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         Swahili Indigenous Peoples Africa:     more detail
  1. The World of the Swahili: An African Mercantile Civilization by John Middleton, 1992-06-24
  2. African Voices, African Lives: Personal Narratives from a Swahili Village by Pat Caplan, 1997-03-24
  3. Tradition and Politics: Indigenous Political Structures in Africa by Olufemi Vaughan, 2004-04
  4. Continuity and Autonomy in Swahili Communities: Inland Influences and Strategies of Self-Determination (Issues in Environmental Politics)

21. About Kids_and_Teens People_and_Society From 2004-06-12
European Conquest and the Rights of indigenous peoples The Moral Backwardness The swahili The Social Landscape of a Mercantile Society (peoples of africa
http://www.beauchamp.de/odp/odp.php/browse/Kids_and_Teens/People_and_Society/
Beauchamp Search
ODP: Kids and Teens People ... Society from 2004-06-12
Search:
If this site is too slow, try the mirror at sicherheitsmeister.com
Kids and Teens ...
  • Music Piracy This category in other languages: Catalan Chinese Simplified Chinese Czech ...
    • ABC Toon Center [ Kids ] - Includes games, puzzles, cartoons, read-a-long picture stories, and music for children of all ages.
    • Children of Bangalore [ Kids/Teens ] - A collection of writings from children of Sophia High School, Bangalore, India.
    • Consumer Reports for Kids Online [ Kids/Teens ] - Zillions (Consumer Reports for Kids) includes advice, ratings of toys and other things kids buy, and fun features like Fad Alert. Accepts no advertising from companies.
    • Everything for Kids and Parents [ Kids/Teens/Mature Teens ] - Teaches kids some customary facts, words, quotations, and creative skills that will prepare them for life.
    • Froggy Da Frog's Travels [ Kids/Teens ] - A project of an Iowa grade school, Froggy's traveled from coast to coast, and has a unique website to chronicle his travels.
    • Kids and Community [ Kids/Teens/Mature Teens ] - Explore how you create communities, how you live in them, and how you change them. Designed by America's city planners.
  • 22. Africa
    An urban swahili culture developed through mutual assimilation of is that more advanced Kushite peoples from the highlands came to dominate the indigenous Bantu
    http://www.emayzine.com/lectures/africa3a.html
    Africa Some 5 million years ago a type of hominid, a close evolutionary ancestor of present-day humans, inhabited southern and eastern Africa. More than 1.5 million years ago this toolmaking hominid developed into the more advanced forms Homo habilis and Homo erectus. The earliest true human being in Africa, Homo sapiens, dates from more than 200,000 years ago. A hunter-gatherer capable of making crude stone tools, Homo sapiens banded together with others to form nomadic groups; eventually these nomadic San peoples spread throughout the African continent. Distinct races date from approximately 10,000 BC. Gradually a growing Negroid population, which had mastered animal domestication and agriculture, forced the San groups into the less hospitable areas. In the 1st century AD the Bantu, one group of this dominant people, began a migration that lasted some 2000 years, settling most of central and southern Africa. Negroid societies typically depended on subsistence agriculture or, in the savannas, pastoral pursuits. Political organization was normally local, although large kingdoms would later develop in western and central Africa. see Aksum, Kingdom of

    23. Africa Links - Academic Info
    News ; Chat ; Search ; Directory ; Sports ; swahili ; Travel ; Economy the Programme aims to extend to indigenous peoples and local South africa South africa
    http://www.academicinfo.net/histafricameta.html
    Academic Info
    Africa Studies Links - Directory of Online Resources
    Home Search Index Contact ... African Studies Links
    Start with:
    African Studies Internet Resources

    "Electronic resources from Africa are organized by region and country. All materials are arranged to encourage an awareness of authorship, type of information, and subject. The scope of the collection is research-oriented, but it also provides access to other gopher and web sites with different or broader missions."
    Includes online library catalogs, maps, electronic news archives, bibliographies, and more.
    Maintained by Joseph Caruso, African Studies Librarian, Columbia University Index on Africa
    "A comprehensive guide to the continent on the Net."
    Sections include News on Africa, Africa Update, Country Pages, Subject Pages, and Search Engines.
    Maintained by the Norwegian Council for Africa. Continue on with Africa Companion site to the PBS broadcast (09/09/01 - 10/28/01) Sections include: Explore the Regions ; Africa Challenge ; Photoscope ; Africa for Kids ; Teacher Tools ; Resources.

    24. Zfsheet09
    The swahili form a big indigenous community in Resource Management in southern africa regional workshop indigenous peoples and Sustainability Cases and Actions
    http://www.sardc.net/imercsa/zambezi/zfsheet/zfsheet09.html

    25. Scholarly Resources: Ethnic Studies
    collections at other institutions, maps of africa, and US http//www.yale.edu/swahili. six moderated discussion groups on issues affecting indigenous peoples.
    http://www.umkc.edu/cad/ub/ethnstud.htm
    Scholarly Resources: Ethnic Studies, Revised March 14, 1998
    New! African and Africa American Topics
    Updated links from WebCrawler. http://webcrawler.com/select/life.african.html African-American Mosaic Exhibit An on-line selection of materials from a 1994 exhibit at the Library of Congress on black history and culture in the United States. Includes photographs and drawings. http://lcweb.loc.gov/exhibits/African.American/intro.html African Studies WWW (U-Penn) A comprehensive directory of on-line resources for African and black studies. The site features links to direct news feeds from Africa, a multimedia resource library, and on-line directories. http://www.sas.upenn.edu/African_Studies/AS.html American Life Histories From the 1930s A searchable, full-text archive of 2,900 life histories recorded in the late 1930s by the Federal Writers' Project. Administered by the Library of Congress as part of the American Memory project. http://lcweb2.loc.gov/wpaintro/wpahome.html New! American Minority Studies Links. http://hanksville.phast.umass.edu/misc/

    26. CourseList (Fill-in) Legal Size
    166, Natural Resource Policy and indigenous peoples, Carr, CJ, F 39100, 010, Precolonial africa An Introductory Survey, 52103, 001B, Elementary swahili, Khisa, MTuWTh 8
    http://ias.berkeley.edu/africa/courses/coursesS2003.htm
    Center for African Studies 342/356 Stephens Hall University of California Berkeley, CA 94720-2314 tel: 510.642.8338; fax: 510.642.0721;
    asc@uclink4.berkeley.edu
    http://www.ias.berkeley.edu/africa African Studies Related Courses
    at UC Berkeley for Spring 2003
    This Schedule is based on the published schedule of classes for this semester.
    Check with departments for changes. Please consult course schedules, catalogs, and individual departments for more information on these courses. http://schedule.berkeley.edu/ CCN: Course # Course Title Instructor Time Location AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES Africa: History and Culture (Modern) Oguto TTh 8-9:30 20 Barrows Political and Economic Development in the Third World Ahluwalia TTh 10-12 200 Wheeler Caribbean Literature By Women Authors Clark 100 Wheeler Interdisciplinary Research Methods-Post Structuralism Ahluwalia M 2-5 140 Barrows AGRICULTURAL AND RESOURCE ECONOMICS Development Planning TBA TBA TBA Nutritional Economics and Policy Sabry TTh 2-3:30 83 Dwinelle ANTHROPOLOGY Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology Graburn TuTh 9:30-11 Wheeler Aud Archaeology of the African Diaspora Kojan TuTh 12:30-2:00 115 Kroeber CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING International Housing Roy TuTh 11-1230 105 North Gate DEMOGRAPHY See Dept.

    27. CourseList (Fill-in) Legal Size
    29203, 166, Natural Resource Policy and indigenous peoples, Carr, TuTh 39322, 125A, History of Black People and Race 52103, 001B, Elementary swahili, Mchombo, MTuWTh 34,
    http://ias.berkeley.edu/africa/courses/coursesS2000.html
    Center for African Studies 342/356 Stephens Hall University of California Berkeley, CA 94720-2314 tel: 510.642.8338; fax: 510.642.0721;
    asc@uclink4.berkeley.edu; http://www.ias.berkeley.edu/africa African Studies Related Courses
    at UC Berkeley for Spring 2000
    This Schedule is based on the published schedule of classes for this semester.
    Check with departments for changes. Please consult course schedules, catalogs, and individual departments for more information on these courses. http://schedule.berkeley.edu/ CCN: Course # Course Title Instructor Time Location AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES Africa: History and Culture (Modern) Gamal MW 12-2 2 LeConte Political and Economic Development in the Third World Hintzen MW 10-12 100 Wheeler Black Nationalism Mostern, K MW 4-6 210 Wheeler Special Topics in Cultural Studies of the Diaspora: African Quayson Tu 2-5 115 Barrows Literature in Comparative Perspective Racisms and Race Small W 2-5 172 Barrows ANTHROPOLOGY Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology Brandes TuTh 11-12:30 Wheelr Aud Field Production of Ethnographic Film Anderson MW 2-4 155 Kroeber Area Studies: Sub-Saharan Africa Moore MW 12-2 110 Barrows African Prehistory Gifford-Gonzal TuTh 12-2 15 2224 Piedmnt Cultural Politics: Landscape, Power, And Identity

    28. FAF - Preamble
    According to Hitchens (1994,) The swahili word for among the Akan and Ga peoples as well A unique characteristic of africa s indigenous system of government
    http://www.freeafrica.org/returning_to_africa.html

    Home
    Indigenous Africa
    Returning to Africa's Roots/Modernizing the Indigenous
    George B.N. Ayittey All Africa needs to do is to return to its roots and build on and modernize its own indigenous institutions. There is now a greater awareness of the need to reexamine Africa's own heritage. Return to traditional institutions will ensure not only peace but stability as well: In Mali each existing ethnic group is recognized for its distinct heritage. "Ethnicity cannot be manipulated in this society," said educator Lalla Ben Barkar. "The people may be from the north or the south, but in the end they realize they are one nation, and that is Mali" (The Washington Post, 24 March 1996, A28). Carl M. Peterson and Daniel T. Barkely offered a reason why Somalia imploded: The previous government [Siad Barre's] failed to incorporate the institutional aspects of Somalia's indigenous culture into a functioning national body. [Therefore] a stable, viable and fair political system must comprise the essential characteristics of Somalia's complex society. This means revitalizing indigenous institutions, restoring traditional powers and giving clans a legitimate outlet for political expression. (New African, June 1993, 20). E. F. Kolajo of Thoyandou, South Africa, concurred: "The Japanese, Chinese, and Indians still maintain their roots, and they are thriving as nations. Africa embraces foreign cultures at the expense of its own, and this is why nothing seems to work for us" (New African, February 1995, 4). In fact, according to The Bangkok Post, "Japan's postwar success has demonstrated that modernization does not mean Westernization. Japan has modernized spectacularly, yet remains utterly different from the West. Economic success in Japan has nothing to do with individualism. It is the fruit of sheer discipline the ability to work in groups and to conform" (cited by The Washington Times, 9 November 1996, A8).

    29. Books & Literature About Kilimanjaro, The Summit Of Africa. Kilimanjaro, One Of
    and those on organized trips and a section on swahili color, 32 maps. . considers the effects of colonial expansion on africa s indigenous peoples, its landscape
    http://7summits.com/kilimanjaro/books.htm
    Kilimanjaro Trips Safari Trips FAQ ... Quotes Join our new mailing list (more info) Send this page to a friend!
    Kilimanjaro
    The most famous book about the Kilimanjaro is Hemingway's Snows of the Kilimanjaro, but more useful is the lonely planet's trekking guide to east Africa and the Kili and mt Kenya climbing and trekking guide... Kilimanjaro; to the roof of Africa , by Audrey Salkeld and David Breashears Although the IMax movie is not available everywhere in the world, the book is, and it's of amazing beauty!
    Kilimanjaro is the highest point of Africa and therefore one of the "7 summits". But even without this statistical feature it is a place you should have visited to know what others mean when they call it a great place...
    Well David Breashears (know from the Everest IMAX and his book) has shot a new IMAX film on Kilimanjaro and this is the accompanying book.
    Much information about the historic exploration of Eastern Africa and it's majestic summit; geological and biological contributions mixed with full page pictures and the trip report of the climb along the scenic Machame/Mweka route (with a variation through the Western breach).

