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         Nuna Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail

1. LATIN AMERICA: High `nuna' Over Bean Patent
Andean communities that grow nuna beans met in late to the protests of indigenous peoples. These plants represent for instance, farmers and rural inhabitants of africa.
http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/2001/448/448p25.htm
LATIN AMERICA: High `nuna' over bean patent
After hearing testimony from expert witnesses, the tribunal's verdict was unflinching in its criticism of intellectual property monopolies that are preying on the knowledge, rights and resources of indigenous people.
`Hops when it pops'
noonya Alejandro Argumedo, a Quechua of the Peruvian Andes and coordinator of the Indigenous Peoples' Biodiversity Network (IPBN), was astonished to learn that the US company had patented the bean he has enjoyed since childhood.
Breeding concern
If the patent dampens research on nuna, it could have negative consequences for developing countries. Toasting nunas uses less fuel than boiling beans, a feature important to economic and environmental conditions in areas of the world where fuel is scarce. Bean breeders at CIAT, one of the 16 international research centres under the auspices of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), believe that the nuna bean could contribute to economic development in the region.
Obvious
All of the nuna bean varieties listed in the AEM patent were freely provided by Andean farming communities, who allowed their bean varieties to be put into the public realm in order to ensure the continued maintenance of the world's seed biodiversity.

2. Bracing For 'El Nuna' Andean Groups Hopping Mad About Popping-Bean Patent
(Zuid Afrika South africa). NHANG (Vietnam). NHUON LU (Vietnam). indigenous peoples of NIGERIA NUER NAATH (Soedan - Sudan). nuna (Burkina Faso). nunaTAGMIUT (Native American, USA)
http://www.biotech-info.net/bean_patents.html
"Bracing for 'El Nuna'
Andean Groups Hopping Mad About Popping-Bean Patent" RAFI News Release
March 20, 2001 Tales from a Tribunal: The nuna bean is part of the Andean heritage. It is our treasure. For a company to patent a nuna cross, claiming the bean-nut popping bean as an invention with absolute world novelty is immoral and violates the rights of all indigenous groups, said Elias Carreno, Coordinator of the Stop Biopiracy in the Andes Campaign of the Associacion Kechua-Aymara for Sustainable Livelihoods, ANDES (translated from Spanish). Indigenous elders from six Andean communities that grow nuna beans met in late February for a traditional Quechua tribunal to deliberate on US Patent No. 6,040,503 on the bean-nut popping bean awarded to a US food processor, Appropriate Engineering and Manufacturing. The popping bean trait is found only in the Andean nuna bean, which the inventors claim in their patent. After hearing testimony from expert witnesses, the tribunal rendered their decision. Their verdict was unflinching in its criticism of intellectual property monopolies that are predatory on the knowledge, rights and resources of indigenous people. Ayahuasca, quinoa, and now nuna, said Carreno, referring to controversial US patent claims on traditional Andean medicinal plants and food crops. (The ayahuasca and quinoa patents were subsequently overturned or abandoned due to the protests of indigenous peoples). These plants represent the collective heritage and knowledge of our people, and we won t sit back and allow our popping-bean to be appropriated by a monopoly patent.

3. Musées Afrique
indigenous Knowledge in South africa du Niger), MasquesMossi, Bwa, nuna, Bobo, Toussian Aquarelles de Joy Adamson peoples of Kenya
http://www.unil.ch/gybn/Arts_Peuples/Ex_Africa/ex_Af_musaf.html
MUSEES Afrique Afrique du Sud Angola Botswana Burkina Faso ... Zimbabwe
ou plusieurs oeuvres majeures.
Afrique du Sud
Cape Town
South African National Gallery Government Avenue ma-di 10-17 Arts de la perle / Expositions temporaires Cape Town - Gardens South African Museum 25 Queen Victoria Street lu-di 10-17 terres cuites de Lydenburg San (peintures rupestres), Zimb abwe Tsonga , Khoikhoi, Sotho, Nguni, Shona, Lovedu... Exposition " Ulwazi Lwemvelo - Indigenous Knowledge in South Africa Cape Town - Rosebank University of Cape Town Irma Stern Museum Cecil Road ma-sa 10-17 Arts de Zanzibar et du Congo: Lega, Luba Durban Art Gallery City Hall lu-sa 8.30-16; di 11-16 Durban Local History Museum Aliwal Street East London East London Museum lu-ve 9.30-17; sa 9.30-12 Grahamstown Albany Museum. Natural Sciences and History Museums Somerset Street lu-ve 9-13 / 14-17; sa-di 14-17 Johannesburg MuseuMAfricA Newtown Cultural Precinct
Bree Street
ma-di 9-17 Histoire culturelle de l'Afrique australe. Peintures rupestres (Museum of South African Rock Art)

4. INTERNATIONAL NEWS: NATIVE NEWS ONLINE
Against Racism, Durban, South africa, Ishgooda. NAHIWCAR Protest Protecting Knowledge indigenous Events at FTAA peoples Summit FTAA. RAFI NEWS RELEASE Bracing for 'El nuna'
http://www.nativenewsonline.org/international.htm
SOURCES
WARRIOR NET

BIO-IPR

UN PRESS RELEASES
AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
COVERAGE
  • UN WCAR SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS NEWS UNPO: PINE RIDGE

  • UPDATES
  • IPR: WIPO meeting on IP, Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore [BIO-IPR] China worried about soybean patent application [BIO-IPR] Resource pointer Ishgooda In Nobel Talk, Annan Sees Each Human Life as the Prize Peace and Human Rights: The Unbreakable Bond The first International Human Rights Day of the 21st century AI, ACT NOW FOR HUMAN RIGHTS ... Conference-1st International Colloquium on the Medicinal Plants/Health/Environmental and Development Don OTTAWA: Protesters march on G-20 meeting site, police arrest several Ishgooda WEISBROT: WTO Back on the Slow Track CBC News Online - Ottawa G-20 UNEP News Release. Environmental Issues make Significant Progress at Key Trade Talks UNITED NATIONS: PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES ... UN: History of humanity based for too long on mutual negation, representative of Israel tells assembly Maureen [corp-focus] The Cipro Rip-Off and the Public Health AI: Turkey: Endemic torture must end immediately WGDD (UN Draft Declaration) RE WGDD post (Excerpt Articles) ... Update 1 IP COP7 Climate, Morocco Indigenous Environmental Network Critics of Kyoto Talks Say Air Now a Commodity..Indigenous caucus
  • 5. INTERNATIONAL NEWS: NATIVE NEWS ONLINE
    Against Racism, Durban, South africa, Ishgooda. NAHIWCAR Protest Protecting Knowledge indigenous Events at FTAA peoples Summit FTAA. RAFI NEWS RELEASE Bracing for 'El nuna'
    http://www.nativenewsonline.org/archive3_01/international.htm
    DAILY NEWS SINCE 1997 A Barefoot Connection
    SOURCES
    WARRIOR NET

    BIO-IPR

    UN PRESS RELEASES
    AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
    COVERAGE
  • UN WCAR SUMMIT OF THE AMERICAS NEWS UNPO: PINE RIDGE

  • UPDATES
  • IPR: WIPO meeting on IP, Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folklore [BIO-IPR] China worried about soybean patent application [BIO-IPR] Resource pointer Ishgooda In Nobel Talk, Annan Sees Each Human Life as the Prize Peace and Human Rights: The Unbreakable Bond The first International Human Rights Day of the 21st century AI, ACT NOW FOR HUMAN RIGHTS ... Conference-1st International Colloquium on the Medicinal Plants/Health/Environmental and Development Don OTTAWA: Protesters march on G-20 meeting site, police arrest several Ishgooda WEISBROT: WTO Back on the Slow Track CBC News Online - Ottawa G-20 UNEP News Release. Environmental Issues make Significant Progress at Key Trade Talks UNITED NATIONS: PERMANENT FORUM ON INDIGENOUS ISSUES ... UN: History of humanity based for too long on mutual negation, representative of Israel tells assembly Maureen [corp-focus] The Cipro Rip-Off and the Public Health AI: Turkey: Endemic torture must end immediately WGDD (UN Draft Declaration) RE WGDD post (Excerpt Articles) ... U.N. Says Planetary Plundering Threatens Earth
  • 6. Africa Direct-Ethnographic Art, Trade Beads, Masks, Carvings,
    Bwa. nuna Burkina Faso An outstanding piece, 37 inches tall!!, with old worn Ancestorworship formed the core of the Kota peoples' religiou Old indigenous repair
    http://www.africadirect.com/ccproducts2.php?category=11&subcategory=97

    7. VADA - Volkeren En Stammen Peoples Tribes N
    NGUNU (Tanzania); NGUNI (Zuid Afrika South africa); Vietnam); NHUON LU (Vietnam);indigenous peoples of NIGERIA; nuna (Burkina Faso); nunaTAGMIUT (Native American
    http://www.vada.nl/volkennn.htm

    8. Remembering Eva:
    The rationale is U nga ta fela hi nuna kumbe nsati Should they not be recognised,South africa’s indigenous 1993 to be the year of indigenous peoples, and in
    http://singh.reshma.tripod.com/alternation/alternation6_1/03MALUNG.htm
    Get Five DVDs for $.49 each. Join now. Tell me when this page is updated contents page The Relevance of Xitsonga Oral Tradition S.J. Malungana 1 Introduction There are three problems which I address in this article. The first concern is that often voiced by the elderly within African culture, namely that they observe the uncultured rules of morals, bad manners, lack of accepted etiquette and lack of respect among youths. The second concern is more general. The indigenous South African languages and their traditions have not received adequate attention in education, research and study. This is especially true in schools. The third concern relates to the fact that publishers do not publish indigenous cultural materials. All three these elements hang together, causing the marginalisation of African indigenous culture in South Africa. 2 The Meaning and Function of Taboos in Xitsonga Oral Tradition Xiyila (taboo) is a Xitsonga word for supernatural injunctions against socially undesirable conduct or behaviour practised by an individual. In oral tradition, a xiyila in its broadest and most abstract meaning, could be defined as a rule of prohibition covering what one may call, the community’s unwritten oral law. Junod (1927:573) who wrote on

    9. ETC Group
    meeting hold in Durban, South africa in May 20/2001 Bracing for 'El nuna' AndeanGroups 2000 'Stop Biopiracy in Mexico!' indigenous peoples' Organizations in
    http://www.cbdcprogram.org/final/second_Phase/ReportsP2/ETC_group/etc_group.htm
    ETC Group (formerly RAFI) Report of activities in the framework of CBDC including Policy and Gender T-lines. Period: June 2000 – December 2001 FAO IU Negotiations and the New Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources
    International Agricultural Research

    State of the World’s Farmer

    Agricultural Biotech future developments
    ... Title page
    In September 2001 we changed our name from "RAFI" to the "ETC Group". The full legal name became "Action Group on Erosion, Technology and Concentration." The new name reflects an expansion of our programme, and emphasizes the work ETC Group does in relation to human rights, democracy, and governance issues; in addition to our previous agenda on cultural and biological diversity, and the impacts of new technologies on peasants and rural societies. What follows is a summary of ETC Group activities on policy, in the framework of the collaboration with the CBDC network. FAO IU Negotiations and the New Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources The process of re-negotiation of the International Undertaking on Plant Genetic Resources originally adopted at FAO in the 1980’s was intended to convert the Undertaking in a legally-binding treaty, to ensure the conservation, exchange, and enhancement of crop genetic resources, as well as farmers’ rights, as a way of ensuring food security.

    10. UNPO Monitor - Geneva July 1999
    Paimiut, notes in his work the close relationship between inua and nuna in our Inwhich he expresses the view that indigenous peoples from africa and Asia
    http://www.unpo.org/wgip99/
    Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organisation
    UNPO Monitor July 1999 The seventeenth session of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations. La decimosiete sesión del Grupo de Trabajo sobre Poblaciones Indígenas.
    This Monitor is not an official transcript of the Working Group,
    but represents substantially what was communicated during the meetings.
    UNPO apologizes for any inaccuracies. Este Monitor no es un documento oficial del Grupo de Trabajo,
    pero representa en gran parte lo que fue comunicado durante las reuniones.
    UNPO se disculpa por los errores.
    TUNUNAK TRADITIONAL ELDERS COUNCIL
    Indigenous Peoples and Nations Coalition Tununak Traditional Elders Council
    Indigenous Peoples and Nations Coalition
    Alaska 17th Session of the Working Group on Indigenous Populations Item Number Warm Greetings and Camai to all distinguished participants: the Governments, the Indigenous Peoples and to all observers of the 17th session of this Working Group. Subsistence
    As a result of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act, the United States government enacted the Alaska National Interest Conservation Act of 1980. The provisions of this act are supposed to provide for the continued protection of our right to take from the land for our health, well-being and survival. I would like to thank my Indigenous Sister from the Ahtna territory of Alaska for the intervention which illustrated the importance of the vegetation and wildlife as an important part of our diet. Yet today, we continue to seek answers which would provide us the recognition and protection of our right to feed our peoples our traditional food from the land we have survived off of for thousands of years. This is one aspect of our right of self-determination which is not secured. Again, self-determination is best expressed and resolved by the Indigenous Peoples concerned.

