of Nicholas and Helena.
For decades, those who could reasonably argue they were fleeing persecution in their homelands could enter the United States and wait for their hearings in court.
On the southwestern border, the administration has also imposed strict new limits on asylum seekers, mainly from Central America, who are fleeing violence in their homelands.
The caravan, an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands, is in southern Mexico, inching toward the distant U.S. border.
But the ruling Hindu nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) of Prime Minister Narendra Modi argues the bill will protect religious minorities fleeing persecution in their homelands.
It's a form of humanitarian relief for people who would face extreme hardship if forced to return to homelands devastated by armed conflict or natural disasters.
The caravan, an estimated 21,2800 to 21,2128 Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands, is in southern Mexico, inching toward the distant U.S. border.
The project's narrative arc took shape when he noticed that most refugees had one or two personal belongings that they managed to bring from their homelands.
The 17 million people who reside in the former homelands, a third of the population, are mostly subsistence farmers working tiny plots and subject to customary law.
Not even those easing the driver's burden of staying overnight in cheap boarding houses before traveling back to their homelands with what profits they manage to muster.
Some tribes, for environmental or cultural reasons, have shunned the idea of developing these reserves, but many others want to tap the vast wealth beneath their homelands.
But the emphasis on law enforcement only serves to deepen the inequities and repression that are spurring millions to flee their homelands and seek asylum in Europe.
" "The real story," she wrote in Bustle, "is one where settler vigilantes unyieldingly pushed themselves into Native American homelands, and forced an uneasy gathering upon the locals.
A year ago, El Salvador sent the United States a formal letter of protest after Trump reportedly disparaged the homelands of some immigrants with an insulting expletive.
Alaska already has some of our nation's first climate refugees, and Alaska's Indigenous people are being displaced from their homelands because of oceans rising and climate change.
If the Taliban took Ghazni and held it, they would essentially have cut off the traditional Taliban homelands in the south from northern Afghanistan and the capital.
To the Editor: Ask yourself: How would we respond if, hypothetically, thousands of Mexicans violently tried to storm the border and reclaim their historical homelands in Texas?
When Salvadorans and Guatemalans tried to enter the United States, claiming a fear of persecution in their homelands, they typically were labeled "economic migrants," not political refugees.
Unless we act in a concerted and sustained fashion now, the Middle East's Christian communities could disappear entirely from their ancient homelands within the next 10 years.
As the Mosuo homelands have become a tourist destination, non-Mosuo tour guides and the Mosuo themselves have occasionally exploited these misunderstandings in favor of a great story.
Both legally and otherwise, directly from their homelands or after spending time in Lebanon, or elsewhere in Turkey, which has sheltered more Syrian refugees than any other country.
For decades, they have been locked in fierce battles with logging, palm oil and mining companies that have been expanding into their homelands in the resource-rich nation.
Ahjam is one of six former detainees accepted by Uruguay in 2014 after U.S. authorities decided they posed no threat but couldn&apost be sent to their homelands.
While the team has yet to be announced, it is expected to be made up of five to 10 athletes from who have been displaced from their homelands.
Without a word spoken, you can feel the tense disconnect of the individuals and their surroundings, a ruptured link of the ancestral homelands they were forced to flee.
Tykn's decentralized database and app acts as a digital wallet so refugees have verified identities when applying for housing or work or starting businesses in their new homelands.
But this project is gaining international support for its twin roles of addressing India's chronic waste problem and empowering refugee women who often flounder in their adopted homelands.
That damage began after the Spanish conquest, with forced labor in mines far from ancestral homelands and the colonial masters' use of people as currency in business deals.
But with protests spreading across the homelands, the communities, mining companies and some within the ANC itself are moving to change what they see as an anachronistic system.
The traditional leaders have acted as intermediaries with companies which have discovered chrome and coal as well as platinum in the homelands and hope to find shale gas.
Mr. López Obrador has for months been pushing a strategy to address the migration crisis by attacking the root problems that are compelling people to leave their homelands.
Among his other books was "The Transported of KwaNdebele" (1989), which documented the oppressively long commutes of black South Africans living in segregated "homelands" to jobs in cities.
The representative of the United States allegedly using "shithole" to describe the homelands of foreign immigrants is contemptuous and clearly inconsistent with America's image of acceptance and tolerance.
Many of the stories of the artists in the show tell not of a single migration to Paris, but a transition through Paris and back to their homelands.
Some members of Florida's Cuban and Venezuelan communities are skittish of Sanders, a self-described democratic socialist, a term some conflate with socialist policies that ravaged their homelands.
"The new (government) should help us build a sovereign Poland within a strong Europe, a Europe of homelands," Morawiecki said earlier in Warsaw in announcing the new appointments.
But the IHS—and every other federal service guaranteed to tribal nations in exchange for their homelands—should be classified as mandatory funding, as the proposed legislation states.
But Iran, like Turkey, worries the vote will encourage their own Kurdish populations to push for homelands and has made no secret of its growing ambitions in Iraq.
Increasingly, the phenomenon of rising sea levels has amplified fears over climate refugees — individuals forced to leave their homes due to changing environmental conditions in their respective homelands.
For others, the work they do bears little relation to what they did in their homelands before being lured to the Gulf by the promise of higher pay.
I always put America first, but I want to see Israel thrive — just like many Irish-Americans, Italian-Americans, Indian-Americans and others feel about their ancestral homelands.
We spit into DNA kits, travel to homelands, dabble in religion, and Facebook message our long-lost biological fathers, all in an effort to figure out who we are.
Asians and Asian-Americans are ubiquitous within tech companies, their food is appreciated by white CEOs, their homelands replicated by ethnoburbs like South San Francisco, Fremont, and Daly City.
The Pentagon has notified Congress of its latest planned transfers from among the 37 detainees already cleared to be sent to their homelands or other countries, the official said.
"No President has ever visited the homelands and holy sites of the Jewish, Christian, and Muslims faiths all on one trip," he said at a press briefing last week.
"The coalition will not stop targeting ISIS terrorists in Iraq and Syria until this threat is removed, the region is secure and our homelands are safe," coalition spokesman Col.
Even though the two North Atlantic gentlemen look like raw vikings at first glance, they really aren't all that hardcore when it comes to the specialities of their homelands.
In many cases, the photographers are compelled to live small, sacrificing creature comforts as they spend weeks, months or years documenting remote villages and overlooked communities in their homelands.
Africans were "broken in" physically, and broken down spiritually, to such an extent they became what they had not been in their homelands or halfway through the voyage: slaves.
The homelands won no international recognition and were reabsorbed into South Africa after the 1994 all-race elections that brought Nelson Mandela and his African National Congress to power.
The homelands won no international recognition and were reabsorbed into South Africa after the 1994 all-race elections that brought Nelson Mandela and his African National Congress to power.
Lynne Olson's "Last Hope Island" chronicles the story of the Poles, French, Dutch and other Europeans who took refuge in Britain and fought to liberate their homelands from there.
