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         Dogon Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. Dogon: Africa's People of the Cliffs by Walter E.A. Vanbeek, 2001-05-01

41. Ethnomathematics Digital Library (EDL)
mathematical practices of the indigenous peoples of America have more meaning, and people s cultural heritage group African, Arab, dogon, Egyptian, European
http://www.ethnomath.org/search/browseResources.asp?type=cultural&id=84

42. AfricaRevealed - Issue 1, 2004
country is a beautiful area in Mali where the dogon people live 420 sq km, it is the largest block of indigenous coastal forest remaining in East africa.
http://www.africarevealed.com/Templates/er2.0/bundle/default.jsp?nodeId=49089

43. African Studies - Films And Videos
fer un film sur les forgerons dogon (Département d distributor of films and videos by People of Color and by Third World and indigenous people throughout the
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/indiv/africa/cuvl/video.html
African Studies
Internet Resources
African Studies Email:
africa

@libraries.cul.columbia.edu
African Studies Internet Resources home WWW Virtual Library ... Department home
Films and Videos on Africa
  • This web site offers highlights from French language immersion programs which feature the use of African and Caribbean films exhibited at an annual spring festival and discussions with the filmmakers.

  • Africa (PBS Online, Public Broadcasting Corporation, Alexandria, Virginia)
      Promotional site for "Africa" the 8 part television series co-produced by WNET/Thirteen's Nature and The National Geographic Society, which begins airing in September 2001. The site includes excerpted texts, photos, "teacher tools", and other resources. See also, the National Geographic website below.

  • AFRICA1.COM:
  • (Z Promotions Pvt Ltd., Harare, Zimbabwe)
      A website dedicated to the African film and television industry, with news, directories, filmographies, and an events calendar . See also:
    • Newsflash. (Online) Harare, Zimbabwe : Z Promotions Pvt Ltd ; Winchester, Hants, UK : FURCO Ltd., 2000-
        In English or French. A monthly online news magazine about the African film and television industry, with archives of back issues.
  • 44. Charities Working In Africa
    communities in the world the dogon people of Mali The Luke Society An organization supporting indigenous Christian health SPW SPW trains young people from the
    http://www.africaguide.com/charity.htm
    HOME NEWS LETTER CONTACT US LINK TO US ... MEDICAL CHARITIES Charities in Africa This section is devoted to Charities for Africa. If your chartity web site is not linked below, your link can be included for free. please see our Get Listed section
    NB:
    links are included only at the discretion of the webmaster People in Need
    GondarLink

    GondarLink is the first full school link with an Ethiopian secondary school. The website tells of this link but also has plenty of information on Ethiopia, its culture and its people.
    Friends of Malawi (USA)

    We encourage our 900+ members, all of who have lived or worked in Malawimostly as volunteers, to continue their involvement with and travel to Malawi. We also provide information and encouragement to others around the world who inquire about traveling to or working in Malawi..
    Build the Future

    Committed to help East African children reach their potential
    Africa Educational Trust

    Many children in Africa will never get the chance to go to school and learn to read or write. This is a denial of their human right to a basic education. AET increases access to learning and enhances the lives of thousands of children and young people in regions of Africa where formal structures for education are absent or have been broken down by conflict and civil war. We develop educational projects using innovative approaches and unusual methods.

    45. The Africa Guide - Newsletter - August 2003
    There are so many different people groups and the Amhara, Bobo, Bushmen/San, dogon, Fang, Fulani Music, Musical Instruments and Dance indigenous African musical
    http://www.africaguide.com/newsletter/034.htm
    ... where Africa comes to you ... HOME NEWS LETTER CONTACT US LINK TO US ... TRAVELOGUES
    Newsletter - September 2003 CONTENTS:
    Newsletter Sponsor

    New to The Africa Guide

    Travel Centre

    Combination Safaris
    ...
    Latest Travel Advice
    Quote of the month...
    "It isn't the mountains ahead that wear you out, it's the grain of sand in your shoe"
    Website of the month
    Disasters Emergency Committee

