Applause. 45 minutes, prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu speaking to a joint session of the us congress, interrupted throughout by raucous applause, particularly from the side of the chamber, filled with republicans who had invited him here to speak, and it was an impassioned and forceful defence of israels Military Campaign in gaza. In an address that lasted much longer than the previous addresses he has made to congress. He urged the lawmakers to congress. He urged the lawmakers to give them the tools to finish the job faster, pay tribute to the men and women of the idf, introducing some webbing and wooded, and almost at the outset. And almost at the outset of the speech, the Prime Minister made a point of thanking president biden, with whom he has had deep disagreements over the past ten months. Our world is in upheaval. In the middle east, Irans Axis of terror conference america, of terror confronts america, israel, and our arab friends. This is not a clash of civilisations, its a d
The characters used to write the Vai script, which was invented in Liberia in 1833, have become visually simpler over time, reflecting the evolutionary pressures acting on writing
TAHLEQUAH – The Cherokee Nation is recognizing Friday, Oct. 15 as “Sequoyah Day” in honor of the 200th anniversary of Sequoyah’s creation of the Cherokee Syllabary.
On the picturesque grounds of Sequoyah’s Cabin Museum in Sallisaw, Cherokee Nation leaders met Oct. 12 to celebrate via a formal proclamation 200 years of the tribe’s written language.
VONORE, TENNESSEE â Located on the shores of the Tellico Lake in the southeastern part of Tennessee is the Sequoyah Birthplace Museum.Â
Owned and operated by the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, the museum was built in 1986 and has recently been renovated and showcases an exhibit that was installed in 2018.Â
âThe old exhibit was a lot of the period paleo Indian, tons and tons of artifacts, pottery shards, and we only spent about four (display) cases talking about Sequoyah and the syllabary,â Charlie Rhodarmer, Sequoyah Birthplace Museum manager/director, said.Â
He said the museum is more of an experience than a walk-through museum, with two small theaters that give a glimpse into what the life and hardships of Sequoyah might have been like as he spent his days creating symbols to match sounds that would become the Cherokee syllabary.Â