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         Berber Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Imazighen: The Vanishing Traditions of Berber Women by Margaret Courtney-Clarke, Geraldine Brooks, 1996-10-28

41. Jewish Communities In Exotic Places
mixed with Hebrew words) with the indigenous peoples who they part of the population in North africa and West Jewish berber tribes such as the Jerava berbers
http://www.earth-religions.com/Jewish_Communities_in_Exotic_Places_0765761122.ht
Jewish Communities in Exotic Places
Jewish Communities in Exotic Places

by Authors: Ken Blady , Steven Kaplan
Released: March, 2000
ISBN: 0765761122
Hardcover
Sales Rank:
List price:
Our price: You save: Book > Jewish Communities in Exotic Places > Customer Reviews: Average Customer Rating:
Jewish Communities in Exotic Places > Customer Review #1: Great to hear about these communities

It seems that we hear a lot about the Jewish communities in North American and Europe, but we are less familiar with the Jewish Communities of Africa, the Middle East, Caucusus, Central Asia, India and China. These are some of the oldest Jewish communities in the world so they deserve attention. Blady has compiled a history and study of these communities. First Blady offers some general information on the country and then focuses on the Jewish community in that country. The communities Blady focuses on are Yemen, Iran, Crimea, Kurdistan, Georgia, Afghanistan, Daghestan, Uzbekistan, India, China, Morocco, LIbya, Tunisia and Ethiopia.
Jewish Communities in Exotic Places > Customer Review #2: Jewish Communities you didnt know exist !!!

42. Bibliography Of Indigenous Knowledge And Institutions
Resource Values on indigenous peoples Are Nonmarket Valuation Agricultural Water Management in East africa." african Affairs The Rights of indigenous peoples in InterGovernmental
http://www.indiana.edu/~workshop/wsl/indigbib.html
WORKSHOP RESEARCH LIBRARY
Indigenous Knowledge and Institutions
(2100 citations)
Compiled by Charlotte Hess
November 21, 2001
Abay, Fetien, Mitiku Haile, and Ann Waters-Bayer 1999. "Dynamics in IK: Innovation in Land Husbandry in Ethiopia." Indigenous Knowledge and Development Monitor Abbink, John. 1993. "Ethnic Conflict in the 'Tribal Zone': the Dizi and Suri in Southern Sudan." The Journal of Modern African Studies Acharya, Bipin Kumar. 1994. "Nature Cure and Indigenous Healing Practices in Nepal: A Medical Anthropological Perspective." In Anthropology of Nepal: Peoples, Problems, and Processes . M. Allen, ed. Kathmandu, Nepal: Mandala Book Point. Acheson, James M. 1994. "Transaction Costs and Business Strategies in a Mexican Indian Pueblo." In Anthropology and Institutional Economics . J. Acheson, ed. Lanham, MD: University Press of America. (Monographs in Economic Anthropology, no. 12). Acheson, James M. 1990. "The Management of Common Property in a Mexican Indian Pueblo." Presented at "Designing Sustainability on the Commons," the first annual conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Duke University, Durham, NC, September 27-30, 1990. Acres, B. D. 1984. "Local Farmers' Experience of Soils Combined with Reconnaissance Soil Survey for Land Use Planning: An Example from Tanzania."

43. IPACC - Who Are Indigenous Africans?
for the protection of the rights of indigenous peoples. on the rights of ‘vulnerable indigenous communities’. Morocco has unbanned the berber language, and
http://www.ipacc.org.za/who.asp
Who is indigenous in Africa?
In the Americas and Australia it is clear that there were long established civilisations that were overcome by European colonisation. It is in these countries that legal precedents, including treaty systems, were established between the colonisers and the first peoples. However, in other parts of the world, the colonisation was internal. In Africa, Asia and the Arctic, it was frequently related to the expansion of agricultural peoples and their cultural-linguistic systems which engulfed the planet. Some indigenous peoples also adopted agriculture or horticulture, but the defining issue has been that certain dominant agricultural peoples came to control the state and its institutions, such as the police, schools, health care and bodies like parliaments. Typically, indigenous peoples have been excluded from the institutions of the state, marginalised within their own countries. The two major expansions of dominance in Africa have included the migration of Bantu speaking agro-pastoralists across Central, Eastern and Southern Africa and the expansion of Arab influence and language across North Africa. What Rights?