    Liberia Crisis Appeal - donate on-line. This Newsletter is sponsored by Beyenaris Tourism - Ethiopia A small family tourism business offering highly personalized tours, cultural encounters and safaris to individuals, couples and small groups of guests to Ethiopia. These are person to person tourism experiences and our tours help you meet the people doing things normal safari tour companies would not do! We try to tailor our tours to your interests, so please don't be surprised if we ask you questions about what you like doing in your time off. If you want something different come with us! NEW TO THE AFRICA GUIDE People and Culture The vast continent of Africa is so rich and diverse in it's culture, not only changing from one country to another but within an individual country many different cultures can be found.

    46. Indigenous Negroids
    were of a tribe in africa called dogon in Mali. the rubber tree which is only indigenous to africa The name Olmec means Rubber People. The rubber was also
    http://members.tripod.com/pointingbird/lostfeatherintl/id7_m.htm
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Indigenous Negroids The Origin
    However, the stone images were not the depiction of Siberians or Mongoloids. The archeologists are not in agreement with the identity of these inhabitants, or more correctly have denied indisputable truth of their origin. However, since the mysterious unearthing of this ancient civilization, one name has surfaced from later transcriptions, the name was Olmec. Who were these people called Olmecs? Can we speculate that these people of the colossal heads were Asians who crossed the Bearing Strait or Siberian icemen who migrated from Europe? Jose Maria Y Serrano upon excavating one of the monolith heads in this region of San Andres Tuxtla, published a short passage in the bulletin of the Mexican Geographical Statistical Society:
    "As a work of art, it, without exaggeration, a magnificent sculpture... but what most amazed me was that the type that it represent is Ethiopian (African). I concluded that there had doubtless been blacks (Negroid) in this region, and from the very earliest ages of the world."
    In 1939, Dr. Matthew Sterling led a joint team from the National Geographic Society into the Gulf of Mexico to spearhead a major digging operation in Vera Cruz to unearth the monolith heads. Sterling concluded: "The features are bold and amazingly Negroid in character." The archeological and cultural data overwhelmingly confirms the depiction of Negroid faces. Further archeological evidence of the Negroid in ancient America is found in the Monte' Alban culture which seems to have begun at the end of the Olmec culture. In Monte' Alban, 140 Negroid type figures have been discovered. Upon archeological research, there is no logical denying of the 'negroidness' found in the art of ancient America. Although there has been denial amongst historians, archeologist have indeed confirmed at least four major facts:

    47. Africa Bibliography
    indigenous African Institutions Ardsleyon-Hudson, NY Society, 1992 Covers meeting the dogon, Fulani, Tuareg A Country and its People *** Takarajima, Tokyo An
    http://members.tripod.com/~HistoricalNovelists/africa.htm
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "tripod.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Africa Bibliography
    all periods
    Gross geography often has nothing to do with cultural lines. That is, the fact that Africa can be easily delimited as a continent by the Suez canal does not mean that it does not consist of several cultural or even racial zones at different epochs. Especially, up until about 600 CE Northern Africa was racially as well as culturally distinct from Sub-Saharan (black) Africa. While there was a Nubian conquest of Egypt, it was fairly short lived, temporarily replaced but did not breed out the uppermost classes, and the Egyptians remained a Semitic rather than Negroid people. Remarks about "Cleopatra being black" are simply silly, since she wasn't even Egyptian, but Macedonian Greek of an inbred royal line, with a narrow, prominently bridged nose. The Tuaregs still show the strongly Europid background of the Libyans and Numidians, who absorbed the Vandals as well. This is primarily a bibliography for Sub-Saharan Africa, which had often more contact with Arabia or India than with its own northern shore. While it will include the Tuareg and the Meroitic Empire, you will have to go to other bibliographies for the earlier peoples of North Africa. Search for Books at
    barnesandnoble.com

    48. Inside Voodoo: African Cult Of Twins Marks Voodoo New Year
    Like other indigenous peoples in this part of West africa, Ameko, a devout follower of voodoo, believes twins are living deities that symbolize fertility.
    http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/02/0211_040211_twincult.html
    Sign up for our free e-mail newsletter Also see: Today's Top Stories
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    Sponsored in part by
    Win a National
    Geographic photo workshop in Santa Fe
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    Send the gift of National Geographic for a special price of $19!

