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durée : 00:59:03 - Guitare, guitares - par : Sébastien Llinares - "Un instrument créé pendant l'antiquité avec plus de 6000 ans d'histoire. Cet instrument le Tanbûr, est une sorte de luth à manche long, qui prend des formes très différentes suivant les pays dans lesquels il est joué. Et suivant les formes qu'il prend, sa sonorité change..." Sébastien Llinarès - réalisé par : Patrick Lérisset
Recorded live at the Arizona Tennis Classic, host Alex Gruskin sits down with ATP #84 Daniel Elahi Galán to discuss his 2024 season to date, his focus on the Arizona Classic tournament this week, and so much more! Don't forget to give a 5 star review with your twitter/instagram handle for a chance to win some FREE CR gear!! This episode brought to you by: Tennis Point Discounted Tennis Apparel, Tennis Racquets, Tennis Shoes & Equipment from Nike, adidas, Babolat, Wilson & More! Visit their store today and use the code "CR15" at checkout to save 15% off Sale items. Some Exclusions (MAP Exceptions) apply and code will not work on those items. This code will add 1 FREE CAN of WILSON Balls to the cart at checkout. Tennis Channel Podcast Network Visit https://www.tennis.com/pro-game/podcasts/ to stay current on the latest tennis news and trends and enjoy in-depth analysis and dynamic debates. Find Cracked Racquets Website: https://www.crackedracquets.com Instagram: https://instagram.com/crackedracquets Twitter: https://twitter.com/crackedracquets Facebook: https://Facebook.com/crackedracquets YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/crackedracquets Email Newsletter: https://crackedracquets.substack.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This episode features Judy Elahi of Fresh Pressed Beverage. Like many stories that we hear, Fresh Pressed Beverage began during covid. Judy looked to help restaurants with cocktail development and bar organization, as well as, what she does on a daily basis. She focuses much of her attention on private and corporate events, restaurant and bar consulting and non-alcoholic development. That highlights cold pressed juices, coffee, tea or water. Judy has been juicing for over 12 years and when you hear what she designs you can understand why people are flocking to her creations. Judy utilizes her culture and experience to produce craft juices and cocktails that boast layers of flavor. www.freshpressedbev.com - Instagram Highlights From our Conversation: Chilled Magazine Mindful Drinking Fest Boisson Disco Mary Collective Johnson & Wales University Chevy's Fresh Mex Gravitas True Food Kitchen Naked and Famous Cocktails Recipe Holistic Spirits Co. Barr Hill Gin Ethos Hospitality Group Tales of the Cocktail
durée : 00:59:09 - L'art du Tanbur : Musiques anciennes d'Iran et d'ailleurs - par : Sébastien Llinares - "Un instrument créé pendant l'antiquité avec plus de 6000 ans d'histoire. Cet instrument le Tanbûr, est une sorte de luth à manche long, qui prend des formes très différentes suivant les pays dans lesquels il est joué. Et suivant les formes qu'il prend, sa sonorité change..." Sébastien Llinarès - réalisé par : Patrick Lérisset
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On this episode I was joined by Bijan Elahi, Award winning Medical Device Risk Management author, educator and consultant. Bijan walks through: MedTech vs. Aerospace - Differences in Risk Management Approaches Risk Control/Reduction - AFAP vs. ALARP or ALARA and Global Requirements Quantifying Benefit and Benefit/Risk Risk Control Measures What a good risk management process looks Bijan Elahi has worked in risk management for medical devices for over 29 years at the largest medical device companies in the world, as well as small startups. He is a Technical Fellow, and the Medtronic corporate Advisor on safety risk management of medical devices. In this capacity, he offers education and consulting on risk management to all Medtronic business units, worldwide. Bijan is a lecturer at Eindhoven University of Technology (Netherlands), where he teaches risk management to doctoral students in engineering. At the invitation of the FDA, he is also teaching a graduate course on medical device risk management at Drexel University (Philadelphia, USA).
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 08 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 07 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 06 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 05 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 01 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 02 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 03 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Elahi Nizam e taleem ki bunyaden | Chapter 1 - Falsafa e Taleem | Dars # 04 | Agha Syed Jawad Naqvi
Coach and pilot, Nushin Elahi took to the skies as a trainee pilot in midlife and found herself gaining not only her pilot's licence, but a new perspective on life! Join us as we talk about feeling invisible, moving outside our comfort zones, the challenges she faced in joining what was essentially, a “Boys' club” and how learning to fly mirrored her personal development journey. Nushin can be contacted via her Reframe Coaching website: https://re-frame.coach/ Reframe Coaching Buy Nushin's book “Find your Wings and Fly: Life Lessons from the Cockpit” here: https://amzn.to/46Uao2O For more information on the book in Nushin's own words, scroll down. About this Podcast. Like all transitions, midlife can be messy and sad and glorious all at once, leaving many midlife women feeling rather alone and somewhat invisible. But what does this transition we are experiencing lead to? I'm Jo Blackwell, a photographer, author and coach for women who want more from their lives post 50 and I'm here to remind you that if we manage our health and embrace it, growing older can lead to one of the greatest periods of growth and transformation of our lives. My aim is to help women step into a starring role in their own lives - whatever that means to you. The Midlife Movement was created to change minds about midlife and growing older, one story at a time. Because we only become invisible when when we stop seeing ourselves. email jo@joblackwell.co.uk to take part in the podcast or suggest guests. See The Midlife & Beyond section of my website for more information and resources to help you navigate change with less stress and more joy! www.joblackwell.co.uk More about Nushin: "I launched my book, Find Your Wings and Fly: Life Lessons from the Cockpit on Amazon in January this year on Blue Monday, so called because it's considered the gloomiest day of the year. The book is the story of how I became a pilot, but as one reviewer said, it's about so much more than flying. It is about the way we learn as adults; a story of adapting to change with hope, optimism and courage.For me, it's a dream come true – a dream I have worked so hard to realise, and at times thought would never happen. I kept going because I had promised myself that I would help the woman who felt as lost and dispirited as I did all those years ago, to realise there was a different path. This has been on my vision board for a very long time. Sometimes, though, that goal doesn't happen in the time frame you had hoped, and you have to accept that and go with what life gives you. For me, it was lemons, and I couldn't see how to make lemonade. My son was ill, I didn't feel like a pilot, I was squarely back in the mum phase. How did I make that authentic in a book where I am telling people they can discover their best life? It was actually working with a coach that helped me find the answer. I knew I wasn't sorry about what I had chosen, even though I was sad I was in a situation where I had to make those choices. “Own it,” she said. And suddenly I knew the answer. We all have bad weather we have to fly around, and I had a downpour. I just had to acknowledge that, and I did so by writing an epilogue, for all the women who find that things aren't working out quite the way they wished. A parent or a child who needs care, a body that isn't functioning the way you would like, a job that doesn't fulfil. Whatever it is, we all face it, some of us many times over. And I found the more compassion I gave myself, the easier it was. So that was one of the lessons I learnt, but not in the cockpit. And now I hope my book will be, as someone wrote, a paper plane that can help other women discover a different future for themselves."Buy Nushin's book “Find your Wings and Fly: Life Lessons from the Cockpit” here: https://amzn.to/46Uao2O
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2023.07.16.549192v1?rss=1 Authors: Torres-Espin, A., Rabadaugh, H., Fitzsimons, S., Chou, A., Harvey, D., Lindberg, C., Goldberger, L., Casaletto, K. B., Staffaroni, A., Maillard, P., Miller, B. L., Hinman, J. D., DeCarli, C., Ferguson, A. R., Kramer, J., Elahi, F. M. Abstract: Aberrant angiogenesis could contribute to cognitive impairment, representing a therapeutic target for preventing dementia. However, most angiogenesis studies focus on model organisms. To test the relevance of angiogenesis to human cognitive aging, we evaluated associations of circulating blood markers of angiogenesis with brain aging trajectories in two deeply phenotyped human cohorts (n=435, age 74+9) with longitudinal cognitive assessments, biospecimens, structural brain imaging, and clinical data. Machine learning and traditional statistics revealed sex dimorphic associations of plasma angiogenic growth factors with brain aging outcomes. Specifically, angiogenesis is associated with higher executive function and less brain atrophy in younger women (not men), a directionality of association that reverses around age 75. Higher levels of basic fibroblast growth factor, known for pleiotropic effects on multiple cell types, predicted favorable cognitive trajectories. This work demonstrates the relevance of angiogenesis to brain aging with important therapeutic implications for vascular cognitive impairment and dementia. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info Podcast created by Paper Player, LLC
Bijan's career began in aerospace back in 1985, where he played a crucial role in ensuring safety within NASA and overseeing space systems. However, it was a fateful encounter at a risk management conference in 1991 that sparked his interest in the field of medical devices. When someone sought his advice on this topic, it paved the way for his transition into the realm of medical devices. Since then, Bijan has become a respected figure, sharing his knowledge and expertise through lectures at numerous universities. He has also provided valuable guidance to multiple medical companies on the intricacies of risk management. As a testament to his deep understanding of the subject, he has authored two comprehensive books on risk management. In this episode, he delves into the intriguing world of risk management, drawing parallels between aerospace and medical devices. With years of experience as an advisor, he unveils the common misconceptions surrounding this crucial topic. He sheds light on his earlier days when risk management lacked standardized frameworks and how he navigated through that landscape. Above all, Bijan shares his unwavering passion for transforming uncommon knowledge into something accessible and widespread. Get in touch with Bijan Elahi - https://www.linkedin.com/in/bijanelahi/ Get in touch with Karandeep Badwal - https://www.linkedin.com/in/karandeepbadwal/ Follow Karandeep on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/c/QRAMedical --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/themedtechpodcast/support
Ehsan Elahi is the CEO of timegram. timegram's Official Website: https://www.timegram.io/ Check out the trainings from Sarmaaya Financials: Training List: https://sarmaaya.pk/trainings/?src=tbt Technical Training Masterclass 2.0: https://sarmaaya.pk/trainings/details?tid=1&src=tbt Fundamentals of Capital Market: https://sarmaaya.pk/trainings/details?tid=2&src=tbt Do not forget to subscribe and press the bell icon to catch on to some amazing conversations coming your way! Socials: TBT's Official Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thoughtbehindthings Muzamil's Official Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/muzamilhasan Support our podcast: https://anchor.fm/syed-muzamil-hasan-zaidi3/support Ehsan Elahi's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marketingwithehsan/ Podcast Links: • Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3z1cE7F • Google Podcast: https://bit.ly/2S84VEd • Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/3cgIkfI --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/syed-muzamil-hasan-zaidi3/support
In this midweek episode, Amber and Uzair talk about the raid at Pervaiz Elahi's home and its impact on the ongoing negotiations. We also talked about the ongoing digital census, which has had major concerns related to it. Another big story is the Washington Post article highlighting an internal memo written by Pakistan's former foreign minister Hina Rabbani Khar. Finally, we also touched on the wheat crisis and the state of labor in Pakistan. Share your comments and feedback with us in the comments section or by tweeting at us @uzairyounus and @amberrshamsi. Chapters: 0:00 Introduction 1:45 Elahi's home gets raided 19:20 Controversy with the census 26:28 Khar's memo leaks 37:10 Wheat crisis and bumper crops 41:10 Bonded labor in Pakistan 44:32 Winners and losers