In return, they have won a clutch of domestic championships and national cups; they have transformed each of their leagues, irrevocably altering the balance of power in their homelands.
As planes crisscross the globe, their exterior graphics not only represent the companies that operate them but in many instances also serve as visual ambassadors for their respective homelands.
Homosexuality is illegal in 34 of Africa's 54 countries — four countries employ the death penalty — so lesbians, gay men and transgender people flee their homelands in search of safety.
Homosexuality is illegal in 34 of Africa's 54 countries — four countries employ the death penalty — so lesbians, gay men and transgender people flee their homelands in search of safety.
At the same time, most people don't want to leave their homelands, but lack the individual ability to change their own governments, to end wars and stop pervasive violence.
The U.N. International Organization for Migration (IOM) said this week the United States had provided it with $10 million to help migrants voluntarily return from Guatemala to their homelands.
By the end of the decade, the 16-seater minibus taxis, known as "combis," were ubiquitous across the country, particularly in townships and rural homelands established for black people.
I wouldn't threaten to send children of undocumented immigrants back to their respective homelands, many of whom are from Mexico and are productive, tax-paying workers with unblemished records.
Trump's policy was crafted to alter American asylum laws that have given people fleeing persecution and violence in their homelands the ability to seek sanctuary in the United States.
Many of these objects have clear associations with the subjects' homelands: for example, a lute emblazoned with an image of the ancient Assyrian king Ashurbanipal or an Iraqi flag.
The product of his wanderings with a camera appeared in 2003: "Diaspora: Homelands in Exile," a weighty two-volume work of black-and-white photographs and Talmud-like outside commentary.
So this isn't all an absurdist/abstract take on world events—as these wars carry a grave impact on civilian populations and people have to flee their homelands for safety.
In "Homelands" he recounts his experiences and those of three friends—altogether, three Mexicans and an American of Mexican descent—as they grapple with having two countries to call home.
For decades they have been locked in bitter battles with logging, palm oil and mining companies that have been expanding into their homelands in the resource-rich Southeast Asian nation.
The administration also needs to think of hundreds of thousands of men, women and children who have no choice but to flee their homelands to escape brutal and longstanding conflicts.
Either way, he said, those involved are examples of ISIS recruits from outside Syria and Iraq who serve as foreign fighters and then return to their homelands to unleash terror.
The 17 million people who reside in the former homelands, a third of the population, are mostly subsistence farmers working tiny plots on communal land and subject to customary law.
He announced plans to move 360,000 Maldivian citizens to new homelands in Sri Lanka, India, or Australia, and he promised to make the Maldives the world's first carbon-neutral country.
It is in these accordion-like bends and folds of the water's course that the Esto'k Gna, whose ancestral homelands straddle both sides of the river, identify innumerable sacred sites.
Since 9/11, many have fled violence in their ethnic homelands near the Afghan border for safety in the cities, as government anti-terror operations prompted violence with the Taliban.
An SSB, deployed with additional North Korean submarines that could act as a screen, close to the North Korean coast could be used to target South Korean and Japanese homelands.
Rangers are given "cultural leave," he added, if they need to visit their homelands after the death of a community member, or to make long journeys home to remote areas.
Mr. Trump on Thursday portrayed the caravans — which include thousands of families, many with children, hoping to escape violence and poverty in their homelands — as a threat to national security.
He is also ready to impose the strictest limits of modern times on refugees fleeing persecution and deprivation in their homelands — those huddled masses enshrined at the Statue of Liberty.
This facilitates their safe and voluntary return when conditions allow, so they can participate in rebuilding their homelands, promoting recovery and long-term stability of those countries and their neighbors.
Antonia R. Giannakakos-Ferman and Dan Ferman are planning a trip to Greece and Israel for their honeymoon to more deeply share their cultures and family homelands with each other.
The government has said that no immigrants are currently in custody, but lawyers say that could be because some of them have already been improperly sent back to their homelands.
The new president could cancel it, leaving young undocumented immigrants to wonder whether they can ever return to their homelands without having to forsake their lives in the United States.
They ruminate on the threatened traditions of their homelands, the relevance of music in a violent world and the stress of staying true to one's art while expanding and experimenting.
In a video message issued Wednesday, the religious leaders called on individuals to welcome refugees who are forced to flee their homelands and urged authorities to work to end their plight.
The Associated Press interviewed several asylum-seekers this past week at a plaza on the border, and each of them cited gang violence as the main factor in fleeing their homelands.
Critics have complained the program allows participants to repeatedly extend their stays in 6-18 month increments in case of a natural disaster, civil strife or other emergencies in their homelands.
CANBERRA, Australia – Australia&aposs highest court on Wednesday rejected the refugee claims of two Pakistani and a Nepalese asylum seeker because they could find somewhere safe in their homelands to live.
Many of us have been here before, facing the destruction of homelands and waters, as time and time again tribes were ignored when we opposed projects like the Dakota Access pipeline.
Many people who already have or are close to achieving dual citizenship in other countries and the United States said they were considering staying in, or leaving for, their alternate homelands.
The plan would send detainees who have been cleared for transfer to their homelands or third countries and transfer remaining prisoners to U.S. soil to be held in maximum-security prisons.
And even if people from former colonies were able to buy up all that was looted from their homelands, it would not solve the problem of returning items to their context.
But as record numbers of Central American families flee violence and poverty in their homelands, they are overwhelming United States border systems, fueling a humanitarian crisis of overcrowding, disease and chaos.
She was of an ancient faith rooted in the high river lands of Africa, and in that faith the dead were reborn, whole, back in their homelands, to walk again free.
In the run-up to each ballot, the interwoven strands that make up this diverse nation's ethnic fabric are carefully unpicked, and residents head for the safety of their ancestral homelands.
Accounts of early colonists marveling at the contrast between these unadulterated runs and the long-impoverished watercourses of their European homelands speak of abundances that would be difficult to imagine today.
That will actually make it harder for the United States to promote the rights of the hundreds of thousands of Christians and other minorities who want to stay in their homelands.
Congress created TPS in 1990 as a form of humanitarian relief for people who would face extreme hardship if forced to return to homelands devastated by armed conflict and natural disasters.
"It's about time we've put an end to this mess of Third World immigration into our white homelands," the message said, quoting a Bible verse before continuing on the anti-immigrant tirade.
"Essentially they've given themselves their own Bantustan," says Norman, describing an apartheid-era policy in which the white-dominated government allotted territories to South Africa's various indigenous peoples as pseudo-national homelands.
As a child, I accepted that we were different but I reminded myself that was the mission of America, "the land of immigrants," a haven for those who had lost their homelands.
"We are disappointed in light of the leak that's happened in our aboriginal homelands," Dave Flute, chair of the Wahpeton Sioux Tribe, Lake Traverse Reservation, said in a press conference on Monday.
