Ripple #poetry #children

penned in moon dust

swishing water

all around

waves of colour

splashing sound

child’s smile

in the sun

rays of light

lapping fun

Observing children live life is one of the most calming and rewarding of activities. Watch a child play today…

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Zelensky #atozchallenge #Ukraine #fiction

penned in moon dust

The Passage Hotel

“How did you know Zelensky?” I had asked Luda when I first met her at her home in Mariople.

“He grew up next door. When my nephews visit, they played. They became very good friends. Those boys have been together through many things and now war. Do you know his name means ‘famous leader?'”

No I didnt not know the meaning of his name, but it fit. These were the few things I knew about Volodymyr Zelensky who was elected President of Ukraine in 2019:

Volodymyr was born in 1978. Ukrainian was then part of the Soviet Union. After the fall of communism, Zelenskyy co-founded a successful comedy troupe and studied law.

Volodymyr Zelensky had been in the position of President of Ukraine for a few years when Russia attacked on Feb 24. Zelensky grew up under the iron fist of Mother Russia and had no desire…

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Cosacchi russi e cosacchi ucraini

le pagine dei nostri libri

La regione ucraina della Zaporizhzhia, che vuol dire oltre le rapide in riferimento al fiume Dnepr, sede peraltro di una delle centrali nucleari, è di fatto, insieme alle rive del Don in Russia, la culla dei cosacchi. L’inno nazionale ucraino infatti dice: «Mostreremo, fratelli, che siamo la nazione cosacca». Mito russo per eccellenza e mito letterario per Gogol e Tolstoj, i cosacchi hanno in realtà un ruolo molto più importante nell’identità ucraina che in quella russa.

I cosacchi erano una popolazione seminomade di diversa provenienza che si muoveva a suo piacimento nelle immense pianure a Nord di Mar Nero e Mar Caspio e costituivano una comunità autonoma di guerrieri, a cui si univano avventurieri e servi della gleba in fuga, che eleggeva democraticamente il loro capo, l’atamano o etmano, dal tedesco Hauptmann. Tutte le cariche erano di norma elettive e le questioni più rilevanti erano affrontate dall’assemblea della comunità (

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Stardust

De malinha pronta

Reprise

Photo : Filipa Moreira da Cruz

Where do you go when you are feeling blue?
Does anyone care about you?
Who do you have when you need a hug?
Do you sometimes feel like a real slug?
What if tomorrow never comes?
And the days are all the same?
Close your eyes
No more sentences and lies
Take a deep breath
Your whole body needs a rest
And your soul too
Your friends are just a few
But they will always be there for you.

Filipa Moreira da Cruz

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Parashat Acharei Mot, Mourning, and Caring for Each Other

Context, Thought, and Learning: ShiraDest Offers Project Do Better

     This week’s Torah portion,  Acharei Mot (After the Death of…),  is the 29th (29th/54 or 52, depending on the year: this year, it’s 54…) through the annual cycle, and the 6th parashah in the book of Vayikra/Leviticus.

   This portion deals with preventing tragedies like that of the two sons of Aaron last regular parashah ( Parashat Metzorah), and also lists prohibitions on certain things that now seem pretty obvious, and give us much of our Western Cultural ideas.  For example “the life of the flesh is in the blood,” and not sleeping with your daughter-in-law.  All of these prohibitions suggest a way of reasoning that leads to the idea that caring about others, and for others, is the basis of a functioning society.  From caring for the animals whose lives meat-eaters take in order to feel nourished, to caring for the feelings of those close to our…

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The mimics among us — birds pirate songs for personal profit

Palm Oil Detectives


From Roman classics to British tabloids, humans have long celebrated the curious and remarkable ability of birds to imitate the sounds of humans and other animals. A recent surge of research is revealing how and why birds use vocal mimicry to further their own interests, as we discuss in Biological Reviews.


Anastasia Dalziell, Cornell University and Justin A. Welbergen, Western Sydney University

Far from being merely a biological curiosity, it appears that vocal mimicry plays a more central role in the lives of birds than we have given them credit for.

Most birds communicate using vocalisations unique to their own kind, but a diverse group of species from around the globe regularly imitate the sounds of other animals, including sounds we produce ourselves.

In Australia, these avian “mimics” are all around us. On a stroll in the Blue Mountains, for example, you can expect to encounter…

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