44. African Timelines Part I
AND CULTUREAs Africas peoples established themselves and Spoken African languages indigenous to the continent are besides SemiticEgyptian, berber, Cushitic (a heterogeneous
http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/timelines/htimeline.htm
Humanities 211
(Historical Contexts, Oral Arts, Film)
Prof. Cora Agatucci
6 October 1998: Learning Resources
http://scout.wisc.edu/Reports/SocSci/1998/ss-981006.html
Part I: Ancient Africa
from the beginnings BC / BCE
With Brief Discussions: Problem of Sources
Sacred Writing
Ma'at
African Orature
...
Can We Generalize about a Common African Culture?

African Timelines Table of Contents Contribute to African Timelines, add a link, or make a comment! New Submission Form 5 to 2.5 million BCE Fossils, rocks, ancient skeletal remains have been uncovered in the Rift Valley and surrounding areas Photo of an African rift (Univ. of Pennsylvania): http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/Misc_GIFS/African_rift.gif Evidence points to a common human ancestry originating in Africa from the emergence of a humanlike species in eastern Africa some 5 million years ago. From Hadar, Ethiopia, the 3.18 million year-old remains of "Lucy" were unearthed in 1974. Resources for African Archeology (ArchNet-WWW Archeology) http://archnet.asu.edu/archnet/regions/africa.php3

45. IPACC - Regional Information: North Africa
was meant to unite oppressed people from africa 40 years and references to berber history were the King, in consultation with indigenous activists, established
http://www.ipacc.org.za/regional/regional.asp?Region=North_Africa

46. Alexandre Kimenyi's Website
experience of indigenous People all over the world namely the Batwa and Pygmies in Central africa, the Khoisan of Southern africa, the berber in Northern africa
http://www.kimenyi.com/ethn-156.php

BOOKS

ARTICLES

KIMENYI'S POETRY

RWANDAN POETS
...
FORUM

Ethnic Studies 156
Indigenous People Advanced Study
General Education: Area D2 The Individual and Society Course Description
The course discusses the common existential experience of Indigenous People all over the world namely the Batwa and Pygmies in Central Africa, the Khoisan of Southern Africa, the Berber in Northern Africa, the Sami in Northern Europe, the Dravidians of India, the Hawaiians in the Pacific, the Ainu of Japan, the Aborigines in Australia, and Native Americans in the Americas
Course Justification:
The course fulfills the curricular goals of the Ethnic Studies Department in its efforts to develop courses with an international and global scope. The course is also important for comparative studies in ethnic and racial relations of pluralistic societies. The course will examine how this "endangered species" is similar and different from other minorities in the United States. Expected Learning Outcomes 1.Students are expected to be able to identify indigenous people.

47. Berber - MavicaNET
AlueellinenMinorities and indigenous PeoplesMinority Languages and Endangered Languages berber Kulttuuri / Kielet / Language Families of Subsaharan africa. Kulttuuri / Kulttuurit
http://www.mavicanet.com/directory/fin/1478.html
selCatSelAlt="Deselect category"; selCatDesAlt="Select category"; selSitSelAlt="Deselect site"; selSitDesAlt="Select site"; STELLA ART GALLERY Andy Warhol
Tom Wesselmann

Jean-Michel Basquiat

MavicaNET - Monikielinen Hakuluettelo MavicaNet Lite - Light version
Luettelo

Belarusian Bulgarian Croatian Czech Danish Dutch English Estonian Finnish French German Greek Hungarian Icelandic Irish Italian Norwegian Polish Portuguese Romanian Russian Serbian (cyr.) Serbian (lat.) Slovak Spanish Swedish Turkish Ukrainian Kulttuuri Kielet Afro-Asiatic (Semito-Hamitic) Kulttuuri ... Minority Languages and Endangered Languages Berber This category is not edited. Ever thought of becoming an editor
Sites

Sister categories ... Aboriginal Australian Language... Ainu Language Ancient Egyptian Language Andamanese Burushaski Language Chadic Chukotko-Kamchatkan Coptic Language Cushitic Eskimo-Aleut Europe Nivkh (Gilyak) Language Omotic Papuan Semitic Yenisseian (Yenisei Ostyak) Yukaghir Kabyle Language Tamazight Language Tachelhit Language See also Kulttuuri / Kielet / Language Families of Subsaharan Africa Kulttuuri / Kulttuurit: Alueellinen / Minorities and Indigenous Peoples / Berbers Sites No filters selected ...

48. Frepic-Awañak: Geneva Declaration For The Working Group On Indigenous Peoples
the Conference of Organisations of indigenous peoples and thanks the Canarians, are a people of Insular the Canarian natives are ethnically Amazigh (berber).
http://amazighworld.net/countries/canary_islands/documents/frepic-awanak_1998gen
Algeria Canary Islands Egypt (Siwa) Libya ... Tunisia GENEVA DECLARATION
for the
WORKING GROUP ON INDIGENOUS PEOPLES Sixteenth Session 27th-31st July 1998
35080 Las Palmas de Gran Canarla P.O. BOX 1391
Telefono/Fax: +34 928644995
E-Mail: Frepicawanak@yahoo.com
We, the Canarians, are a people of Insular Africa, of which the descendants of the Canarian natives are ethnically Amazigh (Berber). 1. The demand of the Republic of Ukrania in 1960 at the UNO to carry out the decolonisation of the Canary Islands. 2. Article 1 of the Constituent Act of the OAU which states that " ... The Organisation will include the African States, Madagascar and all the islands adjacent to the continent." This clearly supports the African nature of the Archipelago. 3. The report made by the Extraordinary Conference of Afro-Asian Writers in 1966: "We ask all Afro-Asian States to support the right and the movement for the independence of the Canarian Archipelago to end Spanish colonialism in their land and to denounce openly all the manouevres of Spanish colonialism in Africa." 4. The contents of Resolution 1514 of the UNO.

49. Civilizations In Africa: Ghana
was filled by desert berbers, an indigenous African people born in Carthage, may have been part berber). The berbers were primarily a nomadic people and would
http://www.wsu.edu:8080/~dee/CIVAFRCA/GHANA.HTM
Sahara , which in Arabic simply means "The Desert." Around 750 AD, under the influence of Islamic peoples, northern and western Africans began to use the camel to transport goods across this forbidding terrain. Camels do several things exceptionally well: they can carry unbelievably heavy loads for impossibly long distances and they can keep their footing on sandy terrain. It was as if someone had invented sand ships and its effect on western African culture was just as profound as if they were sand ships. The most important developments occurred in the Sahel area just south of the Sahara; the Sahel provided southern terminal points for the goods being shipped across the Sahara. The Sahel is a dry, hot area with fertile areas and grasslands; all of the major north African kingdoms grew up in this area: Ghana, Mali, Songhay, and Kanem-Bornu: the Sahelian kingdoms
Soninke
, a Mande speaking people living in the region bordering the Sahara. They built their capital city, Kumbi Saleh, right on the edge of the Sahara and the city quickly became the most dynamic and important southern terminus of the Saharan trade routes.
Ghana (this is why we now call the kingdom, Ghana). The kingship was matrilineal (as was all Sahelian monarchies to follow); the king's sister provided the heir to the throne. In addition to military power, the king appears to have been the supreme judge of the kingdom.