A DNA test will not explain the struggle or plight your ancestors had to go though to make it to a rough patch of dusty earth in exchange for their ancestral homelands.
While female martial leadership remained taboo, male spouses had often served in the army before they married, and were well placed to cement military ties between their homelands and their wives' states.
The International Union for Conservation of Nature, a worldwide wildlife-preservation organisation, reckons that more than 22002m pangolins were traded illegally from their African and Asian homelands over the decade to 2014.
Advertise on Hyperallergic with Nectar Ads With the rise of movements to decolonize institutions and empower Indigenous populations to reclaim their homelands, artists, curators, academics, and art spaces can make crucial contributions.
Arizona faith leaders have a long history of activism and were at the forefront of the 1980s sanctuary movement that provided safe haven to Central Americans fleeing civil war in their homelands.
The story of their arrival there has been told many times; Ms Zahra, of the University of Chicago, describes the impact that leaving had on their homelands and the debates it provoked.
It's only natural for kids in prolonged detention -- and ones who have been separated from their families after harrowing journeys from dangerous homelands -- to have emotional or behavioral challenges, she pointed out.
The NRC's Middle East director, Carsten Hansen, said that while the world's attention was focused on Middle Eastern refugees, or those who fled their homelands, millions were displaced internally in the region.
Fittingly, the cafe has become the latest place where immigrant chefs present the food of their homelands, much as the milk bar or the fish-and-chips shop did in decades past.
The island is the home of the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw Tribe, a band that is currently considered the first of America's climate refugees as their homelands are rapidly sinking beneath the water.
Beyond its Germanic homelands, noteworthy rieslings come from northern Italy, from the Finger Lakes of New York, from Napa Valley and the Northwest, from Michigan and New Zealand, and yes, from Australia.
The core premise of the film's plot is the settlement of Mars by millions of Syrians who have abandoned their homelands and sought refuge in nearing countries due to the ongoing war.
"Refugees who have fled persecution in their homelands don't deserve a life in limbo in a detention center or effectively imprisoned on a tiny remote island," said the group's Australian director Elaine Pearson.
His survey of Indian homelands and their destruction is dry but necessary, since many Americans of European descent are unacquainted with the facts (some seem to regard the country as their patrimony alone).
Image: Marc SimonettiAlso known as the Others, White Walkers first appeared roughly 8,000 years before the events of the series, descending from their arctic homelands during a brutal winter called the Long Night.
These fighters, which include some Americans, have troubled world leaders since the ISIS Caliphat9e was declared in 2014, because of the threat they could pose to their homelands if they're able to return.
"Those who are not refugees, who are not fleeing from Iraq or Syria from war and persecution, must return to their homelands - and that needs to be done consistently," he told Deutschlandfunk radio.
Conflicts of all natures will arise as 6900 million people are on the move, escaping war, conflict and weather-related incidents that no longer allow them to live and flourish in their homelands.
The U.S. presidential race has been marked by candidates in the Republican Party calling for immigrants to be kept out and for those in the country to be sent back to their homelands.
The anti-immigrant backlash has raised alarms at the highest levels of government and even elicited concerns from officials in Poland and the Czech Republic, the homelands of many recent migrants to Britain.
The policy, first enacted in 1990, allowed people from countries suffering from war, natural disasters, epidemic or "extraordinary and temporary conditions" to live and work in the United States until their homelands stabilized.
The Natives Land Act of 21994 appropriated 21994 percent of all arable land for the whites and left a mere 1994 percent for the black majority, who were herded into separate ethnic homelands.
The images of unrest Sunday will likely provide him with additional ammunition as he tries to keep out the caravan members and other immigrants and refugees fleeing poverty and violence in their homelands.
Their dollar stores are often stocked with reminders of their own homelands as well as of their friends and neighbors, from guava juice and curry pastes to hot peppers and Goya canned beans.
When everyone returns to manage their own homelands, they bring with them a deeper knowledge of how to use fire holistically to heal the land while preventing catastrophic and out-of-control wildfire.
In 1835, when the Treaty of New Echota moved us from our homelands in the Southeast to the Indian Territory, we were coerced into ceding vast amounts of land where we once prospered.
The consumer DNA testing company 23andMe gave drug company GlaxoSmithKline access to de-identified data from millions of customers who probably thought their DNA was only being used to discover their ancestral homelands.
Separately, another group of activists calling for institutional change have issued a Land or Territorial Acknowledgement Guide for museums, archives, libraries, and universities to recognize and respect Indigenous homelands, inherent sovereignty, and survivance.
I have interviewed more than 22020 individuals who have come from different backgrounds but are united in their shared experiences of fleeing violent conditions in their homelands and rebuilding their lives in Tucson.
At the same time, "Yardie" (the title is Jamaican patois for a gang member) has something to say about the way immigrants can become trapped in the loyalties and vendettas of their homelands.
The Clint facility houses only a fraction of the tens of thousands of migrants who have been crossing the border each month, mostly Central American families fleeing poverty and violence in their homelands.
Former Department of Homeland Security officials said the numbers indicate that the policies implemented by the administration in recent months have not worked to discourage immigrants from fleeing their homelands for the United States.
Bashar Warda, the Catholic archbishop of Erbil, told a visiting journalist earlier this month that among his people there was a strong determination to return and make a viable living in their traditional homelands.
Critics have complained the TPS program allows participants to repeatedly extend their stays in 6-month to 18-month increments in case of a natural disaster, civil strife or other emergencies in their homelands.
The plan calls for, among other things, closing loopholes in our asylum laws, expedited termination of meritless asylum claims, allowing families to be detained as a unit, and returning unaccompanied minors to their homelands.
Use your knowledge of history and current events to make a list of various push and pull factors to describe why immigrants have left, or are leaving, their homelands to move to another country.
There's nothing distant or pedantic, however, about Vogler's bracing, deeply personal narrative of his travels through the homelands of Calvados, Cognac, Armagnac, rum, scotch and mezcal, in search of the soul of those spirits.
And as his television screen filled with images of refugees around the world fleeing their homelands — reminding him of the hundreds of thousands of people displaced by World War II — he became their champion.
One of the reasons was a large backlog in applications from immigrants seeking refuge in the United States under a different process — filing applications for asylum from persecution in their homelands, mainly Central America.
Grand Ronde was formed in 1857 when the federal government forced at least 27 tribes and bands to leave their homelands, which ranged from California to Washington, and move to a reservation in Oregon.
About $75 million in U.S.-provided "stabilization" funding was to be refocused on areas that were ancient homelands for hundreds of thousands of Christians, as well as the Yazidis, who were equally hated by ISIS.
Compounding the tragedy is the fact that even prior to dealing with Italy's corrupt immigration officials, most refugees have already endured significant traumas in their homelands and on their perilous journeys over land and sea.
Those without permission to stay in Mexico or who had failed to request it through the proper channels could expect to be returned to their homelands, a government official said, speaking on condition of anonymity.
More than 230 indigenous leaders and activists are currently on trial for battling to save their homelands, she said, while at least six tribes face the threat of extinction as a result of land conflicts.
Since 1989, the expansion of protected parks has led to the eviction of indigenous Baka and Bayaka people from their homelands, the criminalization of traditional forest hunting, and brutal attacks by wildlife rangers, said Survival.
Tens of thousands of Central Americans fleeing violence and poverty in their homelands try to pass through Mexico to the United States every year, often transported by human traffickers who subject them to dangerous conditions.
"We know that there is external plotting from Manbij city... against the homelands of Europe, Turkey, all good friends and allies of ours, and the United States as well," U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said.
I won't give away what happens, but something about this scene reminded me of a scene from Satyajit Ray's 1955 film "Pather Panchali," as described by Salman Rushdie in his essay collection "Imaginary Homelands" (1991).
Doing so would mean changing U.S. asylum law in a profound way, according to immigrant advocates, who warned the Republican plan could result in persecuted children being sent back to their dangerous Central American homelands.
Amid the deepening trade battle with China, the United States and Mexico need each other — to trade, to manage the flow of Central Americans fleeing violence in their homelands, and to work against cross border-crime.
Although it has been waived, Department of Homelands Security officials told reporters on Wednesday that the transport of fuel and other emergency supplies is being delayed because of damaged roads and infrastructure on the island itself.
According to the United Nations, Libya is now hosting more than 700,000 people who have fled their homelands, often trekking through the desert in pursuit of their dream of crossing to a better life in Europe.
Earlier this year, a Massachusetts woman turned over an original copy of an 1868 treaty that an ancestor helped negotiate between the tribe and the federal government that returned the Navajo to their Four Corners homelands.
In Athens, Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras criticized Austria and the Balkan states for their actions, which force Greece to deal with thousands of refugees who have no way forward to Europe or back to their homelands.
From homelands with names that have faded from maps of Europe—Galicia, Bessarabia, the Pale of Settlement—they traversed hostile countryside, boarded trains to Hamburg and Bremen, and packed into ships bound for di goldene medine.
But their deaths are just a fraction of how many people die each year trying to flee their homelands and sneak into the US. Every year, hundreds of undocumented immigrants perish trying to make the journey.
The idea of home (white, Protestant) was foisted on various Native American tribes by the numerous treaties divvying up their homelands, forcing them into deadly reservations, breaking down their cultures—and teaching women how to knit.
ROME (Reuters) - Italy on Tuesday said migrant arrivals by sea were up by a quarter this year and chided European Union partners who refused to offer a helping hand to those who flee their troubled homelands.
Mönchengladbach's scouts started watching national youth teams, a shortcut to establishing which players were regarded as the best in their homelands, and a chance to compare them directly with the talent on the rise in Germany.
In his 11 video portraits going on view this week at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, refugees recount the oppression they experienced in their homelands in the Middle East and at refugee camps in the Netherlands.
But a few are: "The Undoing Project," by Michael Lewis; "Thoughts of Home," essays on families, houses and homelands; "Atlas Obscura," by Joshua Foer, Dylan Thuras and Ella Morton; "H Is for Hawk," by Helen Macdonald.
Seeking asylum from El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, they would go on to create ingenious tableaus inspired by their homelands: a miniature soccer field with pipe-cleaner players kicking a polka-dot cotton ball, for instance.
Where the Hispanic immigrant community once segmented itself by country of origin, creating distinctly Mexican or Honduran or Guatemalan populations, the younger generation sees itself as more generally Hispanic and less specifically tied to ancestral homelands.
As in South Africa, thousands of black Namibians were driven off their land in the 19th and 20th centuries, banished to barren and often crowded homelands known as Bantustans while being denied official ownership or tenure rights.
For instance, a very early but common fan theory was that an eventual romance between Jon Snow and Daenerys would be the real "ice and fire" of the series title, given their respective backgrounds, homelands, and affiliations.
The Syrian refugee crisis, for example, created vivid images of Muslims surging into Europe, fuelling the fears of those who fret that non-whites are outbreeding whites and will one day "replace" them in their ancestral homelands.
Each of us here today is the emissary of a distinct culture, a rich history, and a people bound together by ties of memory, tradition, and the values that make our homelands like nowhere else on Earth.
We are now in the time frame when the administration has said North Korea will gain the ability to strike at the US homelands, so canceling the summit puts us perilously close to the brink of war.
"I want everyone to think that refugees are normal humans who had homelands and who lost them," Yusra Mardini, a swimmer who fled Syria a year ago said at a news conference Tuesday, according to USA Today.
Not only is there a need for better accountability, but program goals and policies should be re-assessed to focus on growing the Micronesian economies, so Micronesians will have greater incentives to stay in their island homelands.
The second is the American Promise Act, which would grant amnesty to people who were allowed to remain in the United States under Temporary Protected Status (TPS) because of political turmoil or natural disaster in their homelands.
Other South African mining companies have also been cutting deals with tribal leaders who have royal titles and feudal-style control over their former homelands, often islands of rural poverty where most blacks were confined under apartheid.
Vacations we take between now and August would be more enjoyable if they have a real purpose, like visiting our ancestral homelands, learning a new skill, or taking the challenge to step out of our comfort zones.
At the heart of the conflict are tribal leaders who have royal titles and feudal-style control over the homelands, poor rural areas designated to South Africa's black majority by its former white minority rulers during apartheid.
Opponents of the Trump administration's hard-line policies on immigration said Ms. Meza's case countered the administration's claim that the caravan of migrants, most fleeing violence and deep poverty in their homelands, was a threat to Americans.
"I always tell people, look, if you no longer want to meet these treaty obligations, just give us back northern Mississippi and we'll call it square," he says, referring to the homelands of his tribe, Chickasaw Nation.
KARAAGAC, Turkey (Reuters) - Syrians camped on Turkey's border with Greece believe their hopes of finding sanctuary in the European Union are being undermined by the thousands of other migrants at the frontier who have relatively safe homelands.
For two generations, in what we can call the Yitzhak Rabin era, the leaders of Israel and of Palestinians tried, sometimes dysfunctionally and bloodily, to address this wrong and find two homelands around the pre-1967 borders.
With nearly 26 million refugees worldwide with no imminent hope of returning to their homelands, it is an abrogation of America's role as an international humanitarian leader to squeeze the refugee admission pipeline to a mere trickle.
Other stateless groups — many of whom have lived for generations in their homelands — include many Syrian Kurds, the Karana of Madagascar, Roma in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, and the Pemba of Kenya, the report said.
" As the political theorist Glen Coulthard (Yellowknives Dene) similarly suggests, culturally specific, place-based relationships root Native peoples not only with their homelands but also with ethical obligations and a moral worldview that he terms "grounded normativity.
To the Editor: The debate over whether Western countries should allow foreign fighters and the children and wives of ISIS combatants to return to their homelands acknowledges the threat they could pose to Western citizens upon return.
TAHIR TAGHIZADEHAmbassador for AzerbaijanLondon * The article "Syria's Armenians are fleeing to their ancestral homelands" (June 26th) included a "clarification" note, asserting The Economist's claim that what happened in 1915 in the Ottoman empire constitutes a "genocide" against Armenians.
As an individual it has shown me that our people need our lands to thrive and it has given me more motivation to learn about my plant relatives and fight for my ancestral homelands that are occupied Chicago.
The next stage of this planning process, therefore, must be a re-assessment of the nature of the enemy and the threat it poses to the international order and to the security of the European and American homelands.
In a thread on Twitter on Wednesday, Trump, 73, claimed that the facilities are nicer than many of the migrants' homelands and said if they were unhappy with the conditions, that they should return to their native countries.
The exhibit showcases artwork by children aged 13-17 from Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and other Latin American nations that was made during a multiday art project designed to uplift the children and remind them of their homelands.
Jackson's racial attitudes and forced removal of Native Americans from their homelands now overshadow his reputation as founder of the Democratic Party and have provoked calls for his well-coiffed image to be replaced on the $215 bill.
Another objective will be to learn as much as possible about the identities of foreign fighters who already may have returned to their homelands to set up jihadist undergrounds or wait for instructions to carry out terrorist attacks.
As an immigrant, if not quite a refugee, to the US myself, I'm generally very sympathetic to people forced to flee their homelands, as my family and I escaped ethnic pogroms against Armenians in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 1990.
The Mexican government protested and Central American migrants feared deportation back to their violent homelands on Thursday after the U.S. Supreme Court allowed President Donald Trump to slam the door on asylum-seekers at the U.S.-Mexican border.
It took just hours to begin witnessing the injury and suffering this ban inflicts on families that had every reason to believe they had outrun carnage and despotism in their homelands to arrive in a singularly hopeful nation.
This time the scientists have arrived with their advanced technologies not to dismantle theories of coherent "cultures" who "migrated" from "homelands" but to revive them — without any disciplinary memory of the traps involved or the stakes of failure.
"What we're trying to do is to make sure that we can work as best we can with governments in the region to protect their borders, to protect their homelands, share information with us so we can protect ourselves."
She traveled to Standing Rock out of personal interest, but also as the host of Rise, a show on Viceland that traveled to indigenous communities across the Americas to meet people protecting their homelands and rising up against colonization.
Moreover, states bearing the burden of paying for the services provided to the Micronesians who have left their homelands should have a voice in setting the overall policies — especially when it comes to the federal entitlements for those migrants.
The humanitarian measure, established by the Immigration Act of 1990, was designed to protect people who would otherwise face strong hardship upon return to homelands deemed dangerous, according to the Migration Policy Institute, a Washington-based nonpartisan think tank.
Henry Louis Gates Jr., citing the Trans-Atlantic Slave Database, writes that an estimated 10.7 million people survived the voyage — called the Middle Passage — from their homelands to North America, the Caribbean and South America, between 19603 and 1866.
On the northern edge of Africa with a long Mediterranean coastline, Libya hosts more than 700,000 people who have fled their homelands, often trekking through desert in pursuit of their dream of crossing to a better life in Europe.
Uncertainty around the final Brexit outcome has also seen a reduction in the number of EU citizens coming to the UK and an increase in those returning to their homelands, the company had said in its 22015 annual report.
The act affirms that it is "the historic policy of the United States to respond to the urgent needs of persons subject to persecution in their homelands," including caring for them in asylum areas and promoting opportunities for resettlement.
So when she said, "Let's go home," I immediately wondered if she was, somehow, testing Philip — seeing if he still harbored the defection fantasy he voiced to her way back in the series pilot, forcing him to choose between homelands.
Towns and cities remain racially divided more than 20 years after the end of apartheid, when millions of blacks were forcibly removed from white-only urban areas to live in crowded townships and homelands, with buffer zones separating the races.
Thanks to complicated bureaucracy, a lack of diplomatic agreements with the refugees&apos homelands and unwillingness of impoverished countries to have migrants return, most of those who have lost asylum bids have so far run little chance of being deported.
Under the plan, Costa Rica will host up to 200 applicants at a time deemed too vulnerable to remain in their homelands while the U.S. Department of Homeland Security evaluates them for possible resettlement, which could take up to six months.
In these tweets, she urged those unable to travel to ISIS-controlled territory to expand the "Khilafah," or caliphate, in their homelands, and urged her followers to terrorize the "kuffar" — a derogatory word used by ISIS supporters to describe non-Muslims.
Mkiva, who is a member of the ANC, said Contralesa supported the party's move to look at changing the constitution to allow for the expropriation of land without compensation - but it had to be the 87 percent outside of the homelands.
To secure a mining licence, mining companies must submit a plan for housing and living conditions for their workers, many of whom come from former "homelands", far from the mines, where blacks were forced to live in South Africa's racist past.
In his first foreign trip as President, which begins Friday, Trump has planned a pilgrimage of sorts, visiting the homelands of all three Abrahamic faiths -- Judaism, Christianity and Islam -- before heading to Europe for meetings with Pope Francis and NATO leaders.
"Each of us here today is the emissary of a distinct culture, a rich history and a people bound together by ties of memory, tradition and the values that make our homelands like nowhere else on earth," the president said.
"Longings to protect one's family from warfare, violence, disease, extreme poverty, and other destitute conditions are universal, driving millions of people to leave their homelands to seek a better life for themselves, their children, and their grandchildren," reads the resolution.
Charleston, the South Carolina port city where about 40 percent of enslaved Africans who were brought to North America landed after being taken from their homelands, has become the latest city to apologize for its role in the slave trade.
Those who don't hold equities would include the vast majority of the 353 million people, a third of the population, who reside in the former Homelands, islands of rural poverty where most black South Africans were confined under white rule.
But Gallegos mentions that historically, his family's move away from home was a result of American Indian Urban Relocation, a federal government-sponsored program to remove Indigenous peoples from their homelands and terminate their tribal status between roughly 1950 and 1980.
Mr. Trump weighed in on Twitter on Saturday night, making what appeared to be a derisive reference to the Trail of Tears, during which thousands of Native Americans died while being forcibly relocated from their homelands in the mid-1800s.
As the global refugee crisis continues to worsen, many of the people who flee their homelands for safety and security abroad find that neither are guaranteed in the US. One New York-based company is trying to change that, however.
"Responding to Johnston's remarks in a tweet on Tuesday, Open Society said that "neither Mr. Soros nor Open Society is funding this effort," adding that it does, however, "support the historic U.S. commitment to welcoming people fleeing oppression and violence in their homelands.
The leaders are seen as key to the political base of the ANC and control communal land comprising 13 percent of South Africa in the former homelands, impoverished relics of apartheid where most black South Africans were literally confined under white rule.