Show notes for the Billy Newman Photo Podcast.Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. wnp.app Make a sustaining financial donation, Visit the Support Page here. If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here. If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here. View links at wnp.app Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Communicate directly with Billy Newman at the link below. wnp.app Make a sustaining financial donation, Visit the Support Page here. If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Send Billy Newman an email here. If you want to see my photography, my current photo portfolio is here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustainable value-for-value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books on Amazon here. View links at wnp.app Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. But this photograph is a cool one from the Sierra Nevada on the east side of the Sierra Nevada mountain ranges near Lone Pine, California, in the Alabama hills. And we liked camping in the Alabama hills. This was I think, right during Thanksgiving week. During 2012, we had a blast being there and camping there during the day, it was cool. It was strange because, at that time of year, the sun sets still very early. Like it was around three o'clock that the sun would set behind these mountains. But it would be pretty warm out I think we remember getting sunburned out there even on the first and second day of December when was still when we were still there. It was pretty cool. We had a lot of fun being out there. And this is a really beautiful photograph of it that we took early that morning around sunrise. 1:14 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo calm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism, camping, you cool stuff over there. Today I posted a photograph from the way Canyon area, it's like really remote South East Oregon territory. It's cool out there I've only gone out there a couple of times and truthfully we need to be I don't know just needs to be explored much more than what I've put my time into it for but it it's just so remote. It's amazing how it is that they like what we did we came in from Boise we drove down and through that, you're kind of in the Ottawa area as it kind of flows into I guess though what he would flow into the Snake River. Somewhere around Ontario, Oregon. But up above that, I guess the law he goes up toward Winnemucca which is sort of what I understand or at least kind of stretches on there a little bit I was hearing about we were handing to this guy. This kind of eccentric mountain man, when we were in the Molalla Mountains and he had talked to us stopped for a second he was using like hiking pants and you know a jacket with the handkerchief on he was probably in his 60s maybe. And he told us that he was uh I don't know what he was using the things he had been out there for maybe like a month or so maybe, maybe he said like four or five weeks of being out in the mountains. And he was he had his partner going back into town to get provisions when we ran into him but he had a tripod and a camera and he was walking around, or he's on a hike through the ego cap wilderness trying to find these, these trees, this type of pine that's being affected by climate change. As the climate gets warmer in the Alpine area. As the temperature starts to lift in elevation, it changes the types of tree species that can live in the Alpine area there. So I guess it kills them off as the temperature gets higher. For certain types of pine trees. This was like a two-needle pine and a five-needle pine, something like that. But apparently, 3:31 I guess that's what this guy's working on. So he's trying to work on a photo project for this. He talked to us for a while, though, about the law, he came in about the Snake River and about, I guess how before the dams were built, the salmon run with flow up the Columbia River, up the Snake River, up the Elahi river, and you would get salmon run into the interior area of Winnemucca, California or Winnemucca, Nevada, way out there. So it's just really weird how it kind of pulls up these smaller tributaries of the Columbia from the ocean back into the central part of the state of Nevada to grab a chip. But it was interesting to talk to that guy for a few. And then when we were out in the Milwaukee area, it goes on for a long time. But there are a few different sections of it's a big river, right, like so it's it's whole territory of land that sort of meanders through that section of Oregon. But really beautiful landscape out there. What we did is we went to Rome. And then there's like the pillars of Rome, that's this, this area out there but then off from that you can drive south really for quite a while for a while on a dirt road. And then you pull around. And we take like this bumpy little road, like a little access road out to this point. And we did some cool photos of the awapuhi Canyon. It's pretty right there. At least in this spot that we were taking photos of. But it's cool. I guess if you go a little further you can pull into this, this Three Forks region, I think there's a dam, or there maybe there a few dams in Hawaii it seems like that's kind of what I've noticed from it, but there's this backed up area where you can go in And then what I want to do is I want to get a kayak and I want to set up a camping trip and kind of do like a backpacking trip and just throw the backpack in the kayak and then cut across the water you know kind of cut down though the law he river and then pull out on different sides of it you know over a couple of days and do some camping and do some photos but I seemed like a cool place to explore the Three Forks area I guess was that like the trout Creek mountains it's maybe somewhere near there maybe it's not too near to there I guess that whole area stretches out in a pretty expansive way like so. So from the Hawaii section then we drove over to like the burns junction and then you have to drive past that and then you're pretty close to the Alvord Desert. That's when we're driving West right? So we're way out east like near McDermott, Oregon Rome Oregon, I don't know it's way out there here that like like this week in early October right here it's hunting season and I guess I guess that's a huge area for or it's a it's a big district for some of the bigger mule deer and I guess the elk that are out there I guess it's a big area to go hunt elk but I've also heard like the fossil area there's probably plenty of drainage is that that workout is good hunting lands for this time of year for whoever's into that but yeah I've just been working on some photo stuff so yeah, the photo from the Hawaii canyonlands area is posted I put that one up I worked on it for a little while trying to do some editing stuff and but yeah, it's really cool i like the that area I really want to go back there and spend some time there for real you know, that's a tough thing is it's so remote sometimes you kind of move in over a larger amount of landmass that that whole region just sort of would take a week maybe more to kind of get into and explore and I bet there's a lot of new interesting photos and visual things you can see down there there just be a cool adventure to it seems like like such a cool spot that's not really seen by a lot of other people. So I don't know an interesting thing and something to put on the opportunities list for for next season as we come back into the camping zone. But yeah, it seems like you're gonna have a couple months here. Like winter in Oregon always is a bit kind of turn it down into a little bit of a slower time for the outdoor, outdoor adventure outdoor camping travel stuff. 7:21 You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo comm Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. Couple of things I wanted to talk about were some Mac apps today, I've been trying to sort of set up my mac book to be 8:11 is configured with a few more utilities and a few more pieces of software that make it a little more functional for me. So I want to try and talk about those a little bit today. But one of them was I stat menus it was this application that I'd heard about. Maybe over a year ago, I've been using it a lot when I was trying to render some 360 footage and a lot more like video footage, I was just using a computer like the whole day to do that. So this program, I stat menus is really good for adding in a bunch of information like a bunch of system information to your computer right at the top of was the bar at the top, you know, like the Apple menu and your time and your clock and stuff, right? If you get a bunch of a bunch of information about like your disk space, your network speeds, uploads and downloads, your CPU and GPU. It's pretty interesting I like to get into check it out. And kind of with it, you have a bunch of graphs that sort of indicate when or how much how much of a system is going toward that task at that time. So right now I'm doing an upload to Amazon photos to try and get a backup of all my images up there. And I'm looking at the network monitoring. And so it's showing me like a history of my network upload speeds over the last 24 hours. And I see like there's a big dip before like 5am while I was running overnight, and then now it's back up like two maybe 3x what it was before. So it's an interesting kind of monitor like how, how your speeds are that sort of thing when I was running rendering video out it was cool because you can see like the temperature sensor sensors inside of the computer. And in addition to that, you could see like the hard drive space that was left on each few drives including your externals and you can see how fast the CPU and GPU are working. So I've been using this app a lot for kind of a The system process monitoring stuff is cool, I've been enjoying it, it's kind of fun to, to get used to. In addition to that, another one that I'm checking out is probably one that a lot of people have heard of before, but I think it's called magnet magnet, I think and it sort of reproduces the functionality that you get, I think started back in Windows seven, where if you pull a window to the edge of the screen, it'll sort of snap to the edge of that side of the screen or oral snap to be a split pane window. It's kind of interesting how it works. But I like I like how it works on Windows and I have been sort of frustrated in the past that I don't have that kind of utility in the Mac OS system. So I you know, just windows are sort of built to kind of float all over each other. And I did kind of like that part of windows or even back in my experience of working windows, which is in a way I work with a computer now I have like seven windows up right now. And the windows out really always go to full screen application almost all the time. So it's kind of interesting, that workflows, right changes over time. What else I'm working on, oh, Amazon photos, that was another one that I guess I'm I'm kind of going through right now sort of lean into another side of it. But I've been using Amazon photos for a while and the Amazon drive system to have some backups or, or not even really backups for the photos, backups of the photos, I suppose because it's the dngs. And it is the JPEG images, I think you can put video up there also. But that takes up paid storage space. So for photos, you can put as many photos on the cloud as you want with your prime membership. And I think I put like probably almost 100 gigs of photos up there. So it's cool, you do have access to all of your images in that in that library of images you have online, like I can pull it up on my phone in an app, and I can pull it up, you know, on the web or in a few other places. So it just gives me an accessibility to my images I hadn't really had before to every image and that way at least that's kind of cool that you know, I do see that I have access to all of those photographs. Bigger than that I really need to go through and make more functional collections of smaller sections of that. So they have just a lot of the photos I would need to use set up and a high quality system that are more accessible to me that's still that's still a little piece that isn't really quite as tight as I would like it within my photo business. But I've been using Amazon photos to make a backup of everything if almost everything's already there. But it can incremental area. Like as you go, you need to get all the new stuff up there. So I'm trying to put up a bunch of the stuff that I've had for the last couple months when I haven't really been able to put a sync backup to the Amazon photos. cloud backup. The cool thing is though, is I'm trying to work with iCloud a little more in addition to that, and so I've been setting up the iCloud 12:52 Why put it in Finder so I can access my iCloud data there in Finder from multiple computers and from my phone, which is cool. But on my phone in my files app, I was going in there and I put in satellite the Amazon drive application on my phone, I had my files application sort of show that I can go to my Amazon photos files there from my phone. So without even go into the Amazon photos application just from my files app, I can go through and browse all those photos folders on the cloud and then pull up and view those images. I thought that was kind of cool. Or it was just interesting to see like Well, yeah, I can jump to each any data photos that I want back in time because they're all backed up now and more accessible. So So I think it's pretty cool. It's a it's a free service when you pay for a prime membership. So I guess the proper way to say it is it is it is a premium service that is included with your prime membership, which seems to be pretty valuable. A lot of the time. I like the Amazon cloud services and cloud storage services, which I'm trying to get a little more into, like I was mentioned, I think it's I think it's 11 or 12 bucks a year for 100 gigabytes of storage space on Amazon drive. Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, some good links to other other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like this blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back end. Thank you next time
Het is de dag van Khalid! Maandagavond bij Khalid & Sophie: Met Anita Witzier en Wouter Bouwman nemen we de dag door. Zij zijn ons duo van dienst. Michiel Servaes, actievoorzitter van Giro555, reisde af naar het rampgebied in Turkije. Hij is net terug en deelt vanavond aan tafel wat hij daar heeft gezien. Een ijzige sfeer tussen Amerika en China nu de ene na de andere vermeende 'spionageballon' uit de lucht wordt geschoten. Militair historicus Christ Klep helpt ons begrijpen hoe we naar deze stijgende spanningen moeten kijken. Al vier decennia lang brengt Paul van Loon kinderboeken uit. Zijn grote succesnummer Dolfje Weerwolfje is nu uitgekozen voor de campagne 'Geef een boek cadeau'. Van Loon is vanavond bij ons te gast! Vorige week veranderde Utrecht in een mum van tijd in een afvalberg. Deze week volgt o.a. Den Haag. Vuilnisophalers leggen hun werk neer voor betere arbeidsvoorwaarden. Drie stakers zijn bij ons te gast: Jordan, Elahi en Marc.
"伊姆兰(Imran Faisalabad的PTI MPA Khayal Kastro宣誓就职,并成为首席部长Chaudhry Parvez Elahi团队的一部分 拉合尔:一方面,巴基斯坦Tehreek-e-Insaf(PTI)顶级黄铜正在举行会议" " - 启动AD- #TheMummichogBlogoFmalta Amazon Top和Flash Deals(会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://amzn.to/3cqsdjh 仅在一次搜索中比较所有顶级旅行网站,以在酒店库存的最佳酒店交易中找到世界上最佳酒店价格比较网站。 (会员链接 - 如果您通过以下链接购买,您将支持我们的翻译)-https://www.hotelscombined.com/?a_aid=20558 “因此,无论您希望别人对您做什么,也对他们做,因为这是法律和先知。”“ #Jesus #Catholic。 “从受孕的时刻,必须绝对尊重和保护人类的生活。从他生存的第一刻起,必须将一个人承认为拥有一个人的权利 - 其中每种无辜者都是无辜的权利。”天主教教堂的教理2270。 堕胎杀死了两次。它杀死了婴儿的身体,并杀死了母亲的科学。堕胎是深刻的反妇女。它的受害者中有三个季节是女性:一半的婴儿和所有母亲。 流畅的马耳他无线电是马耳他的第一号数字广播电台,演奏您的轻松最爱 - Smooth提供了“无混乱”的混音,吸引了35-59个核心观众,提供柔和的成人现代经典。我们操作一个流行曲目的播放列表,并定期更新。 https://smooth.com.mt/listen/ 关注电报:https://t.me/themummichogblogdotcom Tumblr:https://www.tumblr.com/themummichogblogofmalta blogspot:https://themummichogblogofmalta.blogspot.com/ 结束广告---" "在扎曼公园(Zaman Park)大部分时间决定解散旁遮普邦议会的日期,另一方面,在派对票上选出的MPA周三宣誓就职。 尽管党主席伊姆兰·汗(Imran Khan)后来表达了他的无知,但该事态发生在发生时发生的,当时Faisalabad的PTI MPA Khayal Ahmad Kastro宣誓就职并成为首席部长Chaudhry Parvez Elahi团队的一部分。 CM Chaudhry Parvez Elahi参加了州长众议院Khayal Kastro的宣誓就职仪式,州长Balighur Rehman向新部长宣誓就职。 CM祝贺卡斯特罗,并希望他能很好地履行自己的责任。省长Raja Basharat,首席秘书Abdullah Sumbal,CM Muhammad Khan Bhatti的首席秘书,州长Nabil Awan的首席秘书,秘书和高级官员参加了仪式。 据消息人士称,后来,一名PTI高级领导人与党主席伊姆兰·汗(Imran Khan)分享了反对意见。党的领导人在汗致词上表示了对这一发展的不满,并表示不应该进行扩张。 可汗在回应他的政党成员时说,他不知道卡斯特罗成为部长。 “我以为你被任命为某个部门的负责人,”他在与新部长交谈时说道。 PTI负责人告诉卡斯特罗,尽管发展没有问题,但他成为部长损害了该党的叙述。 这一举动令成千上万的PTI活动家感到惊讶,他们支持伊姆兰·汗(Imran Khan)的立场消除省级议会。伊姆兰·汗(Imran Khan)宣布了将旁遮普邦和开伯尔·帕克赫瓦瓦(Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa)组件溶解的公告,大约两周前,11月26日。但是,将PTI MPA归纳到旁遮普邦柜中立即。 过去,PTI也在集会会员资格上显示了双重标准。 2014年,伊姆兰·汗(Imran Khan)上演了一次静坐,并宣布不返回大会,但他的政党正在定期参加旁注。在南卡纳(Nankana),诺瓦尔(Narowal)和木尔坦(Multan)的地区,人们看到PTI领导人为党派候选人提供了传教。 同时,议会也正在进行立法过程,而宾夕法尼亚州通过了五项法案,其中包括与立法者和前CMS的薪水和特权有关的法案。 https://www.thenew.com.pk/print/1017963-imran-unaware-punjab-cabinet-cabinet-pti-pti-pti-mpa-takes-takes-oath-as-minister "
Clinical Trial Podcast | Conversations with Clinical Research Experts
This is a special episode on risk management. It is important to understand what dictates the work we do as clinical research professionals and how our work fits into the bigger picture of medical product development. This episode serves exactly that purpose. You'll be introduced to ISO 14971 Application of risk management to medical devices and learn about its relationship to ISO 14155 Clinical investigation of medical devices for human subjects — Good clinical practice. You'll also understand key terminology around risks, how to define risk, what's special about clinical studies with respect to risk management, and much more. Our guest today is Bijan Elahi. Bijan has worked in risk management for medical devices for over 29 years at the largest medical device companies in the world, as well as small startups. He is a technical fellow and Medtronic corporate advisor on safety risk management of. medical devices. In this capacity, he offers education and consulting on risk management to all Medtronic business units, worldwide. Bijan is a lecturer at Eindhoven University of Technology (Netherlands), where he teaches risk management to doctoral students in engineering. At the invitation of the FDA, he also teaches a graduate course on medical device risk management at Drexel University in Philadelphia. Bijan is the founder of MedTech Safety, Inc., an education and advisory company. He has educated over 6,500 individuals worldwide. Bijan is a frequently invited speaker at international professional conferences, and is also a contributor to ISO 14971, the international standard on the application of risk management to medical devices. Last but not least, he is the author of Safety Risk Management for Medical Devices, published by Elsevier publishing. Enjoy! Sponsor: This podcast is brought to you by Slope. Slope provides an online eClinical Supply Chain Management (eCSCM) platform for sponsors and research sites collaborating on complex, sample-intensive, early-stage clinical trials. The Slope eCSCM platform reduces clinical trial risks, reigns in costs, improves the productivity of clinical trial collaborators, and increases subject retention by moving the manual, spreadsheet-driven, and error-prone processes used to manage and track clinical supplies and biological samples to a digital platform. To learn more, visit slope.io and ask to speak with a solutions coordinator today.
Be part of our community by joining our Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/thoughtbehindthings In tonight's conversation with our special guest, Moonis Elahi. What was his early life & education like? How was living abroad different from living in Pakistan? When & how did he join his family business? When did he join politics? His win from Gujrat? What are his views on today's voting system? His political revolution from 2007-2022? Why did he support Imran Khan? Why not the Shareefs? What will be the political evolvement based on current events? Why is the nation supporting Khan now? Youth & today's politics? The future & the evolvement of politics? The problems with Pakistan's agricultural industry & its economical value? Does Pakistan need a new constitution? Political point scoring & how will Moonis maneuver through that? Digitization & de-monetization of cash in Pakistan? Why does Bureaucracy need to be efficient? Why isn't there any ERP of the government? The potential pros & cons of South Punjab as a province? Will there be any more provinces beyond South Punjab? Will the structure of his party evolve over time? What's the post-Imran era like? Are NAB, FIA & other systems suffocating or efficient in Pakistan? Will there be any change in the abusive use of power? How does he contextualize the assassination attempt on Imran Khan? How does Moonis envision Pakistan in 2050? Catch this and so much more in tonight's episode. Do not forget to subscribe and press the bell icon to catch on to some amazing conversations coming your way Connect with us: • https://www.instagram.com/thoughtbehindthings • https://www.instagram.com/muzamilhasan Moonis Elahi's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mooniselahi/?hl=en Moonis Elahi's Twitter: https://twitter.com/mooniselahi6 One8nine Media: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC6akyz6EpkwyzBmKh0L2rSQ Support our podcast: https://anchor.fm/syed-muzamil-hasan-zaidi3/support You can also audio stream our podcast on the following platforms: • Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3z1cE7F • Google Podcast: https://bit.ly/2S84VEd • Apple Podcast: https://apple.co/3cgIkfI --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/syed-muzamil-hasan-zaidi3/support
Donate to the podcast directly with the links below. ⚡️Donate any amount from a Bitcoin Lightning wallet ( including Cash.App ) to Billy Newman https://strike.me/billynewman ⚡️Donate $5 from a Bitcoin Lightning wallet to Billy Newman https://yr.link/lightningpay5 ⚡️Donate $11.11 from a Bitcoin Lightning wallet to Billy Newman https://yr.link/lightningpay11 ⚡️Donate $50 from a Bitcoin Lightning wallet to Billy Newman https://yr.link/lightningpay50 *New* You can send a Bitcoin Lightning payment direct from the Cash.app Get a Bitcoin Lightning wallet for free instant transfers https://breez.technology https://muun.com https://bluewallet.io Value streaming payments system enables listeners to send Bitcoin micropayments to podcasters as they listen, in real-time. Start streaming value! It's easy to remember: http://value4value.io/ newpodcastapps.com I use https://fountain.fm If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. If you get value out of the content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. I wanted to talk today about the Internet of Things, some of the utilities of it, and then some of the questions maybe left on answer for the more practical users out there. So considering IoT for a second, the Internet of Things, one of the biggest issues I see with it is the leverage that it takes from the home signal, your security architecture that you have within the network of your house, with a computer with like a desktop computer that was behind a router from your cable company that was running some security system, or even just, you know, like a modern operating system that's able to run some kind of more frequent updates from the manufacturer. That's an internet connected device, when it was just sort of one internet connected device in the home, the security system was really probably even better, even with the the amount of, I guess, information that'd be sloughed off through air of the user. But now, with all of these connected devices, all running to the router, and all sending IP data across the network to remote servers in the cloud, someone else's computer out there, well, then, there's a lot of other vectors of insecurity that start occurring, and especially if some of these elements of IoT aren't really updated as frequently with patches, or security updates that keep systems like Windows 10, or like the the Mac system that you might use secure. These things just take maintenance and development. And a lot of these companies that are smaller, they don't produce those things for a long time, even a lot of the companies that produced IoT devices in 2015, aren't even in business anymore. And therefore, of course, don't support the service. And oftentimes, it means even worse than just having a failure of security, the device function itself doesn't have an IP gateway to access through its service anymore, because the company's out of business and then your item that you paid for, without really, maybe the explicit understanding of a license agreement, continuing the service activation of the device or the company's existence. Now your device doesn't work at all in some instances. So it's quite ludicrous in those situations. I hope you don't get scammed out of money in that. IoT is great. My my echo device is fantastic for calling out timers in the kitchen and turning on and off the lights remotely. With that functionality. It's quite fun to yell out, turn my lights on, turn my lights off, it's great to do that sort of stuff. But outside of that, I wonder how adept some of these skills are going to be. Until we come about with a new iteration of voice recognition that's going to be a little closer to ay ay ay, our actual artificial intelligence, then something more like coding. Like what we seem to experience right now seems like a lot like coding right? 3:21 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo calm, you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the authors section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism on camping, you cool stuff over there. 3:44 Today I thought I posted a photograph from the wahi Canyon area it's like really remote South East Oregon territory is really cool out there. I've only gone out there a couple times and really truthfully we need to be I don't know just needs to be explored much more than what I've put my time into it for but it's just so remote. It's amazing how it is that they like what we did is we came in from Boise we drove down and through that you're kind of in the ilahi area as it kind of flows into I guess though, why he would flow into the Snake River some somewhere around like Ontario Oregon, but but up above that, I guess the law he goes up toward winnemucca which is sort of what I understand or at least kind of stretches on there a little bit I was hearing about we were handing to this guy. This kind of this kind of eccentric mountain man. When we were in the Alaska mountains and he had talked to us he stopped for a second he was using like hiking pants and you know a jacket with a handkerchief on he was probably in his 60s maybe. And he told us that he was uh i don't know what he was using the things he had been out there for maybe like a month or so maybe. Maybe he said like four or five weeks. Of being out in the willow mountains and he was he had his partner going back into town to get provisions when when we ran into him but he had a tripod and a camera and he was walking around or he's on a hike through the ego cap wilderness trying to find these, these trees, his type of pine that's being affected by climate change as the climate gets warmer in the Alpine area. As the temperature starts to lift in elevation, it changes the types of tree species that are able to live in the Alpine area there so I guess it kills them off as the temperature gets higher. For the certain type of pine tree this like was like a two needle pine and a five needle pine, or something like that. But apparently I guess that's that's what this guy's working on. So he's trying to work on a photo project for this. He talked to us for a while, though, about the law, he came in about the Snake River and about, I guess about how before the dams were built, the salmon run with flow up the Columbia River, up the Snake River, up the Elahi river and you would get salmon run all the way into the interior area of winnemucca, California or winnemucca, Nevada, way out there. So it's just really weird how it kind of pull up these smaller tributaries of the Columbia from the ocean all the way back into the central part of the state of Nevada to grab a chip but it was interesting to talk to that guy for a few and then when we were out in the Milwaukee area, it goes on for a really long time, but there's a few different sections of it's a big river, right like so it's a it's a whole territory of land that sort of meanders through that section of Oregon. But really beautiful landscape out there what we did is we went to Rome and then there's like the pillars of Rome, that's this this area out there but then off from that you can drive south really for quite a while for a while 6:39 on a dirt road and then you pull around and we take like this really bumpy little red like a little access road out to this point. And we did some really cool photos of the Hawaii Canyon it's really pretty right there. At least in this spot that we were taking photos of but it's cool I guess if you go a little further you can pull into this this Three Forks region I think there's a dam or there's maybe there's a few dams on the Hawaii it seems like that's kind of what I've noticed from it but there's this backed up area where you can go in now what I want to do is I want to get a kayak and I want to set up a camping trip and and kind of do like a backpacking trip and just throw the backpack in the kayak and then cut across the water you know kind of cut down though the law he river and then pull out on different sides of it you know over a couple of days and do some camping and do some photos but it seemed like a really cool place to to explore the Three Forks area I guess was that like the trout Creek mountains it's maybe somewhere near there maybe it's not too near to there I guess that whole area stretches out in a pretty expansive way like so. So from the Hawaii section then we drove over to like the burns junction and then you have to drive past that and then you're pretty close to the alvord Desert. That's when we're driving West right so we're way out east like near McDermott, Oregon, Rome Oregon, I don't know it's way out there I hear that like like this week in early October right here it's hunting season and I guess I guess that's a huge area for or it's a it's a big district for some of the bigger mule deer and I guess the elk that are out there I guess it's a big area to go hunt elk but I've also heard like the fossil area there's probably plenty of drainage is that the workout is good hunting lands for this time of year for whoever's into that but yeah I've just been working on some photo stuff so yeah the photo from the Hawaii canyonlands area is posted I put that one up I worked on it for a little while trying to do some editing stuff and but yeah it's really cool i like the that area I really want to go back there and spend some time there for real you know, that's a tough thing is it's so remote sometimes you kind of move in over a larger amount of landmass that that whole region just sort of would take a week maybe more to kind of get into and explore and I bet there's a lot of new interesting photos and visual things you can see down there there just be a cool adventure to it seems like like such a cool spot that's not really seen by a lot of other people. So I don't know an interesting thing and something to put on the opportunities list for for next season as we come back into the camping zone. But yeah, it seems like you're gonna have a couple months here. Like winter in Oregon always is a bit kind of turn it down into a little bit of a slower time for the outdoor, outdoor adventure outdoor camping travel stuff. 9:28 You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo calm, you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value for value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support. You can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or if you're more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo 10:08 and I think I just been going through editing a handful of photographs and I want to talk about a few of the ideas that I had around that it was cool I was going through through an archive on a hard drive that I have for a bunch of the images from a lot of the camping that we did during September while we were out this this past year and it was cool working with with the newer Sony cameras like like I talked about a handful of times on this podcast so far and and working by like traveling around and camping and stuff work into the truck and all that so it was really cool but so with a lot of these photos a handful of or you know in a waterways they really haven't been processed to to a final outcome yet so one thing that I was working on was trying to go through some of the photographs from imnaha Oregon and then now we're going to talk about on here a bit was that area that's east of of Joseph and enterprise Oregon as you get up toward Hell's Canyon or yeah I guess up there like right on the Snake River and the Idaho border and it's a cool spot it's a really interesting little town and the geography out there really changes quite quite dramatically like right there out next to the Snake River and out next all those hills and mountains that are over in that area. But it looks like it used to be way more full of water out there just the amount of erosion that you can you can see that seemed like it ran through their to create this giant gorgeous that we see now that's that's a lot of Earth movement that had happened out there. So it's a really cool area out there. But once you get out to him now there's no services, there's no gas, there's no store really, I think there might be some type of thing if you if you could call ahead and knew what to call in head for. But there's a road that cuts out in the m&r River Canyon where the river flows through and then there's a road that cuts up and it would go out toward Hell's Canyon or toward a viewpoint at least have at the top of Hell's Canyon as you look down into the Snake River and the Oregon Idaho divide really cool area up there and definitely worth the drive if you can get out there but at a certain point there's a viewpoint that you're able to kind of walk out to the shows all of the imnaha Canyon and really interesting way just the angle of it I think everything starts to line up really nicely in that way and that's something I've tried to kind of look for us on try to put together some photographs so that area was that was really cool you know it's designed to look really beautiful but I try to get real low and bring in some of the some of the contexts and texture the grass in this dry grassy field that the cast stressed off on a steep slope down the hillside as it went down to the bottom of the ravine or at the bottom of the canyon you know the M the high River Canyon that's out there but the contours of the land and the distance that kind of all flowed into the same vanishing point as as in high river you know sort of worked his way up back towards the horizon but really beautiful area up there and it was cool just sort of focusing the camera and trying to try to frame that up to sort of capture that immense sness of edge to edge what it what it was really like to sort of feel that the way that just the amount of angle there is to that and so one thing that I was working on with this photograph was an A handful that is from from them Nairobi, Kenya was trying to try to work on some some more advanced black and white conversions of these photographs and I know there's there's different different high contrast filters and stuff for for good black and white images and in a lot of ways I could really help a ton of images especially if they're shot right or you know cleanly with good light that you know the files are clean, there's a huge amount you can do with things like that but gosh Yeah, just trying to like go through and add black and white conversions that are a little bit more specific, a little bit more adjusted to some of these photographs, especially ones that have like a structural context to him or a compositional element that's really just defining the landscape by the structure of the land and by the the angle of the land a cow like I try to mess with that a little bit so it was a school working on it now like the the way that it turned out it kind of pulls some of the yellow color out of it which is really just sometimes distracting. And then the strips it down to the kind of sharp angles that come in from the top of the top of the frame to the bottom of the frame. These these other sharp diagonals that are kind of mashed up in parallel with the two so I kind of like that part of the composition elements that come about with when you're you start working on stuff when when you kind of work or just when you kind of start getting a little bit more trained and stuff and when you're able to sort of make things a little bit more easily that says to come around a bit better but but yeah, it was cool working tonight on a handful of photographs from from the Ohio River Canyon and try and make some black and white conversions of them. 15:02 Thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com a few new things up there some stuff on the homepage some good links to other other outbound sources, some links to books and links to some podcasts. Like this blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy numina photo.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back end. Thank you next time
Today, we hear about a study from UC Berkeley that asks Muslims: Is Islamophobia still common 20 years after 9/11? Then, a former San Jose State professor targeted by the FBI decides to spy on himself. And, author Cassandra Hartt reads from her new young adult novel.
