Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_B - Bwa Indigenous Peoples Africa
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 4     61-80 of 84    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

61. Online Workcamp Catalogue
BOTSWANA WORKCAMPS ASSOCIATION (bwa). numerous day and and evening game drives and indigenous botanical gardens area to register the number of people living in
http://www.quaker.org/capetown/workcat.htm
ONLINE WORKCAMP CATALOGUE
Abbreviations used

CONS = construction, ENVI = environmental work, AGRI = agriculture work, RENO = Renovation, KIDS = work with children, VOLS = volunteers, P = partner or project, W = work, L = location, A = accommodation, B = things to bring, +FEE = participation fee payable by volunteers from North America, Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, Q = Requirements BOTSWANA BOTSWANA WORKCAMPS ASSOCIATION (BWA) 1. CAMP CODE: BWA01PTB DATES: 21/03/2004 – 08/04/2004
LOCATION: WEST HANAHAI
NO. OF VOLUNTEERS: 12 ABOUT THE HOST Permaculture Trust of Botsawana (PTB) is a rural development NGO that provides assistance in area of ecological land use management. It strongly encourages and support traditional and cultural values that relate to sustainable environmental use. Targeted groups include;
-Remote area dwellers (San )
-Rural small communal farmers
-Other NGO`s. WORK The volunteers in conjuction with the local San community will be constructing poultry houses and fencing gardens. These poultry houses are for indigenous Tswana chickens and are sold for income generating purpose in order to sustain their lives. These San are developing gardens comparable to growth expected in tropics and spinach leaves are half a metre long.
The settlement of West Hanahai is situated some 70km east of Ghanzi township, close to the Central Kalahari Game Reserve (CKGR).

62. African Art
about 50% are Muslims, 40% are indigenous belief, and 10 and artifacts from Mossi, Nuna, Bobo, bwa, and Winiama or the spirits will punish the people by making
http://www.personal.psu.edu/users/s/a/sam394/ART 002/ASS7.htm

63. Who Heads Liberia’s Interim Administration? A Personality Profile Of Bisho
He is founder of the People’s Christian Polytechnic Institute of the Independent Churches of africa (AICA), a conglomeration of 170 indigenous churches in
http://www.theperspective.org/interimadministration.html
By: Moses M. Zangar, Jr.
Accra, Ghana
The Perspective

Atlanta, Georgia July 21, 2003
As the debate for who heads the transitional arrangement continues, many prominent Liberians from far and near, with enviable moral standing and academic credentials are fronting to take up the task.
Two of such individuals are Bishop Augustus B. Marwieh (Ph.D.) and Dr. George Toe Washington. This piece is the first in an attempt to scan the profiles of personalities seeking the interim presidency of Liberia.
The "people’s Bishop," as he is affectionately called, is a household name in Liberia. He is one of the world’s outstanding citizens and visionaries who has diligently served his country and people, the church and Africa in many respects. Bishop Marwieh is extensively recognized throughout the United States as an ambassador of good will between the peoples of Africa and the U.S.
His is know for his deep commitment to the social, cultural and economic emancipation of his people which is the hallmark of his mission.
Born in a cassava field in a native village while his mother was digging for cassava, Bishop Marwieh has risen from modest beginnings to sit on some of the highest councils in the world. He did not enter school neither wore clothes until he was 15 years old. Ten years later, he graduated from both the University Laboratory High School of the University of Liberia as valedictorian and from the B.J.K. Anderson School of Business and Commerce with high honors.

64. The Baptist Standard :: The Newsmagazine Of Texas Baptists
the work of more than 25 indigenous church planters in for the consistent commitment of the bwa to a Knowing the Baptist people from every continent has been a
http://www.baptiststandard.com/postnuke/index.php?module=htmlpages&func=display&

65. Buganda Development Plan
social values of the enhanced indigenous management practices The people will be helped to organize themselves the community selfhelp Bulungi bwa nsi spirit
http://www.buganda.com/buga5yr.htm
THE CULTURAL
AND
DEVELOPMENT REVOLUTION (CDR)
THE BUGANDA KINGDOM'S MEDIUM TERM
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME [1995 - 2000] "From impoverishment towards better and civilized living" By: Joseph G M Ssemwogerere
The Katikkiro of Buganda
P O Box 7451
Kampala, Uganda Bulange, Mmengo
May, 1996
Table of Contents
Forwarding Note by the Katikkiro of Buganda
Background to the programme: Preamble
Way Forward for the Emancipation of The Buganda Kingdom
Strategies for Achieving the CDR Objectives ...
Organisation and Structure of The Buganda Kingdom Adminstration
FORWARDING NOTE
The over 30 years of Uganda's Independence have been characterised by civil wars and dictatorial rule which has severely disrupted the country's cultural, social and political institutions thus, throwing the population into unprecedented impoverishment. Now, vigorous attempts are being made to re-discover our past and the Buganda Kingdom is spearheading a Cultural and Development Revolution within the state of Uganda. For, even after a century since the Europeans explored the Dark Continent, Africa remains the least developed continent with its people living in abominable conditions, without democratic institutions that can tackle its numerous political and social scourges. The abandonment by Africa of its traditions and political cultures, on the advent of the European civilisation, and the adoption wholesale of foreign practices vulnerable to corruption and authoritarian rule, has made the continent lag behind, despite its enormous Natural and Human resources. Yet, the old political order of coercion and manipulation, that disregards the Human Rights and SelfDetermination of the people, is still dominant on the Continent.

66. Tim Blair: ETHICS REVIEWED
all this BadWhitey-Angst, or bwa (pronounced bwaaaaaaa promises to say sorry to the indigenous Australians he The self-hating guilt of these people is just a
http://timblair.spleenville.com/archives/005811.php
Tim Blair
Main
January 26, 2004
ETHICS REVIEWED
Gary Sauer-Thompson (who emigrated here from New Zealand) denounces Australia Day I reckon it has to do with planting the British flag on the soil of the continent. An act that says 'this land belongs to us.' An act that signifies colonial conquest. An act that looks towards a bloody history of conflict to dispossess the indigenous people from their land. Robert Corr (who emigrated here from Ireland) agrees Today marks the arrival of the second group of boat people to arrive in Australia. They stole land from the first, and now they lock up the newest boat people (who have no such heinous intent). The various ethical issues raised by these remarks are too complex for me to deal with, so I contacted ethicist Dr. Festus Wolfenstein , head of the School of Ethics at the International Ethics University in Brussels. Here is his report: Mr. Sauer-Thompson is plainly moved by the plight of Australia’s indigenous people, whom he sees as victims of conquest and dispossession. Australia is, he writes, ‘their land’. He also perceives that events subsequent to white settlement are part of a ‘history of conflict’. I imagine he refers here to the construction of cities and roads on Aboriginal land; which is, in his view, the whole of Australia. Mr. Corr characterises Australia as ‘stolen’ from prior inhabitants, and sees present occupiers of Australia as the inheritors of this theft. He contrasts the thieving behaviour of the first white settlers (their crime shared, in Mr. Corr’s view, by subsequent generations) with the honest and decent motives of recent applicants for asylum.

67. The Fet Gede - Spiritual Adventure
mix of many different African, indigenous Haitian and are immediately visible among the people, dispensing wisdom Gran bwa (literally, Big Wood ), for example
http://www.beautifulmutants.com/FG.htm
Site Contents Stay Beautiful Who Is Ross Heaven Books and Tapes Workshops ... Spiritual Products
The Fet Gede
Spiritual Adventure to Haiti
Join us in the beautiful Caribbean to celebrate the Festival of the Ancestors OCT 23 - NOV 6 2004 Fet Gede, the Festival of the Ancestors, is to Haitian Vodou the equivalent of Mardi Gras or the Mexican Day of the Dead. People dress up, take to the streets, dance their communion with the ancestors and, to the wild, lilting music of colourful bands, walk in spiritual procession to the graveyards where they feed the ancestral dead in order to honour their spirit and gain their protection for the coming year.
In peristyles (churches) up and down the country, there is music, dancing and feasting as the priests and the people come together - and enough drumming, singing and laughter to - literally - raise the dead! As well as a colourful celebration, Fet Gede has a serious side, as a festival of sacred communion with the ancestors, who are still an important part of the community, and watch over the living to ensure joy and good fortune. It is a time for celebration, for reconnecting with the past, and preparing for the future, with music, processions, ceremony and spiritual observances taking place throughout. We offer you the opportunity to join us in the Caribbean for two weeks in October and November 2004, to experience - and take part in - Fet Gede, on a facilitated adventure into the drama and magic of this spectacle and the heart of authentic Vodou, all in the beautiful landscape of rural Haiti.

68. MisLinks Relief And Development
Baptist World Aid For 80 years bwa have been entrust, empower, and enable the indigenous Baptist leadership committed to working with poor people to overcome
http://www.mislinks.org/practical/rdorgs.htm
Academic Research Practical Missions Church/Ministry Continental ... Practical Missions Relief and Development Organizations General Resources Search Engines and Directories AERDO Member Links Christian Missions (SIM) CrossSearch.com CrossDaily.com ... Relief Organizations Christian Organizations
Initially prepared by Stephen Bauman Abaana American Leprosy Mission Baptist World Aid Blessings International ... World Vision : The Adventist Development and Relief Agency (ADRA), formed in 1984, is an independent, humanitarian agency established by the Seventh-day Adventist Church with the specific purpose of individual and community development and disaster relief. American Leprosy Mission Founded in 1906, American Leprosy Missions (ALM) provides care to people around the world with leprosy and related disabilities. ALM is a non-denominational Christian ministry of hope and restoration for those suffering with this disease. Baptist World Aid : For 80 years BWA have been working to entrust, empower, and enable the indigenous Baptist leadership to carry out programs of emergency relief, sustainable development, and fellowship assistance.

69. Colors Of The Flag
the Vodoun ceremony known as Ceremony of bwa Kayiman held That is why some people refer to him as many of them being descendents of indigenous Indians, known
http://www.vodou.org/colors_of_the_flags.htm

Register here
The Colors of the Flags in Haiti
By Max G. Beauvoir Ati-Houngan Historically, students in Haiti learn that on May 18 th , 1803, in a congress held at Arcahaie, a township located about fifty miles north of Port-au-Prince, Dessalines created the country’s first flag. Ripping apart a French one — blue, white and red, he threw away the white portion that was in the center and asked Catherine Flon, a young girl of the area, to sew the remaining ones. Having stitched together those two pieces of cloth, he mounted them horizontally on a staff as Haiti’s new national symbol. By this gesture, he publicly designated that this country no longer wanted to be recognized as a French territory and that the people who lived on this land preferred to be dead rather than be slaves. "Liberté ou la Mort!" meaning "Liberty or Death" had become the new motto as it had already been embraced at the Vodoun ceremony known as "Ceremony of Bwa Kayiman " held on August 14, 1791. This motto can be seen on all the official documents signed by Dessalines. France The blue set on the upper part of the flag represented the population of ancient slaves, four hundred and fifty thousand of them, an overwhelming majority indeed who, according to the first constitution, were supposed to be the only social group to personify the country.

70. Cases H-P
This case study discusses indigenous music, why we Presentation to bwa Communications Committee in England through the program reaching over 11 million people.
http://www.newwway.org/articles/cases_h-p.htm
REQUEST PAPERS H-P HISTORY AND MINISTRY OF THE TOKYO BAPTIST CHURCH Darrell A. Mock - Japan This case study details the history and ministry of the Tokyo Baptist Church. March 28, 1985 HISTORY OF ELECTRONIC MEDIA USED BY THE FOREIGN MISSION BOARD, SBC David Daniell, Middle America and Canada Limited coverage of electronic mediaradio, television, audio- and videocasettes. Media and Church Growth Conference September 1995 HISTORY, MINISTRY AND GOALS OF THE YAFA BAPTIST CENTER IN ISRAEL Ray C. Register, Jr. - Israel This case study details the history, ministry and goals of the Yafa Baptist Center. Yafa is an Arab village of about 8,000 people on the outskirts of Nazareth. May 1, 1985 HOME BIBLE STUDIES AND OTHER METHODS OF PENETRATION FOR CHURCH PLANTING OR CHURCH GROWTH Ted Lindwall - Guatemala This case study discusses several successful methods of penetrating a community with the gospel. These methods include home Bible studies, Bible parties, volleyball teams, individual Bible studies and services in homes. July 19, 1977

