View allAll Photos Tagged Reconciliation
No trip without staircases 😉
While Graz is not known for spiral staircases there is one which is very special though. A double-spiral staircase - two flights of staircases, running in opposite directions, join for some steps on each floor, separate again, join again... The architectural masterpiece of 1499 has often been interpreted as a symbol of eternity. Graz people call it the "stairs of reconciliation". If you go separate ways, you will reunite.
Explore # 52
Gracias a todos por vuestras visitas y comentarios !!
Thank you all for your visits and comments !!
hair : mens : [Deadwool] Undercut hair
woman : *ARGRACE* HIKARI
shirts and dress : ::GB:: wet shirt / Wet Dress & pants @ " kustom9 " maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/kustom9/141/62/22
pose : XXY - Under the rain @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Adhara/115/188/27
my face book @ www.facebook.com/shiori.hori.35
Excerpt from www.thespec.com/local-burlington/news/2022/10/07/these-st...:
The City is taking highly visible moves to recognize Truth and Reconciliation.
An orange crosswalk has been installed at Burlington’s Lakeshore Road and Nelson Avenue as part of an ongoing effort to recognize Canada’s Indigenous people and their history. Installed on Sept. 29 (2022), according to the city, the new crosswalk acknowledges the strength and survival of residential school survivors and honours the victims, their families and communities.
Chris Glenn, director of recreation, community and culture, said the crosswalk is about starting conversations.
“These steps are to acknowledge and start conversations about Canada’s past. Only when we work together can we learn and move forward as a community, city and country,” said Glenn.
People can make bad decisions in hopes for a greater good. One of the things that I believe in is when you make a commitment to someone you do everything possible to make the commitment work, but, where is that line drawn? Can you love someone and be with the when the trust has been gravely broken? I don't know yet, but I will follow whatever path my heart and mind take me on.
for christmas and beyond.
wishing eveybody a peaceful christmas.
and a thank you for a another flickr year!
~ The old Vortrekker and the young boy ~
(Those who know SA history know why this shot is so special...)
Church Square Pretoria
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Taken near to where I live on a night when the skies were very special. I have called it Nirvana because the word means any place of complete bliss and delight and peace.
www.barryturner-fineartphotography.co.uk/
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Tower of Reconciliation, by Ed Dwight located at the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park, Tulsa, Oklahoma, and site of the Tulsa race riot of 1921 which was the single worst incident of racial violence in American history. More than 1,256 homes and businesses, covering more than thirty square city blocks, were burned to the ground in the Greenwood District of Tulsa also known as Black Wall Street.
Indigenous Canadians have been observing Orange Shirt Day since 2013. The federal government has proclaimed September 30 to be National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, and today, 2021, is the first.
The days recognize the poor, past treatment of native children in residential schools. Specifically, Orange Shirt Day comes from Phyllis (Jack) Webstad's orange shirt being taken away from her when she arrived as a 6 year old at residential school, and she never saw it again. (www.orangeshirtday.org/phyllis-story.html)
© AnvilcloudPhotography
…. in Canada, a day to remember the 150,000+ First Nations, Inuit, & Metis children taken from their families and forced into abusive residential schools, in an attempt to eradicate their indigenous identities, cultures, and communities—a day for Canadians to continue to commit to actions of reconciliation.
“They tried to bury us,
but they didn’t know we were seeds!”
— Julian Taylor, Afro-Mohawk musician.
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The other day I found myself...or better I met myself again.
I reconciled with the other me, the part I voluntarily had suppressed...the part I was scared of...I feel incredibly good now, it's like seeing clearly after having being blind for a long period...As a confirmation of our "alliance" I came back to red :)
I use this occasion to start a new project...a set about subtle sensuality and much more...so let me introduce you the first photo of:
SKIN & VELVET SOULS
Today is the first Truth and Reconciliation Day, time to honor lost children and survivors of residential school. This day is a federal holiday, unfortunately some provinces including my province have not made it a statutory holiday.
I encourage my fellow Canadians to take time to learn about the real history of Canada and the atrocities that have occurred and are still occurring.
The book I am reading is called "Unreconciled" by Jesse Wente, an Anishinaabe writer. It is a very good story.
There are many good Indigenous writers Richard Wagamamese, Michelle Good, Edmund Metatawabin, Jesse Thistle (Metis), Bev Sellars, Was Kinew.
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.
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Actitudes intesantes
Rue Libergier, Reims, Francia desde el atrio de la Catedral.- Por casualidad he captado las actitudes de las cuatro personas que aperecen en primer plano: de izquierda a derecha se ve una pareja conversando, supongo de sus cosas privadas, luego un hombre calculando si la altura de las torres de la Catedral enmarcan en su cámara y por último un señor leyendo con atencion la lápida titulada "Réconciliation".-
Rue Libergier, Reims, France from the porch of the Cathedral.- By chance I catch an interesting scene in which are involved the four persons in the foregraund:
from left to right a couple chating about, I suppose, their private things; then a man looking it the towers of the Cathedral frames well in his camera; and finally a man reading with great attention the stone entitles "Réconciliation".-
Back to my visit to The Rumps in June. Slightly eralier than the previous with some lovely late light hitting the scene.
Josefina de Vasconcellos (26 October 1904 – 20 July 2005)
De Vasconcellos said:
"The sculpture was originally conceived in the aftermath of the War. Europe was in shock, people were stunned. I read in a newspaper about a woman who crossed Europe on foot to find her husband, and I was so moved that I made the sculpture. Then I thought that it wasn't only about the reunion of two people but hopefully a reunion of nations which had been fighting."