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    Lest We Forget

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    Lest We Forget

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    The playbill for Taylor University’s Fall 1993 Advanced Oral Interpretation Class’s performance of Lest We Forget.https://pillars.taylor.edu/playbills/1345/thumbnail.jp

    Lest We Forget

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    Lest We Forget

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    Lest We Forget

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    Confronting the Holocaust and its implications represents a challenge we should not evade -- and a responsibility we should not avoid

    Anzac Day 2013: lest we forget

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    Australians and New Zealanders commemorated Anzac Day on 25 April 2013, paying tribute to diggers (soldiers) who lost their lives at the Turkish front 98 years ago. The tribute commenced with dawn services and marches across Australia and New Zealand. Those who lost their lives in subsequent wars were also remembered. A resident of the Blue Mountains, Sydney, Michael Adams, said, ‘My father was in World War II in New Guinea and my great grandfather was killed over in France in 1917 so I come here every year to honour them, as well as remember those who have been left behind.’ South Australian Veterans director Bill Denny said that about 300,000 Australians have died in 51 conflicts from 1863 to the present day. Tim Barrett, Commander Australian Fleet, remembered the 3000 veterans who are ‘currently serving with great distinction overseas from South Sudan, Egypt to the Middle East, Afghanistan, in the Southeast Asian region and the South Pacific’. Overseas, at Anzac Cove in Gallipoli, Turkey, many Australians also gathered (as they do every year on Anzac Day) to pay their respects to their lost loved ones. As I reflected on the Anzac Day commemorations, I envisaged the complexities of war. I returned to my previous research, which has touched on three relevant dimensions of Australian history: Australian soldiers’ sacrifice for their country; the question of enemy subjects; and the loyal voices of minorities. • Dr Nahid Afrose Kabir is a Senior Research Fellow in the International Centre for Muslim and non- Muslim Understanding, University of South Australia

    Kashmir: Lest We Forget

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    From a time when Kashmir was regarded as the epitome of communal amity and the unequivocal support that the people of the state gave to the idea of India, to the past three decades of relative inversion of opinions, even if of a segment of the community, the state has travelled a long distance in a small span of its timeless history. All relevant parties to the Kashmir questions have had a role to play in this quagmire of intrigue and deceit. Any resolution is only conceivable if there is acceptance of the role that each has played in bringing the situation to the current pass and taking magnanimous steps in undoing the errors that have given rise to ill- perceptions on all sides. This paper seeks to highlight some of the most glaring issues that have bred distrust and suggest a way forward

    EC995 Lest We Forget

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    Extension circular 995 provides information on teaching children courtesy to other, simple rules for introducing each other correctly, when to shake hands, salutation of courtesy, the fundamental rules that govern table setting, serving the meal, and table etiquette

    Kashmir: Lest We Forget

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    From a time when Kashmir was regarded as the epitome of communal amity and the unequivocal support that the people of the state gave to the idea of India, to the past three decades of relative inversion of opinions, even if of a segment of the community, the state has travelled a long distance in a small span of its timeless history. All relevant parties to the Kashmir questions have had a role to play in this quagmire of intrigue and deceit. Any resolution is only conceivable if there is acceptance of the role that each has played in bringing the situation to the current pass and taking magnanimous steps in undoing the errors that have given rise to ill- perceptions on all sides. This paper seeks to highlight some of the most glaring issues that have bred distrust and suggest a way forward

    Gallery: Lest We Forget!

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    The photographs featured here are from a traveling national exhibition that was on view on the Howard University campus for about a month starting on September 13. Titled We\u27ll Never Turn Back, the exhibition of approximately 130 photographs is the work of 13 photographers who were associated with the Civil Rights Movement
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