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Plaine du Haouz père de Marrakech, Maroc, une ferme qui organise des stages pour une agriculture plus respectueuse de l'environnement, de la terre et de l'humain.

Lire l'article issuu.com/epjt/docs/innova_marrakech p. 32-33

nace de una leyenda urbana

pero q en verda obvio q si igual

se expuso en el peda y nos fuimos de viaje a bolivia

 

fototite

I fee al bit strange, cranmmming the few shots of Citizen Fish, Exploited and Cocksparrer into one album. Cit Fish were great as ever, but here were other graet bands playing at the same time slot.Had to see Exploited once in my Life, heard 2 songs , had enuff , doesn't have much in common with the band of my teenage days.Cocksparrer played a jam packed, steaming hot Ballroom.

The American Immigration offices, Cambodia and World Vision thankfully are doing work to arrest Americans who come to Kampuchea for the child sex trade

Charity Golf Tournament benefiting the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children Sponsored by Lexis Nexis

Photo by Sarah Baker

 

choc covered cinder toffee, cut through

Ancien camp de concentration de Natzweiler..

En septembre 1940, en Alsace annexée, à proximité du village de Natzwiller, germanisé en Natzweiler, les nazis découvrent un filon de granite rose.

En mars 1941, Himmler, chef de la SS, ordonne de construire un camp de concentration pour son exploitation au profit des grands travaux de construction du Reich.

Le 1er mai 1941, au lieu-dit « le Struthof », le Konzentrationslager Natzweiler est officiellement ouvert.

 

Camp de catégorie II, d’abord fermé, ne recevant que des détenus d’autres camps de concentration, il devient en 1942, un camp ouvert, pouvant recevoir des détenus envoyés directement par les services de sécurité nazie (Sipo).

Les 21 et 23 mai 1941, les 300 premiers déportés arrivent sur site en provenance du KL Sachsenhausen. Ils doivent construire le camp et les routes d’accès. L’exploitation de la carrière débute en mars 1942. Elle emploie jusqu’à 1 400 détenus.

A partir de 1943, des halles de démontage de moteurs d’avion sont installées à la carrière au profit de l’avionneur Junkers. Les impératifs de guerre prennent en effet le pas sur la construction de monuments.

En février, le camp est doté d’un four crématoire. Installé près de l’auberge du Struthof, il est déplacé à l’intérieur du camp de détention en octobre. Ce dernier aménagement marque la fin de la construction du camp.

De 1941 à 1944, le camp est le lieu d’expériences médicales : expériences sur les sulfamides, les gaz de combat (ypérite et phosgène), le typhus. Les nazis tentent également de constituer une collection anatomique de squelettes juifs. En avril 1943, une chambre à gaz, à visée expérimentale, est aménagée dans une annexe de l’auberge du Struthof.

En juin 1943, le camp devient par ailleurs le lieu de regroupement des victimes scandinaves du décret Nacht und Nebel (NN). A partir de novembre, tous les NN masculins doivent y être regroupés.

A la fin 1942, le KL Natzweiler commence à développer un réseau d’une cinquantaine de camps annexes sur les deux rives du Rhin. Si certains fonctionnent au service de la SS, le plus grand nombre est destiné à l’effort de guerre nazi.

A partir de septembre 1944, en raison de l'avance des Alliés, le camp principal et ses camps annexes de la rive gauche du Rhin sont évacués, principalement sur le KL Dachau en Bavière. 11 000 déportés, dont près de 6 000 pour le camp principal, sont transférés en Allemagne. Fait unique dans l’histoire concentrationnaire, Natzweiler continue malgré tout d’exister grâce à ses camps annexes situés sur la rive droite du Rhin.

Le camp principal est découvert par les Américains le 25 novembre 1944. Vidé de ses occupants, c’est le premier KL découvert à l’Ouest de l’Europe.

Sa fin définitive survient lors de l’évacuation des camps annexes situés en Allemagne en mars/avril 1945.

 

De 1941 à 1945, 52 000 déportés, de plus de 30 nationalités différentes, sont déportés à Natzweiler et dans ses camps annexes. 35 000 ne passent pas par le camp principal.

Environ 17 000 d’entre eux périssent dans la nébuleuse Natzweiler dont 3 000 dans le camp souche.

WASHINGTON, D.C.: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2025 Hope Gala at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery on Sept. 17, 2025. Photo by Sarah Baker.

 

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s (NCMEC) signature fundraiser is more than a night of celebration—Hope Gala is a powerful call to action for children. Every story shared and every dollar raised brings us closer to a world where every child is safe.

 

For more than 40 years, NCMEC has led the fight to protect children, support families, and bring hope to those impacted by abduction and exploitation. The evening united survivors, advocates, law enforcement, and leaders from across the country around one goal: protecting childhood.

R$20,00

 

Escreva para mofofilmes10@gmail.com e peça já o seu!

Tamanho A3

WASHINGTON, D.C.: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2025 Hope Gala at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery on Sept. 17, 2025. Photo by Sarah Baker.

 

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s (NCMEC) signature fundraiser is more than a night of celebration—Hope Gala is a powerful call to action for children. Every story shared and every dollar raised brings us closer to a world where every child is safe.

 

For more than 40 years, NCMEC has led the fight to protect children, support families, and bring hope to those impacted by abduction and exploitation. The evening united survivors, advocates, law enforcement, and leaders from across the country around one goal: protecting childhood.

Les élèves en stage à la salle de traite

First Polish concert- 21.09.1996

NCMEC held its “40 Years of Hope” celebration on Sept. 26, 2024, at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. For 40 years, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children has been the leading global nonprofit in child protection. Over the past four decades, NCMEC has assisted with the safe recovery of more than 400,000 missing children, stopped the spread of millions of child sexual abuse images, and protected children with groundbreaking prevention education around the world. Claire Edkins /NCMEC

malika, mark, corey & racquel.

Darksiders II follows the exploits of Death, one of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse, in a weaving tale that runs parallel to the events in the original Darksiders game. This epic journey propels Death through various light and dark realms as he tries to redeem his brother War, the horseman who was blamed for prematurely starting the Apocalypse in Darksiders.

 

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WASHINGTON, DC: The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children is celebrating “40 Years of Hope”. John and Revé Walsh, co-founders of NCMEC, host a celebration of 40 years of partnership with Congress to protect our nation’s children. (Claire Edkins /NCMEC 2024)

WASHINGTON, D.C.: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2025 Hope Gala at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery on Sept. 17, 2025. Photo by Sarah Baker.

 

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s (NCMEC) signature fundraiser is more than a night of celebration—Hope Gala is a powerful call to action for children. Every story shared and every dollar raised brings us closer to a world where every child is safe.

 

For more than 40 years, NCMEC has led the fight to protect children, support families, and bring hope to those impacted by abduction and exploitation. The evening united survivors, advocates, law enforcement, and leaders from across the country around one goal: protecting childhood.

Hint: The cute one is not on a branded skateboard with a serendipitous lollipop, busy furthering gender exploitation in Western society and beyond.

 

Skateboard art does not lie, it just pays.

WASHINGTON, D.C.: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2025 Hope Gala at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery on Sept. 17, 2025. Photo by Sarah Baker.

 

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s (NCMEC) signature fundraiser is more than a night of celebration—Hope Gala is a powerful call to action for children. Every story shared and every dollar raised brings us closer to a world where every child is safe.

 

For more than 40 years, NCMEC has led the fight to protect children, support families, and bring hope to those impacted by abduction and exploitation. The evening united survivors, advocates, law enforcement, and leaders from across the country around one goal: protecting childhood.

WASHINGTON, D.C.: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2025 Hope Gala at the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery on Sept. 17, 2025. Photo by Sarah Baker.

 

The National Center for Missing & Exploited Children’s (NCMEC) signature fundraiser is more than a night of celebration—Hope Gala is a powerful call to action for children. Every story shared and every dollar raised brings us closer to a world where every child is safe.

 

For more than 40 years, NCMEC has led the fight to protect children, support families, and bring hope to those impacted by abduction and exploitation. The evening united survivors, advocates, law enforcement, and leaders from across the country around one goal: protecting childhood.

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them. The sleeping lion once awakened from its slumber shall become irresistible even after the achievement ofwhat .

our leaders aim at. After his first experience with the Alunedabad labourers in 1920 Mahatma Gandhi declared: "we.

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must not tamper with the labourers. It is dangerous to make political use ofthe factory proletariat." (The Times, May .

1921 ). Since then, they never dared to approach them. There remains the peasantry. The Bardoli resolution of 'I 922 .

cleatly depicts the horror the leaders felt when they saw the gigantic peasant class rising to shake off not only the .

domination of an alien nation but also the yoke of the landlords. .

.

It is clear that our leaders prefer a surrender to the British than to the peasantry .... " .

The War that exists at the heart ofour 'democracy' .

In Bhagat Singh ~nitial writings, there is an inclination towards anarchism and revolutionary terrorism, but he was quick to recognize and grasp the superior revolutionary essence of Marxism. He spoke of the indispensable need for an organized communist party and the centrality of a communist politics for independence and socialism. He emphasized the proper combination of all forms of struggle and prepared a draft revolutionary programme that was marked by a consistent and compre~_~nsiverevolutionary_ approach. .

The India of Bhagat Singh's dreams was no ram rajya, nor an idealizedworld of milk and honey. He warned against the .

terrifying dangers of communal politics and spoke in no uncertain terms against the brutal reaJjties of caste oppression. .

The India that we liv·e in today is no longer a British colony and the sun has long set on the British Empire. It is, .

however, the land of the brown sahibs that Bhagat Singh warned against. When we observed "Republic" Day this .

year, a police officer under whose custody Soni Sori was tortured and abused sexually was awarded a 'gallantry' award! To .

raise one's voice against state repression, against corporate land grab, against displacement is now termed by the .

powers~that-be as 0 Sedition". Corporate honchos who loot our resources and politicians who rewrite laws to protect a .

regime a corporate profiteering roam free, while people's doctor Binayak Sen is jailed for years together for talking of .

systemic state-sponsored malnutrition and poverty. .

70% of our people live on less than 20 rupees a day, but our rulers are far too busy attending banquets organized by the US President, leader of the biggest imperiaJist power in the world. Our sovereignty has been mortgaged to foreign interests. Love for the country has been redefined as 'love for the corporates'. Vast enclaves of land are being given aver as tax-free havens of corporate loot and plunder. When people suffer, the state turns a blind eye; when they protest. it turns a deaf ear. A state of war has been declared: it goes by the name of 'Operation Green Hunt' whose targets are the poorest people: the dalits and the adivasis of our land. The Indian state today is as unafraid as its colonial predecessor to shoot down people when they raise the flag of protest. .

From Bhagat Singh's last ''Petition to the Punjab governor'': --.

"Let us declare that the state ofwar does exist and shall exist so long as the Indian toiling masses and the natural .

resources are being exploited by a handful ofparasites. They may be purely British Capitalist or mixed British and .

Indian or even purely Indian. ... All these things make no difference . ... The war shall continue . .

.It may assume different shapes at different times. It may become now open, now hidden, now purely agitational, now .

fierce life and death struggle. It shall be waged ever with new vigour, greater audacity and unflinching determination .

till the Socialist Republic is established and ... every sort ofexploitation is put an end to and the humanity is ushered .

into the era ofgenuine and permanent peace." .

.

The face of freedom .

Yet Bhagat Singh lives on in the struggles of our times and the cry of "lnquilab Zindabad" still resounds. Beyond the films, beyond the statues in parliament, beyond the attempts of India's ruling class to subvert Bhagat Singh's revolutionary legacy, his memory endures. It has lived on in Kayyur and Punnapra4 Vayalar, in Tebhaga and Telengana, in Naxalbari, Srikakulam, Bhojpur and Nandigram. .

Bhagat Singh's nationalism began with the students and the youth. He urged that they should go deep among the masses, to the colonies of workers and hamlets ofthe rural poor. For all those of us who wish to fight for an Anti-imperialist and pro~people patriotism, Bhagat Singh is the face of that freedom. For those of us who wish to raise the voice of protest against imperialist agendas, against corporate loot, against draconian laws, against caste violence, religious fundamentaltsm and patriarchy, Bhagat Singh provides us energy and inspiration. .

We remember also the words of Com. Chandrashekhar, who responded to a question asked to him during the JNUSU -Presidential debate with the fearless reply: 'Yes, I have ambitions. My ambitions are to live like Bhagat Singh and die like Che Guevara!' .

To speak ofBhagat 5/ngh-Sukhdev-Rajguru, to speak ofrevolutionary poet Avtar Singh Paash, to speak of Chandrasekharis to reclaim ourhistory, to make itourown, to declare this countryis ours; it does notbelong to imperialistcapitaloritsIndigenous agents. Itis to declare thatwhile we are witness to the suffering ofourstruggling people, we shallalso bearwitness to theirliberation/ .

Piyush, Vice-President, AlSA, JNU Omprsad, Jt.Secy., AISA,JNU .

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Exploitation agricole de Saclay (91) ...

Les Jeunes Agriculteurs d'île de France sur le terrain...

One of the most insidious and pernicious myths perpetuated by campus rape culture is that women are not thinking, feeling subjects but in fact merely objects of attraction, fascination, and exploitation. This TEDxSalon, held during Social Justice Week, will explore how inclusive feminism has demanded (and continues to demand) dignity and respect for all persons, how feminist scholarship and pedagogy has worked to combat rape culture in higher education, and how theory can engage practice in the classroom and beyond. As a Salon, we will watch several videos that address the impact of rape in a global context, in relationship to masculinity and rape culture, and as an intersectional phenomenon. Participants will then collaborate on developing possible models to compassionately address gender violence at UW-L. Participants should be aware that the videos, presentation and conversation all contain potentially triggering elements.

 

About our facilitator Dr. Kate Parker - Dr. Kate Parker studies eighteenth-century British and French literature and teaches courses in literature, critical theory, feminism and sexuality studies at UWL. She has also been active in the sexual assault awareness movement since she was 19, as a college student, a SART (sexual assault responder) in the City of St. Louis, a campus sexual assault advocate and now as a member of UWL’s Violence Prevention Committee. Dr. Parker also co-advises the Rise Above Rape Coalition on campus.

 

WASHINGTON, DC: National Center for Missing & Exploited Children (NCMEC) 2024 "40 Years of Hope" Celebration, Sept. 26, 2024

 

NCMEC held its “40 Years of Hope” celebration on Sept. 26, 2024, at the National Building Museum in Washington, D.C. For 40 years, the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children has been the leading global nonprofit in child protection. Over the past four decades, NCMEC has assisted with the safe recovery of more than 400,000 missing children, stopped the spread of millions of child sexual abuse images, and protected children with groundbreaking prevention education around the world. Claire Edkins /NCMEC

 

Charity Golf Tournament benefiting the Cal Ripken, Sr. Foundation and the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children Sponsored by Lexis Nexis

Photo by Sarah Baker

 

The tarts before being shoved into the oven.

 

Remind me never to attempt dough patterns on top of the jam ever again. The time spent, and my back.

At least they look pretty.

 

Beautiful creatures. Not convinced this is the best way to treat them - do the benefits of educating people about them outweigh the confinement and exploitation? Taken in Malta.

The view of the Exploits near a cache.

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