50. Royalty.nu - Royalty In Africa - History, News, Books
Congo that culminated in the deaths of 4 to 8 million indigenous people. is a children s book about the nomadic berberspeaking Tuareg people of North
http://www.royalty.nu/Africa/

Royalty.nu
World Royalty > African Royalty > Books About African Royalty Related Topics Search
African Royalty
Click for news and information about: Botswana Egypt Ethiopia Ghana ... World Royal News April 7, 2004 Belgian fury at film on Leopold's Congo terror February 24, 2004 King Leopold's legacy of DR Congo violence . Thank you to Solomon for this link. For books about Leopold II and Congo, click here February 23, 2004 - Donald Tick sent this link with photos of the restoration of the former royal palace in Antananarivo, Madagascar (the accompanying text is in German only). The palace was burned down by arsonists in 1995. Located off the southeast coast of Africa, Madagascar is the world's fourth largest island. In the late 19th century it became a French colony and its last queen, Ranavalo or Ranavalona III , was sent into exile. Today Madagascar is an independent republic. Madagascar: The lost palace of Tana
Der Rova von Antanananarivo
(in German)
Books About Madagascar
February 17, 2004 - A BBC article about African royalty: Africa's mighty royals
In pictures: Africa's royals

Books About Ashanti Royalty

Books About Zulu Royalty
...
Books About Swazi Royalty
February 8, 2004

51. Afropop Worldwide
many berber musicians and people resent the while the music of North africa s original inhabitants have mostly ignored beautiful indigenous berber music, and
http://www.afropop.org/multi/feature/ID/112/Berber Rising!
Love African music?
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Home
Radio Explore Archives ... Return to Previous Page Berber Rising!
A companion to the 2002 Afropop Worldwide program.
Berber Politics and World Music Afropop Worldwide's Berber Rising program is certainly not the first time Berber music has been featured on our show. But it is by far our most extensive look at this often overlooked vein of North African music. Understandably, many Berber musicians and people resent the fact that so much effort has gone into promoting Afro-Arabic genres like rai and to a lesser extent shaabi internationally, while the music of North Africa's original inhabitants is relatively unsupported, and hence less known in world music circles. The subject is complex. In the 1970s, Berber singer Idir made one of the first North African hits in Europe, but Berber music has not kept pace since. On the one hand, much of the most interesting Berber music is not pop, but rather village and urban folk music. The major forces behind promoting rai have a dance pop-oriented mindset, and this, they argue, is the reason they have mostly ignored beautiful indigenous Berber music, and even more artistic fusions like that of exiled Algerian singer/songwriters Iness Mezel and Akli D.. The argument overlooks some great Berber-related dance pop by artists like Takfarinas, Tayfa and German-based Moroccan fusion artist Houssaine Kili, but more on that later.

52. BBC NEWS | Africa | Q&A: The Berbers
They dominated North africa until it was conquered by Arabs in the 7th century. Canaries The indigenous people were berber.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3509799.stm
News
Sport

Weather

World Service
... Programmes
LANGUAGES
Last Updated: Friday, 12 March, 2004, 15:30 GMT E-mail this to a friend Printable version
Algeria's Berbers revere slain singer Matoub Lounes For centuries Berbers have fought to prevent their language and culture from being swamped by Arabs. Most numerous in Morocco, they are scattered across nine countries. Their voice has been most loudly heard, amidst outbreaks of violence, in Algeria. Q: Who are they?
The Berbers are a non-Semitic people who since prehistoric times inhabited the Mediterranean coastline from Egypt to the Atlantic. They dominated North Africa until it was conquered by Arabs in the 7th century. Ethnically, a majority of Moroccans and Algerians are Arabicised Berbers. Today it is more language and culture that set Berbers apart. Berber speakers account for some 50% of Moroccans and 30% of Algerians. Q: Where does the name come from? One theory derives 'Berber' from Barbaros, ancient Greek for 'Outsiders'. Berbers call themselves 'Imazighen' (Free), plural of 'Amazigh'. They call the Maghreb 'Tamazgha', or Land of the Imazighen.