71. East Barnet Baptist Church
the evangelism and education arm of the bwa; highlights the need to reach unevangelised people. helps fund indigenous evangelists, as well as conferences in
http://www.ebarnetbaptist.org.uk/church/bwa.htm
Text Only Who are we Statement of Purpose Theme for Year ... Home
The Baptist World
More than 200,000 Baptist churches around the world are members of the Baptist World Alliance through the 211 national Baptist groups. The BWA exists to bring Baptists together to share the Gospel of Jesus Christ. The ministry of the BWA:
Unites Baptists Worldwide:
  • provides scholarship assistance for two-thirds world Baptist leaders. funds Baptist regional fellowships in Asia, Africa, Latin America. enables networking of worldwide Baptist leadership.
Leads in World Evangelism:
  • supports the evangelism and education arm of the BWA highlights the need to reach unevangelised people. helps fund indigenous evangelists, as well as conferences in the developing world.
Responds to People in Need:
  • supports BWAid, the relief and development arm of the BWA. provides emergency funds for disasters in times of war and catastrophe. brings together worldwide Baptist concerns for feeding the poor, and aiding the destitute.
Defends Human Rights:
  • enables Baptists worldwide to defend religious freedom.

72. Haitian Vodou: Serving The Spirits
For an excellent account of the bwa Kayiman ritual Thanks go to all my people in Sosyete Fle d in Haitian Vodou, Asian spiritualities, indigenous lifeways, Faery
http://www.witchvox.com/trads/trad_vodou.html
dqmcodebase = "http://www.witchvox.com/jv/" //script folder location Your browser does not support script
Pagans Profile
their
Belief Systems
Trad Profiles...

1734 Trad

A.D.F. (Druid)

Appalachian

Ar Afalon Tradition
...
Vodou

Important NOTE: The tradition profile on this page contains the writings and opinions of the listed author(s) and is not necessarily shared or endorsed by the Witches' Voice inc. The Witches' Voice does not verify or attest to the historical accuracy contained in the content of this tradition profile. All WitchVox Tradition profiles contain a valid email address, feel free to send your comments, thoughts or concerns directly to the listed author(s).. vox menus... Author: Michael Rock Posted: Jun. 1, 2003 This Page Viewed: TRADITION... Haitian Vodou: Serving the Spirits by Michael Rock Email: hakomi@yahoo.com Haitian Vodou, called Sevis Gineh or "African Service", is the primary culture and religion of the approximately 7 million people of Haiti and the Haitian diaspora. It has its primary roots among the Fon-Ewe peoples of West Africa, in the country now known as Benin, formerly the Kingdom of Dahomey. It also has strong elements from the Ibo and Kongo peoples of Central Africa and the Yoruba of Nigeria, though many different peoples or "nations" of Africa have representation in the liturgy of the Sevis Gineh, as do the Taino Indians, the original peoples of the island we now know as Hispaniola. Haitian Vodou exists in Haiti, the Dominican Republic, parts of Cuba, the United States, France, Montreal, and other places that Haitian immigrants have dispersed to over the years.

73. Reuters AlertNet Lite - Homepage
to rely all the time on the indigenous groups to is looking into the eyes of people and seeing how MORE. Members. • Baptist World Aid (bwa) USA MORE. Countries.
http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefresources/393543.htm?_lite_=1

74. Reuters AlertNet - Baptist World Aid: It's The Community That Counts
base in Pyongyang so that we can have people living there in a number of different parts of africa where there to rely all the time on the indigenous groups to
http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefresources/393543.htm
Alerting humanitarians to emergencies Username: Password: Sign me in automatically Get a password Forgot your password? Login Change Edition United States Japan United Kingdom Other Editions About AlertNet Why join AlertNet? Help You are here: Homepage > Baptist World Aid: it's the community that counts HOME Newsdesk NGO Latest EMERGENCIES ... Middle East COUNTRY PROFILES Select a country - Afghanistan - Albania - Algeria - Angola - Antigua - Argentina - Armenia - Azerbaijan - Bahamas - Bangladesh - Barbados - Belarus - Belize - Benin - Bhutan - Bolivia - Bosnia- Herzegovina - Botswana - Brazil - Bulgaria - Burkina Faso - Burundi - Cambodia - Cameroon - Cape Verde - Central African Republic - Chad - Chile - China - Colombia - Comoros - Congo - Costa Rica - Croatia - Cuba - Cyprus - Czech Republic - Democratic Republic of Congo - Djibouti - Dominica - Dominican Republic - East Timor - Ecuador - Egypt - El Salvador - Equatorial Guinea - Eritrea - Estonia - Ethiopia - Fiji - Gabon - Gambia - Georgia - Ghana - Greece - Grenada - Guatemala - Guinea - Guinea-Bissau - Guyana - Haiti - Honduras - Hungary - India - Indonesia - Iran - Iraq - Israel - Ivory Coast - Jamaica - Jordan - Kazakhstan - Kenya - Kiribati - Korea (South) - Kuwait - Kyrgyzstan - Laos - Latvia - Lebanon - Lesotho - Liberia - Libya - Lithuania - Macedonia - Madagascar - Malawi - Malaysia - Maldives - Mali - Malta - Marshall Islands - Mauritania - Mauritius - Mexico - Micronesia - Moldova - Mongolia - Montserrat - Morocco - Mozambique - Myanmar (formerly Burma) - Namibia - Nauru - Nepal - Nicaragua - Niger - Nigeria - North Korea