    11. Grønland - Et Bæredygtigt Samfund?. Grønlandsrejse! 20 Foredrag Om Grønland
    Tourism, Grønlandsbanken, Grønlandsbankens Erhvervsfond, nuna Fonden og that killedoff the indigenous peoples in many this were the rhino in africa, you'd
    http://www.bionyt.dk/Groenland-debat.html
    GRØNLANDSDEBAT OM GRØNLANDS NATUR:
    PRESSEMEDDELELSER OG ARTIKLER
    Navne- og telefonliste over Grønlandsdebattører (se nederst).
    Se evt. også: Debat om Grønlands politik
    Interview med Frank Wille
    www.netnatur.dk
    Jagt i foråret er meget mere skadelig for bestanden end jagten i efteråret, fordi yngleaktiviteten for mange fugle spoleres, og jagt skaber ufred på den tid, hvor fuglene har behov for fred. Indførelse af jagt i foråret er også selvmodsigende, fordi det betyder mindre jagtudbytte i efteråret. Derfor er den revidering, der nu lægges op til af Fuglebekendtgørelsen et stort tilbageskridt, fordi Landsstyret her fraviger det etiske grundsyn, at fugle ikke bør skydes i yngletiden med risiko for, at unger efterlades til den sikre død, når forældrene er skudt, siger Frank Wille og føjer til, at 20 procent af jagtudbyttet af lomvier og edderfugle nedlægges om foråret.
    Fuglebekendtgørelsen har været undervejs siden 1996, hvor Landstingets frednings- og miljøudvalg pålagde Landsstyret at udarbejde en ny bekendtgørelse, som skulle basere sig på bæredygtighed og forsigtighedsprincippet. Dette levede den Fuglebekendtgørelse, som efter kun at have været i kraft i nogle få måneder er justeret ind efter kritikken og sendt ud i ny høring, op til. At det ikke mindst er KNAPK, som har skubbet på, er så meget mere besynderligt, som fangerorganisationen har siddet i en arbejdsgruppe, der varmt har anbefalet bekendtgørelsen. I denne sad også TPAK, fritidsjægernes forening, Timmiaq, Grønlands Naturinstitut, jagtbetjenten i Nuuk, Direktoratet for Fiskeri, Fangst og Bygder, Direktoratet for Miljø og Natur og Kommunernes Landsforening, KANUKOKA.

    12. Carleton College: Art Gallery: Burkina Faso
    centuries ago, they subjugated indigenous populations fiercely independent, politicallydecentralized peoples to the Kassena, Lela, Lobi, nuna, nunama, Toussian
    http://www.carleton.edu/campus/gallery/exhibitions/2002/burkinaFaso/
    Exhibition Description Calendar of Events
    Exhibition Description:
    Art and Life in Burkina Faso, Land of Upright People
    Carleton College Art Gallery
    April 3 - May 8, 2002 The art works gathered here come from Burkina Faso, the West African nation formerly known as Upper Volta. In 1984, former President Thomas Sankara (1949-1987) renamed the country Burkina Faso, drawing together words from the languages of the country's major populations, the Mossi and the Dyula. Roughly translated, Burkina Faso means "the land of upright people." Located at the southern edge of the Sahara Desert, with national boundaries drawn by the French during the colonial era, many diverse peoples live in this dry, landlocked country, independent since 1960. Burkina Faso's population is made up of more than sixty different ethnic groups. The country's complex cultural diversity is reflected in this exhibition which includes works of art by Bwa, Bobo, Kassena, Lela, Lobi, Mossi, Nuna, Nunama, Toussian, Turka, and Winiama artists. While Burkina Faso is often described as one of the most economically impoverished countries in the world, with an average annual per capita income of between two and three hundred dollars, in terms of cultural traditions, it is one of the richest places on earth. The peoples of Burkina Faso create a wide range of objects, diverse in form, function, size and scale, and employing many different materials and technologies. Within their original contexts, art works are valued not only for their aesthetic qualities, but also for their functional efficacy. In Burkina Faso, art is not just something to look at, but also serves life-sustaining purposes, vital to the well-being of individuals and the larger society.

    13. Earthhope Action Network Environmental Action Alerts For March 16-23, 2001
    This publication is available for download as a PDF file here. held in Johannesburg, South africa, will discuss this issue and on the Rights of indigenous peoples. The draft was the rights of indigenous peoples is an International Labour
    http://www.earthhopenetwork.net/alerts_3-01_3.htm
    ENVIRONMENTAL ACTION
    ALERTS for March 16 - March 23, 2001 Tell Your Senators to
    Support Renewable Energy
    Help Farmers Help
    the Environment
    ... ENS News March 23

    from Union of Concerned Scientists March 16, 2001 TELL YOUR SENATOR TO SUPPORT
    RENEWABLE ENERGY TODAY
    ISSUE:
    Democrats in the US Senate, led by Senator Bingaman
    (NM), are preparing a comprehensive energy bill for
    introduction as early as next week. UCS recently learned
    that the bill no longer includes a Renewables Portfolio Standard (RPS) ACTION: Please call your Democratic Senator immediately. You can reach them by calling 202-224-3121. If that number is busy, try 202-224-4691 or 202-224-8541 and ask to be transferred to the appropriate Senate office you can also visit: http://www.senate.gov If you are in Oregon, Washington, New York, California, North Dakota or South Dakota please make this your next call. Democratic Senators in those states are particularly supportive and most likely to push Bingaman to put the RPS back in the bill. If you are in New Mexico your calls to Senator Bingaman are especially important. If you are in a state without Democratic

    14. MiningWatch Canada Newsletter #8
    Alongside the Earth Summit, indigenous peoples from around the the leadership of theindigenous Kanak paid Mohawk Territory); Richard nuna (Sheshatshiu, Labrador
    http://www.miningwatch.ca/publications/newsletter8.html
    This publication is available for download as a PDF file here
    Contents:

    15. Conference 6: Postings March 2001
    could jeopardize the existence of many peoples in the offensive to Andean farmersand indigenous people because at least 33 Andean nuna varieties traditionally
    http://www.fao.org/biotech/logs/C6/march.htm
      -Original Message-
      From: Biotech-Mod2
      Sent: Tuesday, March 20, 2001 5:18 PM
      To: 'biotech-room2@mailserv.fao.org'
      Subject: General comments on the Background Document
      [The first message of the conference is from Robert Lettington, a Law and Policy Consultant of the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Kenya, who also contributed actively to the first conference of this FAO Biotechnology Forum...Moderator] A few initial comments on what I think is generally an excellent background document: 1) The nature of IPRs must be clear: They are a limited monopoly granted by individual states as a privilege in return for making an invention, or some other useful information, public. The policy reasoning is that, even though society as a whole loses a little through the monopoly, it gains more from the information. 3) January 2000: The arch-supporter of the World Trade Organisation (WTO), the Economist, asked whether the absence of IPRs in somewhere like Burkina Faso would actually alter the investment strategies of a multinational company (MNC). Since the freedom would benefit Africans, surely the net social benefit equation breaks down here. 4) Discoveries versus Invention: This is a huge problem, particularly in developed countries. E.g. in Japan there are patent applications for methods of making curry and tacos (using such 'novel' methods as curry powder). In relation to biological material, it needs clearer iteration - to what extent can you 'invent' something that already existed?

    16. Conference 6, Food Security: Long Summary Document
    the patent claims did not directly concern the nuna bean but their natural geneticresources and the indigenous knowledge of their native peoples (Ageeb, 21
    http://www.fao.org/biotech/logs/C6/summary.htm
      See also the FAO Electronic Forum on Biotechnology in Food and Agriculture website: http://www.fao.org/biotech/forum.asp
      Summary Document (Long Version) - Conference 6
      The sixth conference of the FAO Electronic Forum on Biotechnology in Food and Agriculture was entitled "The impact of intellectual property rights (IPRs) on food and agriculture in developing countries" and ran from 20 March to 14 May 2001. The importance of this topic was evident from previous Forum conferences, in particular from Conference 1 (on the crop sector ) and, to a lesser degree, Conference 5 (on hunger and food security ). Participants in these conferences highlighted the negative impacts IPRs might have for developing countries, such as their increased dependency on developed countries, increased "bioprospecting" in developing countries, reduced technology transfer and reduced ability of developing countries to produce their own biotechnology products. This sixth conference made it possible, therefore, for a deeper discussion of these issues to take place. A relatively large number (265) of Forum Members registered for the conference and 50 messages were posted over the 8-week period, covering a wide range of themes concerning IPRs and their impacts on developing countries. The majority of participants considered the impacts of IPRs to be primarily negative for the developing world. They seemed then to have two approaches to deal with the situation. The first was to reject the current IPRs system that they consider to be wrong and unjust and to propose how it should be changed. The second approach was to accept that the current system is here to stay and to propose strategies to overcome or alleviate the problems associated with it.

    17. LINGUIST List 7.300: Ethnocentrism
    A group of peoples speaking different Athapaskan to be known as nunavut ( nuna = land + vut invaders, when encountering the indigenous British, labeled
    http://www.linguistlist.org/issues/7/7-300.html
    LINGUIST List 7.300
    Tue Feb 27 1996
    Sum: Ethnocentrism
    Editor for this issue: dseely@emunix.emich.edu
    Directory
  • "M. Lynne Murphy", sum: ethnocentrism
    Message 1: sum: ethnocentrism
    Date: Tue, 27 Feb 1996 14:50:43 GMT
    From: "M. Lynne Murphy" < 104LYN@muse.arts.wits.ac.za
    Subject: sum: ethnocentrism
    Recently, I asked for examples of ethnic/racial labels that reflected the view that ingroup members are human and outgroup members are perhaps less so. Here's a summary of posts received on linguistic reflections of ethnocentricity. I'm grateful to everyone who responded to my query. I'm afraid I didn't make clear in the query that I was refering to basic, "neutral" terms for other ethnic groups, not outright insults, and that only ethnicity/race was relevant to my study. (I'm writing an encyclopedia entry on "race".) So, I thank everyone who contributed here, but only summarize the material that was applicable to the problem at hand. The material is arranged by area, rather than language group. Lynne Murphy Department of Linguistics University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg, South Africa thanks to: Katie Druschel < druschelk@kenyon.edu
  • 18. Earth Transformed
    Ladi Kwali a study of indigenous and modern techniques of Poterie et société chezles nuna de Tierkou and artistry among the Mandespeaking peoples of West
    http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/african-ceramic-arts/resources/bibliography.html

    19. Www.iprcommission.org/papers/text/study_papers/sp3b_blakeney_study.txt
    Institute (IRRI) and the West africa Rice Development involving at least 33 AndeanNuna bean varieties Principle 22 stated that 'indigenous peoples and their
    http://www.iprcommission.org/papers/text/study_papers/sp3b_blakeney_study.txt

    20. ELNA Catalog - Mixed Catagories
    MATERIALOJ PRI LA nuna UZADO DE LA AKUZATIVO Interesting perspective on issues ofindigenous peoples' rights describes his voyage through East africa during the
    http://www.esperanto-usa.org/mixed.html
    Mixed Categories
    Biographical
    Cookbooks Esperanto Movement Political History ... Sundry Items Biographical Top of Page
    Biographical AMARA VIVOVOJO, M. MANDRIK . A bitter life story of dealing with Gestapo, NKVD and KGB agents, told with simple dignity and chilling detail. Not available in any other language. 1997. 77p. 215x135. Paper. USA. ISBN 1882251210
    Hanna ZAMENHOF-ZARUSKI . Trans. Senjo UMEDA. A tribute to the Creator of Esperanto by his great granddaughter. This booklet in easy language is geared towards children and young people. Illustrated by Dominique DE ROUGEMONT. 1993. 22p. 210x150. Paper. Japan.
    Div. Trans. Josef VONDROUŠEK. Short description of the life and works of this great Czech author, with brief excerpts from several of his works. 1987. 32p. 205x145. Paper. Czechoslovakia.
    LIFE OF ZAMENHOF, THE, Edmond PRIVAT. Trans. Ralph ELIOTT. An English translation of the classic biography of Zamenhof written by a Swiss journalist who was a personal friend of Zamenhof's. Fourth edition 1980. 165x105. Paper. Canada. ISBN 0919186084
    MI JUNA

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