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Sri Ramana Maharshi a montré que le but de toute pratique spirituelle est de découvrir notre état naturel, celui de l'être essentiel, où l'esprit, libéré de l'agitation des pensées, est silencieux, empli d'une joie sans mélange, où la conscience resplendit. Dans l'Upadesa Saram, l'essence de l'enseignement spirituel, Ramana Maharshi explique comment on peut atteindre cet état, exposant tour à tour les voies de l'Action, de la Dévotion et de la Connaissance. Bibliographie: J'ai utilisé deux ouvrages pour cet audio. Sur le premier, le traducteur est resté anonyme, quant au second, il s'agit de Swami Tejomayananda, aux éditions Chinmaya Mission France. Son commentaire est des plus éclairant. Musique: Bing Satellites (https://bingsatellites.bandcamp.com/album/longform-ambient-studies-002) Narration et réalisation: Bruno Léger Production: Les mécènes du Vieux Sage Soutenez-nous sur PayPal et Tipeee !
The Falklands War casts a long shadow over Argentina as the junta teeters on the verge of collapse. The country slowly returns to democracy. But that isn't the end of Videla's time in the spotlight. As a heroic legal case is brought against him, justice for his victims finally seems within reach. We'll meet a man who sat mere feet away from Videla in the courtroom - a young prosecutor with the hopes of a nation resting on his shoulders… A Noiser production, written by John Bartlett. Many thanks to Edward Brudney, Robert Cox, Marguerite Feitlowitz, Francesca Lessa, Sara Méndez, Luís Moreno Ocampo, Ernesto Semán. This is Part 4 of 4. Get every episode of Real Dictators a week early with Noiser+. You'll also get ad-free listening, bonus material and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you're on Spotify or Android, go to noiser.com/subscriptions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tercer Milenio 360 Internacional - 18/11/24 A su paso por Centro América, la tormenta tropical Sara causó un muerto, graves daños y miles de damnificados en Honduras, así como afectaciones en Nicaragua y Belice, en ruta hacia México. El tifón Man Ji, con vientos de hasta 240 Km/h, destruyó casas, provocó enorme marejadas y obligó a evacuar a casi 700 mil personas mientras atravesaba Filipinas, es la sexta gran tormenta que azota a ese país en menos de un mes. Aumentan en 20% los casos de sarampión por campañas de vacunación deficientes, alerta la Organización Mundial de la Salud. En Murcia, España, el 28 de octubre de este año, una familia registró un objeto en el cielo ubicado a poca altura que se desplazaba lentamente y en todo momento emite un haz de luz. En Playa Miramar, en Tampico, Tamaulipas, México, la noche del 5 de octubre un objeto que emitía una fuerte luz blanca desciende poco a poco hasta sumergirse y cambiar su tonalidad a verde intenso, se trata de un OSNI. Los pobladores aseguran que ahí existe una base de origen extraterrestre.
I det här avsnittet av sälj- och marknadspodden betonas vikten av thought leadership som en kritisk strategi inom B2B-marknadsföring och försäljning. Vår gäst Sara Månsson jobbar på Business Reflex och brinner för strategi inom marknad och sälj. The post Podd #230 – Skapa Thought Leadership, en viktig strategi för marknad och sälj inom B2B appeared first on Business Reflex.
Videla's dirty war begins. ‘Subversives' are rooted out, with torture centres established across the land - including one known as the ‘Argentine Auschwitz'. Education, music, children's books and haircuts are subjected to new regulations. And as the Junta garners international attention, Videla will employ elaborate means to gloss over the atrocities… A Noiser production, written by John Bartlett. Many thanks to Edward Brudney, Robert Cox, Marguerite Feitlowitz, Francesca Lessa, Sara Méndez, Ernesto Semán. This is Part 2 of 4. Get every episode of Real Dictators a week early with Noiser+. You'll also get ad-free listening, bonus material and early access to shows across the Noiser network. Click the Noiser+ banner to get started. Or, if you're on Spotify or Android, go to noiser.com/subscriptions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Abhayapradanasaram by Vedanta Desikan is a significant work in the realm of Hindu philosophy and theology, focusing on the concept of divine protection and refuge. The text, rooted in the Sri Vaishnavism tradition, explains how Lord Vishnu, as the ultimate protector, grants abhaya (safety or fearlessness) to devotees who seek his shelter. Desikan eloquently describes the compassionate nature of the divine, emphasizing the act of surrender as a means to attain spiritual salvation. Abhayapradanasaram is revered for its theological depth and serves as a guide for devotees on the path of complete surrender to God.
When we talk about the metaverse as we imagine it taking shape, we don't always have the vocabulary to describe how we should be able to navigate it safely and enjoyably. Join host Kate O'Neill on The Tech Humanist Show as she engages in an enlightening conversation with technology critic and industry analyst Sara M. […]
Big Funky Beats This Week. https://www.facebook.com/OfficialLoveVibrationNation/ https://www.facebook.com/TheCocreators https://soundcloud.com/love-vibration-nation https://thecocreatorsmusic.com/ 1. Jorge Andrade Corazon (Ordonez Rework) 2. Gene Farris, DJ Rae Forever Always (Anthony Attalla Remix) 3. James Hurr, DJ Rae That's The Kind Of Love I've Got For You (Extended Mix) 4. Freiboitar You Gotta Hear That (Extended Mix) 5. Vintage Culture x Joy N Juno x Maori x Adam Ten Makele x Spring Girl (SUNANA Edit) 6. Saram x Urbanite En El Ritmo 7. Gabry Venus Peace (CASSIMM Extended Remix) 8. James Haskell Control (Original Mix) 9. Tim Cullen Get Together (Anthony Attalla Remix) 10. Stardust Music Sounds Better With You (Sgt Slick's Melbourne ReCut) 11. Todd Terry & Gypsymen Babarabatiri (David Penn remix) 12. Mark Knight Mona Lisa (extended mix) 13. Dombresky, Boston Bun Stronger (Extended Mix)
Get ready for a delightful mix of laughter, surprises, and touching moments in this special episode of Press Pause with Jouhayna. Jouhayna and her best friend Sara take on the ultimate challenge: Burj Banter. This isn't your ordinary game of Jenga—each block has a thought-provoking question written on it, leading to unexpected revelations and heartfelt conversations. As the tower gets taller and the questions get deeper, you'll witness the beautiful bond between Jouhayna and Sara unfold. From hilarious anecdotes to sincere reflections on their friendship and life, this episode is a rollercoaster of emotions that will keep you hooked till the very last block.
Dr. Nathan S. French A school field trip to Washington, D.C. is a formative rite of passage shared by many U.S. school students across the nation. Often, these are framed as “field trips.” Students may visit the White House, the U.S. Capitol Building, the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, Declaration of Independence (housed in the National Archive), the National Museum of the American Indian, the National Museum of African American History and Culture, the Jefferson Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, or the Smithsonian Museum – among others. For many students, this is the first time they will connect the histories of their textbooks to items, artifacts, and buildings that they can see and feel. For those arriving to Washington, D.C. by airplane or bus, the field trip might also seem like a road trip. Road trips, often involving movement across the U.S. from city-to-city and state-to-state are often framed as quintessential American experiences. Americans have taken road trips to follow their favorite bands, to move to universities and new jobs, to visit the hall of fame of their favorite professional or collegiate sport, or sites of family history. As Dr. Andrew Offenberger observes in our interview, road trips have helped American authors, like Kiowa poet N. Scott Momaday, make sense of their identities as Americans. What if, however, these field trips to Washington, D.C. and road trips across the country might amount to something else? What if we considered them to be pilgrimages? Would that change our understanding of them? For many Americans, the first word that comes to mind when they hear the word, “pilgrimage,” involves the pilgrims of Plymouth, a community of English Puritans who colonized territory in Massachusetts, at first through a treaty with the Wampanoag peoples, but eventually through their dispossession. For many American communities, the nature of pilgrimage remains a reminder of forced displacement, dispossession, and a loss of home and homeland. Pilgrimage, as a term, might also suggest a religious experience. There are multiple podcasts, blogs, and videos discussing the Camino de Santiago, a number of pilgrimage paths through northern Spain. Others might think of making a pilgrimage to the Christian, Jewish, or Muslim sacred spaces in Israel and Palestine often referred to as the “Holy Land” collectively – including the Temple Mount, the Dome of the Rock, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (among others). Mark Twain's Innocents Abroad, is a classic example of this experience. Some make pilgrimage to Salem, Massachusetts each October. Others even debate whether the Crusades were a holy war or pilgrimage. American experiences of pilgrimage have led to substantial transformations in our national history and to our constitutional rights. Pilgrimage, as a movement across state, national, or cultural boundaries, has often been used by Americans to help them make sense of who they are, where they came from, and what it means, to them, to be “an American.” The word, “pilgrimage,” traces its etymology from the French, pèlerinage and from the Latin, pelegrines, with a general meaning of going through the fields or across lands as a foreigner. As a category used by anthropologists and sociologists in the study of religion, “pilgrimage” is often used as a much broader term, studying anything ranging from visits to Japanese Shinto shrines, the Islamic pilgrimage of Hajj, “birthright” trips to Israel by American Jewish youth, and, yes, even trips to Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee – the home of Elvis Presley. Arnold van Gennep (1873-1957) defined pilgrimage as one of a number of rites of passage (i.e., a rite du passage) that involves pilgrims separating themselves from broader society, moving themselves into a place of transition, and then re-incorporating their transformed bodies and minds back into their home societies. That moment of transition, which van Gennep called “liminality,” was the moment when one would become something new – perhaps through initiation, ritual observation, or by pushing one's personal boundaries outside of one's ordinary experience. Clifford Geertz (1926-2006), a contemporary of Turner, argued that a pilgrimage helps us to provide a story within which we are able to orient ourselves in the world. Consider, for example, the role that a trip to Arlington National Cemetery or the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier plays in a visit by a high school class to Washington, D.C. If framed and studied as a pilgrimage, Geertz's theory would suggest that a visit to these sites can be formative to an American's understanding of national history and, perhaps just as importantly, the visit will reinforce for Americans the importance of national service and remembrance of those who died in service to the defense of the United States. When we return from those school field trips to Washington, D.C., then, we do so with a new sense of who we are and where we fit into our shared American history. Among the many examples that we could cite from American history, two pilgrimages in particular – those of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X – provide instructive examples. Held three years after the unanimous U.S. Supreme Court decision in Brown v. Board of Education, the 1957 “Prayer Pilgrimage for Freedom,” led by Dr. King brought together thousands in order to, as he described it, “call upon all who love justice and dignity and liberty, who love their country, and who love mankind …. [to] renew our strength, communicate our unity, and rededicate our efforts, firmly but peaceably, to the attainment of freedom.” Posters for the event promised that it would “arouse the conscience of the nation.” Drawing upon themes from the Christian New Testament, including those related to agape – a love of one's friends and enemies – King's speech at the “Prayer Pilgrimage” brought national attention to his civil rights movement and established an essential foundation for his return to Washington, D.C. and his “I Have a Dream Speech,” six years later. In April 1964, Malcolm X departed to observe the Muslim pilgrimage ritual of Hajj in the city of Mecca in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Hajj is an obligation upon all Muslims, across the globe, and involves rituals meant to remind them of their responsibilities to God, to their fellow Muslims, and of their relationship to Ibrahim and Ismail (i.e., Abraham and Ishamel) as found in the Qur'an. Before his trip, Malcolm X had expressed skepticism about building broader ties to American civil rights groups. His experience on Hajj, he wrote, was transformational. "The holy city of Mecca had been the first time I had ever stood before the creator of all and felt like a complete human being,” he wrote, “People were hugging, they were embracing, they were of all complexions …. The feeling hit me that there really wasn't what he called a color problem, a conflict between racial identities here." His experience on Hajj was transformative. The result? Upon return to the United States, Malcolm X pledged to work with anyone – regardless of faith and race – who would work to change civil rights in the United States. His experiences continue to resonate with Americans. These are but two stories that contribute to American pilgrimage experiences. Today, Americans go on pilgrimages to the Ganges in India, to Masada in Israel, to Mecca in Saudi Arabia, and to Bethlehem in Palestine, and to cities along the Trail of Tears and along the migration of the Latter-Day Saints church westward. Yet, they also go on pilgrimages and road trips to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, to the baseball hall of fame in Cooperstown, to the national parks, and to sites of family and community importance. In these travels, they step outside of the ordinary and, in encountering the diversities of the U.S., sometimes experience the extraordinary changing themselves, and the country, in the process. * * * Questions for Class Discussion What is a “pilgrimage”? What is a road trip? Are they similar? Different? Why? Must a pilgrimage only be religious or spiritual? Why or why not? How has movement – from city to city, or place to place, or around the world – changed U.S. history and the self-understanding of Americans? What if those movements had never occurred? How would the U.S. be different? Have you been on a pilgrimage? Have members of your family? How has it changed your sense of self? How did it change that of your family members? If you were to design a pilgrimage, what would it be? Where would it take place? Would it involve special rituals or types of dress? Why? What would the purpose of your pilgrimage be? How do other communities understand their pilgrimages? Do other cultures have “road trips” like the United States? Additional Sources: Ohio History and Pilgrimage Fort Ancient Earthworks & Nature Preserve, Ohio History Connection (link). National Geographic Society, “Intriguing Interactions [Hopewell],” Grades 9-12 (link) Documentary Podcasts & Films “In the Light of Reverence,” 2001 (link) An examination of Lakota, Hopi, and Wintu ties to and continued usages of their homelands and a question of how movement through land may be considered sacred by some and profane by others. Melvin Bragg, “Medieval Pilgrimage,” BBC: In our Time, February 2021 (link) Bruce Feiler: Sacred Journeys (Pilgrimage). PBS Films (link) along with educator resources (link). The American Pilgrimage Project. Berkley Center, Georgetown University (link). Arranged by StoryCorps, a collection of video and audio interviews with Americans of diverse backgrounds discussing their religious and spiritual identities and their intersections with American life. Dave Whitson, “The Camino Podcast,” (link) on Spotify (link), Apple (link) A collection of interviews with those of varying faiths and spiritualities discussing pilgrimage experiences. Popular Media & Websites “Dreamland: American Travelers to the Holy Land in the 19th Century,” Shapell (link) A curated digital museum gallery cataloguing American experiences of pilgrimage to Jerusalem, Israel, and Palestine. LaPier, Rosalyn R. “How Standing Rock Became a Site of Pilgrimage.” The Conversation, December 7, 2016 (link). Talamo, Lex. Pilgrimage for the Soul. South Dakota Magazine, May/June 2019. (link). Books Grades K-6 Murdoch, Catherine Gilbert. The Book of Boy. New York: Harper Collins, 2020 (link). Wolk, Lauren. Beyond the Bright Sea. New York: Puffin Books, 2018 (link). Grades 7-12 Chaucer, Geoffrey. The Canterbury Tales. New York: Penguin Books, 2003 (link). Malcolm X. The Autobiography of Malcolm X: As Told to Alex Haley. New York: Ballantine Books, 1992 (link). Melville, Herman. Clarel: A Poem and Pilgrimage in the Holy Land. New York: Library of America, n.d. (link). Murray, Pauli. Song in a Weary Throat: Memoir of an American Pilgrimage. New York: Liveright, 1987 (link). Reader, Ian. Pilgrimage: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 (link). Twain, Mark. The Innocents Abroad. New York: Modern Library, 2003 (link). Scholarship Bell, Catherine. Ritual Theory, Ritual Practice. New York: Oxford University Press, 2009. Bloechl, Jeffrey, and André Brouillette, eds. Pilgrimage as Spiritual Practice: A Handbook for Teachers, Wayfarers, and Guides. Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 2022. Frey, Nancy Louise Louise. Pilgrim Stories: On and Off the Road to Santiago, Journeys Along an Ancient Way in Modern Spain. First Edition. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998. Lévi-Strauss, Claude Patterson, Sara M., “Traveling Zions: Pilgrimage in Modern Mormonism,” in Pioneers in the Attic: Place and Memory along the Mormon Trail. New York: Oxford University Press, 2020 (link). Pazos, Antón. Redefining Pilgrimage: New Perspectives on Historical and Contemporary Pilgrimages. London: Routledge, 2014 (link). Reader, Ian. Pilgrimage: A Very Short Introduction. New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 (link). Van Gennep, Arnold. The Rites of Passage. Translated by Monika B. Vizedom and Gabrielle L. Caffee. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1960 (link)
Swami Sarvapriyananda teaches Sri Ramana Maharshi's Upadesa Saram (The Essence of Instruction). This is part 1 of the series of talks. ► To support the Vedanta Society of New York: http://www.vedantany.org/donate
Swami Sarvapriyananda teaches Sri Ramana Maharshi's Upadesa Saram (The Essence of Instruction). This is part 2 of the series of talks. ► To support the Vedanta Society of New York: http://www.vedantany.org/donate
Swami Sarvapriyananda teaches Sri Ramana Maharshi's Upadesa Saram (The Essence of Instruction). This is part 4 of the series of talks. ► To support the Vedanta Society of New York: http://www.vedantany.org/donate
Swami Sarvapriyananda teaches Sri Ramana Maharshi's Upadesa Saram (The Essence of Instruction). This is part 5 of the series of talks. ► To support the Vedanta Society of New York: http://www.vedantany.org/donate
Swami Sarvapriyananda teaches Sri Ramana Maharshi's Upadesa Saram (The Essence of Instruction). This is part 3 of the series of talks. ► To support the Vedanta Society of New York: http://www.vedantany.org/donate
Sarah Bashir fikk 52 prosent stilling da hun begynte å jobbe som helsefagarbeider. Hun måtte jakte vakter for å få økonomien til å gå rundt. Nå er Sarah hovedtillitsvalgt for sykehjemmene i Lovisenberg Omsorg i Oslo. Sammen med andre tillitsvalgte i Fagforbundet Pleie og omsorg i Oslo har hun jobba målretta med å sikre folk stillingsstørrelsen de har rett på. De siste par årene har de hjulpet over 550 medlemmer (!) til å få større eller hele stillinger.I denne ukas episode av «Hele laget» forteller Sarah om livet som deltidsansatt, og ikke minst hvordan hun jobber for å løfte Fagforbundets medlemmer ut av deltidsfella og inn i heltid! Denne vil du ikke gå glipp av. Klikk på «følg»-knappen i podkastspilleren din. Slik blir du abonnent og får ny episode automatisk og likte du episoden setter vi pris på om du vil gi den en fem stjerner i spilleren din!Har du tips til temaer eller gjester til podkasten? Send epost til helelaget@fagforbundet.no. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
With Karen Wyld | Award-winning human rights lawyer Sara M. Saleh explores the complexities of identity in her writing. She joins Karen Wyld to talk about her new poetry collection and her debut novel. Event details: Sat 02 Mar, 5:00pm
The Elite Coaches Series Presents: Jen Nurick This is a really special episode where Jennifer Nurick, my guest and well known psychotherapist, dives deeply into the various kinds of attachment styles. She also shares best parts of her new book that's filled with vital information that empaths must know! I also disclose my prior relationship for the first time after months of recovery. So stick around till the end. This is an episode that you should not miss! This episode is dedicated to Sara M. Follow my guest on IG! She has almost 200k followers! @psychotherapy.cental Top 10 Recovery Podcasts: https://blog.feedspot.com/trauma_podcasts/ Over 150+ Guests WorldWide For Coaching: Rajmontage@protonmail.com IG: https://www.instagram.com/on_call_empath https://linktr.ee/oncallempath Youtube Channel: https://youtu.be/p0lDLstiiYM Disclaimer: This podcast's subject matter, which contains sensitive medical and mental health issues, is for entertainment purposes only and does not constitute medical, legal, or any other type of professional advice. If you have any health concerns, please see a doctor or medical professional.
Versets 51 à 102 de Sorupa Saram, aussi nommé Swarupa Saram en sanskrit et traduit en français par "La Splendeur du Soi". Bibliographie: "La splendeur du Soi"; traduit et présenté par Anasuya, éditions Arfuyen (https://www.babelio.com/livres/Sorupananda-La-Splendeur-du-Soi--Sorupa-Saram/750579) Musique: The Ambient Visitor (https://theambientvisitor.bandcamp.com/album/the-choir-invisible) Narration et réalisation: Bruno Léger Production: Les mécènes du Vieux Sage Soutenez-nous sur PayPal et Tipeee !
In this episode, a conversation with Sara M Saleh, author of the new poetry collection, The Flirtation of Girls/Ghazal el-Banat. Saleh is not only a poet; she is a human rights lawyer, and is the author of a novel, Songs for the Dead and the Living, which was published only a couple of months ago. Saleh is the daughter of Palestinian, Lebanese and Egyptian migrants, a lineage very much alive in her work, advocacy, and craft. She also co-edited the 2019 anthology Arab, Australian, Other: Stories on Race and Identity, and Saleh is the first and only poet to win both the Peter Porter Poetry Prize and the Judith Wright Poetry Prize.
Koryo Saram refers to the ethnic Koreans who migrated to the Russian Far East and Central Asia, particularly Kazakhstan, during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The migration was mainly a result of economic opportunities and political instability in the Korean Peninsula during that period. But beyond the political and historical existence, there are people. Daniil and Yona are two of these people both trying to find their way in modern Korean society. Their identities, language skills, and feelings towards their homeland are very different, yet they relate to each other. With the help of Yunseo, we explored what it means to be a Koryo Saram and discovered much along the way. Find them online/instagram Pak Yona: @pkyo1 Daniil: @dnlyeux Yunseo: @y_jeon_s 고려인 Youth Organization: https://www.instagram.com/ks.youthwave/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igshid=OGQ5ZDc2ODk2ZA== 대한고려인협회: https://www.instagram.com/koryosaraminkorea/?utm_source=ig_web_button_share_sheet&igshid=OGQ5ZDc2ODk2ZA== Overseas Koreans: https://www.okocc.or.kr/portal_en/global/okf_webzine.do Discussion Outline 0:00 Introducing the Koryo Saram 25:00 Leaving Moscow: War and Politics 33:15 University and Visas 39:42 Language and Culture 45:30 Appearance and Visuals 53:33 Famous Koryo Saram in Pop Culture 59:20 Multicultural Korea 1:05:00 The Geography of Koryo Saram 1:11:30 North Korea 1:22:50 Misconceptions about Koryo Saram 1:42:50 Final Observations Korea Deconstructed by David Tizzard ▶ Get in touch: datizzard@swu.ac.kr ▶ Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=62047873 ▶ Watch us on Youtube: /davidtizzard ▶ Listen on iTunes: https://podcasts.apple.com/kr/podcast/korea-deconstructed/id1587269128 ▶Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5zdXkG0aAAHnDwOvd0jXEE ▶ Listen on podcasts: https://koreadeconstructed.libsyn.com/ ▶ Music: Fighting by Disorientalz (https://www.instagram.com/disorientalz/) ▶ Recorded at 허브 36.5: https://www.instagram.com/the_story_from_you/
Sara M Saleh is a writer, poet, human rights lawyer, and the daughter of Palestinian, Lebanese and Egyptian migrants. Her poetry is not only an inherently political act, but a deeply personal one. We could not think of a better person to join Hannah for the final episode of Booksmart of 2023. With her first full-length poetry collection The Flirtation of Girls / Ghazal el-Banat, Sara introduces us to the lives of girls and women as they come into being amidst war, colonial and patriarchal violence, and exile and migration. This searing work interrogates and represents the complexity of Arab-Australian Muslim women's identities as they negotiate an irresistible world full of music and family, grit and grief, love and loss.This is an important episode, that is definitely worth a listen.
Du husker kanskje Sara Mäkiperä fra TV-serien Gift ved første blikk? Hun er fortsatt lykkelig gift med Joakim og er nå høygravid med barn nr to. Hun har løpt gjennom hele graviditeten, og deler med oss her hvordan det har vært. Vi snakker bl.a. om det å få energi av å løpe, løpsopplevelser, endometriose, julekalender-challenge og løpegruppen Oppegårdjoggerne som Sara har startet. Her er episode 40 av Baktroppen! Sara finner du på Instagram: saramakiperaOppegårdjoggerne finner du her: oppegardjoggerne --- Baktroppen er en løpepodkast fra nettbutikken Løpeskjørt.no. Thea Stenersen og Tone Nordang Pettersen snakker om løping i alle former, både med og uten gjester. Følg oss gjerne på Instagram: baktroppen_podkast - og bli med i Facebook-gruppen vår: facebook.com/groups/baktroppenpodkast Der kan du bidra til temaer og komme med forslag til gjester. Vi blir også veldig glade om du vil følge og abonnere, og legge igjen noen stjerner eller en omtale der du hører podkast. Tusen takk!
Préface de Sorupa Saram, aussi nommé Swarupa Saram en sanskrit et traduit en français par "La Splendeur du Soi", mais signifiant littéralement "l'essence de notre véritable nature". Texte vedantin composé en langue tamoul par Sorupananda, guru et saint éminent qui vécut prés de la ville de Virai, probablement vers la fin du 16ème siècle. Bibliographie: "La splendeur du Soi"; traduit et présenté par Anasuya, éditions Arfuyen (https://www.babelio.com/livres/Sorupananda-La-Splendeur-du-Soi--Sorupa-Saram/750579) Musique: The Ambient Visitor (https://theambientvisitor.bandcamp.com/album/the-choir-invisible) Narration et réalisation: Bruno Léger Production: Les mécènes du Vieux Sage Soutenez-nous sur PayPal et Tipeee !
Qeybta 7-aad ee ‘Gobaad: Sharaf loo dhanyahay,' Sara Mähönen oo ka socota Howlgalka Awood-dhisidda Midowga Yurub ee Soomaaliya ee EUCAP aya kaga hadlaysaa awoodda waxqabad-wadareedka si loo gaaro isbeddel waara.
Sara M. Saleh is a human rights lawyer, community organiser, writer and the daughter of migrants from Palestine, Egypt and Lebanon. She has many very impressive achievements to her name including being the first poet to win both the Australian Book Review's Peter Porter Poetry Prize and the Overland Judith Wright Poetry Prize, which she did back to back in 2020 and 2021. Sara's debut novel Songs for the Dead and the Living is out now (link below where you can buy). Sara is one of the voices that has been a helpful guide for me in recent weeks as we've seen the Israeli government cause enormous levels of destruction and loss of human life in Gaza. This conversation is really helpful for decoupling anti-zionism and anti-semitism and understanding why it's so dangerous when these are conflated. It's so obvious, as you'll hear throughout this conversation that Sara holds a fierce commitment to any group of oppressed and suffering people, while striving for solutions that do not simply flip who is oppressing who. The way she speaks about liberation is so generous and beautiful and just. We talk about the limits of identity politics and the deep solidarity that can be found in shared values — and there's just so much wisdom here. Listen deeply, share widely, and take whatever actions you can — great or small — in the direction of justice. Sara's website:https://www.saramsaleh.com/Buy ‘Songs for the Dead and the Living':https://www.booktopia.com.au/songs-for-the-dead-and-the-living-sara-m-saleh/book/9781922848536.htmlFollow Sara on Instagram: @instasaranade‘A guide to Palestine for beginners' (this is a fantastic doc): https://docs.google.com/document/d/1lgiFGdUKiPfzC-xo6LZQXvGNIXGHyMYsGCA035kKc80/mobilebasicDonate to the Australia Palestine Advocacy Network: https://apan.org.au/donate/Sign up to our mailing list:https://spiritualmisfits.com.au/Join our online Facebook community: https://www.facebook.com/groups/spiritualmisfitspodcastSupport the pod:https://spiritualmisfits.com.au/support-us/Send us an email: Spiritualmisfits@outlook.comView all episodes and access transcripts at: https://spiritualmisfits.buzzsprout.com
Sara M Saleh is a writer, poet, human rights lawyer, and the daughter of Palestinian, Lebanese and Egyptian migrants. Sara's first novel is Songs for the Dead and the Living (Affirm Press, 2023) and her first poetry collection is The Flirtation of Girls/Ghazal el-Banat Loved this review? You can get more books, writing and literary culture every week on the Final Draft Great Conversations podcast. Hear interviews with authors and discover your next favourite read! Book Club is produced and presented by Andrew Pople Want more great conversations with Australian authors? Discover this and many more conversations on Final Draft every week from 2ser. Get in touch with Andrew and Final Draft. We love to hear about what you're reading! Twitter - https://twitter.com/finaldraft2ser Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/finaldraft2ser/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/finaldraft2ser/
Guest Sara M Johnson: Stealing Friends, Dieting, Slug Lyfe, Social Media Been There Done, Shout Outs
The Final Draft podcast is all about books, writing and literary culture. We're dedicated to exploring Australian writing, looking into the issues that drive our storytelling to discover more from the books you love. These are the stories that make us who we are. Today's show features Felix Shannon in conversation with Sara M Saleh. Sara M Saleh is a writer, human rights lawyer, organiser, and the daughter of migrants from Palestine, Egypt, and Lebanon. Her poems, short stories, and essays have been published widely in English and Arabic. Songs for the Dead and the Living is described as a coming-of-age tale played out across generations and continents, from Palestine to Australia. Discover more from Sarah M Saleh Hear more from Felix on Death of the Reader Final Draft is produced and presented by Andrew Pople Want more great conversations with Australian authors? Discover this and many more conversations on Final Draft every week from 2ser. Get in touch with Andrew and Final Draft. We love to hear about what you're reading! Twitter - https://twitter.com/finaldraft2ser Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/finaldraft2ser/ Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/finaldraft2ser/
Justin and Sarah give a talk at the 2023 Medicine Hat Roundup in September of 2023. Find us at https://maddogspeakers.com/.
Australia cu vawlei cungah khuaruah har saram phun tampi an tlawnlennak le khua an saknak ram/hmun pakhat a si. Nan vahveihnak le khuallam ah ramsa hiamhma a pumi hei hmu law zeitindah na bawmh lai?
This week: The cover of The Spectator magazine looks at whether after years of Covid-based disruption, rising cost and lecturer strikes, university students are getting what they paid for. The Spectator's data editor Michael Simmons writes a sidebar in which he rails against some of the changes that are happening to university freshers' week and joins the podcast alongside Emma de Saram, Guild president at the Exeter University Student's Guild. (01:26) Also this week: In the magazine we are running an interview by The Spectator's special projects editor Ben Lazarus with professor Jim Skea – the new head of the UN intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC) and arguably the most important man in climate science. Ben and Jim kindly allowed us to share a section of their discussion, where they talk about the 1.5 degree target, activist groups and if the messaging on climate has failed. (14:55) And finally: do dogs want ice cream? That's the question that Mary Wakefield wrestles with in her column this week in The Spectator. With supermarkets now stocking everything from dog ice cream to dog caviar, she argues that we have lost our collective minds. Sir Cary Cooper, professor of organisational psychology at the University of Manchester, joins the podcast. (24:00) Hosted by Lara Prendergast and William Moore. Produced by Oscar Edmondson.
This week: The cover of The Spectator magazine looks at whether after years of Covid-based disruption, rising cost and lecturer strikes, university students are getting what they paid for. The Spectator's data editor Michael Simmons writes a sidebar in which he rails against some of the changes that are happening to university freshers' week and joins the podcast alongside Emma de Saram, Guild president at the Exeter University Student's Guild. (01:26) Also this week: In the magazine we are running an interview by The Spectator's special projects editor Ben Lazarus with professor Jim Skea – the new head of the UN intergovernmental panel on climate change (IPCC) and arguably the most important man in climate science. Ben and Jim kindly allowed us to share a section of their discussion, where they talk about the 1.5 degree target, activist groups and if the messaging on climate has failed. (14:55) And finally: do dogs want ice cream? That's the question that Mary Wakefield wrestles with in her column this week in The Spectator. With supermarkets now stocking everything from dog ice cream to dog caviar, she argues that we have lost our collective minds. Sir Cary Cooper, professor of organisational psychology at the University of Manchester, joins the podcast. (24:00) Hosted by Lara Prendergast and William Moore. Produced by Oscar Edmondson.
Three ‘Just Stop Oil' Environmental activists have been arrested after two protests disrupted tennis at Wimbledon yesterday. Emma de Saram, Just Stop Oil Campaigner spoke to Newstalk Breakfast and was asked if their message is getting through.
The law of attraction contends that if you want something badly enough, you can think it into existence—that you can manifest whatever you put your mind and energy into. Is it possible to manifest your soulmate in this lifetime? This is something many empaths ask themselves especially after trauma. . Many deem themselves as "damaged goods' or unlovable. But what message is that sending to the universe? This episode will hopefully give you hope love it possible no matter your past situation. My next guest, spiritual coach Emily Norwood, talks about her past and how she brought love into her life. I decided to invite her back to the podcast to tell her story to the rest of the world. Finding a life partner can be difficult for trauma survivors. In this episode, we'll discuss how to attract love into your life and why you should keep your hopes alive. Tune in!
Berlin based Saramé joins us for a mind bending journey into her sound. She is a DJ, sound practitioner and sound engineer and has many appearances across many respected venues building a solid footing as selector. We are excited to share this journey for Monument 366. Follow : IG: https://www.instagram.com/sarahhwreath SC: https://soundcloud.com/sarame-official FB: https://www.facebook.com/sarame.official https://linktr.ee/sarahwreath
Recorded at the Choose Your Own Conception OA Big Book Study meeting. Mondays, Tuesdays, & Wednesdays - CYOC Speaker Meetings Thursdays - CYOC Home Meeting - Milestones, Open Sharing, & Meditation All nights 8:00-9:00 PM Eastern Time Meeting ID: 985 0940 4749 Passcode: 12164 Inspired by the line from Bill's Story on page 12 in the Big Book, “Why don't you choose your own conception of God?”, the mission of this Overeaters Anonymous meeting is to be as inclusive as possible regarding spirituality and language, while staying firmly rooted in the program of recovery outlined in The Big Book. Multiple meetings/speakers on every chapter/step allow for access to multiple perspectives on our common solution. For more information about this meeting: https://cyocbbstudy.blogspot.com
Olga Kim is a Koryo-Saram artist from Rome. Olga is joining us to discuss Koryo-saram, a unique group of Korean diaspora who migrated to Uzbekistan in the late 19th century.Olga's InstagramJoin our Patreon to get more stuff!https://patreon.com/darksideofseoulBook a tour of The Dark Side of Seoul Ghost Walk at https://darksideofseoul.comListener Mail! Send us a message (Instagram, Facebook, email) and we might read it on air.CreditsProduced by Joe McPherson, Shawn Morrissey, and Mia RoncatiMusic by SoraksanTop tier PatronsAngel EarlJoel BonominiShaaron CullenDevon HiphnerMinseok LeeAlix RadillaRyan BerkebileAshley RigbyGabi PalominoSteve MarshChad StruhsMitchy Brewer Sarah FordToni ASean 진헌 BraunLaura CaseyReba PriceAndrea McDermottSupport the show
Australia cu saram a daw ngaingai mi ram an si bantuk in ramchung kokek saram pawl hna cu tha tein zohkhenh le huhphenh an si khawh nak ding caah cozah nih zulhphung an ser.
Spletité jsou osudy lidí, kterým cestu zkřížily geopolitické ambice světových mocností. V podstatě i v jejich důsledku vzniklo v Plzni korejské bistro. Mluví se tam česky, rusky, uzbecky a občas korejsky. Podnik vedou čistokrevní Korejci, do jednoho absolventi univerzit. Velkou část života musela rodina strávit na Sibiři a v Uzbekistánu, kde byla korejština v dobách Sovětského svazu zakázaná. Před několika lety dostali do Česka a v Plzni otevřeli bistro Korjo–Saram.
#DSR037 // Tracklisting 1) Topic x A7S - Kernkraft 400 (A Better Day) (Extended Mix) 2) Plastik Funk & Rudeejay ft. Crooked Bangs - Sideways (Extended Mix) 3) Fissure & VJS - Loving You (Extended Mix) 4) Melarmony - This Time (Original Mix) 5) Merger & Brocofski - Alright (Extended Mix) 6) Duke & Jones - Lucid (Extended Mix) 7) Capozzi ft. Bricc Baby - Lay It Down (Original Mix) 8) DØBER - Somebody (Extended Mix) 9) Lizzo - About Damn Time (Tim Hox Remix) 10) Matt Steffanina - Radio Rockin' (Extended Mix) 11) Alex Amaro - Hope (On Deck Remix) 12) Kate Bush - Running Up That Hill (KREAM Remix) 13) Marc Benjamin - Anything (Extended Mix) 14) James Hype x ATB x Öwnboss - Ferrari x 9PM x Move Your Body (Djs From Mars Bootleg) 15) Crushed Candy - Empty Space (Extended Mix) 16) Cheery-O ft. Sara Mélon - Gold (Extended Mix) 17) Kaskade x deadmau5 pres. Kx5 ft. Hayla - Escape (John Summit Remix) 18) Joe Bermudez & Louise Carver - Lose My Number (jeonghyeon Remix) www.darkamada.com
I vårt moderna samhälle har döden alltmer flyttat in på sjukhuset, bort från de anhöriga. Döden har blivit "övermedikaliserad" menar forskare i en ny rapport. Hur kan vår sista tid bli en värdefull del av livet? Programmet är en repris från 31 maj 2022.Något har gått fel med hur vi dör och hur vi hanterar andras död i vårt moderna samhälle, enligt ledande forskare i en rapport från en kommission kopplad till tidskriften the Lancet. Och de som arbetar med vår sista tid i livet menar själva att yrkesmänniskorna har fått en alltför stor roll. Vi anhöriga och vår kärlek till den döende kan sägas ha fastnat i väntrummet, samtidigt som stora resurser går åt till avancerad vård som inte kan rädda patienten. Hur kan då den sista tiden i livet bli bättre för den som ska dö, för de anhöriga, och för samhället? - Det är viktigt att den sista delen av livet är just en del av livet! Många i samhället förknippar palliativ vård med döden, och tänker att inget finns att göra. Det är tvärtemot hur vi i den palliativa vården tänker och gör, där vi vill möjliggöra ett liv så länge som möjligt, säger Joakim Öhlén, expert på palliativ vård, alltså vård i livets slutskede.- Vi i Sverige har en attityd av OM vi dör som skapar en distans till döden, och ger en illusion av att det är vi som har kontroll över liv och död, säger Sara Möller, verksamhetschef på Bräcke hospice i Göteborg.Medverkande: Joakim Öhlén, professor i omvårdnad vid Sahlgrenska akademin, sjuksköterska på palliativt centrum på Sahlgrenska universitetssjukhuset och föreståndare för centrum för personcentrerad vård vid Göteborgs universitet; Libby Sallnow, forskare University college London Hospitals och Vrije Universiteit i Belgien, och medförfattare till Lancetkommissionens rapport On the value of death: bringing death back into life; Heather Richardson, St Christophers Hospice, London; Sara Möller, verksamhetschef på Bräcke hospice i Göteborg.Reporter: Sara Heyman, korrespondent för global hälsa sara.heyman@sr.seProducent: Björn Gunér bjorn.guner@sr.se
Air Date: Friday June 3 2022 Roxe - Hey Sexy Hook N Sling feat. Marlhy - Asking For a Friend (Hooks VIP Mix) Bram Fidder and Stefano Iezzi - Good Time DØBER - Somebody Sean Finn & DJ Wady & Moondark - Pasilda (CASSIMM Remix) Lee Cabrera and Mike Vale - Shake It (Antho Decks Rework) Crusy - Movin' Wade - Get After It Ship Wrek - Silent Pickle - Body Heat Cheery-O feat. Sara Mélon - Gold Landis - Like Honey Oliver Heldens, Tchami and Anabel Englund - LOW Fedde Le Grand & 22 Bullets - Down Avicii & Sebastien Drums - My Feelings For You (Don Diablo Remix) Lionis and Jasberg - Overload Cat Dealers - Pressure Melsen - Ain't Real (Club Mix) SAYMYNAME x Nitti Gritt - Bing Bong Chester Young - Smash George Heyden & Leonard - Dark
00:52 1 Kryder feat. Richard Walters Breathe Deep ARMADA 03:56 2 Judah, Matt Fax, Luke Coulson Alone (feat. Luke Coulson) Colorize (Enhanced) 09:24 3 Jaakob Palma SPINNIN' 11:33 4 SAY SAY feat. EEVA Jump (Julien Fade Remix) ARMADA 13:13 5 MXV Rising Above Thought Colorize (Enhanced) 15:00 6 MAGNUS & Conor Ross Take Me Back SPINNIN' 19:16 7 KILL SCRIPT feat. Linney LINE IN THE SAND ARMADA 22:39 8 Cat Dealers Pressure ARMADA 26:30 9 Nicky Romero Hear Me Now Protocol 30:15 10 Alesso Words (Alesso VIP Mix) CAPITOL 32:41 11 Cheery-O feat. Sara Mélon Gold GEMSTONE RECORDS 36:28 12 Kohen, FREAKPASS I Mean Never (feat. Mikalyn) SPINNIN' 39:01 13 Ahmed Helmy Afterlife ARMADA 43:11 14 SLVR Push Your Body SPINNIN' 47:15 15 Ummet Ozcan Oblivion SPINNIN' 48:30 16 SMACK x Raven & Kreyn ft. CHYL Boom Boom Future House Music 50:15 17 Badshah & J Balvin Voodoo (Tiësto Remix) CAPITOL 53:01 18 MP x Vinne On and On MUSICAL FREEDOM 56:16 19 TELYKast Stay TELYKast 58:37 20 Oliver Heldens I Was Made For Lovin' You ft. Nile Rodgers & House Gospel Choir RCA 21Jonas Blue & Julian PerrettaPerfect MelodyCAPITOL
01. Yves V, INNA & Janieck - Deja Vu (Extended Mix) 02. Alok - The Club Is Jumpin' (Extended Mix) 03. Galoski - Get Down 04. Eric Prydz - Pjanoo (NOME. Bootleg) 05. Bassjackers - Bored Ape Rave Club (Extended Mix) 06. Yves V & 22Bullets - She Movin' (Extended Mix) 07. Almero, Thomas Feelman & Robbie Rosen - Inside You (Extended Mix) 08. Dastic feat. Amanda Collis - Wish We Never Met (Extended Mix) 09. Denzell, Aitor Blond & Jone Fields feat. Jordan Grace - We Belong (Extended Mix) 10. Arround - Gotta Go Home (Extended Mix) 11. Cat Dealers - Pressure (Extended Mix) 12. Castion - Like You Do (Extended Mix) 13. Dennis Cartier - How Are You (Extended Mix) 14. Cheery-O feat. Sara Mélon - Gold (Extended Mix) 15. ÜHÜ - Going Out (Extended Mix) 16. Edmondsski & Uri Farre - You & I (Extended Mix) CLASSIC OF THE WEEK 17. ATFC - I Called U (ATFC's Conversation Killer)
I vårt moderna samhälle har döden alltmer flyttat in på sjukhuset, bort från de anhöriga. Döden har blivit "övermedikaliserad" menar forskare i en ny rapport. Hur kan vår sista tid bli en värdefull del av livet? Något har gått fel med hur vi dör och hur vi hanterar andras död i vårt moderna samhälle, enligt ledande forskare i en rapport från en kommission kopplad till tidskriften the Lancet. Och de som arbetar med vår sista tid i livet menar själva att yrkesmänniskorna har fått en alltför stor roll. Vi anhöriga och vår kärlek till den döende kan sägas ha fastnat i väntrummet, samtidigt som stora resurser går åt till avancerad vård som inte kan rädda patienten. Hur kan då den sista tiden i livet bli bättre för den som ska dö, för de anhöriga, och för samhället? - Det är viktigt att den sista delen av livet är just en del av livet! Många i samhället förknippar palliativ vård med döden, och tänker att inget finns att göra. Det är tvärtemot hur vi i den palliativa vården tänker och gör, där vi vill möjliggöra ett liv så länge som möjligt, säger Joakim Öhlén, expert på palliativ vård, alltså vård i livets slutskede.- Vi i Sverige har en attityd av OM vi dör som skapar en distans till döden, och ger en illusion av att det är vi som har kontroll över liv och död, säger Sara Möller, verksamhetschef på Bräcke hospice i Göteborg.Medverkande: Joakim Öhlén, professor i omvårdnad vid Sahlgrenska akademin, sjuksköterska på palliativt centrum på Sahlgrenska universitetssjukhuset och föreståndare för centrum för personcentrerad vård vid Göteborgs universitet; Libby Sallnow, forskare University college London Hospitals och Vrije Universiteit i Belgien, och medförfattare till Lancetkommissionens rapport On the value of death: bringing death back into life; Heather Richardson, St Christophers Hospice, London; Sara Möller, verksamhetschef på Bräcke hospice i Göteborg.Reporter: Sara Heyman, korrespondent för global hälsa sara.heyman@sr.seProducent: Björn Gunér bjorn.guner@sr.se
Welcome to the 143rd edition of the Keen Minds Podcast! In this episode Tessa and Jen jump into the trippy adventure that was Aram working through his fears, weigh in on some theories, and gush (okay, Jen gushed) over our brief Saram moment and what that means for Aram's growth and self reflection.
In this conversation, we discuss the dimensions of compositional process and style. Vytautas V. Jurgutis is truly an exponent of a new type of multi-faceted artist. He is a do-it-yourself musician, delving into primordial depths of sound. A mathematician, thinking in sophisticated musical routines of programming languages, we discover a composer of solid academic background, employing a vast modernist heritage of advanced instrumental writing and deeply engaging electronic soundscapes. Tracklist: Podcast intro: Bronius Kutavičius Anno cum tettigonia from Lithuanian Music in Context II. Landscapes of Minimalism (Music Information Centre Lithuania, 2011), Silesian String Quartet: Marek Moś (violin), Arkadiusz Kubica (violin), Łukasz Syrnicki (viola), Piotr Janosik (cello). Compositions by Vytautas V. Jurgutis: Su60 from the album Sound Masks (Caprice Records, 2003); Ellipses from the album zoom in 3: new music from Lithuania (Music Information Centre Lithuania, 2004), Arditti Quartet: Irvine Arditti (violin), Graeme Jennings (violin), Ralf Ehlers (viola), Rohan de Saram (cello); Alpha 10 from the album Sound Masks (Caprice Records, 2003); Axis from the album Sound Masks (Caprice Records, 2003); Metroscan (2015); Terra tecta from the album zoom in 4: new music from Lithuania (Music Information Centre Lithuania, 2004), Mindaugas Bačkus (cello).
If the first Mad Max gives audiences a glimpse of the last vestiges of civilization, 1982's Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior takes them full-on into George Miller's Wasteland in one of the most celebrated action films ever. On this episode, film critic Sara M. Fetters joins the show as we talk about how Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior builds on its predecessor, how it impacts the series' future, and why it still holds up all these years later. SYNOPSIS After avenging the death of his wife and young son, Max (Mel Gibson) drives the post-apocalyptic highways of the Australian outback, fending off attacks from nomadic tribes that prey on outsiders. Falling into an encampment led by the relatively peaceful Pappagallo (Mike Preston), Max at first schemes to steal their oil. But soon he becomes the group's reluctant defender against the hulking Humungus (Kjell Nilsson) and his ruthless marauders. Connect with Crooked Table Productions on social media: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram