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         Bemba Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

41. People And Peoples (A-C)
An aborigine is a member of an indigenous people. are a number of distinct but relatedpeoples of northern bemba The bemba are an African people of northern
http://www.sneaker.net.au/docs/encyclo/C1.HTM
People and Peoples (A-C)
A. H. L. Fizeau
A. H. L. Fizeau was a French physicist. He was born in 1819 at Paris and died in 1896. He measured the speed of light in 1849.
Aaron
Aaron was the brother of Moses
Ababdeh
The Ababdeh were (are?) a nomadic African tribe inhabiting Egypt between the Nile and the Red Sea
Abandonee
An abandonee is an underwriter to whom the salvage of a wreck is abandoned.
Abbas
Abbas was the Uncle of Mohammed . He was born in 566 and died in 652.
Abbasid An Abbasid was a member of a dynasty of caliphs who ruled in Baghdad from 750 until 1258. They claimed to be descended from Abbas Abbess An Abbess is the female superior of a community of nuns. Abbot An abbot is the superior of a community of monks Abdul Azziz Ibn Saud Abdul Azziz Ibn Saud was King of Saudi Arabia . He was born in 1880 in Central Arabia and died in 1953. Abel In the bible, Abel was the second son of Adam . He was killed by his brother Cain Abel Tasman Abel Tasman was a Dutch explorer. He discovered Tasmania in 1642. Aborigine An aborigine is a member of an indigenous people. Abraham Bloemaart Abraham Bloemaart was a Dutch painter . He was born in 1565 and died in 1657. Abraham Cowley Abraham Cowley was an English poet. He was born in 1618 and died in 1667. He was one of the metaphysical school of poets who followed

42. About AFJN News Events Newsletter Action Alerts Grassroots
bishops initially backed the Kabilabemba accord, they agricultural sector and indigenousgenetic inheritance and poverty among africa's peoples and communities
http://afjn.cua.edu/Newsletter/AA AugSept02.cfm
About AFJN Newsletter Action Alerts Grassroots Response Initiative ... Home
Around Africa
August/September 2002
A Publication of the Africa Faith and Justice Network TABLE OF CONTENTS
Congo Peace Accord but Conflict Grows

Sign-On Letter to Sec. Colin Powell

Africa Gripped by Famine

Eat GMOs or Starve?
...
Recent AFJN Sign-Ons

Our Annual Meeting is approaching fast. Enclosed you will find another registration form. This is your last chance to plan to join us in shaping, in an active and meaningful way, AFJN's agenda for action in the next two years in the post-election period. The theme of the meeting, Speak Hope, Claim Justice , is symbolic in diverse ways. As we enter AFJN 20th year of existence, it reflects both AFJN's faithful commitment to Africa and the continent's resilience in face of adversity. It is also a witness to the challenges of our times. From the fall of the Berlin Wall (1989) to the months following September 11 (2001), we seem to have moved from one Cold War to another. The interim twelve years presented a unique window of opportunity for ensuring that respect for human rights and human beings and commitment to genuine democracy became the prevailing values of our nation's foreign policies. That window has largely closed. Corporate greed, (re)militarization of foreign policy, primacy of security over human rights concerns, secrecy of action and decision-making based on covert intelligence have become the pillars of our current foreign policy-making craft. The distinction between the developed and the developing worlds is becoming increasingly blurred. Lacking any viable role model for sustainable people-centered development, Africa now more than ever needs to reinvent itself. We have deep faith that Africa can do this and that another world is possible. Come and be part of the debate and history in the making.

43. UN Wire: An Independent News Briefing About The UN
of resources available to indigenous peoples (Mendez, Guatemala of Human Rights Watch'sAfrica division (Human group head JeanPierre bemba criticized Kabila
http://www.unwire.org/unwire/2002/09/12/current.asp

advanced search

U.N. Affairs

Health

Environment
...
UN Wire Home

Sept. 12, 2002
HEALTH
HIV/AIDS:  Hope Of Free Treatment Draws Botswana's Neighbors NIGERIA:  UNICEF Urges Action On Vitamin A For Children
WOMEN, CHILDREN AND POPULATION
CHILD LABOR:  U.S. Pledges $4 Million For ILO Program In Tanzania SRI LANKA:  Tamil Tigers Release 85 Child Soldiers; More ENVIRONMENT CHAD-CAMEROON:  World Bank Management Dismisses Pipeline Criticism THAILAND:  UNEP Official Criticizes Carbon Credit Rejection AFGHANISTAN:  Landmark UNEP Environmental Assessment Begins Today ECONOMICS, TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT PALESTINIANS:  Economy Beyond The Help Of Aid, Says UNCTAD AVIATION:  ICAO Says Traffic Stabilizing After Post-Sept. 11 Decline DIGITAL DIVIDE:  New UNESCO Strategy Unveiled For Summit EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND CULTURE AFGHANISTAN:  ADB Grants $4 Million To Rebuild Education System HUMANITARIAN AID AND FOOD SECURITY SWAZILAND:  U.N. Appeals For $20 Million For Food Aid

44. Minority Languages And Cultures In Central Africa
for example, has bridged, in the peoples' Republic of and its total neglect of indigenousideographic scripts for example, is a dialect of bemba, and bemba is
http://ntama.uni-mainz.de/main2/kubik/

Special Focus

Articles

Afrobolivia

Afroeurope
...
Home
Minority languages and cultures in Central Africa
Situation analysis and research priorities
by Gerhard Kubik Unchanged text of a lecture given by the author on July 21, 1989
at the University of Zimbabwe, Harare, on invitation by the Department
of African Languages and Literature. Venue: Lecture theatre)
The current situation of minority languages and their associated cultures in Africa south of the Sahara including some particular areas where I have conducted research (such as in Angola 1965, 1979, 1980 and 1982, Zambia 1971, 1973, 1977/78, 1979 and 1987, and the Central African Republic, 1964 and 1966) is a consequence of historical developments which are to be understood politically, socially and culturally. What is a minority language? Are there any criteria that make a language fall under this category? In the first place the answer depends on a definition of the term "minority". In a country with two political parties, for example, one may obtain a majority of votes, while the other, consequently, is then in the minority. In such a case "minority" is anything below 50%. In practice, however, there are always more contenders. With regard to language, there are no linguistic criteria to determine what is a minority language.

45. Peace Support Operations In Africa, The Unresolved Issues - Boundaries Of Peace
should aim at the empowerment of peoples and should For example, ubuntu is an indigenousAfrican philosophy of other hand, MLC head JeanPierre bemba said he
http://www.iss.co.za/Pubs/Monographs/No44/SupportOperations.html
Peace Support Operations in Africa:
The Unresolved Issues
Mark Malan
Institute for Security Studies

Published in Monograph No 44: Boundaries of Peace Support Operations, February 2000
INTRODUCTION
African solutions to African problems.
"In Kosovo a group of states intervened without seeking authority from the United Nations Security Council. In [East] Timor the council has now authorised intervention, but only after obtaining an invitation from Indonesia ... As in Rwanda five years ago, the international community stands accused of doing too little, too late ... Neither of these precedents is satisfactory as a model for the new millennium."

The aim of this contribution is to highlight a number of key unresolved issues regarding the present and future conduct of peace support operations on the African continent. These issues are grouped into three main areas of enquiry: when and where to intervene, who should intervene, and how to intervene.
WHEN AND WHERE TO INTERVENE
The question of when and where to intervene legitimately can be answered, rather simplistically, with a brief reference to the UN Charter. Chapter VII deals with

46. Africa
tribes are the Lozi, the bemba, the Ngoni sites; Equatorial Guinea Bioko Island'sIndigenous Bubi Tribe - learn how ancient African peoples crossed the
http://schools.sd68.bc.ca/dove/dept/library/africa.html
Africa These sites are suggested as starting points for students' Internet research. Art and Culture
General Sites and Statistics About Africa

Modern Societies

Past Societies
...
Trade Routes
Art and Culture Links

47. Zambia
2000 est) Ethnic groups over 95 indigenous Africans, belonging the BantuBotatwe andthe bemba about 1 16th century Immigration of peoples from Luba and Lunda
http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/countryfacts/zambia.html
HOME Internet Access Broadband Email ... Travel
Search the Web:

serveAd("REFERENCE.HOME")
REFERENCE ENCYCLOPAEDIA Hutchinson's
Encyclopaedia
Country Facts On This Day ... Wildlife TOOLS Car Insurance Cheap Flights Downloads Email By Phone ... What's On TISCALI About Us Business Services Investor Relations Contact Us Find a country's flag, map or national anthem here. Click on a letter to find the country: A B C D ... Z Or search for a country:
HUTCHINSON COUNTRY FACTS Zambia General Information
Government

Economy and resources

Population and society
...
Chronology

GENERAL INFORMATION National name Republic of Zambia Area 752,600 sq km/290,578 sq mi Capital Lusaka Major towns/cities Kitwe, Ndola, Kabwe, Mufulira, Chingola, Luanshya, Livingstone Physical features forested plateau cut through by rivers Zambezi River, Victoria Falls, Kariba Dam back to top GOVERNMENT Head of state and government Frederick Chiluba from 1991 Political system emergent democracy Political executive limited presidency Administrative divisions nine provinces Political parties United National Independence Party (UNIP), African socialist Movement for Multiparty Democracy (MMD), moderate, left of centre Multiracial Party (MRP), moderate, left of centre, multiracial National Democratic Alliance (NADA), left of centre Democratic Party (DP), left of centre Armed forces 21,600 plus paramilitary forces of 1,400 (1998)

48. Food Resource [http//food.orst.edu/], Oregon State University,
wild plants by the traditional peoples they surveyed was Richard's systematic overviewof bemba fooduse economically deprived of the indigenous Native Americans
http://food.oregonstate.edu/kelsey/ref/mexico_grivetti.html

49. The Probert Encyclopaedia - People And Peoples (B)
Batak are six distinct but related peoples of northern an industrialized and highlyorganised indigenous British stone bemba The bemba are an African people of
http://www.vets.com/questionmanager/encyclopaedia/ency1/C2.HTM
People and Peoples (B)
B. Gratz Brown
B Gratz Brown was an American politician. He was a Liberal Republican governor of Missouri from 1871 until 1873.
B. K. Henagan
B K Henagan was an American politician. He was a Democratic governor of South Carolina during 1840.
Baber
Baber was the founder of the Mogul dynasty which ruled northern India for 300 years. He was born in 1483, dying in 1530.
Babi
The Babi are a Persian religious sect formed in 1843 by Bab Ed Din
Baby Peggy
Baby Peggy is an actress. She was born in 1917.
Baden-Powell Baden-Powell was a British soldier. He was born in 1857. He died in 1941. He was the founder of the scouting movement. Badi Uzza Badi Uzza is an actress. Baggara The Baggara are a Muslim Bedouin people of the Nile Basin. Baker A baker is a person who manufacturers bread Baldred Baldred was king of the Heptarchy in 805. He was killed by Egbert , king of Wessex in 823 who took over the kingdom of Heptarchy. Baldwin I Baldwin I was the first Latin king of Jerusalem . He was born in 1058 and died in 1118. Having taken part in the first crusade with his eldest brother, Godfrey of Boulogne, he succeeded on the death of Godfrey to the government of Jerusalem in 1100.

