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Sengoku Daimyo's Chronicles of Japan
The Sovereign of Heavenly Wisdom

Sengoku Daimyo's Chronicles of Japan

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 35:39


Following the death of Takara Hime, and the war on the Korean peninsula, Naka no Ōe was taking hold--or perhaps keeping hold--of the reins of government.  He wasn't finished with his changes to the government.  He also had a new threat--the Tang Empire.  They had destroyed Yamato's ally, Baekje, and defeated the Yamato forces on the peninsula.  While the Tang then turned their attention to Goguryeo, Yamato could easily be next.  The Tang had a foothold on the Korean peninsula, so they had a place to gather and launch a fleet, should they wish to bring Yamato into their empire. For more, especially to follow along with some of the names in this episode, check out our blogpost at https://sengokudaimyo.com/podcast/episode-125     Rough Transcript Welcome to Sengoku Daimyo's Chronicles of Japan.  My name is Joshua and this is episode 125: The Sovereign of Heavenly Wisdom The people of Baekje looked around at the strange and unfamiliar land.  They had fled a wartorn country, and they were happy to be alive, but refugee status was hardly a walk in the park.  Fortunately, they still knew how to farm the land, even if their homeland was hundreds of miles away, across the sea, and occupied by hostile forces.  Here, at least, was a land where they could make a home for themselves. Some of them had to wonder whether this was really permanent.  Was their situation just temporary until their kingdom was restored?  Or were they truly the last people of Baekje, and what would that mean? Either way, it would mean nothing if they didn't work the land and provide for their families.  And so, as with displaced people everywhere, they made the best of the situation.  They had been given land to work, and that was more than they could have asked for.  They might never return to Baekje, but perhaps they could keep a little of it alive for themselves and their descendants. Greetings, everyone, and welcome back.  Last episode we talked about the downfall of Baekje and the defeat of the Yamato forces at the battle of Hakusukinoe, also known as the Battle of Baekgang, in 663.  And yet, something else happened as well: the sovereign, Takara Hime, aka Saimei Tennou, died as the Yamato forces were setting out.  Immediately Prince Naka no Oe took the reins of government.  He would be known to later generations as Tenji Tennou, with Tenji meaning something like “Heavenly Wisdom”. Now Prince Naka no Oe has been in the forefront of many of our episodes so far, so I'd like to start this episode out with a recap of what we've heard about him so far, as all of this is important to remind ourselves of the complex political situation.  I'm going to be dropping – and recapping – a lot of names, but I'll have many of the key individuals listed on the podcast website for folks who want to follow along.  I would note that this episode is going to be a summary, with some extrapolation by me regarding what was actually happening.  Just remember that history, as we've seen time and again, is often more messy and chaotic than we like, and people are more complex than just being purely good or evil.  People rarely make their way to the top of any social hierarchy purely through their good deeds.  To start with, let's go back to before the year 645, when Naka no Oe instigated a coup against Soga no Iruka and Soga no Emishi.  In the Isshi Incident, covered in Episode 106, Naka no Oe had Soga no Iruka murdered in court, in front of his mother, Takara Hime, when she sat on the throne the first time.  And yet, though he could have taken the throne when she abdicated in apparent shock, he didn't.  Instead, he took the role of “Crown Prince”, but this wasn't him just sitting back.  In fact, evidence suggests that he used that position to keep a strong hand on the tiller of the ship of state. Prior to the Isshi Incident of 645, the rule of the Yamato sovereign had been eroded by noble court families.  These families, originally set up to serve the court and its administration, had come to dominate the political structures of the court.  The main branch of the Soga family, in particular, had found its way to power through a series of astute political marriages and the support of a new, foreign religion:  Buddhism.  Soga no Iname, Emishi's grandfather, had married his daughters to the sovereigns, and thus created closer ties between the Soga and the royal line.  He also helped ensure that the offspring of those marriages would be the ones to take over as future sovereigns.  Soga no Iname, himself took the position of Oho-omi, the Great Omi, or the Great Minister, the head of the other ministerial families.  As Prime Minister, he held great sway over the day-to-day running of the court, and execution of much of the administration.  Much of this was covered in previous episodes, but especially episodes 88, 90, 91, 92, 95, 98, 99, and 103. Soga no Umako, who succeeded his father as Oho-omi, was joined in his effort to administer the government by his grand-nephew, Prince Umayado, also known as Shotoku Taishi, son of Tachibana no Toyohi, aka Youmei Tennou, and thus grandson of Umako's sister, Kitashi-hime, and the sovereign known as Kimmei Tennou.  Umayado's aunt, sister to Tachibana no Toyohi, was Kashikiya Hime, or Suiko Tennou.  The three of them:  Soga no Umako, Prince Umayado, and Kashikiya Hime, together oversaw the development of Yamato and the spread of Buddhism.  Buddhism was also controversial at first, but they turned it into another source of ritual power for the state—ritual power that Soga no Umako, Prince Umayado, and even Kashikiya Hime were able to harvest for their own use. Unfortunately, the Crown Prince, Umayado, died before Kashikiya hime, suddenly leaving open the question of who would take the throne.  Soga no Umako himself, passed away two years before Kashikiya Hime.  When she in turn passed away, there was another struggle for the throne, this time between the descendants of Crown Prince Umayado and Soga no Umako.  Eventually, Soga no Umako's son and heir, Soga no Emishi, made sure that a more pliant sovereign, Prince Tamura, would take the throne, and Prince Umayado's own son, Prince Yamashiro no Oe, was cut out of the succession.  Soga no Emishi, serving as prime minister, effectively ran things much as his father had.  When Tamura diedhis queen, Takara Hime, took the throne, rather than passing it back to Umayado's line—no doubt with Emishi's blessing.  He was careful, however, not to provoke direct action against Yamashiro no Oe, possibly due to the reverence in which Yamashiro's father, Prince Umayado, aka the Buddhist Saint Shotoku Taishi, was held.  Meanwhile, Emishi appears to have been cultivating his grandson by way of Prince Tamura, Furubito no Oe, to eventually succeed to the throne, trying to duplicate what his own father Umako and even grandfather had been able to accomplish. Soga no Emishi's son, Soga no Iruka, was not quite so temperate, however.   Who would have thought that growing up at the top of the social hierarchy might make one feel a bit arrogant and entitled?   When Soga no Emishi was ill, Soga no Iruka took over as Prime Minister, and he didn't just stand back.  He decided that he needed to take out Furubito no Oe's competition, and so he went after Yamashiro no Oe and had him killed. Unfortunately for him, he apparently went too far.  There were already those who were not happy with the Soga family's close hold on power—or perhaps more appropriately, this particular line of the Soga family.  This kind of behavior allowed a group of discontented royals and nobility to gain support. According to the popular story recounted in the Nihon Shoki, the primary seed of resistance started with a game of kickball, or kemari.  Nakatomi no Kamako, aka Nakatomi no Kamatari, was the scion of his house, which was dedicated to the worship of the traditional kami of Yamato.  The Nakatomi were ritualists: in charge of chanting ritual prayers, or norito, during court ceremony.  This meant that their powerbase was directly challenged by the increasing role of Buddhism, one of the Soga patriarchs' key influences on the political system. Kamatari was feeling out the politics of the court, and seemed to be seeking the support of royal family members who could help challenge the powerful Soga ministers.  He found that support in two places.  First, in Prince Karu, brother to Takara Hime, the current sovereign, who had been on the throne ever since her husband, Tamura, had passed away.  And then there was the Prince Katsuraki, better known to us, today, as Prince Naka no Oe.  A game of kemari, where a group of players tried to keep a ball in the air as long as they could, using only their feet, was a chance to get close to the Prince.  When Naka no Oe's shoe flew off in the middle of the match, Kamatari ran over to retrieve it.  As he offered the shoe back to its owner, they got to talking, and one of the most impactful bromances in Yamato history was born. The two ended up studying together.  The unification of the Yellow River and Yangzi basin regions under the Sui and Tang, and the expansion of the Silk Road, had repercussions felt all the way across the straits in Yamato.  Naka no Oe and Kamatari were both avid students and were absorbing all that the continent had to throw at them about philosophy and good governance.  As is so often the case, it seems like idealistic students were the fertile ground for revolutionary new thoughts. There were problems implementing their vision, however.  Although the Nihon Shoki claims that Naka no Oe was the Crown Prince, that honor was probably given to Prince Furubito no Oe, who would have no doubt perpetuated the existing power structures at court.  This is something that the Chroniclers, or perhaps those before them, glossed over and may have even tried to retconned, to help bolster the case that Naka no Oe was actually working for the common good and not just involved in a naked power grab for himself.  There is also the question as to where Yamashiro no Oe had stood in the succession, as he likely had a fair number of supporters. With the destruction of Yamashiro no Oe's family, however, the balance of power shifted.  Although Soga no Emishi had long been an influential member of the court, and not solely because of his role as Prime Minister, Soga no Iruka was relatively new to power.  Yamashiro no Oe's family, in turn, likely had a fair number of supporters, and even neutral parties may have been turned off by Iruka's violent methods to suppress an opponent who had already been defeated politically.  Naka no Oe and Kamatari seem to have seized on this discontent againt the Soga, but they needed at least one other conspirator.  They achieved this by offering a marriage alliance with Soga no Kurayamada no Ishikawa no Maro, a lesser member of the Soga household, whose own immediate family had been supporters of Yamashiro no Oe, and so likely had plenty of grievances with his cousins.  Naka no Oe married Ishikawa no Maro's daughter, Wochi no Iratsume, also known as Chinu no Iratsume.  Together, these three—Naka no Oe, Kamatari, and Ishikawa no Maro—brought others into their plot, and finally, in 645, they struck.  Soga no Iruka was killed at court, in front of a shocked Takara Hime and Prince Furubito no Oe.  By the way, this is another thing that suggests to me that Furubito no Oe was the Crown Prince, because why was he front and center at the ceremony, while Naka no Oe was able to skulk around at the edges, tending to things like the guards?  After the assassination at the court – the Isshi Incident -- Naka no Oe gathered forces and went after Soga no Emishi, since they knew they couldn't leave him alive.  With both Soga no Emishi and Soga no Iruka dead, and Takara Hime having abdicated the throne in shock at what had just occurred, Naka no Oe could have taken the throne for himself.  However, in what was probably a rather astute move on his part, he chose not to.  He recognized that Furubito no Oe's claim to the throne was possibly stronger, and those who had supported the Soga would not doubt push for him to take the throne.  And so, instead, he pushed for his uncle, Prince Karu, to ascend as sovereign.  Karu was Takara Hime's brother, and they could use Confucian logic regarding deference to one's elders to support him.  Plus, Karu's hands weren't directly bloodied by the recent conflict. As for Prince Furubito, he saw the way that the winds were blowing.  To avoid being another casualty, he retired from the world, taking the vows of a Buddhist monk.  However, there were still supporters who were trying to put him on the throne and eventually he would be killed, to avoid being used as a rallying point. Prince Karu, known as Jomei Tennou, ruled for around a decade. During that time, Naka no Oe and his reformers helped to cultivate a new image of the state as a bureaucratic monarchy.  Naka no Oe was designated the Crown Prince, and Nakatomi no Kamatari was made the “Inner Prime Minister”, or Naidaijin.  Ishikawa no Maro was made the minister of the  Right, while Abe no Uchimaro was made Minister of the Left, and they ran much of the bureaucracy, but the Naidaijin was a role more directly attached to the royal household, and likely meant that Kamatari was outside of their jurisdiction, falling into a position directly supporting Naka no Oe.  They instituted Tang style rank systems, and set up divisions of the entire archipelago.  They appointed governors of the various countries, now seen as provinces, and made them report up to various ministers, and eventually the sovereign.  After all, if you were going to manage everything, you needed to first and foremost collect the data.  This period is known as the Taika, or Great Change, period, and the reforms are known as the Taika reforms, discussed in episode 108. They even built a large government complex in the form of the Toyosaki Palace, in Naniwa, though this may have been a bit much—for more, check out episodes 112 and 113. Years into the project, though, things seem to have soured, a bit.  Rumors and slander turned Kamatari against his ally, Ishikawa no Maro, resulting in the death of Ishikawa no Maro and much of his family.  Naka no Oe and other members of the royal family eventually abandoned the Naniwa palace complex, leaving now-Emperor Karu and the government officials there to run the day-to-day administration, while much of the court made its way back to the Asuka area.  Karu would later pass away, but the throne still did not pass to Crown Prince Naka no Oe, despite his title.  Instead, the throne went back to Takara Hime.  This was her second reign, and one of only two split reigns like this that we know of.  The Chroniclers, who were creating posthumous titles for the sovereigns, gave her two names—Kogyoku Tennou for her reign up to 645, and then Saimei Tennou for her second reign starting in 655.   During her latter reign, Naka no Oe continued to wield power as the Crown Prince, and the Chroniclers don't really get into why she came back into power.  It may be that Naka no Oe, in his role as Crown Prince, had more freedom: although the sovereign is purportedly the person in power, that position can also be limiting.  There are specific things which the sovereign is supposed to do, rituals in which they are expected to partake.  In addition, there were restrictions on who was allowed into the inner sanctum of the palace, and thus limits on who could interact with the sovereign, and how.  That meant that any sovereign was reliant on intermediaries to know what was going on in their state and to carry out their orders.  As Crown Prince, Naka no Oe may have had more flexibility to do the things he wanted to do, and he could always leverage the sovereign's authority. When Baekje was destroyed, and Yamato decided to go to their aid, Naka no Oe appears to have had a strong hand in raising forces and directing movements, at least within the archipelago.  When Takara Hime passed away rather suddenly, he accompanied her funerary procession much of the way back, and then returned to Tsukushi—Kyushu—to direct the war.   This is the same thing that Toyotomi Hideyoshi would do when he sent troops to Korea in the late 16th century.  Moving headquarters closer to the continent would reduce the time between messages.  Theoretically he could have moved out to the islands of Iki or Tsushima, but I suspect that there were more amenities at Tsukushi, where they even built a palace for Takara Hime—and later Naka no Oe—to reside in.  It was likely not quite as spectacular as the full-blown city that Hideyoshi developed in a matter of months, but the court could also leverage the facilities previously created for the Dazaifu. The war took time.  This wasn't like some “wars” that were more like specific military actions.  This was a war that dragged on for several years, with different waves of ships going over to transport people and supplies.  Things came to a head in the 9th month of 663, roughly October or November on the Western calendar.  The Baekje resistance was under siege, and their only hope was a fleet of Yamato soldiers coming to their aid.  The Yamato fleet met with a much smaller Tang fleet at the mouth of the Baek River—the Hakusukinoe.  They attempted to break through the Tang blockade, but the Tang had positional advantage and were eventually able to counterattack, destroying the Yamato fleet.  Without their relief, the Baekje resistance fell. The remnants of the Yamato army, along with those Baekje nobles that were with them, headed out, fleeing back to the archipelago.  One presumes that there may have been other Baekje nobles, and their families, who had already made the trip. After the entry describing this rout, on the 24th day of the 9th month of 663, we have a gap in the Chronicles of just a little more than 4 months.  We then pick up with Naka no Oe's government starting to look at internal affairs.  For one thing, we are told that he selected his younger brother, the Royal Prince Ohoama, as Crown Prince, and he made updates to the cap-rank system, changing it from 19 ranks to 26 ranks.  The first six ranks remained the same, but the name “kwa”, or “flower”, for the 7th through 10th ranks was changed to “Kin”, meaning “brocade”.  Furthermore, a “middle” rank was added between the Upper and Lower ranks, further distinguishing each group, and adding 6 extra ranks.  Finally, the initial rank, Risshin, was divided into two:  Daiken and Shouken.  We aren't told why, but it likely meant that they could have more granular distinctions in rank. At the same time that was going on, the court also awarded long swords to the senior members of the great families, and short swords to the senior members of lesser families.  Below that, senior members of the Tomo no Miyatsuko and others were given shields and bows and arrows.  Furthermore, the vassals, or kakibe, and the domestic retainers, or yakabe, were settled, to use Aston's translation.  The kanji used in the text appears to refer to settling a decision or standardizing something, rather than settling as in giving a place to live.  It seems to me to mean that the court was settling servants on families: determining what kind and how many servants that various houses could have based on their position in the hierarchy.  I can't help but notice that all of these gifts were very martial in nature.  That does not mean, of course, that they were necessarily because of the war over Baekje, nor that they were in response to the concern about a possible Tang invasion -- we've seen in the past where swords were gifted to people who had served the court --but it is hard not to connect these gifts with recent worries.  We also know that this year, Naka no Oe turned his focus on building defenses, setting up guards and beacon fires on the islands of Tsushima and Iki.   Should any unknown fleet be seen coming to the archipelago, the fires would alert the forces at Kyushu, so they could send word and prepare a defense. In addition, the court built an impressive defense for Tsukushi—for the Dazai itself, the seat of the Yamato government in Kyushu.  It is called the Mizuki, or Water Castle, though at the time “castle” was more about walls and fortifications than the standalone fortress we tend to think of, today.  Along those lines, the Mizuki was an earthen embankment, roughly 1.2 kilometers long, extending from a natural ridgeline to the west across the Mikasa river.  Archeological evidence shows it had a moat, and this line of fortifications would have been a line of defense for the Dazai, should anyone try to invade.  This construction was so large and impressive that you can still see it, even today.  It stands out on the terrain, and it is even visible from overhead photographs. In the third month of 664, we are told that Prince Syeongwang of Baekje and his people, were given a residence at Naniwa.  In fact, even though Baekje was no longer an independent kingdom, there appear to have been thousands of Baekje people now living in Yamato, unable to return home.  Many of these were former nobles of the Baekje court, which Yamato treated as a foreign extension of its own.  Resettling these people would be a major theme for the Chronicles, but we will also see, as we read further on, how their talents were leveraged for the state. Also in the third month, a star fell in the north—it says “in the north of the capital”, but I suspect that anywhere north, south, east, or west of the capital would have seen the same thing “in the north”.  There was also an earthquake, which isn't given any particular significance, beyond its mention as a natural phenomenon. On the 17th day of the 5th month of 664, so roughly 2 months later, we are told that Liu Jen'yuan, the Tang dynasty's general in Baekje, sent Guo Wucong  to Yamato with a letter and gifts.  We aren't told the contents of the letter, but one imagines that this may have been a rather tense exchange.  Yamato had just been involved in open warfare against Tang forces on the peninsula, and they still weren't sure if the Tang empire would come after them next.  Their only real hope on that front was Goguryeo, since the Tang and Silla were still trying to destroy the Goguryeo kingdom, and that may have kept the Tang forces tied up for a while.  No doubt Guo Wucong would have seen some of the defenses that Yamato was constructing during his visit. Guo Wucong would hang around for about seven and a half months.  He was given permission to take his leave on the 4th day of the 10th month.  Naka no Oe had his friend and Inner Prime Minister, Nakatomi no Kamatari send the Buddhist Priest, Chisho, with presents for Guo Wucong, and he and his officers were granted entertainments  before they left as well. Finally, Guo Wucong and his people returned to the Tang on the 12th day of the 12th month. While the delegation from the Tang was in Yamato, we are told of several tragedies.  First was that Soga no Murajiko no Oho-omi had passed away.  Soga no Murajiko appears to have been another son of Soga no Kuramaro, and thus brother to Soga no Ishikawa no Maro.  Unfortunately, we don't have much more on him in the record. Just a month later, we are told that the “Dowager Queen” Shima passed away.  Aston translates this as the Queen Grandmother, suggesting that she was Naka no Oe's grandmother. We are also told, that in the 10th month of 664, around the time that Guo Wucong was given leave to depart, that Yeon Gaesomun, the Prime Minister—though perhaps more correctly the despotic ruler—of Goguryeo, died.  It is said that he asked his children to remain united, but, well, even if we didn't know how it all turned out, I think we would look somewhat skeptically on any idea that they all did exactly as they were told.  Sure enough, in 667 we are told that Gaesomun's eldest son, Namseng, left the capital city of Pyongyang to tour the provinces, and while he was gone his younger brothers conspired with the nobility, and when he came back they refused to let him back in.  So Namseng ran off to the Tang court and apparently helped them destroy his own country. This is largely corroborated by other stories about Goguryeo, though the dates do seem to be off.  Tang records put Gaesomun's death around 666 CE, which the Samguk Sagi appears to follow, but on his tomb the date would appear to be 665.  Confusion like this was easy enough given the different dates and trying to cross-check across different regnal eras.  Sure, there were some commonalities, but it was very easy to miscount something. One last note from the twelfth month of 664—it seems that there were omens of apparent prosperity that came to the court from the island of Awaji.    First, there was rice that grew up in a farmer's pig trough.  The farmer's name is given as Shinuta no Fumibito no Mu, and Mu gathered this rice and stored it up, and thus, every day his wealth increased.  Then there was the bridal bed of Iwaki no Sukuri no Oho, of Kurimoto district.  They claimed that rice grew up at the head of his brides' mattress during her first night's stay with him.  And this wasn't just some brand new shoot, but overnight it formed an ear, and by the morning it bent down and ripened.  Then, the following night, another ear was formed.  When the bride went out into the courtyard, two keys fell down from heaven, and after she gave them to her husband, Oho, he went on to become a wealthy man. The exact purpose of these stories is unclear, but it seems to be that the Chroniclers are choosing to focus on stories of wealth and growth, which speak to how they wanted this reign as a whole, including the sovereign, to be remembered. However, more tragedy struck the following year, in 665,  when Hashibito, another Dowager Queen – this time the wife of Karu, aka Koutoku Tennou - passed away on the 25th day of the 2nd month.  On the first day of the 3rd month, 330 people took Buddhist vows for her sake. We are also told that in the second month the ranks of Baekje were cross-referenced with the ranks of Yamato, and then ranks were given out to some of the Baekje nobles that had come over to Yamato.  Kwisil Chipsa, who was originally ranked “Dalsol” in Baekje, was accorded “Lower Shoukin”.  That was rank 12 of the 26.  In comparison, “Dalsol” seems to have been the 2nd rank of 16 in Baekje.  Along with handing out rank, over 400 Baekje commoners, both men and women, were given residence in the Kanzaki district in Afumi.  This appears to be an area along the Aichi river, running from the Suzuka Mountains, west towards Lake Biwa. The court granted them rice-lands in the following month.  At the same time, several high ranking Baekje nobles were put in charge of building castles at strategic points around the archipelago.  These included one castle in Nagato, as well as the castles of Ohono and Woyogi, in Tsukushi.  Two years later, in 667, we also see the building of Takayasu castle, in Yamato and Yashima castle in Yamada, in Sanuki—modern Kagawa, on Shikoku, facing the Seto Inland Sea passageway.  Kaneda castle in Tsushima was also a Baekje-built one. We mentioned something about these castles last episode.  They were in the Baekje style, and as I said, the term “castle” here is more about the walls, which were largely made of rammed earth ramparts.  This means that you pile up earth and dirt in a layer and then the laborers use tools specifically to tamp it down until it is thick and hard.  Then another layer is piled on top and the process is repeated.  These walls were often placed on mountain tops, and they would follow the terrain, making them places that were easy to defend.  Beyond that, they didn't necessarily have a donjon keep or anything like that—maybe a tower so that one could see a little further, but being at the top of a mountain usually provided all the visual cues that one needed. We know there were other castles made as well.  For example, I mentioned last week about Kinojo, in Okayama, the ancient Kibi area.  Kinojo is not mentioned in the Nihon Shoki, but it clearly existed back then, and matches the general description of a 7th century mountain castle as built in Baekje.  The name means Demon Castle, and there is a story about it that is connected to the local Kibitsu Jinja—the Shrine to Prince Kibi.  According to legend, Kibitsu Hiko, aka Prince Kibitsu or, perhaps more appropriately, the Prince of Kibi, came to the area around the time of the Mimaki Iribiko, so probably about the 3rd century, at the head of a large force.  Kibitsu Hiko had come to defeat the demon, Ura, who lived in the nearby castle, hence Kinojo, and legend says that he freed the people from the demon's rule. As I also mentioned, last week, this particular castle may have ended up in the Momotaro story.  There are those who believe that the story of Momotarou is based on the story of Prince Kibitsu Hiko, and his defeat of the so-called demon, “Ura”.   Certainly the story has grown more fantastical, and less connected to the ancient history of the Kibi region, but it still may have its origin in a much more standard legend of a founding prince of the ancient Kibi kingdom that was later changed into a fairy tale.   More likely, the castle was built by a Baekje nobleman, often thought to be a prince, who settled in the area.  There is the possibility that the demon's name “Ura” came from a mistranslation of his name, or it is also possible that he was unrelated to the story at all.  The Kibitsu Hiko legend may have incorporated the castle, Kinojo, at a later date, once people had forgotten when and why the castle was actually built. It would make sense if Kinojo had been built as part of the defenses for Yamato, as that area overlooks a large part of the fertile plains of Okayama and out beyond Kojima to the Seto Inland Sea -- it is perched over a key overland route from the western edge of Honshu to Yamato, and there would have been several ways to signal boats to put to sea to intercept forces on the water.  . This all suggests to me that Kinojo was probably part of Naka no Oe's castle-building effort, even if it isn't specifically remembered in the Chronicle.  But building castles wasn't enough to bring peace of mind that Yamato would survive a Tang invasion, and it is possibly as a defensive measure that Naka no Oe would go on to do something truly incredible—he would eventually move the capital from Asuka and Naniwa all the way to the shores of Lake Biwa itself, establishing the Ohotsu palace.  This was a truly extreme step that didn't endear Naka no Oe to the court, but it had several advantages.  For one thing, this move pulled the capital further away from the sea routes, meaning that if they were attacked, they had a more defensible position.  Even more so than Yamato, the Afumi region around Lake Biwa is surrounded by mountains, with a few narrow passes that restricted movement in and out. One of these is the famous Sekigahara, which remained a choke point even up to modern times.  The name even means the Field of the Barrier, indicating the barrier and checkpoint that had been set up there in ancient times.  Moving the capital also pulled the court away from some of the previous political centers, which may have been another feature that made it attractive to Naka no Oe.  Many capital moves have been made, at least in part, to get farther away from strong Buddhist temples, and this certainly would have moved things out of the Asuka region, which by now was a hotbed of Buddhist temple activity. But we'll talk about that all more, next episode.  Until then, thank you once again for listening and for all of your support. If you like what we are doing, please tell your friends and feel free to rate us wherever you listen to podcasts.  If you feel the need to do more, and want to help us keep this going, we have information about how you can donate on Patreon or through our KoFi site, ko-fi.com/sengokudaimyo, or find the links over at our main website,  SengokuDaimyo.com/Podcast, where we will have some more discussion on topics from this episode. Also, feel free to reach out to our Sengoku Daimyo Facebook page.  You can also email us at the.sengoku.daimyo@gmail.com.  Thank you, also, to Ellen for their work editing the podcast. And that's all for now.  Thank you again, and I'll see you next episode on Sengoku Daimyo's Chronicles of Japan

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Inner States

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 62:28


I've been thinking about borders for a few months now. The last time we had our current president, he talked a lot about building a wall between Mexico and the U.S. There's been less talk of a wall this time around. Turns out, in the 21st century, a wall isn't the most effective way to stop people coming into your country. It's bureaucracy. Visas, passports, customs, resident status. You can stop a lot more people by changing rules than building a wall, and that's what Trump has done this time. One of the rules he changed—this was on his very first day in office—was about refugees. So, as you may know—I didn't—the president has a lot of control over how many refugees enter the United States. Every year, the president decides how many refugees the country will accept. In Obama's last year in office, about 85 thousand refugees resettled here. In the last year of Trump's first term, it was about 12 thousand. Biden brought it up to a hundred thousand. And then, as soon as he got back into office, Trump completely suspended the program, meaning zero refugees would be admitted to the United States.A few years ago, Exodus Refugee, an Indianapolis-based organization that helps refugees resettle, opened an office here in Bloomington. I wanted to understand how Trump's suspension of refugee resettlement has affected the office here, and the people they help, and to understand that, I thought it would be good to hear the story of how the office got started.Erin Aquino is the founding director of the Bloomington office. Exodus has been around as an organization since 1981, but Erin got called in to start the Bloomington office at the beginning of 2022. When she took the job, she's imagined having a few months to get things set up. But she ended up moving a lot faster than anyone expected. Which was good, because she you can't meet with clients in a hotel room, and the post office was getting tired of all the carseats.On this episode, Erin Aquino tells us how to set up a refugee resettlement office when the refugees have already started arriving. And what's happened since January 20th.

Not Without My Sister
Resettling the Banana

Not Without My Sister

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 31:27


Things we discuss include:Snowflakes Embryo Adoption & Donation (a division of Nightlight Christian Adoptions)I haven't listened to this NPR podcast yet, but they get actual professionals to discuss whether or not we should let our kids quit things, and that seems like it would be valuableJoin our Patreon! patreon.com/notwithoutmysister – bonus content, ad-free listening and more.And if you have questions, email us! notwithoutmysis@gmail.com. While you're at it, leave us a five-star review! We love those. DM us on Instagram @notwithoutmysister. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Renegade Talk Radio
Episode 270: Big Left Wing Media Driving Democracy with Betsey Bell

Renegade Talk Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2025 33:00


Resettling who, refugees, what are they? Following who's getting the cash, and then the felon could be right. But you are still left out. 

Communism Exposed:East and West
Nations Push Back on Trump's Suggestions for Resettling Palestinians

Communism Exposed:East and West

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 4:42


Voice-Over-Text: Pandemic Quotables
Nations Push Back on Trump's Suggestions for Resettling Palestinians

Voice-Over-Text: Pandemic Quotables

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 4:42


Communism Exposed:East & West(PDF)
Nations Push Back on Trump's Suggestions for Resettling Palestinians

Communism Exposed:East & West(PDF)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 4:42


Pandemic Quotables
Nations Push Back on Trump's Suggestions for Resettling Palestinians

Pandemic Quotables

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 4:42


The FOX News Rundown
Evening Edition: Trump Proposes Resettling Palestinians Outside Of Gaza

The FOX News Rundown

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 14:32


President Donald Trump is telling Arab countries, including Jordan and Egypt, that he would like to see them increase the number of Palestinian refugees they are accepting from the Gaza Strip. The President went on to suggest Palestinians could permanently settle somewhere else than Gaza. So far, Arab nations have said they are rejecting these suggestions. FOX's Eben Brown speaks with FOX's Mike Tobin, reporting from Tel Aviv, about the latest on the ceasefire and hostage exchanges. Click Here To Follow 'The FOX News Rundown: Evening Edition' Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

From Washington – FOX News Radio
Evening Edition: Trump Proposes Resettling Palestinians Outside Of Gaza

From Washington – FOX News Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 14:32


President Donald Trump is telling Arab countries, including Jordan and Egypt, that he would like to see them increase the number of Palestinian refugees they are accepting from the Gaza Strip. The President went on to suggest Palestinians could permanently settle somewhere else than Gaza. So far, Arab nations have said they are rejecting these suggestions. FOX's Eben Brown speaks with FOX's Mike Tobin, reporting from Tel Aviv, about the latest on the ceasefire and hostage exchanges. Click Here To Follow 'The FOX News Rundown: Evening Edition' Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Fox News Rundown Evening Edition
Evening Edition: Trump Proposes Resettling Palestinians Outside Of Gaza

Fox News Rundown Evening Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 14:32


President Donald Trump is telling Arab countries, including Jordan and Egypt, that he would like to see them increase the number of Palestinian refugees they are accepting from the Gaza Strip. The President went on to suggest Palestinians could permanently settle somewhere else than Gaza. So far, Arab nations have said they are rejecting these suggestions. FOX's Eben Brown speaks with FOX's Mike Tobin, reporting from Tel Aviv, about the latest on the ceasefire and hostage exchanges. Click Here To Follow 'The FOX News Rundown: Evening Edition' Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Daily Objective
The Case for Resettling Gaza #1228

The Daily Objective

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 29:34


YouTube link: https://youtube.com/live/r2CCnA8gj1sSupport the show

Five in Ten
Members of Israeli Government to Attend Conference on Resettling Gaza

Five in Ten

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2024 17:23


Although Prime Minister Netanyahu has ruled out Israeli resettlement of Gaza, nearly a third of the MKs from his Likud Party will attend a conference promoting resettlement next week.5) Some Israelis pushing to resettle Gaza; 4) Kamala Harris now openly promising free money if she's elected; 3) Biden's DOJ sues Virginia for removing illegal immigrants from voter rolls; 2) Amazon latest big tech company to invest in nuclear power for AI processing centers; 1) ABC News hosts criticizes Trump comments on Aurora, Colorado because “only a handful” of apartment complexes have been taken over by Venezuelan prison gang.FOLLOW US!X: @WatchSkyWatchTV | @Five_In_TenYouTube: @SkyWatchTelevision | @SimplyHIS | @FiveInTenRumble: @SkyWatchTVFacebook: @SkyWatchTV | @SimplyHIS | @EdensEssentialsInstagram: @SkyWatchTV | @SimplyHisShow | @EdensEssentialsUSATikTok: @SkyWatchTV | @SimplyHisShow | @EdensEssentialsSkyWatchTV.com | SkyWatchTVStore.com | EdensEssentials.com | WhisperingPoniesRanch.com

The Show on KMOX
Full Show - Stuck in the Arch, resettling refugees, hot button issues on MO ballots

The Show on KMOX

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 110:45


On today's edition of The Chris and Amy Show: we start with the terrifying news of people being stuck in the Arch for hours and other irrational fears. Sarah Fenske joins us to talk about some trouble an organization is facing in resettling refugees in St. Louis. Plus, we talk Cardinals baseball and CITY SC soccer. Finally, we close the show by looking at some of the issues facing voters in Missouri come November's election.

The Show on KMOX
Welcome Neighbor STL blocked from resettling refugees

The Show on KMOX

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2024 14:28


Sarah Fenske, the Executive Editor of STL Magazine and formerly of the Riverfront Times, joined us to discuss the situation in which Welcome Neighbor STL was blocked in their attempt to resettle refugees despite a decreasing population in St. Louis.

The Jason Cavness Experience
Mariah Smith Director of Operations, Accrete AI | Board of Directors, No One Left Behind | Town Council Member, Stephens City, Virginia

The Jason Cavness Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2024 140:56


Mariah Smith Director of Operations, Accrete AI | Board of Directors, No One Left Behind | Town Council Member, Stephens City, Virginia Go to www.thejasoncavnessexperience.com for the full episode and other episodes of The Jason Cavness Experience on your favorite platforms. Sponsor The Jason Cavness Experience is sponsored by EquityED 2024: An Antiracist Education Conference Get ready for two days curated with engaging workshops, thought-provoking discussions, and inspiring speakers, all aimed at equipping you with the tools, skills, and insights needed to create inclusive and empowering spaces within any educational setting.  We'll come together on Wednesday, October 2nd and Thursday, October 3rd at the Hilton Seattle Airport & Conference Center in SeaTac to explore the transformative power of education. Our work is centered on making our conference an innovative, safe, and welcoming space, whether you're a teacher, student, parent, or community leader.  To RSVP and to attend the conference use this link.  https://www.eventbrite.com/e/equityed-2024-an-antiracist-education-conference-tickets-897526113767?aff=JasonLinkedIn Partners Message your customers - https://www.tawk.to/?pid=byo1znq Payroll - https://offers.everee.com/cavness-hr Sales CRM for small business - https://refer.close.com/100cqlbfcgg5 Health Insurance and Benefits - https://www.peoplekeep.com/refer Mariah's Bio Mariah had a twenty-year career in the Army before transitioning to the private sector. Serving as a military police officer, she was also an FBI National Academy graduate of Session 256. During her time in the Army, she was deployed to Djibouti, Iraq, and three times to Afghanistan. She previously worked as a military legislative assistant for a New York member of the House of Representatives, as a liaison between the Army and the Appropriations Committees in Congress, and as a liaison between United States Central Command and the Armed Services Committees. Mariah has a B.A. in Psychology from Vanderbilt University and a M.A. in Security Management from Webster University.  In her personal time, she is a councilwoman for her hometown of Stephens City, Virginia, and is the Vice-Chairman of the non-profit No One Left Behind, which assists Afghan and Iraqi allies who worked with the US government during the Global War on Terror.  We talked about the following and other items A soldier's experience with a kitten in Afghanistan and the efforts to bring her home legally.  Beekeeping and family connections in Afghanistan. Animal intelligence, farming, and personal balance.  Cat fostering and adoption, addressing concerns about personal burnout and the importance of focusing on the positive impact. Writing, and human rights. Nonprofit organization's mission to help Afghan and Iraqi interpreters resettle in the US.  Afghanistan war, evacuation, and visa process. Afghanistan's immigration challenges and the impact of the Taliban's return on the economy and society. US withdrawal from Afghanistan and its implications.  Resettling Afghan and Iraqi refugees in the US, with a focus on housing, job placement, and credential recognition. Immigration and resettlement of Afghans in the US. Resettling 10,000 Afghan refugees in the US with various challenges and solutions.  Resettling Afghan refugees in the US, focusing on language barriers and cultural integration.  Immigration reform for Afghan and Iraqi interpreters. Afghan resettlement and advocacy efforts in US government. Immigration and FBI training. Military career choices for women, including maternity and paternity leave, and the challenges of balancing family and career. Challenges faced by military spouses in career development and job market. AI's role in managing knowledge loss and improving work efficiency. Entrepreneurship, AI, and government contracting. Self-driving cars, safety, and government regulation. Innovation, product development, and work culture. Housing prices and demographic shifts in a small town. Military service, personal growth, and retirement planning. No One Left Behind and Accrete AI, including their founding stories, products, and focus on veterans' health. Military experience, physical toll, and career choices. Military service, culture shock, and job transition after leaving the Army during COVID-19. Career goals, travel experiences, and personal growth. Military career and legislative liaison work. US Congress, annual cycles, and influence. Political corruption and the influence of money in politics. Mariah's Social Media Mariah's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mariahcsmith/ No One Left Behind Website: https://www.nooneleft.org/  No One Left Behind X: https://x.com/n1leftbehind Accrete.ai Website: https://www.accrete.ai/  Accrete.ai X: https://x.com/accreteai Mariah's Advice Focus on putting good into the world. I think a lot of happiness can be derived from making a difference

Fritanga by the Hispanic Heritage Foundation
Navigating the Current Migrant Crisis: Insights from Krish Vignarajah, President & CEO, Global Refuge

Fritanga by the Hispanic Heritage Foundation

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 45:38


Welcome back to the Fritanga Podcast by the Hispanic Heritage Foundation. In this week's episode, we explore the urgent need for immigration reform to address the ongoing migrant crisis at the border. Joining us is Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, President and CEO of Global Refuge.On the pod, we explore:- The humanitarian crisis resulting from a broken immigration system and the failure of elected officials to enact necessary reforms.- The global scale of displacement, with over 114 million people affected and the projections of increased migration due to climate change and political instability.- The importance of investing in stability in regions experiencing turmoil to reduce the need for migration.- The role of refugee resettlement and a robust asylum system in responding to global crises.- The power of advocacy, education, and personal connections in combatting fear-mongering and misinformation surrounding immigration.Krish also discusses the vital work of Global Refuge in providing support and advocacy for vulnerable children, families, and individuals. She emphasizes the importance of engaging in volunteer opportunities, supporting organizations dedicated to immigration advocacy, and fostering personal connections to humanize the immigrant experience.La lucha sigue. Tune into Fritanga today!RESOURCES: Learn more about Global Refuge and their essential work in cultivating a world of just and welcoming communities at https://www.globalrefuge.org/.

Not Your Momma's Bible Study Podcast
Nehemiah: Resettling

Not Your Momma's Bible Study Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 30:16


Watch our friends settle in this week and establish themselves back in community with each other and God. Nehemiah 11 is full of good stuff for us this week. Let's go!   Find the reading plan and freebie for each season at chrystanferrell.com/podcast   Daily Pages Links https://amzn.to/3VjF2Q1 https://www.chrystanferrell.com/dailysheets   Dive in deeper! Join my community chrystanferrell.com/community   Bible highlighters (I remembered!) https://amzn.to/3JdQzcj   The commentary I use https://amzn.to/3ODZQxp   A great Bible reading app: https://dwellapp.io/aff?ref=chrystanferrell    

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing
Day 165 - How resettling Gaza is not a quixotic passing fancy

The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 23:36


Welcome to The Times of Israel's Daily Briefing, your 20-minute audio update on what's happening in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world. Today is day 165 of the war with Hamas. Zman Yisrael editor Biranit Goren and settlements reporter Jeremy Sharon join host Amanda Borschel-Dan for today's episode. President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke on the phone yesterday. It was their 20th phone call since the outbreak of war following Hamas's October 7 attack, but their first since February 15. Goren fills us in on the broad strokes points addressed in the conversation, according to both leaders' readouts. The phone call came four days after a scorching speech from longtime pro-Israel stalwart and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer — who is the most senior Jewish lawmaker in Congress -- calling for early elections in Israel to replace Netanyahu. What are the scenarios that could lead to new elections? The United States imposed more sanctions on three Israeli settlers -- and, for the first time, two illegal outposts -- implicated in West Bank violence. What does it mean to sanction an outpost? Six Israeli settler activists were arrested Friday night during a Shabbat dinner next to the Erez Crossing into Gaza, where they were spending a Shabbat dedicated to calling for the resettlement by Israel of the Gaza Strip. Sharon takes a step back and delivers the big picture. More than half of the evacuees from Israel's south — 32,000 out of the 60,000 people whom the government evacuated from locales within a 7-kilometer radius (4.3 miles) of the border with Gaza — are back in their communities. So the question remains how are they going to be protected? For the latest updates, please see The Times of Israel's ongoing live blog. Discussed articles include: Live blog March 19, 2024 Biden rules out support for major Rafah op, in first call with PM in over a month US targets three settlers, two illegal outposts in second round of sanctions Six settler activists arrested at Erez Crossing after 50 people stage Shabbat event Over half of southern evacuees back home as officials prep massive rehabilitation push THOSE WE HAVE LOST: Civilians and soldiers killed in Hamas's onslaught on Israel THOSE WE ARE MISSING: The hostages and victims whose fate is still unknown Subscribe to The Times of Israel Daily Briefing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts. This episode was produced by the Pod-Waves. IMAGE: Settlement activists hold a Shabbat event at the Erez crossing on the Israeli border with northern Gaza, March 16, 2024. (Courtesy Shavei Aza and Back to Home)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

8 O'Clock Buzz
Resettling Afghan Nationals in Portugal

8 O'Clock Buzz

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2024 11:02


Many Afghans who helped the U. S., but who were unable to leave during the expedited evacuation of troops and Afghan nationals have gone into hiding from the Taliban. Kathy […] The post Resettling Afghan Nationals in Portugal appeared first on WORT-FM 89.9.

Boston Public Radio Podcast
Best Of BPR 2/01: Resettling Refugees & Lottery Drama

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 34:21


Best Of BPR 2/01: Resettling Refugees & Lottery Drama

Boston Public Radio Podcast
Best Of BPR 2/01: Resettling Refugees & Lottery Drama

Boston Public Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 34:21


Best Of BPR 2/01: Resettling Refugees & Lottery Drama

TyskySour
The West Attacks UNRWA in Sick Response to ICJ, Israeli Convention on Resettling Gaza

TyskySour

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 55:28


Western nations have pulled funding from the UN Refugee agency in Gaza after Israeli accusations that 12 of the 13,000 workforce have links to Hamas. Plus: Labour have suspended another left-wing MP; and the Israeli far-right have held a ‘return to Gaza' convention. With Michael Walker and Ash Sarkar.

Tuesday Breakfast
Dehumanisation of Arabs in the West, Languages in Community Festival, World Volunteer Day, resettling LGBTQIA+ refugees in Australia, Nevo Zisin at Free Palestine rally

Tuesday Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2023


Headlines// 7.15: Syrian-Lebanese author and academic Ruby Hamad on 3CR's Women on the Line on the historic dehumanisation of Arabs and Muslims in the west. Listen to the full episode here//7.30: Salvadoran born artist-researcher Dr Tania Cañas on her work with the Nahuat Saturday School and the Languages in Community festival which takes place this Saturday 9th December from 11am-3pm in Footscray//7.45: Innez Tulloch, Volunteer Coordinator at 3CR, on World Volunteer Day and the value and joy of volunteering in the community//8.00: Lecturer and researcher Dr Brandy Cochrane on the Forcibly Displaced People's Network's report 'Inhabiting Two Worlds at Once' which looks at the experiences of LGBTIQA+ settlement in Australia. Find out about FDPN's refugee sponsorship program here//8.15: Anti-Zionist, Jewish, queer trans non-binary poet, author, and educator Nevo Zisin speaking in support of Palestinians right to freedom at last week's Free Palestine rally in Naarm/Melbourne// SongsHabibi Taal - Alsarah & the NubatonesHoodie Girl - June JonesAll My Boyfriends - Kira PuruMan Hater (ft Manali) - YARA

The Briefing
Will the world follow Australia in resettling climate change refugees?

The Briefing

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 3, 2023 18:58


Australia is the first country to offer climate refuge, after signing a new treaty with Tuvalu. The agreement could set an example for the rest of the world ahead of 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference. In this episode of The Briefing Katrina Blowers speaks with Tamara Wood from the Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law about exactly what this deal means. Headlines: 1.8 million people displaced in Gaza   National Health and Climate Strategy announced at COP28  Supermarkets under pressure to ease prices   Follow The Briefing:Instagram: @thebriefingpodcast Facebook: TheBriefingNewsAUTwitter: @TheBriefingAUSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Tuesday Breakfast
Beyond the Bars, NAIDOC 2023, cost of living and rental crises, resettling LGBTQI+ refugees, Aunty Rhonda Collard-Spratt

Tuesday Breakfast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 3, 2023


 Headlines// 7.15: Beyond the Bars broadcast from Monday 3 July - First Nations inmates at Dame Phyllis Frost Centre (Deer Park) talk about what NAIDOC Week means to them and connection with family// 7.30: NAIDOC Week events & news// 7.45: Kristin O'Connell, research and policy expert at the Antipoverty Centre, speaks with Priya on Thursday Breakfast about the convergence between Australia's cost of living and rental crises for people living below the poverty line. This conversation first aired on Thursday Breakfast on 29 July 2023// 8.00: Renee Dixson, co-founder of the Forcibly Displaced People Network (FDPN), on resettling LGBTQI+ refugees and upcoming info sessions on sponsoring LGBTQI+ refugees. Follow @fdpn.lgbtqi on Instagram for more info. 8.15: Yamatji-Noongar elder and Stolen Generations survivor Aunty Rhonda Collard-Spratt on her art practice, connection to generations past and future, and her book, 'Bobtail's Friend'. This conversation first aired on Tuesday Breakfast on 5 July 2022. SongsFight For Me - Barkaa, Electric Fields (language warning)Take No More - Kee'han and Emma DonovanBlack Smoke - Emily WurramaraDamaged - Miiesha

Diaspeiro
Episode 15: Healing Through Food With Mona sang

Diaspeiro

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2023 47:46


Mona Sang is a 1st generation Cambodian American chef, mom, and daughter who is the owner of Khmai Cambodian Fine Dining in Rogers Park, Chicago, IL. Mona was born in a refugee camp where she lived with her mother and siblings after fleeing the Khmer Rouge. Resettling in the U.S, Mona witnessed her mother use cooking to support the family. Her passion for food and cooking led her to work for Lettuce Entertain You Enterprises, Chicago's largest restaurant group to now owning her own restaurant. Using her mother's recipes, Mona hopes to showcase Khmer culture, history, food, and strives to share her and her mother's story of survival. In this episode, Mona shares about her and her family's survival stories and resettling in the States. You will hear about her special connection to food and how it's brought upon healing in her mother's life leading them to the food industry.

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast
New York City vs. Some Of Its Suburbs On Resettling Asylum Seekers

Brian Lehrer: A Daily Politics Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 21:41


As border states continue to send asylum-seekers to urban metro-areas, NYC and its suburbs are at odds about how to address the needs of these newcomers. On Today's Show:Murad Awawdeh, executive director at the New York Immigration Coalition, discusses how the city is responding to migrants making their way here, the dispute with the northern suburbs over housing them and what NYIC believes can be done by both federal and local governments to handle the new arrivals.

Soundside
A year later, Ukrainian refugees' legal status creates roadblocks for resettling in the PNW

Soundside

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2023 15:39


The U.N. estimates that at least 8 million Ukrainian refugees have been recorded across Europe. Before Russia's invasion, the Taliban's takeover of Afghanistan prompted another refugee crisis. These global conflicts, among others, have triggered mass displacements on an unprecedented scale. Some folks are making it here. In the last year, Snohomish county alone has welcomed several thousand Ukrainian and Afghan refugees.We can only make Soundside because listeners support us. Make the show happen by making a gift to KUOW: https://www.kuow.org/donate/soundside.

The Confluence
Resettling refugees is expensive, but necessary to make sure families have everything they need

The Confluence

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2023 22:30


On today's episode of The Confluence: Groups of private citizens can now apply to resettle refugees in the United States and we discuss what it takes to help someone escape their country and resettle in a new community; Lunar New Year began Sunday, and we discuss how else to celebrate the holiday in Pittsburgh; and tenants from a downtown apartment are struggling to find affordable housing since their complex was damaged in a fire.Today's guests include: Ivonne Smith-Tapia, director of refugee and immigrant services at Jewish Family and Community Services; Marian Lien, president of the Organization of Chinese Americans in Pittsburgh.

The Church in Action Podcast
Ep. 107: How Resettling Refugees Opened Doors to Evangelism in NH with Kasey and Wes Dillon

The Church in Action Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 27:34


Many of us want to grow in our evangelism as church families, but oftentimes we don't connect growing in evangelism to doing justice. We know doing justice is a clear command, but what exactly happens to our collective witness when we sincerely pursue justice as a Church body? Especially in our post-Covid, cancel-culture context? For Kasey and Wes Dillon (co-founders of Four Rivers Church in Durham, NH),  they've seen God compound their church's choice to resettle an Afghan family (fully without government funding), and use it to prompt local ministries (Christian and secular alike) to partner together, all while opening their surrounding community to hear more about Christ! To learn more about Four Rivers Project, click here!To learn more about Four Rivers Church, click here!To read more about the resettlement of this family, click here!

EWTN NEWS IN DEPTH
A look at how Afghan refugees are resettling in the United States one year after the Taliban regained control of their home country

EWTN NEWS IN DEPTH

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2022 60:00


A look at how Afghan refugees are resettling in the United States one year after the Taliban regained control of their home country. Expert analysis on the latest religious freedom violations in Nicaragua and the recent arrest of a bishop. Plus, the inspiring story of a religious sister who felt called by God to leave her home in war-torn Iraq to start a new community in Boston.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
Language barriers creating difficulties for Syrians resettling in Ireland

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 5:48


Razan Ibraheem, Irish-Syrian journalist, on a report on the integration of Syrian refugees in Ireland.

Coronavirus Daily
More American military equipment & training headed to Ukraine + how Biden's handling of Ukraine is playing here at home -- Resettling millions of internally displaced Ukrainians

Coronavirus Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 14:50


The U.S. government is keeping the military aid rolling toward Ukraine. President Biden approved another 800-million-dollar package of equipment, ammunition and training for Ukraine's armed forces--including sending over heavier weapons, like howitzers and drones--shedding the previous concerns over antagonizing Vladimir Putin. What kind of weapons are we sending and how effective will they be in stopping the Russian offensive in Eastern Ukraine? We'll also take a closer look at the continuing political fallout here at home over how President Biden is handling Ukraine. And while an estimated 5-million Ukrainians have left the country to avoid Russia's invasion, millions more have been internally displaced. We'll talk with one Ukrainian woman helping her fellow citizens to resettle in safer parts of the country, out of harm's way. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Coronavirus Daily
More American military equipment & training headed to Ukraine + how Biden's handling of Ukraine is playing here at home -- Resettling millions of internally displaced Ukrainians

Coronavirus Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2022 12:06


The U.S. government is keeping the military aid rolling toward Ukraine. President Biden approved another 800-million-dollar package of equipment, ammunition and training for Ukraine's armed forces--including sending over heavier weapons, like howitzers and drones--shedding the previous concerns over antagonizing Vladimir Putin. What kind of weapons are we sending and how effective will they be in stopping the Russian offensive in Eastern Ukraine?We'll also take a closer look at the continuing political fallout here at home over how President Biden is handling Ukraine.And while an estimated 5-million Ukrainians have left the country to avoid Russia's invasion, millions more have been internally displaced. We'll talk with one Ukrainian woman helping her fellow citizens to resettle in safer parts of the country, out of harm's way. To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast
Britain's new policy to resettle refugees in Rwanda

RN Breakfast - Separate stories podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2022 10:02


Resettling refugees offshore, destroying people smuggler networks and deterring people from arriving by boat.

BC Today from CBC Radio British Columbia
Insurance for B.C. cyclists; resettling Ukrainian refugees

BC Today from CBC Radio British Columbia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 50:25


What needs to be in place when it comes to insurance for cyclists? We discuss that with Vancouver lawyer Kyla Lee and Jeff Leigh with HUB Cycling; and in our 2nd half, we hear from the Immigration Services Society about the challenges facing Ukrainian refugees looking to settle in Canada.

VINnews Podcast
Talkline with Zev Brenner on Resettling Ukrainian Jews in Israel with Abe Biderman Co-Chair SHUVU

VINnews Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2022 28:34


Talkline with Zev Brenner with noted Community leader Abe Biderman, Co Chair Shuvu on Resettling possibly 100,000 Ukrainian Jews in Israel and dealing with their spiritual needs.

VOA Asia
VOA Asia - Olympic athletes face new pressures - February 02, 2022

VOA Asia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2022 24:59


A new threat to the Winter Olympic Games. Australia copes with COVID. Thailand legalizes cannabis. Resettling woes for Afghan refugees. Overcoming COVID test waste. Teaching with virtual reality.

Alabama's Morning News with JT

Congressman Mo Brooks discusses election reform as well as a bill he is proposing to keep the government from resettling illegal immigrants in the US

The Mothers of Reinvention
MIRY WHITEHILL on resettling over 500 Refugee families and turning her love of lists into creating Miry's List

The Mothers of Reinvention

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022 21:30


Miry Whitehill is a social entrepreneur, activist, and speaker. Her work over the past decade focuses on immigration, community engagement and social media and digital marketing. Miry is best known as the founder of Miry's List which can be found at miryslist.org, the first nonprofit organization to develop a scalable solution to the historic and systemic problem of refugees starting out in America without the things, people and services they need to feel safe and normal. Through crowdsourcing and social media, Miry's List addresses the needs of families resettling as refugees by connecting them with their new American neighbors. Since its founding in 2016, Miry's List has served over 320 families from countries including Syria, Afghanistan, Iraq and Iran and activated over 70,000 America people to welcome their resettling neighbors. Prior to founding Miry's List, Miry worked in digital advertising, helping Fortune 500 companies grow their audience online through video, social media and influencer outreach. As a speaker, Miry empowers audiences to support and uplift families and individuals resettling in America as refugees, focusing on inclusivity, equity, safety and freedom in all its forms, civility, and a shared sense of belonging. Through storytelling and personal anecdotes, she has dedicated herself improving the experience for families resettling as refugees in America by connecting them with their neighbors. Most recently Miry was the recipient of the 2019 LinkedIn Compassion Award and in 2018 she was recognized as 1 of 11 Women Making L.A. A Better Place by Los Angeles Magazine. Miry is the coauthor of People of the World, A Migration Story, which will come out in 2020, and creator of People of the World Migration Club, which piloted at Eagle Rock Elementary in Spring, 2019. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/jesszaino/support

KPFA - The Pacifica Evening News, Weekdays
Guilty verdict for Ahmaud Arbery killing; Federal benefits running dry for 250 Afghan refugee's resettling in the Bay Area; Bill to reform forced arbitration contracts for workplace sexual harassment advances

KPFA - The Pacifica Evening News, Weekdays

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2021 59:59


Comprehensive coverage of the day's news with a focus on war and peace; social, environmental and economic justice. Missouri black man, James Strickland, freed after 42 years in prison for triple homicide he did not commit. Three white men found guilty of murdering black man, Ahmaud Arbery, while jogging through their neighborhood. California oil and gas fracking permits on downward trend, ahead of Governor's 2024 ban. Bay Area Congress members detail anticipated funding from $1 trillion infrastructure law for local projects. Federal benefits running dry for 250 Afghan refugee's resettling in the Bay Area from Taliban rule in Afghanistan. World Health Organization says Europe epicenter of COVID-19 surge, warns 700,000 more deaths by spring. Bill to reform forced arbitration contracts for workplace sexual harassment and assault survivors advances. Bay Area prosecutors form task force to target “smash and grab” thefts ahead of holiday shopping season. Photos of Ahmaud Arbery and murderers Gregory and Travis McMichael. The post Guilty verdict for Ahmaud Arbery killing; Federal benefits running dry for 250 Afghan refugee's resettling in the Bay Area; Bill to reform forced arbitration contracts for workplace sexual harassment advances appeared first on KPFA.

Mornings with Carmen
Defining the meaningful things of life | Afghans resettling in the US

Mornings with Carmen

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 42:48


Institute for Global Engagement‘s Nick Pitts unpacks what people value in our current society and what experiences are agreed upon as fulfilling. Philos Project's Luke Moon updates us on the Poland-Belarus Border Crisis and shares what we can learn from the Hanukkah season.

Mornings with Carmen
Defining the meaningful things of life | Afghans resettling in the US

Mornings with Carmen

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 23, 2021 42:48


Institute for Global Engagement‘s Nick Pitts unpacks what people value in our current society and what experiences are agreed upon as fulfilling. Philos Project's Luke Moon updates us on the Poland-Belarus Border Crisis and shares what we can learn from the Hanukkah season.

The Loop
Reselling and resettling

The Loop

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 27:50


This week the show dives into artefacts- what do we do with problematic pieces of history? Host Clare Bonnyman digs into it with Alex Archibold of Curiosity Inc. And host Min Dhariwal visits Catholic Social Services to meet Afghan refugees finding comfort and safety in our city.

Crossnerds
RESETTLING LETTERINGS | Let's get Nast-y

Crossnerds

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2021 40:19


Whether you're a teehee, a tehee, a heh heh, har har, haha, or a ROFLcopter, all laughs are welcome this (and every!) week, as Rebecca and Brooke review the New York Times crossword puzzles from 8/16/21 - 8/22/21.  The Lollapuzzoola puzzles and Twitch stream are still available at bemoresmarter.com.  Enjoying "Crossnerds"? Give us five ⭐️s and comment in Apple Podcasts! Or just keep listening. Or both. Ideally both. But we'll take either. Please and thank you!

Roy Green Show
Difficulties of resettling Afghans in Cda. Emily Regan Wills, assoc prof political studies U of Ottawa.

Roy Green Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2021 4:18


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Political Rewind
Political Rewind: Welcoming (And Supporting) Refugees Amid The Chaos And Heartbreak Of Resettling

Political Rewind

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2021 50:55


Thursday on Political Rewind: Chaotic scenes of Afghans trying to flee their country now that it is under Taliban control have stung the consciences of people around the world. And while the fate of many of the desperate Afghans remains uncertain, some will find their way out of the country and become refugees in the United States and here in Georgia. In response to the crisis, President Joe Biden declared emergency procedures for processing special visas and expanding refugee limits to take in those fleeing Afghanistan. In Georgia, Gov. Brian Kemp said the state will accept some Afghans. Our panel discussed the complicated regulations that may pose a barrier for helping those looking to escape to America, and at the political implications of accepting refugees. Panelists: Mayor Beverly Burks — Mayor of Clarkston Charles Kuck — Immigration attorney Donna Lowry — Host, Georgia Public Broadcasting's Lawmakers Kevin Riley — Editor, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Two Tape Decks Podcast
B-Sides #9 Chernobyl (Resettling The Irradiated Zone)

Two Tape Decks Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2021 9:28


This week on B-Sides, an interesting conversation from the cutting room floor about Chernobyl now.