من الكتاب الفرنسي #اليمن نحو الجمهورية وثائقي 1900-1970م
اخترت لكم صور تخص مراسلات الامام يحيى واختام
اخترت لكم صور تخص مراسلات الامام يحيى واختام
Forwarded from قناة تعز للأخبار العاجلة
Forwarded from #الحـــرية_الإخبـــارية
انخفاظ كبير في اسعار الصرف اليوم .. شاهد الانخفاظ المستمر
👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
@AlHorreya
هل تعبت من كثرة البحث عن الأخبار على الانترنت؟
● #شبكة_الحرية_الإخبارية تنقل لكم من قلب الحدث تغطية شاملة وواسعة عن أخبار #اليمن لحظة حدوثها..
● كادر #صحفي #واعلامي متخصص ينقل لكم الخبر من قلب الحدث وخطوط النار..
👈 #سرعة
👈 #تحـري
👈 #دقــــة
شبكة الحرية.. نافذتك لمعرفة كل ما يحصل.
@AlHorreya
👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇👇
@AlHorreya
هل تعبت من كثرة البحث عن الأخبار على الانترنت؟
● #شبكة_الحرية_الإخبارية تنقل لكم من قلب الحدث تغطية شاملة وواسعة عن أخبار #اليمن لحظة حدوثها..
● كادر #صحفي #واعلامي متخصص ينقل لكم الخبر من قلب الحدث وخطوط النار..
👈 #سرعة
👈 #تحـري
👈 #دقــــة
شبكة الحرية.. نافذتك لمعرفة كل ما يحصل.
@AlHorreya
يقوول مرحبا بكم في جزيرة سقطرى جزيرة الفضائيين 👽👽👽👽👽👽
كثيريين يعتقدون بوجود مخلوقات اخرى ويستشهدون بكل غريب ومعجز
كثيريين يعتقدون بوجود مخلوقات اخرى ويستشهدون بكل غريب ومعجز
How the Yemeni island of Socotra is forging its own future
Abu Dhabi-based author Nathalie Peutz explains how the Yemeni territory is a thriving community taking control of its heritage and destiny
January 5, 2019
Nathalie Peutz first visited Socotra, the largest island in Yemen’s Socotra Archipelago, in 2003. She returned in 2004 and lived for a year and a half in Homhil, a protected area on the eastern tip of the island, where she stayed with the local community and carried out anthropological fieldwork.
UAE-based author Nathalie Peutz wrote 'Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen'. Courtesy New York University Abu Dhabi
“People at first were suspicious of me,” says Peutz. “They wondered why an American would want to live in their village.” Peutz, an assistant professor of anthropology at New York University Abu Dhabi, has continued to visit Socotra on and off ever since. She has witnessed first-hand Socotra’s transformation from a marginalised region, stranded in the Indian Ocean more than 322 kilometres south of Yemen and about 96 kilometres east of the horn of Africa, to a popular tourist destination, after the island was made a Unesco World Heritage Site in 2008 in recognition of its striking flora and fauna (Socotra is often referred to as “the Galapagos of the Indian Ocean”). More recently, Socotra’s situation has changed again, the ongoing civil war in Yemen, as well as a pair of devastating cyclones in 2015, destroying the tourism industry.
'Islands of Heritage'
Peutz has now written a fascinating book, Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen, in which she explores the ways the people of Socotra have responded to the increasing influence of outside forces on their island. Islands of Heritage is less about the animals and plants that make Socotra unique and more about the impact of conservation efforts on the islanders; it is about language and culture and what happens to these when an island experiences rapid and radical change.
Mainland Yemen, of course, has also undergone enormous change since 1990 and the unification of South Yemen and North Yemen. “A political scientist may write about what’s happened in Yemen from the perspective of [the capital] Sanaa,” says Peutz. “But this book tells the story from the perspective of the people [on Socotra], who were never really central to those developments but were still affected by them
The cover of Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen. Courtesy Stanford University Press
Too often, she argues, Socotrans are muscled out of the limelight by the very island they inhabit – either because of its biodiversity (“Outsiders linking Socotrans’ value to their environment,” says Peutz) or because of its strategic significance. This book places the Socotrans front and centre.
The influence of external powers
At the heart of Islands of Heritage is the question of whether or not it is ever beneficial, particularly in terms of conservation and heritage, for external powers to influence and intervene. “Socotra is interesting to me because what is going on there is going on all over the world,” says Peutz. “People are worried about cultural loss, language loss and how to retain what it is that makes them distinctive.”
Although Peutz points out that interest in Socotra’s natural resources dates back two millennia, modern-day scientific research on the island’s biodiversity began to snowball around the turn of the 21st century. It was during this period that a new term – “the Environment” – was introduced into the lexicon of the islanders, despite, Peutz writes, “Socotrans’ long-standing traditions of resource conservation and regulation.”
It was as if western scientists and conservationists were trying to introduce to Socotrans something that they had relied upon – and maintained – for many hundreds of years. “These are people who have always been completely dependent on their environment in a way that I am not in my daily life,” says Peutz.
Grinding wheat in the countryside, Socotra. Nathalie
Abu Dhabi-based author Nathalie Peutz explains how the Yemeni territory is a thriving community taking control of its heritage and destiny
January 5, 2019
Nathalie Peutz first visited Socotra, the largest island in Yemen’s Socotra Archipelago, in 2003. She returned in 2004 and lived for a year and a half in Homhil, a protected area on the eastern tip of the island, where she stayed with the local community and carried out anthropological fieldwork.
UAE-based author Nathalie Peutz wrote 'Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen'. Courtesy New York University Abu Dhabi
“People at first were suspicious of me,” says Peutz. “They wondered why an American would want to live in their village.” Peutz, an assistant professor of anthropology at New York University Abu Dhabi, has continued to visit Socotra on and off ever since. She has witnessed first-hand Socotra’s transformation from a marginalised region, stranded in the Indian Ocean more than 322 kilometres south of Yemen and about 96 kilometres east of the horn of Africa, to a popular tourist destination, after the island was made a Unesco World Heritage Site in 2008 in recognition of its striking flora and fauna (Socotra is often referred to as “the Galapagos of the Indian Ocean”). More recently, Socotra’s situation has changed again, the ongoing civil war in Yemen, as well as a pair of devastating cyclones in 2015, destroying the tourism industry.
'Islands of Heritage'
Peutz has now written a fascinating book, Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen, in which she explores the ways the people of Socotra have responded to the increasing influence of outside forces on their island. Islands of Heritage is less about the animals and plants that make Socotra unique and more about the impact of conservation efforts on the islanders; it is about language and culture and what happens to these when an island experiences rapid and radical change.
Mainland Yemen, of course, has also undergone enormous change since 1990 and the unification of South Yemen and North Yemen. “A political scientist may write about what’s happened in Yemen from the perspective of [the capital] Sanaa,” says Peutz. “But this book tells the story from the perspective of the people [on Socotra], who were never really central to those developments but were still affected by them
The cover of Islands of Heritage: Conservation and Transformation in Yemen. Courtesy Stanford University Press
Too often, she argues, Socotrans are muscled out of the limelight by the very island they inhabit – either because of its biodiversity (“Outsiders linking Socotrans’ value to their environment,” says Peutz) or because of its strategic significance. This book places the Socotrans front and centre.
The influence of external powers
At the heart of Islands of Heritage is the question of whether or not it is ever beneficial, particularly in terms of conservation and heritage, for external powers to influence and intervene. “Socotra is interesting to me because what is going on there is going on all over the world,” says Peutz. “People are worried about cultural loss, language loss and how to retain what it is that makes them distinctive.”
Although Peutz points out that interest in Socotra’s natural resources dates back two millennia, modern-day scientific research on the island’s biodiversity began to snowball around the turn of the 21st century. It was during this period that a new term – “the Environment” – was introduced into the lexicon of the islanders, despite, Peutz writes, “Socotrans’ long-standing traditions of resource conservation and regulation.”
It was as if western scientists and conservationists were trying to introduce to Socotrans something that they had relied upon – and maintained – for many hundreds of years. “These are people who have always been completely dependent on their environment in a way that I am not in my daily life,” says Peutz.
Grinding wheat in the countryside, Socotra. Nathalie