Young People in Cameroon Develop a Historic Resolution for Peace
Students at the Cameroon Peace Project s main Anglophone campus compose essays about the injustice they and their families have endured.
Students at the Cameroon Peace Project s main Francophone campus eagerly listen to Martin Luther King Jr. s historic speech, I Have a Dream.
Students at one of the Cameroon Peace Project s home-based micro-campuses analyze Maya Angelou s poem, Caged Bird.
Anglophone and Francophone youth call upon citizens of the world to help them bring peace and equality to their homeland
President Biya, whose regime has ruled Cameroon since 1982, has declared any discussion of federalism a crime punishable by imprisonment.”
27.01.2021 - Santiago de Chile - Pía Figueroa
This post is also available in: Spanish Helmut Kramer (Image by Pressenza)
The heat and the cold have that thing of inevitable denunciation of the unjust. When a city burns or freezes, inequality emerges and there is no way to hide it. The summer in Santiago de Chile, in addition to boiling over with inequality and mismanagement, this 2021 brings extra ingredients of a social outbreak that does not cease, of a pandemic that is worsening, endorsed by the authorities who seem to forget that below, crushed in the recesses of capitalism, there are human beings and that without them nothing is possible, not the market, not consumption, not labour, nothing.
The Rare Print Show includes artwork from leading artists including Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin and Robert Indiana. The virtual showcase is being hosted by the Enter Gallery in Bond Street, Brighton, on Friday, January 29.
Queen of Mass Contamination by James Cauty Tracey Emin’s poignant drawing I Kept Thinking of You is among the pieces being put on display. Created for her 2016 exhibition at the White Cube in Hong Kong, Tracey described the artwork as a personification of “the dull ache of loneliness, the complexity of desire, and the bitterness and pain of separation and loss.” The work of American artist Robert Indiana will also be feature.
2:29 am UTC Jan. 8, 2021
Emma McMahon and her family were near the end of a line in front of a Safeway supermarket outside Tucson. It was a sunny January Saturday morning and they were waiting to see Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, who was hosting an event she called Congress on Your Corner, a chance for constituents to bring questions and concerns.
Emma, then 17, was a senior at Salpointe Catholic High School. She had worked as a page for Giffords in Washington, D.C., but somehow she d never gotten a picture of herself with the congresswoman. That was her goal for the
day.