Portrety Abrahama (Edward Fiała, Abraham w polskiej prozie biblijnej)
Edward Fiała, Abraham w polskiej prozie biblijnej, Wydawnictwo KUL, Lublin 2012, ss. 272
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Edward Fiała, Abraham w polskiej prozie biblijnej, Wydawnictwo KUL, Lublin 2012, ss. 272
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Rzetelna monografia (Libor Martinek, Władysław Sikora (Monografie), Literature & Sciences (Edice Spisovatelé Těšínska 1. díl),Opava 2015, ss. 152)
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The Ukrainian Revolution on Granite began as a student demonstration in early October 1990. It lasted a little over two weeks and directly involved slightly more than 300 people. Unexpectedly, this little-known student hunger strike turned out to be one of the most remarkable events of the late Soviet period. It set a blueprint for the future revolutions in Ukraine.
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Interview with Valdas Adamkus, former president of Lithuania.
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It seems that one of Viktor Yanukovych’s biggest mistakes was not believing that Ukraine in 2004 and Ukraine in 2013 were two completely different countries. The fundamental difference between them was the role the internet and social media played. Due to social media, the Ukrainian protests of 2013–2014, which were later dubbed the Revolution of Dignity, could begin and be organised in an unprecedented fashion.
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The EuroMaidan started in Kyiv on the evening of November21st 2013. Throughout the subsequent weeks it turned into a true revolution – one that changed Ukraine’s political system and its geopolitical vector. Less known, however, is the fact that EuroMaidan went beyond the Independence Square in Kyiv. It also took place in eastern Ukraine.
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Public opinion polls are a great tool for depicting the motivation of political activity, potential participation in protests as well as new manifestations of public activity. However, people often misunderstand the purpose of sociological surveys and how they can be useful. Or else, wrongly assume thatpolls are supposed to predict future societal outbursts.
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Armenians love their country – that is a feeling deeply rooted in Armenian culture. Despite this attachment they still see that Armenia offers them no future. Practically all Armenians stress the need for change. They wish the political processes would become more transparent. The question is: are these desires enough evidence to suggest that a revolution is in the air?
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Inclusive education in Romania is realized if the principle of equality of chances for all children isrespected. In this framework, a series of measures and strategies specific of an educational processcentered on the student and on his special educational needs have been designed and implemented.The educational policies in Romania promote and implement equal access to education for allchildren with no discrimination. For this, the integrated approach for the problems of the child withspecial educative demands in the context of a multisectorial and pluridisciplinary intervention willsuccessfully assure a high-quality education for people with special educative demands.
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The paper aims to capture a series of teaching speech coordinates, focusing on dimensions lessobvious or visible, expression of a covered / hidden curriculum with a marked impact on theformation. The awareness of these implications provide a fuller picture of the dynamics of theeducational space and supports the development of ethical and professional conscience, sonecessary to trainers.
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The community of Ukrainian origin in Warmia and Mazury is not often the object of research due to the fact that it is strongly involved in ideology and politics, which makes it difficult to draw a boundary between propaganda and its actual problems. What contributed to the transformation of the Ukrainian culture into the North-East Poland were activities of those Ukrainian communities that migrated into this region in the course of „Wisła” action in 1947. The research that the author conducted in a group of Ukrainian teenagers in 2004 casts a new light onto the community, making it possible to characterize the continuously evolving problems of its existence. The approach to this topic highlights the way in which the Ukrainian minority, tom apart from its original environment, deals with its problems and is gradually integrating into the new reality. It also focuses on the analysis of differences concerning mutual relations. In time. the awareness of the Ukrainian community members has lost its demanding nature, and has become filled with invention and initiative, thus resembling the awareness that the hosts of their new motherland should display. It is very interesting to notice that the Poles are often participants in the cultural events organized by the Ukrainians.
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The changes in Russia’s historical policy and the importance given to the past has had a direct impact on Russian education. In any western country education remains a fundamental mechanism for shaping the specific beliefs of its citizens, whereas in countries drawing towards authoritarian rule, like Russia, it has become a perfect tool for indoctrination.
More...The politics of history in post-communist Europe
In an age of globalisation, when people are moving more freely and ranging more widely across borders than ever before, the politics of history reflect existential anxieties related to the breakdown of mnemonic rootedness, making the question of whose understanding of the past will be recognised as canonical across multiple contexts increasingly pertinent.
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Two memory veins are fuelling certain hostilities between Poland and Ukraine which developed during the post-communist period. They are the Volhynia massacres and the “Vistula” action. Paradoxically, attempts at reconciliation have turned the work of determining who is a victim and who is a victimiser into a competition between victims.
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An interview with Paul Lendvai, Hungarian-born Austrian journalist, writer and intellectual.
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On the 67th parallel, 150 kilometres above the Arctic Circle in the vast space of permafrost where the mercury column rises above zero only 70 days a year, where for 11 days the sun does not rise and for 46 nights it does not set, lies Vorkuta. This city-project was to prove that a Soviet man is able to tame and overcome all of nature’ selements and create something out of nothing.
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Nowhere is the interplay between rock music and politics more evident than in the story of Prague’s legendary Plastic People of the Universe. Banned from playing official concerts in the early 1970s and put on trial by Czechoslovakia’s hard-line communist regime in 1976, the Plastic People inspired future president Vaclav Havel to launch Charter 77 which led to the Velvet Revolution of 1989.
More...Parallel to reality
The story of Tsar Nicholas II was one of disregard for developments taking place in the outside world. Hence it came as little surprise when the 1917 Revolution brought a tragic end to the 300 year Romanov rule, with the execution of the oblivious former Russian ruler.
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