50. UN Wire: An Independent News Briefing About The UN
indigenous peoples such as the Penan are said to International Day of the World'sindigenous People, established JeanPierre bemba, leader of the Movement for
http://www.unfoundation.org/unwire/archives/UNWIRE990806.asp
Friday, 6 August, 1999
UN Affairs
HOLBROOKE:
US Ambassador To UN Is Finally Approved
US:
House Defeats Effort To Release UN Funds
ANNAN:
Deserves A Second Term Earth Times
Health
EBOLA:
African Plant Could Hold Cure, Scientist Says
UGANDA:
Safe Sex Campaign Leads To Lowest Infections In Region
HIV/AIDS:
US Envoy Says South African Dispute Near Resolution
BREASTFEEDING:
Campaign Says More Education Is Needed
Women, Children and Population HONOR KILLINGS: Groups Protest Senate Decision In Pakistan INDIA: UN Population Expert Comments On Country's Growth COSTA RICA: UNICEF Study Shows Young Girls Are Disadvantaged Environment BALKANS: Environmental Team Leader Urges Cleanup Aid CHINA: UNDP To Sponsor Water-Pricing Reform Plan BIODIVERSITY: Botany Congress To Endorse Monitoring Effort Economics, Trade and Development Half The World Lacks Web Information On Millennium Bug Education, Science and Culture INDIGENOUS CULTURES: 20th Century Marked By Their Loss Humanitarian Aid and Food Security HUNGER: Web Site Solicits Donations For World Food Program RICE: Satellite Will Monitor Asian Crop Growth From Space Human Rights, Justice and Democracy

51. UN Wire: An Independent News Briefing About The UN
the lives and cultures of indigenous peoples in Alaska senior adviser to the organization'sAfrica division. Liberation Front leader JeanPierre bemba and the
http://www.unfoundation.org/unwire/2001/06/12/current.asp

advanced search

U.N. Affairs

Health

Environment
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UN Wire Home

12 June 2001
UN AFFAIRS
UNHCR:
 Two More UN Staffers Charged In Corruption Probe
HEALTH
HIV/AIDS:
 Experts To Develop African Medical Training Center HIV/AIDS II:  IAVI Aims To Overcome Drug Makers' Wariness HIV/AIDS III:  Singer Launches World Campaign In Pakistan MAD COW DISEASE:  UN-Sponsored Conference Opens In Paris WOMEN, CHILDREN AND POPULATION CHILD SOLDIERS:  More Than 300,000 Recruited For Combat Report UGANDA:  UNICEF Provides Funds For Rural Schools SIERRA LEONE:  Rebels Release Dozens More Children ENVIRONMENT ARCTIC:  Human Activity To Affect 80% Of Region, UNEP Says CLIMATE CHANGE:  Europe Stands Firm On Kyoto Protocol MEXICO CITY:  Gov't Receives Int'l Help To Fight Pollution ECONOMICS, TRADE AND DEVELOPMENT TRADE:  ILO Proposes Commission To Air Social Fears YUGOSLAVIA:  IMF To Loan $249M Over US Objections HUMANITARIAN AID AND FOOD SECURITY CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC:  UN To Assist Displaced AFGHANISTAN:  Bakeries For Widows Will Not Close, WFP Says HUMAN RIGHTS, JUSTICE AND DEMOCRACY MYANMAR:  Forced Labor Continues Human Rights Watch EAST TIMOR:  Territory Prepares For First Election RWANDA:  Thousands Forced Out Of Rural Homes, NGO Says

52. CMI * Chiapas * IMC - Noticias, 1 Página(s)
on posts, government statements, television reality and even Radio bemba, word of acrime to think like an indigenous. The indigenous peoples were referred to
http://chiapas.indymedia.org/display.php3?article_id=298

53. U.S. Embassy, Lusaka - Background Notes On Zambia
local languages and dialects, including bemba, Lozi, Kaounde The indigenous huntergathereroccupants of Zambia of that century, the various peoples of Zambia
http://www.usemb.org.zm/wwwhzam.htm
BACKGROUND NOTES ON ZAMBIA Updated February, 2003 Geography Government Defense People ...
Public Diplomacy in Washington, DC
U.S DEPARTMENT OF STATE BACKGROUND NOTES: ZAMBIA, FEBRUARY 2003 Prepared by the U. S. Embassy, Lusaka, Zambia
Official Name: Republic of Zambia PROFILE Geography
Area: 752,614 sq. km. (290, 585 sq. mi.); slightly larger than Texas.
Cities: Capital Lusaka (pop. 1 million).
Other Cities: Kitwe, Ndola, Livingstone, Kabwe.
Terrain: Varies; mostly plateau savanna.
Climate: Generally dry and temperate People Nationality: Noun and adjectiveZambian(s).
Population: Approx. 10 million.
Annual growth rate: 2.3%.
Ethnic groups: More than 70 ethnic groups. Religions: Christian, indigenous beliefs, Muslim, Hindu Languages: English (official), about 70 local languages and dialects, including Bemba, Lozi, Kaounde, Lunda, Luvale, Tonga and Nyanja. Education: Years compulsory AttendanceLess than 50% in grades 1-7. Less than 20% of primary school graduates are admitted to secondary school. Literacy Health: Infant mortality rate 35 years (U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2002).

54. South Africa - EthnoBass
Portuguese Major ethnic groups indigenous tribal groups 99.66 Barotse, Tonga, Ila,Lozi, bemba, Nyanja and
http://www.ethnobass.org/afr_south.html
Home AFRICA page: - Central Africa - East Africa - North Africa - Southern Africa - West Africa AMERICA page: - Caribbean - Central America - Central South America - East. South America - North America - North. South America - South. South America - West. South America ASIA page: - Central Asia - Eastern Asia - Northern Asia - Southern Asia - South Eastern Asia - South Western Asia EUROPE page: - Central Europe - East Europe - North Europe - Southern Europe - South Eastern Europe - South Western Europe - West Europe MIDDLE EAST page COUNTRIES PEOPLES ARTISTS GLOSSARY INTERVIEWS ESSAYS LINKS SERVICES page - CD reviews - Events - Picture Galleries
Southern Africa page
Angola Botswana Lesotho Madagascar ... Zimbabwe
Links:
Music.org.za The core of this site is the reference biografies of South African artists. Nice! There is also a interesting News + events + tours department. Description: African Jazz, Hip Hop, Kwaito, Reggea and more... THE African music site from the south...
Top of page - Menu
Angola
Map of Angola Population: 10 million
Capital: Luanda
Offisial language: Portugese
Major ethnic groups: Ovimbundu 37%, Kimbundu 25%, Bakongo 13%, mestico (mixed European and Native African) 2%

55. Title
local languages and dialects, including bemba, Tonga, Nyanja The indigenous huntergathereroccupants of Zambia of that century, the various peoples of Zambia
http://www.umsl.edu/services/govdocs/backgroundnotes/23.htm
U.S. Department of State
Background Notes: Zambia, September 1997 Released by the Office of Southern African Affairs, Bureau of African Affairs Official Name: Republic of Zambia
PROFILE
Geography
Area: 752,614 sq. km. (290,585 sq. mi.); slightly larger than Texas.
Cities: Capital Lusaka (pop. 982,000). Other cities Kitwe (348,000), Ndola (500,000), Livingstone (83,000), Kabwe (381,000).
Terrain: Varies; mostly plateau savanna.
Climate: Generally dry and temperate. People Nationality: Noun and adjective Zambian(s).
Population (1995): 9.1 million.
Annual growth rate: 3.2%.
Ethnic groups: More than 70 tribal groups.
Religions: Christian, indigenous beliefs. Languages: English (official), about 70 local languages and dialects, including Bemba, Tonga, Nyanja, Lozi, Luvale, Ndembu (Lundu), and Kaonde. Education: Years compulsory Attendance Less than 50% in grades 1-7. Less than 20% of primary school graduates are admitted to secondary school. Literacy Health: Infant mortality rate Life expectancy 52.9 yrs. male; 55 yrs. female.

56. A F R I B E A T
of a new accompainment to an indigenous form of southern Tanzania including the Chokwe,Lunda, bemba and Tumbuka; these are also all heptatonic peoples.
http://www.afribeat.com/archiveafrica_hughtracey_newrelease1.html
World Online homepage News Sport Money High Tech Travel Leisure Music Entertainment Motoring
Archive Africa
Hugh Tracey historic recordings
Cape Jazz 1959 - 1963 The preservation of grace - the Buena Vista Social Club From the foot of the Shrine of Fela Kuti ... Ubuyile - Jazz coming home radio documentaries Past, present and future are inextricably linked. And the music of Africa reflects this in its experiences and realities. There are some exciting archives that capture this, private collections that represent it and slowly fading oral histories that tell of all the pains, tragedies and triumphs.
ArchiveAfrica is a portal for all of this, to network throughout the world in the interests of bringing all this material to one resource that can document, distribute and facilitate research.
swp-records
forest music congo 1952 origins of guitar music, southern congo and northern zambia tswana and sotho voices ... sound samples
Historical recordings by Hugh Tracey
Origins of Guitar Music
sound samples
accompany details of the tracks below. Read about the piece of music and listen to it)
In the new urban culture during the fifties in the copper mining towns of Katanga province in southern Congo and on the Copperbelt in northern Zambia, the guitar became an important status symbol. The Katanga guitar style came from the rich likembe tradition of the Luba peoples, whereas on the Zambian Copperbelt the guitar songs are very diverse - being either traditionally based or heavily influenced by the mainly American music, popular in the fifties, played by the radio station specifically set up for African broadcasts. An exciting document, with some famous names such as Mwenda Jean Bosco and George Sibanda, of the emergence of a new sound.

57. ISSUES AND DILEMMAS OF MULTI-PARTY DEMOCRACY IN AFRICA
they do is to substitute a bembadominated regime its contours must be shaped by indigenousAfrican socio incumbent regimes held democracy and peoples at ransom
http://www.westafricareview.com/war/vol3.2/hameso.html
West Africa Reivew (2002)
ISSN: 1525-4488
ISSUES AND DILEMMAS OF MULTI-PARTY DEMOCRACY IN AFRICA
Seyoum Hameso
Introduction
Decades of military rule and authoritarian regimes were gradually yielding to a new era of democracy, and popular participation in governance began to emerge. During the last decade, some 42 African countries have held multi-party presidential or parliamentary elections, with mixed results (ADB 2001:99). Given a situation where all the above conditions are met, competitive politics culminate in majoritarian rule. During the Cold War era, the priority by Western states for economic and national ties meant that corrupt regimes elsewhere were supported despite their record on human rights violations and absence of democracy. When the Cold War was over, governments made reluctant moves to multiparty democracy. Reluctance in itself was a pointer of the fragility of the basis for competitive politics. While politicians in power viewed multipartyism with suspicion, academics too contested its validity. It is argued that, born and bred in the industrial West, multiparty politics is not the best fit for Africa where socio-political structures and potent identification are more of ethnicity and less of classes (Hameso 1997b; 2001). This paper advances the debate on the appropriateness of multiparty politics in Africa. The starting point is an inquiry into the background to democratisation of African polities followed by the examination of the dilemmas facing multiparty democracy in African setting and the search for alternative approaches.

58. Liberia Institute Of Liberia: West Africa Newsletter Back Issues
minister of Jean Pierre bemba's Congolese Liberation organisations such as indigenousand international INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE OF peoples' STRUGGLE COMMUNIQUÉ We
http://www.lij.kabissa.org/lij/wan/0026.html
WEST AFRICA NEWSLETTER BACK ISSUES
subscribe unsubscribe From: Kabissa-fahamu Newsletter ( editor@kabissa.org
Date: 06/20/01-04:53:52 AM Z
  • Next message: ColorNet Robin: "Re: KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER - Brief Subscriber Survey June 2001" KABISSA-FAHAMU NEWSLETTER 26 * 5722 SUBSCRIBERS The Kabissa-fahamu Newsletter is an advocacy tool for social justice. The Newsletter is open to any organisation committed to this goal. You can use this Newsletter to tell others about your work, events, publications, and concerns. The quality and range of information depends on you.
    CONTENTS: 1. Editorial, 2. Conflict, Emergencies, and Crises, 3. Rights and Democracy, 4. Corruption, 5. Health, 6. Education and Social Welfare, 7. Women and Gender, 8. Refugees and Forced Migration, 9. Racism and Xenophobia, 10. Environment, 11. Media, 12. Development, 13. Internet and Technology, 14. eNewsletters and Mailing Lists, 15. Fundraising, 16. Courses, Seminars, and Workshops, 17. Advocacy Resources, 18. Jobs, 19. Books and Arts, 20. Members Corner, 21. Letters and Comments
    1. EDITORIAL
  • 59. S E S S I O N III
    Gender, Kinship, and Power Among the Matrilineal peoples The bemba of Zambia L inUganda Susan Dicklich, University of South Carolina, indigenous NGOs and
    http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/ASA/sessionIII.html
    S E S S I O N III
    S A T U R D A Y, 8 : 4 5 A. M. - 1 : 4 5 A. M.
    (III- A1) Writing Islamic History I (Osceola B)
    C hair: Randall L Pouwels, University of Central Arkansas
    Randall L Pouwels, University of Central Arkansas, The East African Coast, 900 1900 CE
    Lidwien Kapteijns, Wellesley College, Ethiopia and the Horn
    Allan Christelow, Idaho State University, Islamic Law in Africa
    David Sperling, University of Nairobi, East African Islam Under Colonial Rule
    Discussant: E dward A Alpers, UCLA
    (III-C1) Newt Gingrich as American Africanist: Some Questions Concerning Africanist, American, and American Africanist Identities and Discourses (Osceola C)
    Chair: Ann Biersteker, Yale University
    Deborah P Amory, SUNY-Purchase, Funding African Studies in the Age of Gingrich Ann Biersteker, Yale University, American Civilization and Other Technocratic Nightmares Kana Dower, Yale University, Teach a Man to Fish: Formal Education in Africa Kimani Njogu, Kenyatta University, Questions of Language and Politics: Some Reconsiderations (III-C4) Africa Tunes In: Forays into the Mediated Construction of African Identity (Polk City) Chair: Louise M Bourgault, Northern Michigan University

    60. Sunvil Discovery Africa - Zambia - Guide On Line - Chapter 14
    the best place in the country for bemba history and of the country, with a mix ofpeoples and a situated near some extensive patches of indigenous forest, and
    http://www.sunvil.co.uk/africa/zambia/guidebook/ch14.htm
    Chapter Fourteen Northern Zambia The biggest attractions in the region are the Nyika Plateau and Lake Tanganyika. Nyika is mainly in Malawi, and its wildlife has been well conserved. Most of its animals are non-threatening, and so it is a superb place for hiking. KASAMA Getting there By train The TAZARA station is a few kilometres from the centre of town, on the right as you enter from Mpika. This is your last chance to disembark at a major town before the railroad turns east, and away from Lake Tanganyika. By bus Hitchhiking Where to stay Where to eat Chisimba Falls These falls partially run an unobtrusive hydro-electric station, but the water that is left makes for a pleasant waterfall, and there is a good camp-site nearby. Getting there MBALA Where to stay There are two options here. The New Grasshopper Inn (which used to be merely the Grasshopper Inn) has 14 rooms, and can be contacted at PO Box 93, tel: 04 291. The alternative is the Arms Hotel (tel: 450585) which has 10 rooms. This used to be called the Abercorn Arms, but changed when the town changed its name from Abercorn to Mbala. Moto Moto Museum This museum opened in 1974 and has an excellent reputation as perhaps the best place in the country for Bemba history and artefacts. It was originally assembled by a missionary stationed here, Father Corbell, who amassed a very extensive collection of tools, craft instruments, and exhibits connected to traditional ceremonies and witchcraft. These have been housed with the help of some aid money, and the museum is now well signposted and well known to the locals.

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