75. Category Browsing Results
8. Bush Medicine in bwa Mawego Illnesses and their Treatments. It was thus shown to be the only known indigenous script in Oceania Of Populations and People.
http://opamp.com/cf/browse.cfm?Main=SCIENCES&Sub1=ANTHROPOLOGY/HUMAN DEVELOPMENT

76. Liberia's Decline Due To Death Squads Was Swift And Complete
with their African brothers, the country s indigenous population, in a all directed against the very Liberian people the new Ta Ka a mu mwean bwa sodaah? In
http://www.landofsixpeoples.com/news401/gyltns403145.htm
Liberia's decline due to death squads was swift and complete Stabroek News
March 14, 2004
Related Links: Letters on 'wrong man' death Letters Menu Archival Menu
Dear Editor,
For 8 years between 1978 and 1986 I worked in Africa from a base in Abidjan capital of the Republique Cote d'Ivoire (RCI). My job involved regular visits to 24 countries stretching roughly from Morocco to Zaire. It was during this period that I first became aware of the existence of death squads in at least 2 of the countries I frequented. In both instances the official titles used had a more salubrious coinage though extra-judicial killing was in fact their single currency.
In the case of Liberia neighbouring the RCI, the death squad seems to have emerged after April 1980 when a group of soldiers led by Master Sergeant Samuel Doe entered President Tolbert's residence killing him and 25 others. Historically a major ethnic distinction had been made between the native Liberians and the so-called Americo Liberians, the progeny of freed American slaves who settled in 1822, in what became known as Liberia. After the coup Doe, an ethnic Liberian, a krahn, took the presidency and governed Liberia as chairman of the People's Redemption Council (PRC). To quote Doe during his first public engagement in the United States at a luncheon tendered in his honour by Ronald Regan at the White House on August 17, 1982.
Doe actually ran the country after a fashion with 10 soldiers of NCO rank and below. Closest to him were fellow krahns and at least one very close relative who was assigned the task of setting up and managing a death squad. This individual was known to have an insatiable appetite for violence and an established criminal record. For the purposes of this letter I shall refer to him as Uncle George. At the beginning it appeared that the squad's main agenda was to hunt down and exterminate members of the old Tolbert cabinet, prominent members of his True Whig Party, and members of the Tolbert family. It would appear that freemasons and non-compliant criminal types were added to the target list as an afterthought. Many of these hapless Liberians were arrested, charged with a variety of crimes and executed - a process that took hours in some cases rather than days, months or years as would have been likely had normal judicial procedure been followed.

77. Articles
who would direct and train the indigenous pastors, staffs As many of you know the bwa is comprised of uniting them in evangelism, responding to people in need
http://www.txbc.org/reynolds.htm
Texas Baptists - Hitherto and Henceforth By: Herbert Reynolds,
Chancellor, Baylor University delivered at the Texas Baptists Committed Annual Breakfast, Nov. 10, 1998 Houston, Texas. While maintaining the autonomy and integrity of our state convention and that of any partnering states, it might well be possible to create a Baptist Convention of the Americas.
-Herbert Reynolds Today, I am speaking for myself only. I do not represent Texas Baptists Committed, the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, the Baptist General Convention of Texas, Baylor and certainly not the SBC. Further some of the viewpoints I will present may seem presumptuous and are not necessarily shared in by some of the people with whom I have labored over the years. I will give you a brief Prologue, then talk about Our Present Circumstance to set the stage for my thoughts about Charting Our Course Into the Future. I. THE PROLOGUE In the April 1981 issue of Baptist History and Heritage, Walter Shurden presented a "formulation of Baptist roots" under the title "The Southern Baptist Synthesis: Is it Cracking?" He indicated that the Charleston Tradition gave us "Order," the Sandy Creek Tradition gave us "Ardor," the Georgia Tradition promoted "Missions," and the Tennessee Tradition gave us much of our "Anti-ecumenism and Sectarianism." Ten years later, in the January 1991 issue of Baptist History and Heritage, Dr. Leon McBeth stated that the "Texas Tradition" was best exemplified in the lives of B.H. Carroll (the John Wayne of Texas Baptists) as the "Architect," L.R. Scarborough as its most "Fervent Evangelist" and George W. Truett as the primary "Pastoral Role Model." McBeth summarized the Texas Tradition thusly: "At least three major features distinguish this segment of Baptist life (1) intense conservatism (2) fervent evangelism and (3) a spirit of independence."

78. BICN Zine 03 May 2001
Itchy Feet Internships for Young Canadian Professionals bwa Yard Sale. Profits go directly to indigenous projects. city and for different kinds of people (etc
http://bicn.com/ezine/recent/v4n15.htm
Back Up Home
About Bangladesh
...
Site Tools
Get the 'zine
Enter your email address: You are visitor since April 1998
BICN 2 May - 6 Jun 2001
Volume 4 Number 15 From the Editor Last Issue Before Summer Break
Help Wanted - BICN Editor Letters to the Editor [none this issue] Feature Article "The Busy, Busy Mru, " Mis-Interpreted by Reng Yu This Issue's Sponsors (Commercial Ads) Jazz It Up In Singapore - Singapore International Jazz Festival Presented By Singapore Airlines (SIA) Translation Services Offered: Bangla/English - English/Bangla Seeking A Capable Young Lady Executive For Modern IT Cybercafe in Hajipara Dhaka Ethnic Bandarban Hilltract Tours: Specials for Dhaka Expats Effective Bangla Language Center (EBLC) Lake Facing Apartment To Let Community Announcements Dhaka International Christian Church: Home/Small Groups
For Bright Young Canadians With Itchy Feet - Internships for Young Canadian Professionals
BWA Yard Sale Webby! UNWA Bangladesh Website
Night View of the World from the NASA Space Station
Bangladesh Chapter, 2001 Annual Report of

79. LTC Library Acquisitions - July 1996
Authority of the Interior. (IN indigenous affairs, 1 dynamics of poverty why some people escape from in den Landnutzungssystemen der Senoufo, bwa, Dogon und
http://www.wisc.edu/ltc/jul96.html
RECENT LIBRARY ACQUISITIONS
JULY 1996
ARTICLES - GENERAL
Bose, G.
Agrarian efficiency wages in a dual economy. (IN: Journal of development economics, 49:2, 1996, p. 371-386)
Periodical Shelf Desai, Vandana
Access to power and participation. (IN: Third world planning review, 18:2, 1996, p. 217-242)
Periodical Shelf Focus on desertification. (IN: D+C, development and cooperation, 3, 1996, p. 8-19)
Periodical Shelf Government action, social capital and development : creating synergy across the public-private divide. (IN: World development, 24:6, 1996, p. 1033-1132)
Periodical Shelf Hendrix, Steven E.
An introduction to cadastral-registry systems and their modernization. (From: Comparative juridical review, 31, 1994, p. 3-29)
Files 5.65 H24513 Rothgeb, John M.
Investment penetration, agrarian change, and political conflict in developing countries. (IN: Studies in comparative international development, 30:4, 1995/96, p. 46-62) Periodical Shelf
Articles - EUROPE
Barbic, Ana Agricultural change, rural society and the State in Central and Eastern Europe. (IN: Agricultural restructuring and rural change in Europe. Wageningen : Wageningen Agricultural University, 1994, p. 296-310) HD 1917 .A37

80. Search Results
is building his own Church in africa and elsewhere and professional development for people in missions Mission dedicated to serving indigenous and national
http://www.missionboard.com/search/results.cfm?criteria=mission

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 4     61-80 of 84    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter