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"In this book, Christine brings us the other side of the Rwanda story which the mastermind perpetrators have killed to keep the international community from finding out. As a survivor of the Rwanda and DRC Congo genocides, wars, and dictatorship, Christine shares her experiences, showing you the real Rwanda, the one that is never advertised nor shown to the outside world. Help free the voices of those who have been silenced before their time. Understand today's Rwanda and give freedom to those trapped by a regime that is only interested in power. Remove the blinds placed on the west by a cruel dictator who hates his own people"--Back cover.
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The Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies began compiling data on the number of black elected officials in the United States in 1970. Since then the number of black elected officials has increased steadily each year. In the 1990 edition of this annual volume, black elected officials sworn into office for the 1990 term are listed by state and indexed alphabetically. There is also an overview of geographic distribution; female black elected officials; federal, state, substate regional, county, and municipal breakdowns. Blacks elected to judicial, law enforcement, and educational offices are also listed.
As a young boy, he suffered unspeakable physical and mental abuse at the hands of unfit parents. This forged him into a brutal serial killer. As a man, he possesses great physical strength. He evades police at every turn and considers himself invincible. His nemesis is a highly motivated and skilled RCMP detective. He heads a team of investigators who work tirelessly to learn the killers identity. Arresting him will be quite another challenge. The trail turns cold after the killer leaves a shocking gift for the detective. The police receive an unusual break which ignites the hunt. The killer takes the police on a wild ride of bloodshed, mayhem, and narrow escapes. The toll upon the killer and the detective builds to a breaking point. Frustration leads to confrontation. There is only one winner, but the cost is great.
This ethnohistory uses colonial-era native-language texts written by Nahuas to construct history from the indigenous point of view. The book offers the first internal ethnographic view of central Mexican indigenous communities in the critical time of independence, when modern Mexican Spanish developed its unique character, founded on indigenous concepts of space, time, and grammar. The Aztecs at Independence opens a window into the cultural life of writers, leaders, and worshippers--Nahua women and men in the midst of creating a vibrant community.