itfwa.wordpress.com
In The Field: West Africa | the blog for GlobalGiving's ITF: West Africa team | Page 2
https://itfwa.wordpress.com/page/2
In The Field: West Africa. The blog for GlobalGiving's ITF: West Africa team. About ITF: West Africa. Newer posts →. What’s in store? July 14, 2010. So farwe have visited 27 GlobalGiving partner organizations, hosted 5 workshops (for over 150 organizations), and traveled through 4 countries. We’ve been to Lome’s Fetish Market, seen the Wli Falls in Eastern Ghana, hung out at the beaches on the Ghanaian coast, and banged on bongo rocks in Bongo, Ghana. But the adventure is not over yet! At the crack of da...
brendapie.org
Brenda Adelson | Professional Profile
http://www.brendapie.org/index.html
A position in which I can apply my professional experience in small business management to craft and implement innovative strategies to affect positive social change while supporting [triple] bottom line returns. The Cristina Nardone Foundation. I have the honor of working with Cristina's sister Jackie and former colleague and Peace Corps Volunteer Ariel Wagner to establish a nonprofit foundation with the purpose of honoring Cristina and her dedication to improving the lives of the Dogon people. Project ...
en.wikipedia.org
Dogon people - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dogon_people
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. For the ethnic group of the Kingdom of Dagbon. In the north of Ghana. Dogon people, Mali. 400,000 to 800,000). Regions with significant populations. Are an ethnic group living in the central plateau region of the country of Mali. In Western Africa, south of the Niger. Bend, near the city of Bandiagara. Region. The population numbers between 400,000 and 800,000. A Dogon hunter with a flintlock. Dogon dwelling on the Bandiagara Escarpment. Dogon insecurity in the face...
bethroberts13.wordpress.com
Christmas and New Year’s Eve 2011 | Musing in Mali
https://bethroberts13.wordpress.com/2012/01/12/christmas-and-new-years-eve-2011
Join me in discovering new people, places and things. Christmas and New Year’s Eve 2011. Celebrating holidays in Mali always seems a bit weird. The birthday parties, Christmas and Thanksgiving gatherings, New Year’s Eve festivities (etc.) of the past year and a half have been wonderful in their own way, but so different from what I’m used to doing Stateside. Instead of cutting the Christmas ham with my family in Kentucky last year, I spent Christmas Eve at a mud-structure church in Dogon Country. We setu...