How to lose America: The death of democracy looks nearer than ever Salon 5/15/2021 © Provided by Salon QAnon; Trump Supporters; Flags A woman holds a Trump 2020 flag and a Q Anon flag outside of Mankato Regional Airport as President Donald Trump makes a campaign stop on August 17, 2020 in Mankato, Minnesota. Trump spoke at the airport before continuing on to a campaign stop in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Stephen Maturen/Getty Images
Liz Cheney is not on my short list of politicians I admire or wish to see in Congress. But she has done the right thing in calling out the big lie and promising to do all she can to keep Donald Trump away from the White House, literally or in terms of his influence over a terribly broken party. She is a canary in the coal mine. Would that others had the courage to follow suit.
Νέα για: Σεισμός 6,6 Ρίχτερ στην Κω #seismos #σεισμος
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Reflections on the Tragedy in Meron By Dr. Chani Maybruch | May 06, 2021
As I sit down to write, my mind is flooded with the tragedy that occurred on Lag B’Omer in Meron, Israel. During a climactic and momentous celebration marking the time that Rabbi Akiva sought out Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai and a few other students to rebuild the Torah legacy after his 24,000 students perished, the Jewish nation suffered yet another devastating tragedy. This Lag B’Omer event was particularly anticipated and cherished in Israel because it was a significant gathering of tens of thousands of people that testified to our overcoming the threat of the coronavirus that trapped people inside during many months of lockdown. We felt victorious, and yet now, utterly defeated.
District Six legend Aunty Shariefa Khan celebrates 100
By Staff Reporter
Cape Town - District Six’s oldest living land claimant, Shariefa Khan, turned 100 on Sunday.
Her daughter Nadiema Khan said the family had a photo session on Sunday in Wynberg where relatives could have their pictures taken with her mother to treasure as memories.
The family had iftar (breaking of the fast) on Saturday followed by small birthday party, Khan said.
“She was so very happy. She laughed and talked. She told the young children stories even we have not heard before,” she said.
Also known as Mama or Aunty Riefa , Shariefa Khan was born in 1921 in Vryburg in the North West. Her family came to Cape Town in 1928, and lived in Muizenberg and later Kensington where her father had the first halaal butchery in the area, before she married her husband, Dawood Khan, an Indian migrant living in District Six.
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