    Inside Voodoo: African Cult of Twins Marks Voodoo New Year Lorne Matalon in Bouche du Roi, Benin
    for National Geographic News February 11, 2004 View a Voodoo Photo Gallery by Chris Rainier: Go >> Reporter Lorne Matalon's African assignment was part of the National Geographic Society's ongoing Ethnosphere Project, a five-year series of expeditions to study cultural diversity. Watch for related coverage on the National Geographic Channel , and tune in to National Public Radio's Morning Edition this week for related broadcasts on Radio Expeditions on National Public Radio (NPR). Read the full Two voodoo followers prepare to cut themselves with knives during a ceremony in Benin, West Africa. The act is meant to reveal a deity has possessed their body. Explorers Wade Davis and Chris Rainier were joined on their quest by filmmakers from National Geographic On Assignment and journalists from Radio Expeditions , heard on National Public Radio. Listen to NPR's

    49. World And General Books (tw3)(worPage1)
    have served) (Keywords Ethnology, Mossi, dogon, Bakota, Zuni fully codified) (Keywords Ethnology, africa, Pacific,. to learn about the indigenous people of the.
    http://www.tribalworldbooks.com.au/worPage1.html

    page links
    Page 1 of 1 TRIBAL WORLD BOOKS
    Feature book of the Month Lommel
    , Andreas. PREHISTORIC AND PRIMITIVE MAN . Landmarks of the World's Art. (See this page for more detail)
    index

    Adam , Leonard (introduction). PRIMITIVE ART EXHIBITION - 1943. Library, Museums and National
    Gallery of Victoria. BNo. n/a. First Edition, 1943. Pp: iv, 26; 215mm x 140mm; 0.09kg. 10 b/w, 12 fig.
    Foreword, acknowledgements, further reading list. A very good paperback copy with staple binding.
    Wrp: vg (minor rusting of staples). Stuart Taylor, Fine Printers, Melbourne, 1943. (A brief introduction to
    tribal art from Aboriginal Australia, Oceania, America, and Africa.) (Keywords: Australian Aboriginal,
    Melanesia, Polynesia, Americas, Africa).
    Book Code: AU index Adam , Leonard. PRIMITIVE ART . Africa, Asia, Oceania, Australia, and Americas. BNo. n/a. First Edition, 1940 (pb). Pp: 160; 180mm x 110mm; 0.06kg. 32 b/w (pl), 38 fig. Foreword, notes, index. A good paperback copy Wrp: g (With some browning of paper). Penguin Books, Harmondsworth, 1940. (This book describes the various forms which the artistic impulse has been taken among primitive peoples - from the Stone Age men who roamed the plains of Europe twenty thousand years ago, to the

    50. From The Dogons And The Zulus: Two Impossible Stories
    The dogon Story. The dogons are an indigenous tribe in africa. by these same ET s, but also to illustrate that sometimes indigenous people possess information
    http://www.spiritofmaat.com/archive/jan1/dogons.htm
    Vol 2 January 2000
    From the Dogons
    and the Zulus: Two ''Impossible'' Stories by Drunvalo
    ''Aliens from Sirius Visit African Tribes!'' It sounds like a headline from a supermarket tabloid. But the cave drawings and objects that might support such a story actually exist. I have seen them both in real life and in special documentaries. And although the story of the Dogons may be found elsewhere (we'll give you a link later on), and found in detail in books like The Sirius Mystery by Robert Temple, it is usually not known that another tribe in Africa besides the Dogon holds an almost identical experience in their origin stories: the Zulu. And naturally it is how they say they received this secret knowledge that is challenged, yet it is what this knowledge actually is that makes their stories believable. The Dogon Story The Dogons are an indigenous tribe in Africa. About 100,000 strong, they hold knowledge that they could not possibly have received by today's understanding, for it implies, among other things, the use of giant, powerful telescopes and the mathematical concepts of modern astronomy. And yet it is so. And the story of how they came by this knowledge is equally unbelievable by today's standards, for the Dogons claim that it came from amphibious beings who arrived long ago in a spaceship.
    We present this not only to bring you the new information I mentioned, which is that another tribe, the Zulu, also claim to have been visited by these same ET's, but also to illustrate that sometimes indigenous people possess information that goes beyond our concepts of what they could possibly know. There have been many theories as to how the Dogons came by this information, but they are all inadequate. The Dogons themselves claim that they have had this knowledge for at least seven hundred years and if that's true it defies everything we think we know about both human and alien presence on Earth.

    51. Africa
    africa; the first language of most people is one Nyanja, Tonga, and about 70 other indigenous languages, Yes. dasenech derasa digo dinka diola dogon duala dukawa
    http://www.ethiotrans.com/africa.htm
    Home About Africa Services Health Education Portfolio Get Quote ...
    ALRC
    County Flag Language Support Algeria Arabic (official), French, Berber dialects Yes Angola Portuguese (official), Bantu and other African languages Yes Benin French (official), Fon and Yoruba (most common vernaculars in south), tribal languages (at least six major ones in north) Yes Botswana English (official), Setswana Yes Burkina Faso French (official), native African languages belonging to Sudanic family spoken by 90% of the population Yes Burundi Kirundi (official), French (official), Swahili (along Lake Tanganyika and in the Bujumbura area) Yes Cameroon 24 major African language groups, English (official), French (official) Yes Central African Republic French (official), Sangho (lingua franca and national language), Arabic, Hunsa, Swahili Yes Chad French (official), Arabic (official), Sara and Sango (in south), more than 100 different languages and dialects Yes Congo, Democratic Republic of the

    52. ELOQUENT FURY
    of “gay” does not exist in the indigenous world The great astrologers of the dogon are gay Why is it spiritual life of the Dagarat that her people have no
    http://www.geocities.com/ambwww/GAYS-IN-AFRICA.htm
    ALICIA BANKS
    Radio Producer, Talk Show Host, DJ, Columnist
    ELOQUENT FURY
    REVOLUTIONARY AFRICAN TRUTH
    EXPRESSLY FOR RADICAL INTELLECTUALS WHO SEEK KNOWLEDGE
    WARNING : HAZARDOUS TO NEOCON DELUSION*******) 
    HOMOSEXUALITY IN ANCIENT AFRICA
    Stolen Women: Reclaiming Our Sexuality, Taking Back Our Lives
    is an excellent book by Dr. Gail Elizabeth Wyatt. Read it today. It expertly examines Black female sexuality. It is afrocentric and candid. It is written so that it may be as valuable to a teenager as it is to the mother of a teenager. Every sister and every person who loves a sister should read this book. It is because I love this book so that I am so deeply wounded by the following quote taken from it: “[In Africa] There were sexual practices that were not condoned, such as adultery, rape, incest or homosexual relationships.” No true scholar would ever make any blanket statements about any cultural practices in Africa. Africa is a HUGE continent with HUNDREDS of tribes. Each tribe has diverse traditions and practices. It is true that some African tribes do not condone homosexuality. It is equally

    53. Pilot Guides.com West Africa Background And Travel Essentials
    People West africa is home to a large and fascinating number of indigenous tribes and In Mali, for example, the dogon people are physically distinct from
    http://www.pilotguides.com/destination_guide/africa/west_africa_benin_burkina_fa

    54. Africa: A Biography Of The Continent - Book Review - By John Reader
    the crocodiles venerated by the dogon from time rise of africa s first literate indigenous civilization, Aksum familiarity with the continent and its people.
    http://www.bookfinder.us/review7/067973869X.html
    Africa: A Biography of the Continent
    Niger History Book Review
    AUTHOR: John Reader
    ISBN: 067973869X
    Compare Price for This Book

    History
    Africa History Niger History Editorial Reviews from Amazon
    Africa: A Biography of the Continent
    - Book Review, by John Reader
    Amazon.com
    From Publishers Weekly
    From School Library Journal
    The New York Times Book Review, Thomas Pakenham

    ...a masterly synthesis of the geological, climatological, and paleontological discoveries of the last decades... The Los Angeles Times Sunday Book Review, John Ryle ...[a] very considerable achievement. The book is vibrant with affection for its subject, measured in its judgments, and it is hard to imagine a more lucid and balanced synthesis of the many disciplines that have cast light on the obscurities of the African past and the complexities of its present. From Kirkus Reviews Inside Flap Copy "Awe-inspiring . . . a masterly synthesis." The New York Times Book Review "Deeply penetrating, intensely thought-provoking and thoroughly informed . . . one of the most important general surveys of Africa that has been produced in the last decade." The Washington Post In a book as splendid in its wealth of information as it is breathtaking in scope, British writer and photojournalist John Reader brings to light Africa's geology and evolution, the majestic array of its landforms and environments, the rich diversity of its peoples and their ways of life, the devastating legacies of slavery and colonialism as well as recent political troubles and triumphs. Written in simple, elegant prose and illustrated with Reader's own photographs

    55. Jungle Drum And Bass / JungleVoodoo.com
    com India s Culture History indigenous People s Literature Info on the dogon People Japan Links Viking Runes Voodoo Voodoo Museum Vodou West africa.
    http://www.junglevoodoo.com/links_tribal.html
    tribal / art Aboriginal Astronomy
    African American Culture LInks

    African Cultures

    Afro-cuba Web
    ...
    West Africa

    56. IFA FA
    Early Civilization was probably similar to IFA, the indigenous religion of african Nile Region is the knowledge of the dogon people of East africa that the
    http://www.innerx.net/personal/tsmith/VodouFA.html
    Tony Smith's Home Page
    IFA
    The Global Early Religion of the Global Early Civilization was probably similar to IFA , the indigenous religion of Africa, the place of origin of Humanity. Most likely, ALL Human Religions evolved from IFA, sometimes introducing special characteristics based on Local/Regional cultures after the breakup of the Global Early Civilization IFA , whose divination system seems to be based on the same -dimensional Clifford Algebra Cl(1,7) as the D4-D5-E6-E7-E8 VoDou Physics Model , is probably not only the source of all Human Religions , but also divination systems such as I Ching (64-dimensional), Tarot (78-dimenisonal), etc., and the abstract structures of the Natural Physical World such as Elementary Particle Physics Quantum Consciousness Cosmology , etc. Here is an Introduction to VoDou Physics Structure Examples Sikidy ... Cl(8) IFA Torah Genes 2^32 ~ 4 x 10^9 Genome Base Pairs 2^64 ~ 16 x 10^18 Brain Electrons Planck 2^128 ~ 256 x 10^36 Brain GraviPhotons Uncertainty ~ 65,536 x 10^72 Particles in Universe
    FA , the god with 16 eyes,
    brought a system of learning to the people of the Cradle of Civilization based on the 2^4 = 16 Tetragrams or Quadruples of sets containing either 1 or 2 elements (such as nuts, shells, beans, calabash, metal (brass, copper, aluminum, silver, lead, iron, etc.), wood, ivory, pangolin or crocodile scales, fish or turtle bones or shells, etc.).

    57. Durmam Daxxel Homepage - Indigenous Education In West Africa
    indigenous LEARNING IN MAURITANIA. An other African proverb says, It is through other people s wisdom that couples at the same time, as in the dogon myth where
    http://www.garbadiallo.dk/indedu.htm
    INDIGENOUS LEARNING FORMS IN WEST AFRICA, THE CASE OF MAURITANIA. "Listen," says old Africa. "Everything speaks. Everything is speech. Everything around us imparts a mysterious enriching state of being. Learn to listen to silence, and you will discover that it is music.."
    THE CONCEPT OF INDIGENOUS FORMS OF LEARNING
    Indigenous modes of education here refer to the native, locally developed forms of bringing up the youngsters by the older and more experienced members of the society. Being native is by no means to deny the fact that indigenous learning goals, contents, structures and methods have not been enriched, or for that matter, polluted or both by outside influences. As far as West Africa and Mauritania in particular are concerned, the deepest foreign impacts on indigenous education were caused by the massive Arab intrusion into the area as part of the 8th century Islamic conquest (Klarke, 1982). Second in importance was the European colonial conquest of the 19th century and its subsequent social, cultural, political and economic legacy (Egudu, 1977).
    Although not often mentioned, African traditional learning forms have had their own imprints on both Islamic and Western education on the continent. Neither of the two systems has escaped gradual Africanization. The Marabou is increasingly playing the role of thetraditional Medicine Man or spirit medium (

    58. MSN Encarta - African Art And Architecture
    influenced the architecture in Whydah, where indigenous mudbrick The Kongo people of central africa began to make Mende of Sierra Leone, the dogon and Bamana
    http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761574805_3/African_Art_and_Architecture.htm
    MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: logoImg('http://sc.msn.com'); Encarta Subscriber Sign In Help Home ... Upgrade to Encarta Premium Search Encarta Tasks Find in this article Print Preview Send us feedback Related Items African cultural revival African Mud Architecture more... Magazines Search the Encarta Magazine Center for magazine and news articles about this topic Further Reading Editors' Picks
    African Art and Architecture
    News Search MSNBC for news about African Art and Architecture Internet Search Search Encarta about African Art and Architecture Search MSN for Web sites about African Art and Architecture Also on Encarta Editor's picks: Good books about Iraq Compare top online degrees What's so funny? The history of humor Also on MSN Summer shopping: From grills to home decor D-Day remembered on Discovery Switch to MSN in 3 easy steps Our Partners Capella University: Online degrees LearnitToday: Computer courses CollegeBound Network: ReadySetGo Kaplan Test Prep and Admissions Encyclopedia Article from Encarta Advertisement Page 3 of 5 African Art and Architecture Multimedia 52 items Article Outline Introduction The Cultural Role of African Art Materials, Forms, and Styles

    59. The Blacksmith's Art From Africa
    SubSaharan people apply the analogy of blood indigenous terminology used during the event related the The first ancestral blacksmith in dogon mythology (Mali
    http://www.africans-art.com/index.php3?action=page&id_art=363

    60. Africa - Research Papers On - 007-001
    Filename dogon.rtf. Every aspect of the ancient people’s life was consumed by The indigenous population practices Usufruct Panpsychism, a philosophy that is
    http://www.papers24-7.com/categories/007-001.html
    ALL Papers Listed Below Are Available
    For Download TODAY
    - For Only -
    /page FREE Bibliography
    Click The ORDER PAPER Button At The Bottom Of The Screen..
    (Or E-Mail Us For A Free 1pg Excerpt Before Buying!) CLICK HERE FOR THE MAIN PAPER LIST Papers On Africa
    Page 2 of 10 BACK NEXT
    send me this paper

    A 7 page paper that provides an comparison between the human rights violations in Nigeria and those in New Guinea, and suggests the reason why outside response has been so limited. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
    Filename: Humright.doc
    Nigeria / One Example Of The Influence Of Christian Imperialism In Sub-Saharan Africa send me this paper A 5 page paper discussing the Christianization that occurred in Nigeria between the 1880s and the 1930s. Bibliography lists 6 sources. Filename: Nigeria.wps send me this paper In 5 pages, the author compares and contrasts the countries of Nigeria, Mexico, and Russia based on their ethnicity/tribalism, the role of men and women, corruption, and revolution. Bibliography lists 8 sources. Filename: RArcj.rtf

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