Image 2 of 2 SAO PAULO – U.S. Vice President Mike Pence thanked Brazil on Tuesday for welcoming Venezuelans fleeing their country&aposs collapse, while warning Central Americans running from violence in their homelands not to attempt to enter the United States illegally.
Some of the parents of children under 5 may have been released into the United States and others may have been deported to their homelands, and the government may not know where they are, Justice Department lawyer Sarah Fabian told the court.
The Congress of Traditional Leaders of South Africa (Contralesa) also said the government must not move to expropriate communal land, which is in the former "homelands", islands of rural poverty where most blacks were confined under apartheid according to their tribal grouping.
Over the next eight decades a succession of white governments evicted 3.5m black South Africans from their homes, in cities and in the countryside, prodding them onto the backs of lorries at gunpoint and dumping them in barren reservations misleadingly called "homelands".
People from places where political instability and violent conflict undermine the flow of daily life — from raising families in safety to snapping the occasional vacuous selfie — often find themselves exiled, not only from their physical homelands, but from their communities and historical records.
BOGOTA (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Rural and indigenous communities worldwide must wade through decades of red tape to secure property rights while companies can win those rights within weeks, putting local people at grave risk of losing their homelands, researchers said on Wednesday.
U.S. officials have said the plan would call for sending to their homelands or third countries detainees who have been cleared for transfer, now numbering 35, and bringing remaining prisoners, possibly several dozen, to U.S. soil to be held in maximum-security prisons.
Consider this from cultural ecologist and indigenous scholar-activist Melissa Nelson: The bones of our ancestors have become the soil, the soil grows our food, the food nourishes our bodies, and we become one, literally and metaphorically, with our homelands and territories.
Bad Bunny featuring El Alfa - La Romana A celebration of the twin Carribean homelands of its artists, the highly anticipated video for this X100PRE standout lives up to the high expectations set by the pair's fusing of Puerto Rican trap with Dominican dembow.
The teams included amateurs and a few professionals from their respective homelands (as with Székely Land, an ethnic Hungarian area in Romania) or their diasporas abroad (as with Western Armenia, whose Armenian inhabitants were deported by the Ottomans during the first world war).
In March 2018, High Country News featured Diné activist Kendra Pinto, who spoke of how witnessing the global phenomenon of resistance in the Standing Rock case inspired Natives and Indigenous peoples like her to return to their homelands and start their own movements.
Instead, thousands of migrants — predominantly families — are actively seeking out border officials at and between U.S. ports of entry in order to turn themselves in and enter the asylum system by claiming fear of being subjected to violence or persecution in their homelands.
Morgan Neville, the documentary's director, follows the ensemble as it performs, and profiles a few of its members — among them Kayhan Kalhor, a kamancheh player from Iran, and Kinan Azmeh, a clarinetist from Syria — who speak about the threatened traditions of their homelands.
But critics say ongoing operations provide a "pull" factor for migrants hoping to make the crossing to escape violence or poverty in their homelands, and some have accused charities of acting as a "taxi service" for smugglers taking advantage of the ongoing crisis.
From the Huygens Titan lander to the Soviet Venus probes, the robots we send to explore other worlds are normally abandoned in their adopted homelands, never to see humans again, a circumstance that inspired this heartrending xkcd comic about the Mars Spirit rover.
Ms. Meisner said that over the last couple of decades, the United States government has softened its stance on dual citizenship to accommodate a growing number of Americans who choose to work abroad and take on citizenship in their newly adopted homelands.
Taking roller derby back to their homelands and engaging more indigenous athletes in the sport is a priority for members like María Noelia Paez, 34, of the Qom tribe, one of the largest indigenous groups in Argentina, and the Aonikenk tribe of Patagonia.
Taliban control of the city would not only cut off northern Afghanistan and the capital from the traditional Taliban homelands in the south, it would also prove a severe defeat for the American and Afghan strategy of holding population centers rather than territory.
Mr. Viana, 35, spent years photographing Bolivian immigrants in São Paulo before moving to New York, and he made his own journey with them in mind: Why did some people give up their homelands for new destinations that seemed to offer only hardship?
More than that, Filipino and Indonesian domestic workers in Hong Kong, Singapore and Malaysia sent more than $2 billion in remittances in 2018 back to their home nations, illustrating that, in many ways, these women are also the backbone of their homelands.
The upbeat message contrasts with the views of aid groups and experts who say many of the displaced people are terrified by the prospect of returning to their homelands now, before the causes of the violence along ethnic lines have been resolved.
Those strings of As, Cs, Ts, and Gs can tell you any number of things you might want to know—the location of your ancestral homelands, say, or which cancer drug is going to give you the best shot at beating your diagnosis.
Perhaps, this is why the artist has taken to Manhattan's waterways with his latest work, "Night Watch," which is a floating barge featuring a large-scale LED video of recent New Yorkers granted political asylum after fleeing violence and discrimination in their homelands.
Representative Steny H. Hoyer, the Democratic leader, echoed her point, adding that Mr. Trump routinely makes offensive comments — such as his recent tweet making light of the Trail of Tears, the genocidal removal of Indians from their homelands — while Republicans remain silent.
For, a mere 10,000 years ago, the coral-covered seabed that now forms the Great Barrier Reef was dry land—a fact lamented in the songs, tales and dances of indigenous people living along the coast, which speak of homelands being drowned by incoming waters.
Tribal authorities in these areas - the former homelands where most blacks were confined under apartheid - have wide powers of land allocation and curtailing their power could have implications for a range of actors including mining companies which cut deals with the chiefs to access minerals.
We are justly proud that immigrants continue to want bring their dreams to this country — and that refugees have been able to escape homelands ravaged by the carnage of war, consumed by race hatred, and mired in self-destructive ignorance to rebuild their lives here.
" He added that he hoped "there is some small solace in knowing their loss has meaning for our country and all the nations of the Coalition as the fallen service members were fighting to defeat a truly evil enemy and to protect our homelands.
The president should make it clear that he will not sign any new TPS authorizations until Congress clears the way for revoking that status to foreign nationals whose homelands have long since recovered from the immediate aftermath of the circumstances that led to TPS.
Reflecting on some of the more over-the-top aspects of the celebration in the United States, such as the annual green-dying of the Chicago River, he said there is a tendency to romanticize homelands after millions of people move to another country.
It began in 1916 at the Cabaret Voltaire, a nightclub in Zurich that became a gathering place for artists and writers, some who had fled from countries immersed in World War I. After the war, as the artists returned to their homelands, Dada spread.
The caravan's organizers said that the migrants were a hardened group and that the wait, however uncomfortable, was a minor challenge compared with the challenges they had already endured — in their homelands, where they faced violence and poverty, and during their strenuous trip north.
Mr. Giambra admits that he doesn't understand the nuances of asylum law, as the Border Patrol's workload changes from arresting and deporting people who enter the country illegally to dealing with the growing number of migrants arriving to seek protection from persecution in their homelands.
Redirecting billions of tax dollars intended to secure our borders toward programs to stabilize these societies would not only fulfill our moral responsibility to repair the damage we have done but also give Central Americans reason to have hope for and remain in their homelands.
The consumer DNA testing company 23andMe gave drug company GlaxoSmithKline access to de-identified data from millions of customers who probably thought their DNA was only being used to discover their ancestral homelands (customers have to opt in to be included in research programs).
Kiron Open Higher Education is a prizewinning, crowd-funded "virtual university" that provides refugees entering higher education, or those who were already students in their homelands, with free online courses at 7003 partner universities, enabling them to study for recognized degrees and then land jobs.
GENEVA, Dec 20111.5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Major companies including Ikea, Lego and Vodafone pledged to do more to help refugees get access to education and employment on Monday, ahead of a global conference aimed at supporting the millions of people forced from their homelands.
MIZUE AIZEKI Deputy Director Immigrant Defense Project New York To the Editor: The best response the United States can make to people fleeing the "murderous homelands" of Central America is to end the misguided, counterproductive "war on drugs" we have been waging since the Nixon administration.
The people willing to stay and fight are predominantly asylum-seekers with no criminal history who have fled persecution and torture in their homelands, and lawful permanent residents arrested for petty crimes, guys like Lora who have jobs, U.S. citizen families, and strong ties to their communities.
Although many Aboriginal people who gave hair samples to BAR had already been displaced from their homelands by European colonists, their family trees and stories allowed Tobler and Cooper to connect the samples with ancestral homes—and DNA sequences allowed them to see the relationships between groups.
I think of my fellow immigrants without such freedoms — the families who have been kept apart by discriminatory travel bans, forcibly separated at the border, tear-gassed as they fled their homelands to seek safety, all by a country that recognizes me as one of its own.
The unfortunate death of civilians is a fact of war that weighs heavy on our hearts, however, if ISIS is not defeated the cost will be even higher, and it will be paid not just in Iraq and Syria, but in our homelands across the globe.
He informs us that 40 percent of modern national borders were made by Britain or France and tells us that in Africa, borders created by ex-colonizers split 357 tribal groups, leading to higher rates of political violence in partitioned homelands, which reliably ends in displacement.
While the Pashtun protests have wound down — the police superintendent still remains at large —other demands levied by protestors, including the removal of landmines, accounting for "disappeared" persons by the Pakistani military, and ending security checks and curfews in Pashtun tribal homelands have yet to be addressed.
At her booth at the Indian Art Fair, Ms. Romero was selling her richly colored photographs of Chemehuevi boys roaming through their homelands of the Southern California desert in feather headdresses and Ray-Bans, or running alongside the giant wind turbines of the San Gorgonio Pass.
"Employers are worried ... because there's no register for undocumented migrants to see if they've got criminal records in their homelands, if they're members of the Mara Salvatrucha or some other gang," said Eduardo Ramos, president of employers' association Coparmex in the border city of Ciudad Juarez.
They're fighting for their homelands, so they'll fight for years and years and years—whereas if you send some [troops] from the north of the country to the south, a lot of them don't really want to be there and they don't have that same level of commitment.
TPS applies to people in the United States who would face extreme hardship if forced to return to homelands devastated by armed conflict or natural disasters, and allows them to legally work in the US. A series of devastating earthquakes in El Salvador led to its designation in 2001.
The 20013-page Foreign Assistance Act of 1961 (as amended) still has provisions on support for South African Homelands, prohibition of assistance to the Khmer Rouge and abeyance of aid to Afghanistan until such time that they officially apologize for the murder of Adolph Dubs (who died in 1979).
The quietness and longing of the works on view serve as a reminder that when we are displaced or remove ourselves from our homelands, it's not just action that we miss — we risk setting our memories, emotions, and senses of self at what can feel like an impassable distance.
The survey also found there are deep concerns among Americans over refugees fleeing their homelands for safety in the U.S. Forty-seven percent said allowing refugees into the country has a negative impact on the nation, compared to only 6900 percent who said it has a positive effect.
The official told CNN that the leader of the recruitment effort is a former rebel sub-commander who has criticized the US forces at At Tanf and has promised would-be recruits positions in the regime's armed forces as they clear their homelands in the Middle Euphrates River Valley.
And that's not all, the proposal adjusts the visa lottery as a way to provide amnesty for some 400,85033 people who were granted Temporary Protected Status (some as long as 20 years ago), many of whom were here illegally at the time the triggering event in their homelands.
In the early 1990s, ICE's precursor, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, began rounding up thousands of alleged criminal gang members and deporting them back to their countries of origin — even though many had left their homelands when they were small children fleeing war and had never been back since.
Afghans and Iraqis supporting American military operations would be justified in reassessing the merits of taking enormous risks for a government that is bold enough to drop bombs on their homelands but too frightened to provide a haven to their most vulnerable compatriots, and perhaps to them as well.
But the fear is that having positioned himself as the leader of a populist surge across much of Europe with his strident attacks on immigration and the European Union, Mr. Orban now risks reopening Europe's most dangerous Pandora's box: the grievances of ethnic groups caught outside their homelands.
There's a little bit of smoke rising above the Holly neighborhood in East Austin recently, where Tatsu Aikawa and his partner, Tako Matsumoto—the two young Japanese-American chefs exploring the food of their shared homelands in a series of restaurants in Austin and soon, Houston—have opened a new izakaya.
But offshore processing with a blanket refusal to settle refugees in Australia has created a standoff, with genuine refugees left in legal limbo: unable to be settled in Australia, unwilling (understandably) to be returned to homelands they fled, and in negotiation with the government to find alternative places to settle.
It became the largest and most dramatic iteration of a yearslong tradition that had largely passed unnoticed: Central Americans fleeing poverty and violence in their homelands, traveling en masse toward the United States, the size of their groups providing security from the criminals who prey on migrants during the journey.
Tens of thousands of Hondurans who have lived in the United States for up to two decades must prepare to leave, government officials announced Friday, a decision that effectively spells the demise of a humanitarian program that has protected nearly half a million people who had sought refuge from unstable homelands.
Discussions with world leaders highlighted extraordinary potential: vast supplies of affordable energy, untapped markets that can be opened to new commerce, a growing number of young people seeking the chance to build better futures in their homelands and new partnerships among nations that can form the basis for lasting peace.
Heather Nauert, the State Department's chief spokesperson, defended the Trump administration's decision to accept a maximum of just 30,743 refugees in 2019 — the lowest cap in the 43-year history of the U.S. refugee program — in part by positing that most refugees would rather remain in their war-torn homelands.
Heather Nauert, the State Department's chief spokesperson, defended the Trump administration's decision to accept a maximum of just 225,21.2 refugees in 226 — the lowest cap in the 235-year history of the U.S. refugee program — in part by positing that most refugees would rather remain in their war-torn homelands.
Critics say the bill re-entrenches the tribal boundaries and leadership structures created by the apartheid regime, which dumped many black people in "Bantustans", semi-autonomous homelands created to maintain the fiction that blacks did not need the vote because they were governed by a tribal chief, even if they barely knew him.
Through the 20th century and into this one, those fleeing political persecution or war have produced important works that we think of now as at least partly American, from fiction about the harrowing experiences of exile and dislocation to political treatises by thinkers who want to understand why their homelands fell apart.
By the late 1800s the buffalo population had been slaughtered and the Lakotas' homelands had been reduced, confined to reservations "where life was hard and food was scarce," Mark Hirsch, a historian at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian, wrote in 2015, ahead of the 125th anniversary of the massacre.
Slave owner Jackson is being pushed to the back of the bill by a former slave; Tubman, who led more than 203 slaves to freedom on the Underground Railroad, is displacing a president who drove 16,000 Cherokees (and thousands more from other native tribes) out of their homelands on the Trail of Tears.
" Speaking to reporters in Baghdad, the defense secretary said, "It's necessary but not sufficient to destroy ISIL in Iraq and Syria because this is where it began and is what I have called the parent tumor of the cancer ... but, like cancer, ISIL has spread to ... other places and it also threatens our homelands.
While public sentiment was largely sympathetic to the plight of thousands of families fleeing Syria at the height of the civil war, there has been a public backlash in both Germany and Italy at the perceived large number of young, single men leaving their homelands as economic migrants rather than asylum seekers and refugees.
"Congresswoman Bordallo is working to identify legislative options that would enable the Chamorro Land Trust to continue to administer homelands on Guam to the benefit of the Chamorro people, and will be presenting these options to the Guam Legislature and the Governor of Guam to develop a clear, unified 'One Guam' way forward," he said.
Nobody knows how many international adoptees grow up undocumented due to negligence or clerical errors, but given the difficulties adopted children often have, many of them end up in trouble with the law, which can in turn lead to deportation to homelands they do not remember and cultures that are completely foreign to them.
The result is less an accurate map of FGM victims and risk cases in the nation and more a rough map of west, central, and east African migration into America, which flags high concentrations of Ethiopian, Egyptian, and Somali migrants as especially high-risk zones given the prevalence of FGM in their homelands as a whole.
Nevertheless, there will be some people for whom permanent resettlement is the only option that will give them the opportunity for a decent life, either because they are "classic" refugees who would be persecuted if they were to return to their homelands, or because the collapse in social order that prompted them to leave shows no sign of ending.
But IRLI's documents show a whopping 91 percent of CAM-applicants (that is, those already residing in the US who've filed an 'Affidavit of Relationship' with a CAM-minor) are in the country under Temporary Protected Status (TPS): a program whereby the DHS Secretary can defer deportation of those whose homelands have been plagued by war or natural disaster.
In an op-ed for The Washington Post, Shultz, along with former Mexican Treasury Secretary Pedro Aspe, wrote that policy actions such as decriminalizing drug use in the United States would reduce drug cartel-related violence in countries such as Honduras and El Salvador, where many are forced to leave their homelands for the U.S. every year.
But even President Trump's bombastic pledges to throw up a Mexican border wall, expel illegal immigrants and bar entry to Muslims are different from expelling people who, though they may have entered the United States illegally, have been allowed to stay legally, often for many years, with solid jobs and large families, while their homelands remain unsettled or dangerous.
In the Qing, ethnic identity profoundly informed environmental politics, and Qing officials justified environmental protection in part as a way of defending the Manchu and Mongol homelands — just as many in the German-speaking world saw nature protection as a pathway to redemption for the German "Volk," and Americans called for national parks to preserve the country's national spirit.
The legislation that created the land trust was an act of the Guam Legislature rather than the US Congress, putting it on possibly shakier footing than the Native Hawaiian homestead program, a similar initiative created by Congress via the Hawaiian Homelands Act of 1921 thanks in large part to Hawaiian Prince and Congressman Jonah Kūhiō Kalaniana'ole.
Washington (CNN)President Donald Trump tweeted Thursday that the US military would continue securing oil fields in Syria while also suggesting that America's onetime allies in the fight against ISIS, the Syrian Kurds, consider moving to the region that houses those oil fields, a move that would see them relocate from their traditional homelands to a desert area hundreds of miles away.
Some of the parents of children under 5 may have been released into the United States, and others may have been deported to their homelands, and the government may not know where they are, Justice Department lawyer Sarah Fabian — now better known for arguing that the US government may not be legally required to provide children with toothbrushes and soap — told the court.
A little more than a year ago, Vice President Mike PenceMichael (Mike) Richard PenceTrump adopts familiar mantra on possible recession: fake news The Hill's Morning Report - Trump on defense over economic jitters FEC chair calls on Trump to provide evidence of NH voter fraud MORE pledged direct support to Christians, Yazidis and other minorities forced out of their Iraq homelands by ISIS.
Oyelowo and Pike hold fast to the intimate core of the pair's connection, even as they are spurned by their homelands and subjected to humiliations large (exile, threats of annulment) and small (an official's wife offers Ruth a cocktail while archly informing her that her new husband may help himself to a soda, because "blacks can't drink" in the territory).
Much of the first 22017 pages of the manifesto are the shooter responding to questions he's posing to himself about who he is ("just an ordinary White man" and why he decided to kill ("to show the invaders that our lands will never be their lands, our homelands are our own and that, as long as a white man still lives, they will NEVER conquer our lands").
" The author explicitly states that his reason for carrying out the attack against New Zealand's Muslim community, many of whom are immigrants, was to "most of all show the invaders that our lands will never be their lands, our homelands are our own and that, as long as a white man still lives, they will NEVER conquer our lands and they will never replace our people.
But even so, turning Hitler into a comic character is difficult, because he comes freighted with so much emotional baggage — especially in film, where any attempts at funny Hitler imagery come pre-contextualized by hundreds of deeply emotional films about his effects on millions of lives, from soldiers and concentration camp victims to the citizens trying to get by under occupation or the disintegration of their homelands.
In the classroom, she teaches her students about conflicts in Vietnam, Ethiopia, the Middle East and Central America—regions that all have a large diaspora in Washington, DC. The students then go on field trips to restaurants serving the cuisines of these places, where they dine together and listen to the owners of the eateries talk about their homelands, their cultures, and how war has impacted their nations.
Noah and his biblical flood, a tale likely descended from the even older story of Utnapishtim in the "Epic of Gilgamesh," but there is also Da Yu and the flood that supposedly inspired China's imperial feats of hydraulic engineering, Brahma and Manu, and, perhaps oldest of all, the 10,000-year-old tales of certain indigenous peoples of Australia, who sing of homelands lost beneath the rising waves at the end of the last ice age.

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