53. Bank Information Center USA : Indigenous Peoples
active organizations of the Amazigh (berber) people, including ‘Tamaynut rights, territories and environment of indigenous and traditional peoples of the
http://www.bicusa.org/bicusa/issues/indigenous_peoples/index.php
BIC is not responsible for any 'sponsored links' that appear on this Google search.
Indigenous Peoples
Updates
BIC Update on the IDB Indigenous Peoples Policy, May 3, 2004
Indigenous representatives from the Americas met with President Iglesias on April 27 to discuss proposed consultations on an Indigenous Peoples Policy and Framework. Read More
IDB and civil society groups discuss Indigenous Peoples Policy at March 2004 Annual Meetings in Lima
Representatives from Amazon Alliance and other indigenous organizations presented a letter to IDB management proposing specific minimum steps necessary for a successful policy consultation. Read More
Update on IDB indigenous peoples policy
Indigenous Peoples Policy Profile mentions many of the key points indigenous peoples have been asking for. Read More
World Bank Agrees to Indigenous Legal Roundtable
The legal department at the World Bank finally agreed to a long time indigenous demand to hold a roundtable discussion about the indigenous people’s policy in the context of international human rights standards. It is expected to take place in Spring 2004.
view all updates
On this page: Updates Introduction Timetable of Events Partner Organizations ... Resources
Introduction
  • working in Washington and internationally to improve the core MDB policies that are designed to protect indigenous peoples.
  • 54. The Moors
    Moslem people of mixed Arab and berber descent. This first applied officially to the indigenous people of a Roman province in North africa called Mauretania
    http://herso.freeservers.com/moors.html
    The Moors Freetranslation.com
    Download

    Ebook
    Who were they?
    The Moors are not a specific race of people. The word has never been clearly defined and remains ambiguous and confusing. This term has been broadly used to denote various people in North Africa, people who came from Morocco or simply to describe Muslims in general. Christians in the 13th century also referred to the Moors as "Moriscos" and "Mudejares"
    The word MOORS may have evolved from the Greek 'Mauros' which means 'dark'. The Greeks were in Spain around 500 BC, 300 years before the Romans . The Romans probably pinched it from the Greeks, complete with its original connotation of 'dark'. This might explain why the Latin 'Maurus' translates literally into 'Moors', with no further definition. Borrowing directly from the Greek meaning, this would have been good enough for the Romans to describe the 'dark' skinned people of North Africa. This is all conjecture of course, but its close enough for me.
    Circa 46 B. C., the Roman army entered West Africa where they encountered black Africans whom they called ‘Maures’ from the Greek adjective mauros, meaning dark or black.

    55. NATIVE-L (June 1993): AFRICAN 'INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' TAKE STOCK
    The berber peoples of Algeria have a saying, the only minority is reminded the meeting, the whole aim of asserting indigenous peoples rights is to
    http://nativenet.uthscsa.edu/archive/nl/9306/0053.html
    AFRICAN 'INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' TAKE STOCK
    wrm@gn.apc.org
    Sun, 6 Jun 1993 10:59:00 PDT
    Subject: AFRICAN 'INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' TAKE STOCK
    WORLD RAINFOREST MOVEMENT
    AFRICAN 'INDIGENOUS PEOPLES' SEARCHING FOR A FUTURE
    'Indigenous Peoples' from all corners of the African continent
    have met for the first time to take stock of their situation and
    organise for their future.
    By Marcus Colchester
    When John Hardbattle, a /Kwe 'Bushman' from the Kalahari, was a
    young boy his mother explained to him about the variety of
    peoples. 'God made us all. We are all the same. But, we are different' she told him, thus encapsulating one of Africa's great dilemmas: how to recognise the continent's cultural diversity while at the same time ensuring equality for all humanity. Today, John is a spokesperson for the 'First Peoples of the

    56. Tribes Of The Niger
    19th century, established kingdoms by the conquest of indigenous peoples. TUAREG a berber people of the YORUBA a cluster of Kwaspeaking peoples of south
    http://schools.4j.lane.edu/spencerbutte/StudentProjects/Rivers/tribe.html
    Tribes of the Niger River
    BAMBARA : a Mande-speaking people of Mali. Today sedentary farmers, they are divided inti many small chiefdoms, and known for their elaborate cosmology and religion. Earlier they had founded two important states at Seguo, on the Niger. Population 1.2 million.
    EDO : a Kwa-speaking people of southern Nigeria, the population of the kingdom of Benin; whose political and religious ruler, the , lives in Benin City. The ruling dynasty is historically closely linked with the Yoruba. They are famed for they carving, metal-casting and other arts. Population 1.3 million.
    FULANI ( FULBE, PEUL) : a people speaking a West Atlantic language, dispersed across the Sahel zone of West Africa from Senegal to Cameroon. They are predominantly Muslim, and coprise both transhumant cattle keepers and also sedentaery agricultural groups. Both are typically minority elements living among other peoples. The pastoralist groups are egalitarian, the sedentary ones having chiefs in some areas, such as northern Nigeria, where they overthrew the Hausa rulers of existing states in the early 19th century, established kingdoms by the conquest of indigenous peoples. population 7 million
    HAUSA : a Chadic-speaking people of Nigeria and Niger. They are intensive farmers

    57. Wcsf Online: Sorry. An Error Has Occurred.
    Chinese population now outnumbers the indigenous population The berber claim for an autonomous region of representative of the distribution of peoples in North
    http://www.mcart.org/wcsfonlinenews/en/17-jul-02/summ_17.10.cfm
    An error has occurred.
    Please wait while the site administrator is being notified...
    ODBC Error Code = S1000 (General error) [Microsoft][ODBC Microsoft Access Driver] Not enough space on disk. For questions please email: errors@mcart.org

    58. NativeWeb Resources: Speeches, Articles & Essays
    berbere (berber Cultural Movement), berber, africa, 859. by AbdenourAugustin Benyahia, berber Cultural Movement John Bonsignore indigenous people are both inside
    http://www.nativeweb.org/resources/law_legal_issues/speeches_articles_essays/

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    This category includes speeches, articles, essays, book notices and reviews dealing with indigenous peoples' legal issues. Resources: 82 listings Name and Description Nation Location Hits
    A Brief History of the Ainu People (Japan) Ainu Asia
    by Koichi Kaizawa (from NativeNet)
    More sites on bioc09.uthscsa.edu
    A Decade of Rhetoric for Indigenous Peoples
    by Gerald Taiaiake Alfred and Jeff Corntassel - Indigenous Governance Program (IGOV) at the University of Victoria (Canada) - 12 January 2004
    Few people may realize that we are living in the United Nations' International Decade of the World's Indigenous People (1995-2004). As the Decade comes to a close this year, it is apparent that the Decade has been remarkable only in the emptiness of the UN's rhetoric and in how so little has been done.
    A  Second  Century  of  Dishonor : Federal  Inequities  and  California  Tribes United States
    A report prepared by the UCLA American Indian Studies Center; by Carole Goldberg-Ambrose, J.D. and Duane Champagne, Ph. D.
  • 59. Shout! - Algeria: The Arab-Berber Conflict Today
    The mobilized berber opposition is especially disturbing at a time when the government is seeking As the indigenous people of North africa, once occupying a
    http://www.shoutmonthly.com/mena/arabberber.html
    August 2002 Algeria: The Arab-Berber
    Conflict Today Dr. Andrew McGregor

    le Pouvoir Today, in the midst of a Berber cultural revival, many Kabyle Berber leaders represent the Arabs as the latest in a series of colonizers (there are smaller groups of Algerian Berbers in the Aures mountains and the Ouarseni Massif, but the Kabylians are the most politically active). It is a mistake to regard Berbers as an excluded minority, however. Berbers can be found in the highest levels of Algerian military, political, business and intellectual circles. hadiths (traditions) were fabricated which described the conversion of the Berbers by the Prophet Muhammad himself well before the Arab conquest. The Moroccan Bargawatiyya movement translated the Koran into Berber in the 10th century, but Sunni Muslim reformists destroyed their kingdom and burnt the offensive Berber Koran. The French, who conquered Kabylia in 1857, attempted to divide the Berbers from their Arab neighbours. The use of Berber customary law (

    60. ColorQ S Color Club Black And Arab Mixing In North Africa
    It should be noted that prior to the Islamic conquests by Asian Arabs, many regions of North africa were inhabited by the berber, an indigenous african people.
    http://www.colorq.org/MeltingPot/Africa/NorthAfr.htm

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