Dr. Hossein Elahi Ghomshei, Dr. Nicole Jafari, Dr. Marjan Assefi, Dr. Golnaz Dadjou, , Dr. Peyman Raoofi, Dr. foojan Zeini, Zahra Soroush, Dr. Javid Shaghaghi, --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/radiohekmat20/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/radiohekmat20/support
The Remarkable Journey of a Street Soldier The post Street Soldiers Radio: Khalid Elahi appeared first on Alive and Free.
In association with the University of Texas Press, the third instalment of the My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora special series features, Prof. Mehdi Tavana Okasi and Dr. Roger Sedarat. Mehdi is Professor of Creative Writing at Purchase College of the State University of New York, who was born in Iran and became a refugee of the Iran-Iraq war, which led him to the suburbs of Boston. Roger is a Professor in the Department of English at Queen’s College of the The City University of New York. Roger was born in Normal, Illinois to an Iranian father, and grew up in San Antonio. Instead of talking primarily about their wonderfully powerful pieces, Tommy chats with Mehdi and Roger about what occasioned their coming together: the unexplained suspension of Katherine and Leila's Twitter account. A perplexing and confusing situation that remains unresolved after more than 6 months. Indeed, today's chat is about politicized censorship, the ironies of cancel culture, and of course, their catalysts: a pandemic riding out on the heels of the most incompetent President in American history. From the burden of hybridity, the policing of the imagination, and the absence of space for ambiguity, to the false ideal of whiteness and the commodification of lies, there’s something here for everyone. We begin by discussing the utter disappointment of Katherine and Leila’s twitter account suspension, and Twitter’s refusal to not only reinstate it, but their lack of willingness to actually investigate what happened. Follow your host: @whatsthatdata | @wtncast Follow our guests, Prof. Mehdi Tavana Okasi: @mokasi and Dr. Roger Sedarat: @rogersedarat Follow Katherine, Leila and their contributors (IF THE ACCOUNT IS EVER REINSTATED): @IRANMusings Follow the University of Texas Press: @UTexasPress A very special thanks to Dr. Babak Elahi and The Resonant Freqs for sharing their incredible music for this special series. Dr. Elahi is also a contributor to My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora. Subscribe for updates Email: wtncast@gmail.com Follow us on Apple Music and Spotify Note: revised episode published on evening of March 9, which includes a reference correction to Prof. Okasi's title. Episode listening stat prior to change: 27.
Jarre en Lisa maken kennis met Jaswina Elahi, nummer 38 op de kandidatenlijst voor de Tweede Kamer. Jaswina groeide op in de Hindoestaanse gemeenschap in Den Haag en weet uit eigen ervaring hoe het is om op te groeien met armoede. Ze neemt ons mee naar Laak en vertelt over hoe armoede meer is dan financiële waarde, en wat we er tegen kunnen en moeten doen.In de komende drie afleveringen van Achter de Duinen stellen we je voor aan de Haagse kandidaten op de kandidatenlijst voor de Tweede Kamerverkiezingen. We praten met hen over hun idealen, hun motivatie om voor GroenLinks de Kamer in te willen en hun inspiratiebronnen.Als eerste praten we met Jaswina Elahi. Ze deed onderzoek naar onder andere armoedevraagstukken en de versterking van de positie van kwetsbare groepen, zoals migranten. Daarbij is het voor Jaswina van belang om niet alleen naar de cijfers te kijken, maar ook naar de verhalen van deze mensen zelf te luisteren. Voor Jaswina was het niet gemakkelijk om haar eigen verhaal over opgroeien in armoede te vertellen.“ Ik voelde gewoon hoe het was op dat moment. Als je thuiskomt en je moet leren en je hebt geen gas, licht of water. Het is ijskoud. Ik voel gewoon de wanhoop van mijn moeder op dat moment. ”We praten niet alleen met Jaswina, maar ook met twee mensen die haar inspireren. Eén van hen is Denise Harleman. Denise is overtuigd van de positieve effecten van het basisinkomen. De overheid durft het nog niet aan, maar wachten zag Denise niet zitten. Ze richtte Collectief Kapitaal op, een initiatief waarbij honderd mensen geld doneren om zo vijf gezinnen te kunnen voorzien van een basisinkomen.Ook praten we met Ivan Poornomassy. Ivan nodigde dakloze mensen bij hem thuis uit voor een maaltijd of een kopje koffie. Dit initiatief van Ivan en zijn huisgenoten groeide uiteindelijk uit tot Zout der Aarde—een ontmoetingsplek waar iedereen kan binnenlopen en terecht kan voor een kop koffie of een warme maaltijd. Zowel Denise als Ivan maken zich sterk voor minderbedeelden in onze samenleving. Zij doen dat door uit te gaan van de eigen kracht van mensen en vanuit waardigheid en wederzijds respect. Dat is ook precies waar Jaswina zich voor wil inzetten in de Tweede Kamer.“En wat me heel erg opviel bij Iwan was dat ze in hun interacties heel erg het gevoel geven van gelijkwaardigheid. En dus waardigheid. Wat je ziet is dat armoede meer is dan financiële waarde. Het gaat ook om die menselijke waardigheid,” aldus Jaswina. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What if you could sign into a portal and be immediately redirected to browse clinicians and hospitals willing to have you rotate with them? A system where you are in control of picking whom and where to go to enrich your CV? Well, there is another IMG out there who has created a platform like this to help other international medical students find rotations. Oh, do not be alarmed, even graduates can find observerships here too! Want to know more? Keep reading ... One of the most frequently asked questions I get from IMG's evolve around the topic of USCE (United States Clinical Experience) and how to find and fund clinical rotations. As a result of that, on this episode I invited Dr. Umair Elahi, a hospital medicine physician and previous graduate of Windsor University School Of Medicine, St. Kitts who is now board certified in Internal Medicine. As a student, Dr. Elahi rotated through the Chicago area and personally experienced the pain of seeking out high quality rotations. His mother, also a practicing ER and primary care physician and preceptor for medical students also battled with the opportunistic nature of the foreign medical education "system" and how they unfairly treated attending physicians and IMG's alike. So, what did Dr. Elahi do? He partnered up with 2 other colleagues to create what I call, "the UBER for clinical rotations". I invited them to sponsor this episode so you can learn how they are outing the old and ushering in a new way of obtaining rotations that favors the student. USDoctor.co is a one-stop solution for healthcare professionals. The network holds top-tiered talent from around the globe; while providing you accessibility, streamlined solutions, speedy processes all on one platform. They provide you the technology to bring all healthcare professionals together so IMG's can pick and choose with whom to work with based on their preferences. Listen to this episode to learn how Dr. Elahi is helping IMG's find US Clinical Experience by redefining healthcare for international medical students. Dr. Umair Elahi, MD, is a trained Internal Medicine physician, and a physician executive in healthcare management. Over the past 11 years, Dr. Elahi has taken care of tens of thousands of patients and their families. He has connected with each one on a personal level by gaining their trust, admiration, and respect by providing them the care and treatment, and most importantly providing them the knowledge, education, resources, and tools to better their health. You can sign up today by using this link: https://usdoctors.co/ USDOCTORS.CO does just that and they are sponsoring this episode to share this great resource with you. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/ninalum/support
Machine intelligence is already changing the ways health systems deliver care, measure outcomes, and enter into value-based arrangements. The onset of COVID-19 has only further highlighted the importance of this technology. This episode features Zahoor Elahi, COO of HEALTH[at]SCALE, as he shares how machine learning can be applied to patient navigation, elective surgery prioritization, and other care decisions to help health systems optimize accountable care. This episode is sponsored by HEALTH[at]SCALE.
In this second instalment of our special series, in association with the University of Texas Press, Tommy speaks with Dr. Babak Elahi, Head of Department, Liberal Studies at Kettering University. Dr. Elahi is a special contributor to My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora, not only as the musical talent behind the series' music, but also as author of chapter 25: Errand. Dr. Elahi reflects on his deeply personal piece, which surrounds the days and months leading to the loss of his dear mother. In his travel back to Iran, Babak negotiates navigates cultural, emotional, political, and social tensions that, in more ways than one, offer themselves rather productively as points of reflection about his personal and professional journeys as an Iranian-American living in Flint, Michigan. Dr. Elahi is a rich source of experience and insight about identity, justice, language, honor, belonging, and mobility. Babak is a gracious, articulate, and thoughtful speaker who has a lot to share about the values of family, community, and the importance of basic human connection. Follow your host: @whatsthatdata | @wtncast Follow our guest, Dr. Babak Elahi: @babakelahi Follow Katherine, Leila and their contributors: @IRANMusings Follow the University of Texas Press: @UTexasPress A very special thanks to Dr. Babak Elahi and The Resonant Freqs for sharing their incredible music for this special series. Dr. Elahi is also a contributor to My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora - we look forward to his interview, indeed! Subscribe for updates Email us: wtncast@gmail.com Follow us on Apple Music and Spotify
Happy Hump Day! Renaldo and Bernadette are talking positivity right off the bat! It is good to be positive at the start of our day! We are excited for today's show! We have two long-time OLR friends, Faye Elahi and Jaime-Lee Fraser! Jaime-Lee Fraser After surviving a bombing attack at the age of 22 and before self-help and biohacking became mainstream she discovered the power of vulnerability, positive psychology and the impact it had on human performance. Today, Jaime-Lee is an award winning business growth expert who's created a suite of multi-million dollar businesses, from start up, to acquisition, mergers and exits. Co-founding & partnering with companies in wealth management, real estate projects to tech start ups, supplement & novel ingredients and human performance organizations - she helps brands and teams connect to the company vision and effectively market meaningful projects into experiences that sell, scale and profit. She has a unique and innate ability to build businesses with a 360 degree view that mitigates risk and expands growth through innovative opportunity and powerful connection of its people to develop brands at scale. The Benefits Of Being Confident Confidence is something that is built. Self confidence is about trusting oneself. Bernadette says it is hard to navigate your own confidence when you are around people who are pretentious. Jaime-Lee and Bernadette speculate that overly-confident people might actually lack self confidence deep down. Over-confidence is a turn off when you are trying to size someone up and they are overly confident. A self confident person is someone who is ready to rise up to new challenges! Confidence is also being able to take control of situations, and being able to admit when you are wrong. Confidence and self esteem are different! Self esteem is about our self worth. We can still be confident and work towards something, but have low self esteem and self worth. Faye Elahi Faye Elahi is a non-celiac, gluten-sensitive nutritionist with over 30 years of experience in special needs nutrition. She has helped thousands of individuals with food allergies & Intolerances, Celiac Disease, Attention Deficit Disorder, Hyperactivity Disorder, and Autism Spectrum Disorders. Faye is the author of the popular gluten-free nutrition book, "Ready, Set, Eat!" She has written over 50 articles about the relationships between diet and behavior, sensory integration disorder, gluten, casein, yeast, and toxin-free diets. The Daily Habits to Protect Against Viral Attacks and Boost Your Immune System The more stress we let in, the less we sleep and the less our immune system can fight off bacterias and viruses. So number 1, be careful of your sugar intake! Be a good example to your children by making good food choices! Immunity is something we all need to be vigilant about. Faye says we need to have a blood test done to see what we are deficient on! Faye says that we need to know if we are vitamin D deficient, so a blood test is most easy and attainable. 5,000 iu doses of vitamin d, daily, are what Faye and Bernadette recommends. Exercise the minimum 30 minutes a day! Sleep from 6-8 hours at night. Sleep is key for a healthy brain and body, so turn off you screens before bedtime! Also, connect with friends! Connection with other people is key for a happy life. Finally, meditate! Thank You! A big thank you to our guests, Faye Elahi and Jaime-Lee Fraser! Find more of Jaime-Lee on her website here! Purchase Faye's book here! Thank you to all of our One Life Radio listeners. We truly appreciate each and every one of you, so If you’d like to hear more from One Life Radio, please subscribe to our podcast. If you have any hot ideas or burning questions, email us at info@oneliferadio.com. Bernadette loves hearing from listeners. And, last but never least, thank you to our sponsors. We couldn’t do the show without you; Crazy Water, Sunwarrior, Enviromedica, Flunada,
The pandemic has taken an extra toll on women. And among those disproportionately affected by Covid are Alzheimer's patients—two thirds of whom are women. All which makes the work of UCSF neurologist Dr. Fanny Elahi even more crucial. In this excerpt from 100 Women to Hear, we talk to Dr. Elahi about how she brings a “women's lens” to her work on early detection of degenerative brain disease, including Alzheimer's — and how a women's lens can lead to better health outcomes for all. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Women respond differently to medications and treatments than men do, but most medical research focuses just on men. Two scientists, Dr. Jane Salmon, a professor and associate dean at Weill Cornell College of Medicine, and Dr. Fanny Elahi, a neurologist at the UCSF Memory and Aging Center, are doing groundbreaking work that will result in better health for everyone. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
"In the four decades since the Iranian Revolution in 1979, Iranian-Americans have made sense of their lives and reconciled their sense of belonging and not belonging through writing, first through poetry and memoir in the immediacy of migration and exile, and later in a developing and rich explosion of fiction. In the past decade, we have seen a blossoming of nonfiction writing that reflects complex voices and modern sensibilities and that reveals a broader range of stories and remembrances than ever before." - Katherine Whitney and Leila Emery, Editors, My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora. In association with the University of Texas Press, we are proud to present "My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora: a Special Series on What's That Noise?!" - a collaboration that aims to lend a hand, if only modestly, in further cultivating this ongoing blossoming of otherwise marginalized reflections about life, identity, and belonging from the Iranian diaspora. In this first episode, Tommy chats with the book's editors about their project, of how it came together, its sources of inspiration, its aims, and its aspirations. We trust you will find, just as Tommy did, that My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora is a vitally important contribution to an often overlooked, ongoing struggle - particularly in a time filled with system political intolerance, exceptionalism, and racism; in a world of increased distancing, My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora brings us closer together. Stay tuned for future episodes that interview contributors to this excellent book, which we aim to bring to you every month. On behalf of Katherine, Leila, their wonderful contributors and the University of Texas Press, thank you for opening your heart and mind to these powerful stories. Follow your host: @whatsthatdata | @wtncast Follow Katherine, Leila and their contributors: @IRANMusings Follow the University of Texas Press: @UTexasPress A very special thanks to Dr. Babak Elahi and The Resonant Freqs for sharing their incredible music for this special series. Dr. Elahi is also a contributor to My Shadow Is My Skin: Voices from the Iranian Diaspora - we look forward to his interview, indeed! Subscribe for updates Email us: wtncast@gmail.com Follow us on Apple Music and on Spotify
Listen in as Marcel and Khalid have a conversation about the unspoken "Hood Virus" that infects inner city children on a daily basis. Khalid also talks about the impacts of unprotected social relationships. Marcel listens as his guest walks him through the first four steps into San Quentin State Prison. The two men share what it was like to grow up in their families, their mutual respect for their fathers and for one another. Khalid reveals what it means for him to be a: Master Motivator. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/iamnecessary/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/iamnecessary/support
Alzheimer’s might be considered a "women's disease." Did you know that women make up 2/3 of new Alzheimer’s patients and comprise 60% of unpaid caregivers for those with the disease? And the Alzheimer's epidemic is just one example of why there needs to be a "women's lens" on medical research. Dr. Jane Salmon and Dr. Fanny Elahi join Kim Azzarelli to discuss why adding more women to medical research — both as scientists and subjects — is urgent for everyone’s health. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
A Prayer to Allah for forgiveness and redemption..
How many times have you looked at your phone today? Artist Mat Collishaw draws parallels between behavioural experiments on birds and the highly addictive nature of social media. And Artist Hasan Elahi explains how a false investigation led to a 15 years project, sharing his personal data and images with the FBI and public. Artists explore the non-stop nature of modern life. Mat Collishaw (https://matcollishaw.com/) ’s work The Machine Zone was inspired by the behavioural experiments of American psychologist B.F. Skinner (1904 – 1990) whose work is widely referenced in relation to the algorithms which drive interactions on social media. Using birds and other small mammals, Skinner’s ‘operant conditioning chamber’ investigated the subconscious primal side of the brain involved in motivated behaviours. He demonstrated that random rewards create a constant uncertainty that encourages a behavioural loop. Collishaw worked with animatronics designer Adam Keenan to create these mechanised pigeons exhibiting obsessive repetitive behaviour. Skinner’s ghost has persisted into the modern day, a quiet spectre among our statuses, likes, comments, and shares. Today an average user spends 1/7th of their waking lives on social platforms, and we owe some of this apparent addiction to Skinner’s research. His work followed on from philosopher Jeremy Bentham’s research into human motivation (‘the utilitarian self’ as pleasure seeking and pain avoiding) as demonstrated in Bentham’s ‘Table of the Springs of Action’. Over the last fifteen years Hasan Elahi (http://elahi.gmu.edu/) has generated online systems to share personal data and photographic evidence of his whereabouts at all times with the FBI, as a result of their mistakenly putting him on a no-fly list after the events of 9–11. In his work, Scorpion W2, 2019 he mines this ongoing personal database to create large immersive collages picturing all the meals he’s eaten, beds he’s slept in and airports he’s flown to. The overall pattern is the current operational camouflage pattern of the American military – standardized across all divisions, units and countries in 2019 – but Elahi has changed the colours to those that feature in the test pattern shown during a U.S. television emergency broadcast. Featuring contributions from exhibition curator Sarah Cook and Jonathan Reekie, co-curator of 24/7 and Director of Somerset House. The exhibition 24/7 - A Wake Up Call For Our Non-Stop World (https://www.somersethouse.org.uk/whats-on/247) at Somerset House takes visitors on a multi-sensory journey from the cold light of the moon to the fading warmth of sunset through five themed zones and contains over 50 multi-disciplinary works that will provoke and entertain. The exhibition runs at Somerset House until 23 February 2020. Producer: Eleanor Scott Sound Design: Harry Murdoch Mixed by Nick Ryan
This week Elahi speaks to one of our Adept students Yahel about his experiences growing up in India, how he came to be on the path, and what led him to Drukama. Please email radio@drukama.com with any questions or comments. We would love to hear from you. The teachings website is now open for limited registration. Please come and visit us at drukama.com. Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drukamateachings Find us on YouTube: https://goo.gl/Lrhuxm Find us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/drukamat Find us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drukama_teachings/
Teorier av Edward Said och Sara Ahmed Konstverk vi pratar om: Britta Marakatt Labba, Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Katarina Pirak Sikku, Hasan M. Elahi
Inspired by family friend, the late great Mohammed Ali, special guest AJ Elahi shares how he helps clients "level up" their lives with his new innovative program. *** SFP 104 Show Notes *** Top Take away from AJ Elahi 1. Examine your life. Where can you level up? Find AJ below https://www.ankhfitness4life.com/ https://www.instagram.com/ankhfitness/ https://www.facebook.com/ankhfitness/ Get Involved Got an idea or story to share? We are always on the lookout for inspirational stories and news relating to health and fitness. Email us if you have something neat on your mind. If you have a fitness/health related or coaching questions contact us at hello@solanofit.com. Subscribe on iTunes https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/solanofit-the-podcast/id1438930036 or the podcast player of your choice. Thank you! Follow us on www.facebook.com/solanofit Follow us on www.instagram.com/solanofit
Big Blend Radio conversation with Hasan Elahi, recent sousveillance artist-in-residence at Hawai'i Volcanoes National Park, and Tanya Ortega - Founder of National Parks Arts Foundation (NPAF). Hasan is an interdisciplinary artist working with issues in surveillance, privacy, migration, citizenship, technology, and the challenges of borders. Watch his TED Talk Here: https://www.ted.com/talks/hasan_elahiMore about the Hasan at www.Elahi.org. More about the National Parks Arts Foundation at www.NationalParksArtsFoundation.org Featured music is Hi'ilawe by slack key guitarist, Makana - www.MakanaMusic.com
When it comes to health and wellness, it can feel like you are navigating a maze. One person says fat is the devil while another says a full scoop of butter in your coffee is the way to go. Enter Raiyah Elahi. As a certified health coach, Raiyah’s goal is to take the confusion out of health and wellness. She creates personalized regimens to fit her client’s needs while also helping them to focus on treating the mind, body and soul as one. Raiyah’s passion for overall wellbeing is what lead her to create two wellness based businesses. The first, Flourish Mind and Body, is Raiyah’s wellness consulting business. And the second, Food for Tiny Thoughts, is geared toward children and helping them to develop and learn healthy habits at a young age. Raiyah is a wealth of knowledge and a networking queen. Here are some of the things we discuss: - How her Pakistani heritage impacted her childhood and increased her desire for education- How your health changes when you start viewing the body as a whole: mental, emotional and physical health all connected - Raiyah’s tips for helping you stay committed to your health plan-The different factors that effect weight-loss - The need Raiyah saw in the health industry that lead her to start her consulting firm “Flourish Mind and Body”- The power of networking and Raiyah’s tips for increasing your confidence at networking events- Raiyah’s passion for re-educating children on what healthy food is MORE ABOUT RAIYAH: The Center for Internal and Integrative Medicine Food For Tiny Thoughts Books mentioned: How Successful Peopel Think by John Maxwell
Talk about a rap sheet. In an arresting fundraising event, Story Story Night did some solid time at the Old Idaho Penitentiary on September 26, 2017 with live music from The Storytellers. The bull pen spotlight landed on featured escapee and resident artist at Surel's Place, Hasan Elahi, an American artist whose name was added (by mistake) to the US government’s watch list after September 11th. His arresting story got him stints on This American Life, The Colbert Report, TED & more.
http://www.nooresunnat.com/Audio/Baitul%20Mukarram/Mufti%20Taqi%20Usmani/Ashaar/Elahi%20Teri%20Chokhat%20Par.mp3
http://wr5.aswatalislam.net/data2012/Naats//Jalwa%20Jana%20-%20Junaid%20Jamsheed/Elahi%20Teri%20Choukhat%20(www.aswatalislam.net).mp3
Amina Elahi of Blue Sky Innovation joins Steve and Johnnie to talk about surprising new toys this season. Then, Johnny Jet gives his daily travel tips, and Scott Kleinberg of #SoSocial joins in studio to fill you in on what’s flowing through social media today.
Mohabbat E Elahi Naqshbandi Ijtema 22 3 2014 Peer Zulfiqar Ahmad
As far as spirituality goes, a purely theoretical approach to principles, detached from actual practice, will not do. Not only is it inefficient, it constitues a genuine impediment to spiritual progress: that of smugness or spiritual “superioritism”. Professor Bahram Elahi spells this out in the following excerpt from a lecture given at the Sorbonne (Paris) in November 2011. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/category/lectures/
En matière de spiritualité, l’approche purement théorique des principes, coupée de la pratique, n’est pas seulement inefficace, elle constitue aussi un obstacle bien réel au progrès spirituel : celui de la suffisance ou du « supérioritisme » spirituel. Le professeur Bahram Elahi en expose les raisons dans cet extrait d’une conférence prononcée en Sorbonne en novembre 2011. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/la-spiritualite-in-vivo/
Ostad Elahi used to define his teachings as a new medicine of the soul: one that is adapted to the true nature of human beings and adheres to the law of causality governing both their spiritual and material lives. The spirituality he practiced was natural spirituality, and he viewed the process of spiritual perfection as a curriculum. The excerpts presented here are drawn from a lecture given at the Sorbonne in March 2011, in which Prof. Bahram Elahi revisits various aspects of Ostad Elahi’s philosophy. Rephrasing them in a simple and direct manner, he relates these points to fundamental questions and examines them from a rational standpoint. Is it enough to have faith and become acquainted with the fundamental principles of spirituality to secure one’s spiritual future? That is the question addressed in the following excerpt by Prof. Bahram Elahi who also touches upon the general meaning of our life on Earth as well as the undeniable link between spiritual progress and individual effort. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/a-few-fundamental-principles-excerpt-no-4-of-a-lecture-by-b-elahi-md/
Ostad Elahi définissait son enseignement comme une nouvelle médecine de l’âme : une médecine adaptée à la nature réelle de l’homme, conforme à la causalité qui règle sa vie spirituelle comme sa vie matérielle. La spiritualité qu’il pratiquait était la spiritualité naturelle ; il concevait le perfectionnement spirituel à l’image d’un cycle d’études. Dans une conférence prononcée en Sorbonne en mars 2011 et dont nous donnons ici quelques extraits, Bahram Elahi revient sur ces différents aspects de la pensée de son père. Il les reformule de façon simple et directe en dégageant, à chaque fois, les questions fondamentales qu’ils recouvrent, et ce qui les justifie d’un point de vue rationnel. Suffit-il d’avoir la foi et de prendre connaissance des principes fondamentaux de la spiritualité pour assurer son avenir spirituel ? C’est la question qu’aborde Bahram Elahi dans l’extrait qui suit. Elle lui donne l’occasion de revenir sur la signification générale de notre existence terrestre, mais aussi sur le lien indéfectible qui existe entre le progrès spirituel et l’effort individuel. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/conference-de-b-elahi-extrait-n%C2%B04-quelques-principes-fondamentaux/
Ostad Elahi used to define his teachings as a new medicine of the soul: one that is adapted to the true nature of human beings and adheres to the law of causality governing both their spiritual and material lives. The spirituality he practiced was natural spirituality, and he considered the process of spiritual perfection to resemble an academic curriculum. The excerpts presented here are drawn from a lecture given at the Sorbonne in March 2011, in which Prof. Bahram Elahi revisits various aspects of Ostad Elahi’s philosophy. Rephrasing them in a simple and direct manner, he relates these points to fundamental questions and identifies how they are justified from a rational standpoint. To begin with, who are we? What is this self that we identify with? And what prevents us, in practice, from connecting to it? These questions relate to the issue of the soul and the fight against the imperious self. Next, why are we here? What is the meaning of this earthly life? These questions relate to the idea of spiritual development as a cognitive process: the process of perfecting our ordinary reason into sound reason. As the discussion unfolds, an original definition of spirituality begins to take shape and the exact role of connecting to the divine, of faith and emotions, becomes clear. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/sound-reason-excerpt-no-3-of-a-lecture-by-b-elahi-md/
Ostad Elahi définissait son enseignement comme une nouvelle médecine de l’âme : une médecine adaptée à la nature réelle de l’homme, conforme à la causalité qui règle sa vie spirituelle comme sa vie matérielle. La spiritualité qu’il pratiquait était la spiritualité naturelle ; il concevait le perfectionnement spirituel à l’image d’un cycle d’études. Dans une conférence prononcée en Sorbonne en mars 2011 et dont nous donnons ici quelques extraits, Bahram Elahi revient sur ces différents aspects de la pensée de son père. Il les reformule de façon simple et directe en dégageant, à chaque fois, les questions fondamentales qu’ils recouvrent, et ce qui les justifie d’un point de vue rationnel. Pour commencer, qui sommes-nous ? Quel est réellement ce moi auquel nous nous identifions ? Et qu’est-ce qui nous empêche, concrètement, de nous connecter à lui ? C’est le thème de l’âme et de la lutte contre le soi impérieux. Ensuite, pourquoi sommes-nous ici, quelle est la signification de la vie terrestre ? C’est le thème du développement spirituel comme processus cognitif, perfectionnement de la « raison saine ». Au fil de la discussion se dessine une définition originale de la spiritualité. Se précise également la place qu’y tient la connexion au divin, ou encore la foi et les émotions. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/conference-de-b-elahi%e2%80%93extrait-n%c2%b03-la-raison-saine/
Ostad Elahi used to define his teachings as a new medicine of the soul: one that is adapted to the true nature of human beings and adheres to the law of causality governing both their spiritual and material lives. The spirituality he practiced was natural spirituality, and he considered the process of spiritual perfection to resemble an academic curriculum. The excerpts presented here are drawn from a lecture given at the Sorbonne in March 2011, in which Prof. Bahram Elahi revisits various aspects of Ostad Elahi’s philosophy. Rephrasing them in a simple and direct manner, he relates these points to fundamental questions and identifies how they are justified from a rational standpoint. To begin with, who are we? What is this self that we identify with? And what prevents us, in practice, from connecting to it? These questions relate to the issue of the soul and the fight against the imperious self. Next, why are we here? What is the meaning of this earthly life? These questions relate to the idea of spiritual development as a cognitive process: the process of perfecting our ordinary reason into sound reason. As the discussion unfolds, an original definition of spirituality begins to take shape and the exact role of connecting to the divine, of faith and emotions, becomes clear. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/the-soul-and-the-conscious-self-bahram-elahi/
Ostad Elahi used to define his teachings as a new medicine of the soul: one that is adapted to the true nature of human beings and adheres to the law of causality governing both their spiritual and material lives. The spirituality he practiced was natural spirituality, and he considered the process of spiritual perfection to resemble an academic curriculum. The excerpts presented here are drawn from a lecture given at the Sorbonne in March 2011, in which Prof. Bahram Elahi revisits various aspects of Ostad Elahi’s philosophy. Rephrasing them in a simple and direct manner, he relates these points to fundamental questions and identifies how they are justified from a rational standpoint. To begin with, who are we? What is this self that we identify with? And what prevents us, in practice, from connecting to it? These questions relate to the issue of the soul and the fight against the imperious self. Next, why are we here? What is the meaning of this earthly life? These questions relate to the idea of spiritual development as a cognitive process: the process of perfecting our ordinary reason into sound reason. As the discussion unfolds, an original definition of spirituality begins to take shape and the exact role of connecting to the divine, of faith and emotions, becomes clear. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/the-purpose-of-our-existence-excerpt-no-2-of-a-lecture-by-bahram-elahi-md/
This is a short excerpt from the French TV program “Les Chemins de la Foi” (The Routes of Faith) broadcasted on March 27, 2011. The significance of Ostad Elahi and Malek Jân Nemati’s spiritual heritage is discussed during an interview of two specialists of the mystical traditions of Iran: Leili Anvar, Associate Professor of Persian literature at the Institut National des Langues et des Civilisations Orientales (Paris), and Christian Jambet, islamologist and Professor of philosophy (Paris). http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/ostad-elahi-a-spiritual-heritage/
Ostad Elahi définissait son enseignement comme une nouvelle médecine de l’âme : une médecine adaptée à la nature réelle de l’homme, conforme à la causalité qui règle sa vie spirituelle comme sa vie matérielle. La spiritualité qu’il pratiquait était la spiritualité naturelle ; il concevait le perfectionnement spirituel à l’image d’un cycle d’études. Dans une conférence prononcée en Sorbonne en mars 2011 et dont nous donnons ici quelques extraits, Bahram Elahi revient sur ces différents aspects de la pensée de son père. Il les reformule de façon simple et directe en dégageant, à chaque fois, les questions fondamentales qu’ils recouvrent, et ce qui les justifie d’un point de vue rationnel. Pour commencer, qui sommes-nous ? Quel est réellement ce moi auquel nous nous identifions ? Et qu’est-ce qui nous empêche, concrètement, de nous connecter à lui ? C’est le thème de l’âme et de la lutte contre le soi impérieux. Ensuite, pourquoi sommes-nous ici, quelle est la signification de la vie terrestre ? C’est le thème du développement spirituel comme processus cognitif, perfectionnement de la « raison saine ». Au fil de la discussion se dessine une définition originale de la spiritualité. Se précise également la place qu’y tient la connexion au divin, ou encore la foi et les émotions. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/conference-de-b-elahi-extrait-n%c2%b02-le-but-de-notre-existence/
Ostad Elahi définissait son enseignement comme une nouvelle médecine de l’âme : une médecine adaptée à la nature réelle de l’homme, conforme à la causalité qui règle sa vie spirituelle comme sa vie matérielle. La spiritualité qu’il pratiquait était la spiritualité naturelle ; il concevait le perfectionnement spirituel à l’image d’un cycle d’études. Dans une conférence prononcée en Sorbonne en mars 2011 et dont nous donnons ici quelques extraits, Bahram Elahi revient sur ces différents aspects de la pensée de son père. Il les reformule de façon simple et directe en dégageant, à chaque fois, les questions fondamentales qu’ils recouvrent, et ce qui les justifie d’un point de vue rationnel. Pour commencer, qui sommes-nous ? Quel est réellement ce moi auquel nous nous identifions ? Et qu’est-ce qui nous empêche, concrètement, de nous connecter à lui ? C’est le thème de l’âme et de la lutte contre le soi impérieux. Ensuite, pourquoi sommes-nous ici, quelle est la signification de la vie terrestre ? C’est le thème du développement spirituel comme processus cognitif, perfectionnement de la « raison saine ». Au fil de la discussion se dessine une définition originale de la spiritualité. Se précise également la place qu’y tient la connexion au divin, ou encore la foi et les émotions. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/conference-de-b-elahi-extrait-n%c2%b01-lame-et-le-moi-conscient/#more-5118
After completing his surgical training at the University of Montpellier in France, Prof. Elahi led a distinguished clinical and academic career as professor of pediatric surgery, serving as dean of several medical schools and publishing various medical textbooks. Parallel to his professional career, he has concurrently pursued the study of ethics and spirituality for the past forty years, following the path traced by his father, Ostad Elahi. This has resulted in the publication of several books, including Medicine of the Soul and The Path of Perfection. Prof. Elahi regularly lectures in Europe and North America. In October 2010, his talk in Paris focused on two key concepts in Ostad Elahi’s thought: self-knowledge and Perfection. Self-knowledge refers to active, concrete, in vivo knowledge of the powers that constitute our being, a knowledge that becomes more refined through the practice of true ethics, based on correct divine principles. According to Prof. Elahi, everything else results from this, including the level of development reached by the “metabrain”, as well as the understanding and freedom that one can enjoy here and in the other world. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/self-knowledge-and-perfection-a-lecture-by-bahram-elahi/
Conférence du mois d’octobre 2010, à Paris, consacrée à deux notions-clés de la pensée d’Ostad Elahi : la connaissance de soi et le perfectionnement spirituel. La connaissance de soi est une connaissance active, concrète, in vivo, des puissances qui composent notre être ; une connaissance qui s’aiguise et s’affine à travers la pratique de l’éthique véritable, fondée sur des principes divins justes. Bahram Elahi montre de quelle manière tout le reste en découle : le niveau de développement atteint par le « métacerveau », mais aussi le degré de compréhension et de liberté dont chacun peut bénéficier ici-bas comme dans l’au-delà. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/bahram-elahi-connaissance-de-soi-et-perfection/#more-4868
Interview with Jean During, orientalist, musicologist and research director at The National Centre for Scientific Research (Centre national de la recherche scientifique or CNRS). This specialist in Central Asia and author of numerous books here describes the particular characteristics of Ostad Elahi’s music, putting it in relation with his spiritual teachings. The questions examined are the following: Why is Ostad Elahi recognized as the “master” of tanbur? To what extent and how did he reinvent its musical tradition? What place did music have for Ostad Elahi? Can his music be qualified as “meditative”? Is Ostad Elahi’s spiritual teaching as singular as his music? The views presented in this brief interview, are more extensively developed by Jean During in The Spirit of Sounds: The Unique Art of Ostad Elahi (L’Âme des sons : l’art unique d’Ostad Elahi), 2003 by Rosemont Publishing and Printing Corporation. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/category/interviews/
Rights and Duties: here are two concepts that seem to be excluded from our every day modern lives, at least the latter. With respect to rights, we instantly think of human rights. On duties there isn’t much said, almost nothing, the concept repels due to it’s constraining aspects, upsetting our sense of freedom; we would rather bring it up indirectly through notions such as deontology, civil duties, eco-responsibility or judicial responsibility. The lecture on the duties of human beings deals with the notion of rights and duties through an existential perspective, as a return to the source of the rights itself. By creation, each human being or other, acquires the right to return to its origin, to the divine source, according to a path that Ostad Elahi calls path of perfection. However to obtain this right, human beings must accomplish a certain number of duties. http://www.e-ostadelahi.com/eoe-en/category/lectures/
Droits et devoirs : voilà deux notions qui paraissent en dehors de la modernité, au moins pour la seconde. Pour ce qui est des droits, on pense immédiatement aux droits de l’homme, et plus récemment à toute une série de droits dits « opposables » et qui font débat. Des devoirs on ne dit rien, ou presque rien, le mot répugne par son caractère contraignant, contrariant notre goût pour la liberté ; et on préfère l’évoquer indirectement à travers des notions comme la déontologie, la citoyenneté, l’éco-responsabilité ou la responsabilité juridique, etc. La conférence Les devoirs de l’homme aborde les notions de droits et de devoirs sous l’angle existentiel, comme un retour aux sources même du droit. Par création, toute être, humain ou autre, dispose du droit de retourner à son origine, la source divine, selon un cheminement qu’Ostad Elahi appelle le perfectionnement. Mais pour obtenir ce droit, l’être humain doit accomplir un certain nombre de devoirs… http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/category/conferences/
Entretien avec Jean During, orientaliste et musicologue, directeur de recherches au CNRS. Ce spécialiste des traditions d’Asie intérieure, auteur d’une dizaine d’ouvrages, décrit dans ce document les traits singuliers de la musique d’Ostad Elahi, en la mettant en relation avec son enseignement spirituel. Les questions abordées sont les suivantes : Pourquoi Ostad Elahi est-il reconnu comme le « maître » du tanbur ? En quoi a-t-il réinventé sa tradition musicale ? Quelle était la place de la musique pour Ostad Elahi ? Sa musique peut-elle être qualifiée de « méditative » ? L’enseignement spirituel d’Ostad Elahi est-il aussi singulier que sa musique ? Les vues présentées dans ce court entretien ont été plus largement développées par Jean During dans L’Âme des sons : l’art unique d’Ostad Elahi, Éditions Le Relié, 2001. http://www.e-ostadelahi.fr/eoe-fr/category/entretiens/