    30. Homework For Colonial Africa
    in Kiswahili, a mixture of Arabic and swahili spoken in 3. Should the Boers have left South africa once they discovered indigenous peoples were using the
    http://www.mrdowling.com/610hw.html
    Mr. Dowling's
    Electronic Passport E-mail
    Home

    Download
    Colonial Africa Homework
    Prince Henry Maafa David Livingstone Liberia ... Nelson Mandela Topics SIXTH GRADE The Earth Prehistory Mesopotamia Ancient Egypt ... China SEVENTH GRADE Ancient Greece Rome Middle Ages Renaissance ... South America Download your homework You can now download all of your homework assignments at Mr. Dowling's Download page. Name: Date: Colonial Africa Homework 1 Mr. Dowling's Electronic Passport Fill in the Blanks
    Use your study sheet to find the correct answers PRINCE HENRY THE NAVIGATOR Prince Henry was a *P monarch spurred e of A. Africa was unexplored during Henry's time because the vast *A Ocean and the S Desert were barriers that few adventurers were able to surmount. Henry made African e possible by setting up a school for s and paying for sailing e from the P_. Henry also hired skilled mpaes whose work made it possible for s_ to l from previous e. Henry knew that if his s could c_ Africa, he could find a w route to I. Sailors had reached the C_ Islands of W Africa when Henry d in 1460, but Bartholomeu D proved H's vision to be correct when he reached the s tip of A in 14. Vasco da completed the first *E to travel from P to I. A few years earlier, a sailor hired by Queen I of S attempted to reach I by sailing w. He found land and "I," by what be actually found was *A. That sailor was *C *C_.

    31. Common Myths About Africa
    Persians and Arabs among the swahili of East africa, Arabs in North africa, or Indonesians the population consists of indigenous peoples (Native Americans
    http://jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu/~plarson/syllabi/121/myths/text.htm
    Myths about Africa, Africans, and African History: The Student's "Ten Commandments" Introduction. Many of the ten myths referred to below have become "common knowledge" and widely accepted in American society, in both Black and White communities. It is necessary to discuss and unlearn them before we proceed with learning new things about Africa. Because unlearning these popular myths is very important for learning new things about Africa, I call them the student's "Ten Commandments." Knowing that these myths are wrong should be your foundational knowledge about Africa, its peoples and history. Myth One. Africa has no ancient cultures, histories or civilizations and has therefore made no meaningful contributions to world history. Subsidiary to this, the values that Westerners hold dear today like political freedom and democracy had and have no tradition or history in Africa.
    Myth Two. Africans are primarily tribespeople; Africans are organized first and foremost into tribes while Europeans are primarily organized into nations.
    Myth Three . Africans are essentially primitive in lifestyle, art and technology because few or no innovations took or take place in Africa.

    32. Are Kanaka Maoli Indigenous To Hawai'i? Would The Status Of Being Indigenous Giv
    some indigenous tribes in africa and Asia indigenous people who have continuously maintained their cultural learn traditional skills, or study swahili in their
    http://www.angelfire.com/hi2/hawaiiansovereignty/indigenous.html
    var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
    Are kanaka maoli indigenous to Hawai'i? Would the status of being indigenous give them special rights?
    Are kanaka maoli indigenous to Hawai'i? Do they have a special relationship to the land of Hawai'i that is different from any actual or possible relationship which non-kanaka maoli might have with the land?
    Anthropological research suggests that the Polynesian islands were settled by people originating from Asia, spreading through the south Pacific, and arriving in Hawai'i very late in the process. Clearly Marquesas and Tahiti were settled long before Hawai'i. But China, Africa, and even the Americas had indigenous peoples living in those places for many thousands of years before anyone ventured into any of the Polynesian islands. So, among the peoples of the world, Polynesians have one of the shortest tenures in their so-called indigenous area. And within the Polynesian triangle, Hawai'i is one of the most recently settled island groups.
    Kanaka maoli have ancestors whose bones have been in the land of Hawai'i for hundreds of years. But millions of Americans have ancestors whose bones have been in the land of England for many centuries, and that does not give those Americans political rights in England. Indeed, some kanaka maoli have more English blood than they have kanaka maoli blood, and more ancestral English bones in the land of England for more centuries than they have ancestral kanaka maoili bones in the land of Hawai'i. Where the bones are does not determine either indigenous status or political rights.

    33. Who Are Then Are The Swahili?
    The word swahili comes from the Arabic word sawahil the Waswahili have been the indigenous people of the eastern seaboard of africa stretching from the
    http://www.waswahilitrust.plus.com/pages/who are then are the waswahili.htm
    The Waswahili Community Trust UK
    (Wadhamini wa jumuiya ya Waswahili)
    Ethnicity
    Who are then are the Swahili?
    "The Swahili are among the most distinctive peoples in Africa, and their coastal location is the primary reason why. It provided a setting where multiple cultural influences came together to produce a society characterized by:
  • mercantilism based on Indian Ocean trade; town dwelling; a unique architecture using coral and stone; Islam; literacy in an African language with an Arabic script; a sense of belonging to a wider civilization; and social stratification, with ruling elites who stress their Persian and Arab lineages. Influences from southwestern Asia have clearly been significant to Swahili identity, but it is equally obvious that the Asian elements are essentially a veneer glued onto a solid Bantu African framework."
  • James L. Newman in his recent book called THE PEOPLE OF AFRICA (Yale University Press, 1995 P. 177) The Bantu peoples are many and varied and exist in different clusters of fairly closely related tribes. According to Newman, the Swahilis constituted part of the Sabaki cluster of Northeast Coast Bantu that had formed in the Lower Tana River-Lamu Archipelago. From the original Sabaki who lived in small coastal or offshore-island villages where they could both fish and farm, some Sabaki took up a trading activity with merchants from the Arabian Peninsula and the Persian Gulf. This trade has by all accounts been going on for at least some 2000 years.

    34. People Of Kenya
    has become the most extended indigenous language in Mozambique, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Somalia and South africa. what we call the swahili people is really a
    http://kenya.com/people/people_002.htm
    Current time in Nairobi
    Special Fares to Kenya
    e-mail Log in Safari Finder My Itinerary QUICK BROWSE
    Swahili
    Origin of Swahili

    kenya's linguistic groups
    Swahili the National Language of Kenya
    Swahili or Kiswahili has become the most extended indigenous language in Africa, with some 50 million speakers. Currently it is the official and national language in Tanzania. In Kenya and Uganda it is the national language, since official communications and administration use English. Thanks to the relationships of the East African countries with the neighboring countries, Swahili is also spoken in some regions of Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique, Congo, Rwanda, Burundi, Somalia and South Africa. The name of this language has its origin in sâhils-awâhil Dating the origins of Swahili is not an easy task. It seems clear that the language was spoken at the coast during the 13th century. Some authors propose a much more ancient origin: in his work "Journey through the Erithraean Sea", a greek trader named Diogene who visited the East African coast in the year 110 A.D. told that the arab traders who regularly sailed the coast talked to the natives in their local language, which could represent the first historical reference to Swahili.

    35. People Of Kenya
    The Bantuspeaking people (such as the Gusii, Kikuyu down the western coast of africa, Vasco da By the 16th century, most of the indigenous swahili trading towns
    http://kenya.com/people/people_001.htm
    Current time in Nairobi
    Special Fares to Kenya
    e-mail Log in Safari Finder My Itinerary QUICK BROWSE In the beginning
    The Europeans

    Settlement

    History and Culture of Kenya
    The first of many footprints
    The remainder of the 18th century saw the Omani dynasties from the Persian Gulf dug in along the East African coast. The depredations of the Portuguese era and constant quarrels among the Arab governors caused a decline in trade and prosperity which meant that economic powerhouses such as Britain and Germany weren't interested in grabbing a slice of East Africa until about the mid-19th century.
    With Europeans
    It was downhill from here for the Maasai. As white settlers demanded more fertile land, the Maasai were herded into smaller reserves. The Kikuyu, a Bantu agricultural tribe from the highlands west of Mt Kenya, also had vast tracts of land ripped from under their feet.

    36. Stephan Goes East-Africa
    30,339,770 Capital city Nairobi People 22% Kikuyu 6% Meru, 16% other Languages English, swahili, indigenous. Uganda, Tanzania, UK, Germany, UAE, South africa.
    http://groups.msn.com/StephangoesEastAfrica/kenyafacts.msnw
    var nEditorialCatId = 232; MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Shopping ... Money Web Search: Groups Groups Home My Groups Language ... Help Stephan goes East-Africa StephangoesEastAfrica@groups.msn.com What's New Join Now Homepage Route67 Leave a message ... Tools The Swahili word safari (literally, journey) wouldn't mean much to most people if it wasn't for this East African adventure land. Revered by anthropologists as the 'cradle of humanity', Kenya is also the heart of African safari country, boasting the most diverse collection of wild animals on the continent. And no matter how many Tarzan movies you've seen, nothing will prepare you for the annual mass migration of wildebeests. Unfortunately the wildlife isn't confined to the countryside: petty crime in Kenya's urban centres qualifies as one of the country's few growth industries. Since any encounter with the police is likely to end with money changing hands, you'd have less chance of being fleeced if you strapped a gazelle to your safari suit and went jogging among a pride of lions. Still, if you're a little bit brave - and a little bit sensible - Kenya promises the globe's most magnificent game parks, unsullied beaches, thriving coral reefs, memorable mountainscapes and ancient Swahili cities. Just remember to leave your Rolex at home. Full country name: Republic of Kenya
    Area: 583,000 sq km

    37. Democratic Republic Of The Congo / DRC (Kinshasa)
    An annotated guide to internet resources on the Democratic Republic of the Congo. aequatoria.be/archives_project/ africa Focus. Articles on Congo Cambridge, MA, "helps indigenous peoples and
    http://www-sul.stanford.edu/depts/ssrg/africa/zaire.html
    Countries Democratic Republic of the Congo Search: Countries Topics Africa Guide Suggest a Site ... Africa Home See also: DRC News
    ABC Nightline - Heart of Darkness
    Site for the five-part TV series hosted by Ted Koppel. Program transcripts, a journal by the producer of life in the Eastern Congo, people profiles, relief efforts, the link between coltan, cell phones and the DRC. http://abcnews.go.com/sections/nightline/
    Academie Royale des Sciences d'Outre-mer (Bruxelles, Belgium)
    In French, English, Dutch. "The Royal Academy of Overseas Sciences was founded in 1928 with the aim of promoting scientific knowledge in overseas regions" [esp. Congo-Kinshasa]. "The Academy is divided into three Sections: the Section of Moral and Political Sciences, the Section of Natural and Medical Sciences and the Section of Technical Sciences." Publishes Biographie belge d'Outre-Mer (first pub. in 1941, formerly la Biographie Coloniale Belge . Publishes three series of . http://users.skynet.be/kaowarsom/
    Aequatoria Archives Research Project
    Based at the Research Center of the International Pragmatics Association, University of Antwerp, and works with the

    38. RIGHTS: Indigenous Peoples Push For Restitution
    Vth IUCN, World Parks Congress in South africa. The indigenous peoples are lobbying to create a high
    http://ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=20351

    39. Africa Indigenous People Resources Bangwa
    africa, african Anthropology General Resources. By peoples
    http://www.archaeolink.com/africa_indigenous_people_resourc.htm
    Bangwa Home Africa, African Anthropology General Resources By peoples Akan Akuapem Akye Anyi ... Zulu ArtWorld AFRICA -Bangwa "The Bangwa occupy a mountainous and part forested countryside west of the Bamileke in south-eastern Cameroon, near the headwaters of the Cross River. They comprise nine chiefdoms. People live in separate family compounds, sometimes with large meeting houses where visitors may be received." - From University of Durham - http://artworld.uea.ac.uk/teaching_modules/africa/cultural_groups_by_country/bangwa/welcome.html Bangwa People "Authority among the Bangwa was traditionally instituted as part of the Bamileke political complex. Like most of the western Grasslands people, Babanki political authority is vested in a village chief, who is supported by a council of elders, and is called Fon." You will find material related to Bangwa history, culture, arts, political structure and more. - From University of Iowa - http://www.uiowa.edu/~africart/toc/people/Bangwa.html

    40. Map & Graph: Africa:Countries By Language: Languages
    Mozambique, Portuguese (official), indigenous dialects. in Zanzibar), many local languages (Kiswahili (swahili) is the the first language of most people is one
    http://www.nationmaster.com/graph-T/lan_lan/AFR

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