Labrador is the only province in Canada to officially adopt a provincial anthem. Newfoundland and Labrador is a province of Canada on the country's Atlantic coast in northeastern North America. A Place to Stand, A Place to Grow (Ontari-ari-ari-o!) was an unofficial anthem of the Canadian province of Ontario. The song was written as the signature tune for a movie of the same name that was featured at the Expo 67 Ontario pavilion. "Something to Sing About" is a patriotic song written by folk singer Oscar Brand that sings the praises of the many different regions of Canada. There was once a movement for it to replace O Canada as the Canadian national anthem. The Bold Canadian was a patriotic song for Canadians that originated during the War of 1812. It celebrated the conquering of Detroit in Michigan Territory. The Island Hymn is the patriotic song of the Canadian province of Prince Edward Island.
being given a small Flag. Two weeks later on May 8th, the Board of Managers of the Pennsylvania Society of Sons of the Revolution unanimously endorsed the action of the Pennsylvania Society of Colonial Dames. As a result of the resolution, Dr. Edward Brooks, then Superintendent of Public Schools of Philadelphia, directed that Flag Day exercises be held on June 14, 1893 in Independence Square. School children were assembled, each carrying a small Flag, and patriotic songs were sung and addresses delivered. In 1894, the governor of New York directed that on June 14 the Flag be displayed on all public buildings. With BJ Cigrand and Leroy Van Horn as the moving spirits, the Illinois organization, known as the American Flag Day Association, was organized for the purpose of promoting the holding of Flag Day exercises. On June 14th, 1894, under the auspices of this association, the first general public school children's celebration of Flag
Images of India are exotic and magical. In India is have beauty landscape and nature. In India is have excotic plants and animals India has a coastline of 7,517 kilometres. Taj Mahal It is widely considered as one of the most beautiful buildings in the world and stands as a symbol of eternal love. Tourist like that building. Taj Mahal Used material: http://www.indif.com/india/patriotic/national_anthem.asp http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India Thanks for hearing! Writer: name 2010
Canadians drive dog sleds everywhere They have monopoly money They have no army They have beavers everywhere They have police horses They are afraid of dark They are all lumberjacks They have a lot of geese They don't lock their front door when they are at home They have a lot of mooses Canadians are polite and respectful. Canadians are passive and boring. Canadians don't have much to be patriotic Canadians have a very subdued form of patriotism. about. Canadians are afraid to express Canadians are moderates. controversial opinions. Canadians don't engage in hero / celebrity Canadians are resentful towards successful worship
reflecting different aspects of its cultural life and history. FLAG- It was first flown in Melbourne on 3 September 1901. This date has been proclaimed as Australian National Flag Day. COAT OF ARMS- The Coat of Arms is the formal symbol of Australia and its ownership and authority. ANTHEM- Created by the Scottish-born composer Peter Dodds McCormick, the song was first performed in 1878, and was sung in Australia as a patriotic song. It did not gain its status as the official anthem until 1984, following a plebiscite to choose the national anthem in 1977. COLOURS- They were formally proclaimed by the Governor-General of Australia, Sir Ninian Stephen, on the 19th of April, 1984; on advice from the then Prime Minister Bob Hawke. FLORAL EMBLEM- It have been the informal floral emblem of Australia for many years, it was not until
such as Iron Maiden, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Michael Jackson, Tina Turner, 50 Cent, Metallica, The Rolling Stones, Elton John, Depeche Mode, Pet Shop Boys, Andrea Bocelli, Madonna, Thirty Seconds to Mars, Lady Gaga, Green Day, José Carreras, Robbie Williams and the contemporary dance music event, the Sundance Festival · An optimal capacity for concerts is 75,000 fans · In 1988, Estonians gathered at the Tallinn Song Festival Grounds, to sing patriotic hymns in what became known as the Singing Revolution that led to the overthrow of Soviet rule. · . In June 1988, during the Singing Revolution days, up to 300,000 people attended the Night Song Festival. In the years to come, however, theisfigure has been questioned. During the Song Festivals, when the grounds are well packed, the number of people in the audience may reach 100,000 Pictures Used sites
tapmist või vigastamist 61,5 % ähvardati tappa 57,7 % nägi tapmist või vigastamist matseetega 31,4 % nägi vägistamist või seksuaalset rünnakut Kuidas lõpetati? · Rwanda Patriotic Front'i eestvedamisel saadi jagu hutude agressorist. · Riigi president Paul Kagme võttis võimu üle. · Hutud põgenesid massiliselt üle Sairi piiri. · Prantsuse vägede kaitse all pääsesid põgenema paljud genotsiidi korraldajad. · Ajaloo suurim humanitaarkatastroof. · 18. juulil 1994 kuulutas Paul Kagame kodusõja lõppenuks. Kokkuvõtteks.. http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=8DvvB_uAFFw Kasutatud materjal ·http:// www.unitedhumanrights.org/genocide/genoc ·http:// et
vaenlasteks Genotsiid Rahutused said alguse, kui tulistati alla Rwanda ja Burundi presidendid koos valitsusliikmetega 100 päeva jooksul kaotas elu kuni 1 miljon Rwanda elanikku Tapeti 75% tutsidest Relvastatud hutud ründasid tutsidest tsiviilisikuid – tapeti mehi, naisi ja lapsi, põhjendusega hävitada kurjus juba juurestaadiumis Genotsiidi lõpetas jõudu kogunud RPF-i (Rwandan Patriotic Front) pealetung Tänapäevane meediakajastus Kuu alguses möödus genotsiidist 20 aastat Lääneriikide poolsed avalikud vabandused Kasutatud kirjandus http://sellinemaailm.wordpress.com/2011/02/21/rwanda-genotsiid/ http://et.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rwanda_genotsiid http://www.postimees.ee/2750054/rwanda-genotsiid-pildis http://w3.ee/openarticle.php?id=1858778&lang=est http://www.vm.ee/?q=node/12859 Täname kuulamast!
divided. In 1948 Stalin enforced a blockade of Berlin and so Germany was divided into the Federal Republic of Germany( West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). The Allies responded with the `Berlin Airlift and for eleven months supplies were flown into Berlin by the Allies aircraft. The blockade was ended in May 1949 when Stalin gave up. 4. a) Marshal Tito also known as Josip Broz Tito was the Communist regime leader in Yugoslavia. He was very patriotic and party thanks to him Yugoslavia managed to keep its independence. Yugoslavia managed to fight back the Nazis almost single-handed.Tito resented taking orders from outsiders and when Stalin suggested to join Russias and Yugoslavias bank he refused. Many non- communist Yugoslavs supported Tito for patriotic reasons. b) NATO or also known as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization was formed in April 1949. It
Theatres in Estonia Native Estonian theatre, born in 1870 with the plays of the patriotic poetess Lydia Koidula, came into being on the crest of national awakening. Its tastes were at first pretty simple, the favourite genres being folk comedy and romantic melodrama, although both also transmitted halfhidden social and political attitudes. In less than forty years, in 1906, the leading amateur companies, the "Vanemuine" in the university town Tartu and the "Estonia" in Tallinn, could become professional, and in 1911 the "Endla" of P ärnu joined them.
• Metsavennad( the forest brothers) were freedom fighters who fought in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania during World War II and later even after the Soviet invasion. • The current independence of Estonia has lasted for 26 years since 1991 People • Estonians are Maarahvas • Estonians are seen as calm, withdrawn and shy. Of course this isn’t true for every Estonian and once you get to know them they’re very open. • Estonians are patriotic due to the hardships during it’s history and their own shared love of their home country. • Historically Estonia is one of the "least religious" countries in the world in terms attitudes, though many Estonians do look for alternative beliefs. Language • The Estonian language is finno ugric, it’s closest relatives are the Finno-Ugrian languages of the Vedic and Livonian languages. • There are many dialects, the main groups can be
Others recoil from acts of blood. 3. What feelings do stories about teenage soldiers evoke in people? The stories about teenage soldiers evoke a particular sadness, resonant as they are of the destruction of youth and possibility 4. What were the volunteers’ motives for joining the army (emotional and other)? The volunteers’ motives varied and often overlapped as many were gripped by patriotic fervour, sought escape from grim conditions at home or wanted adventure. 5. Why did the children of immigrants rally to the flag? The children of immigrants rallied to the flag because it was proof of loyalty to their new country. 6. Was there anything to prevent the 14-year-olds and upwards from joining? There was nothing to prevent 14-year-olds and upwards from joining. 7. Why did the recruiting sergeants turn a blind eye even if it was obvious that the new
In 1972 was builded Tallinn first skyscraper ,,Viru Hotel" what is 74m high and located in centre of Tallinn. The Tallinn TV Tower (Tallinna teletorn) is a free-standing structure with an observation deck, built to provide better telecommunication services for the 1980 Moscow Summer Olympics regatta event. It is located near Pirita, six km north-east of the Tallinn centre. The tower has a specified height of 314 m (1030.2 ft). On 26-28 August 1988, the Rock Summer Festival was held, and patriotic songs, composed by Alo Mattiisen, were played. On 11 September 1988, a massive song festival, called "Song of Estonia", was held at the Tallinn Song Festival Arena. This time nearly 300,000 people came together, more than a quarter of all Estonians. On August 23, 1989, 50 years later the three nations living by the Baltic Sea got back on their feet and, to the surprise of the entire world, took hold of each other's hands. The 600 km human
maailmas. Kristi Metshein Kasutatud kirjandus Kuurme, T., 2003 Kasvatuse võim ja võimetus Tallinna Pedagoogikaülikool ja autorid, 2004, Kasvatusteadused muutuste ajateljel Vapper, T., 2012, Ei ole halbu lapsi, on valed kasvatusvõtted http://www.opleht.ee/admin/pages/preview/?archive_mode=article&articleid=8055 Kasutatud fotod Foto 1 Internet http://www.realussr.com/ussr/the-patriotic-education-in-ussr-part-2-pioneers- soviet-boy-scouts/ Kristi Metshein Kool kui areneva inimese kogemusruum. Õppimist soosiv keskkond. Vana ja uus kool. Vanakoolilikult range kool on selline, kus õpetaja köstrina klassi ees vaikust ja kuuletumist nõuab. Küsimusi esitada ja arvamust avaldada ei ole lubatud. Kui sa õpitavast aru ei saa, siis on see sinu mure kuidas endale asjad selgeks teed
Discuss the representation of the generation of fathers in Turgenev's novel "Fathers and Sons" Turgenev always had two tasks before him to depict the body and pressure of time, and to depict the rapidly changing face of cultured Russian society (Freeborn 1960:48). Kluchevsky (1993:40) defined one case of the generation gap in the beginning of the XIX century as "merry cosmopolitan sentimentality of the fathers now transformed in a patriotic grief of their children. The Fathers were Russians, who passionately wanted to become French; the sons were raised as French and passionately wanted to become Russians. Fathers and Sons situates this generational conflict within family relations. In this essay, the ways how Turgenev represents the generation of Fathers in Fathers and Sons is discussed. Fathers and Sons is set in between Russia's defeat in the Crimean War and the Emancipation of the Serfs a socially challenging area
originally the flag of the Estonian Students' Society, consecrated in Otepää Church in 1884. Today there is a memorial plaque on the church wall commemorating the event. The Flag Museum was opened in 1996. During the Soviet time the flag was prohibited. But many people hided their flags somewhere and the flag was seen again in 1988 in public. A meeting was held in Tartu and elderly people were carrying the flags, nationalistic speeches were told and patriotic songs were sung. Tears were rolling down people's cheeks. The Estonian flag is hoisted every morning at sunrise and lowered at sunset. The national anthem of Estonia is called My Native Land, My Pride and Joy. It was composed in 1848 by Friedrich Pacius. The words were written by Johann Voldemar Jannsen. It was performed in 1869 in the first Song Festival in Tartu and it gained popularity during the national movement. It was adopted as the national
Müller is a hardheaded, practical young man, and he plies his friends in the Second Company with questions about their postwar plans. Tjaden - One of Paul's friends in the Second Company. Tjaden is a wiry young man with a voracious appetite. He bears a deep grudge against Corporal Himmelstoss. Kantorek - A pompous, ignorant, authoritarian schoolmaster in Paul's high school during the years before the war. Kantorek places intense pressure on Paul and his classmates to fulfill their "patriotic duty" by enlisting in the army. Read an in-depth analysis of Kantorek. Corporal Himmelstoss - A noncommissioned training officer. Before the war, Himmelstoss was a postman. He is a petty, power-hungry little man who torments Paul and his friends during their training. After he experiences the horrors of trench warfare, however, he tries to make amends with them. Read an in-depth analysis of Corporal Himmelstoss. Franz Kemmerich - One of Paul's classmates and comrades in the war
David, a member of the Jacobin club, commemorated his killing with a sincerely mourning painting. (Vaughan, ?????????????) With The death of Marat David expressed both his personal and public emotions and thoughts. For the public Marat was first and foremost a painting about patriotism and courage: "In these "martyr" canvases he portrays the tragedy of the patriot (and later in life David still viewed Marat as such) who, in the midst of carrying out his patriotic duties, falls a victim to the dagger." (Friedlaender, 1952, p.25) Furthermore, Marat was using his bathroom as an office, because he had a severe case of skin disease and taking a bath would relieve his pain. Accordingly, David painted him dead in a bathtub, almost in a Christ like pose. The wound on Marat's right chest can be compared to Jesus's wounds when he was crucified, and therefore Marat seems like a hero dying for a noble cause
segment, lõik (Oxford Dictionary) 120. SELF-DIRECTED - (of an activity) under one's own control enda kontrolli all olev tegevus (Oxford Dictionary) 121. SERVICE CENTRE - an authorized commercial establishment for repairs and replacement parts for appliances or cars teeninduskeskus (dictionary.com) 122. SOCIETY an organized group of persons associated together for religious, benevolent, cultural, scientific, political, patriotic, or other purposes - ühiskond, ühing (dictionary.com) 123. SOCIO-ECONOMIC - Relating to or concerned with the interaction of social and economic factors. sotsiaalmajanduslik (Oxford Dictionary) 124. SOLUTION - the answer to a probleem lahendus (Cambridge Dictionary) 125. SPECIFICATION - something specified, as in a bill of particulars; a specified particular, item, or article - spetsifikatsioon, detailne kirjeldus (dictionary.com) 126
consisting of civil servants, merchants and artisans, and, increasingly, the ethnic Estonian clergy. The low social status and the lack of the right to make any decisions, a result of the Russian central power and the Baltic German-dominated cultural situation, motivated the elite of the `awakened peasants' to build up their own independent nation and national society. In 1857 Johann Voldemar Jannsen (18191890), replaced the term `country people' with the word `Estonians'. Patriotic intellectuals encouraged Estonians to participate in public life, determined the legal and cultural requirements of the emerging nation, and organised the extensive sending of petitions to the Russian authorities. At its height, in 18601880, the movement was governed by a politically moderate trend with their specific ethnic-linguistic aims. The trend stressed the need to develop national culture and education in Estonian. Pastor and linguist Jakob Hurt was convinced that the mission of a
Kipling left South Africa in disgust when the Liberals came to power in Britain, and, as he saw it, destroyed all that had been gained in the Boer war. Until the end of his life, Kipling's world view would be distorted by the paranoid belief that conspiracy and betrayal were everywhere in public life. World War One proved a bracing diversion for the embittered Kipling, who had long predicted that Germany's rivalry with Britain would result in conflict, and who positively revelled in patriotic occasions. He urged his son John to join up, even using his influence to secure the boy a commission. Tragedy ensued when John Kipling disappeared in action only a month after his arrival. My Boy Jack Author Rudyard Kipling and his wife search for their 17-year-old son after he goes missing during WWI. (TV 2007) Kipling saw the subsequent settlement at Versailles as another betrayal, mocking the sacrifices of the fallen allies.
Peale employed trompe-l'oeil ("deception", giving the impression of three dimensions). Peale, Stuart and Trumbull all painted George Washington's portraits which were demanded and worshipped by the public. Military was romanticized by scenes of battle and theatrical postures. Artists: Charles Willson Peale, Gilbert Stuart, John Trumbull, Thomas Sully, Rembrandt Peale. History. History painters had to create a demand for their paintings. History paintings encapsulated the patriotic duty to memorialize the country's struggle for independence and human rights. Allston was America's first truly Romantic artist and expressed the themes of mystery, terror and poetic daydreaming. Artists: John Trumbull, John Vanderlyn, Washington Allston. Landscape, Genre and Still Life. In late-C18, these were almost entirely neglected. Guy painted city life, Birch painted the seascape. The "Peale formula" was adhered to: objects along tableware against a dark background. Also,
Peale employed trompe-l'oeil ("deception", giving the impression of three dimensions). Peale, Stuart and Trumbull all painted George Washington's portraits which were demanded and worshipped by the public. Military was romanticized by scenes of battle and theatrical postures. Artists: Charles Willson Peale, Gilbert Stuart, John Trumbull, Thomas Sully, Rembrandt Peale. History. History painters had to create a demand for their paintings. History paintings encapsulated the patriotic duty to memorialize the country's struggle for independence and human rights. Allston was America's first truly Romantic artist and expressed the themes of mystery, terror and poetic daydreaming. Artists: John Trumbull, John Vanderlyn, Washington Allston. Landscape, Genre and Still Life. In late-C18, these were almost entirely neglected. Guy painted city life, Birch painted the seascape. The "Peale formula" was adhered to: objects along tableware against a dark background. Also,
the desired balance. Sense of timelessness (relationship between the experience of past and this day). Balance presentation of different emotional states. Both parties are to exercise their judgement. In 17th C retreat to Nature meant retirement from practical business to ideal contemplation. In 18th C turning from ambotion to usefulness. Emphasis on the varied hues of nature. British countryside attuned to the ideals of a new urban bourgeoisie, patriotic, pastoral, classical and sentimental. Winchilsea: A Nocturnal Reverie James Thomson: The Seasons – appreciate colour in the universe, it is scientific and descriptive. To The Memory of Sir Isaac Newton John Denham: Cooper’s Hill – established the exact standard of good writing, obedience to decorum and correctness of form, imagery and vocabulary, pattern for English poetry of place (celebration of place etc... ) John Dyer: Grongar Hill, from the Fleece, Book III Akenside:
The book is a fictionalized autobiography of Ostrovsky's life, who had a difficult working-class childhood and became a Komsomol member in July 1919 and went to the front as a volunteer. The novel's protagonist, Pavel Korchagin, represented the "young hero" of Russian literature: he is dedicated to his political causes, which help him to overcome his tragedies. The novel has served as an inspiration to youths around the world and played a mobilizing role in Russia's Great Patriotic War. Alexander Fadeyev achieved noteworthy success in Russia, with tens of millions of copies of his books in circulation in Russia and around the world. Many of Fadeyev's works have been staged and filmed and translated into many languages in Russia and around the world. Fadeyev served as a secretary of the Soviet Writers' Union and was the general secretary of the union's administrative board from 1946 to 1954. He was awarded two Orders of Lenin and various medals
gave you a soldier in each son. ¡Guerra, guerra sin tregua al que intente War, war without truce against who would attempt De la patria manchar los blasones! to blemish the honor of the fatherland! ¡Guerra, guerra! Los patrios pendones War, war! The patriotic banners En las olas de sangre empapad. saturate in waves of blood. ¡Guerra, guerra! En el monte, en el War, war! On the mount, in the vale valle The terrifying cannon thunder Los cañones horrísonos truenen and the echoes nobly resound Y los ecos sonoros resuenen to the cries of union
Evald Uustalu (London: Boreas Publishing, 1961) 316. organisation. Eugen Kapp was elected chairman; such a procedure and election can be regarded as legally void. The statutes declared the obligation to implement the directives of the Communist Party and to fight for the principles of Soviet patriotism and internationalism, for Socialist Realism. Considering the symphonic output behind Soviet lines during the war, one has to mention the First Symphony (Patriotic, 1942) by Eugen Kapp.1 The title indicates a connection with the homeland. The introduction, including several lyrical motifs, seems to depict images from Estonian nature. The first movement (Allegro agitato) is extensive, the main theme being manly and “rough” in harmony: Example 48. The subsidiary theme has an epic sound: it is characteristic that sustained sounds always belong to the subdominant: Example 49.
typify the period in the book. But most of the attention get the fictional characters. There's three groups of them, three families. First of all a white family. WASP White Anglosaxon South Protsetant. There's a little boy, the mother, the father, mother younger father and a grandfather. It's sigunificant that the story begins with the white family. It symbolises what America was in the beginning of the century. It was dominated by the WASP's. In such an America everyone had to be patriotic. Father was a real patriote. Mother was a stereotypical victorian women. Father has to make an appointment with her when he wants to have sex. But when he leaves for the north to discover northpole, mother takes on the responisibility on running the household. And she starts reading dangerous books, deals with business. The father has sex with escimo women and when he returns he thinks his changed wife is his punishment for what he's done
But Stimson was different from previous Secretaries of State, on whom this tactic had always worked. He was shocked to learn of the existence of the Black Chamber, and totally disapproved of it. He regarded it as a low, snooping activity, a sneaking, spying, keyhole- peering kind of dirty business, a violation of the principle of mutual trust upon which he conducted both his personal affairs and his foreign policy. All of this it is, and Stimson rejected the view that such means justified even patriotic ends. He held to the conviction that his country should do what is right, and, as he said later, "Gentlemen do not read each other's mail." In an act of pure moral courage, Stimson, affirming principle over expediency, withdrew all State Department funds from the support of the Black Chamber.* Since these constituted its major income, their loss shuttered the office. Hoover's speech had warned Yardley that an appeal would be fruitless. There was nothing to do but close up shop
Chapter 14 1 "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church" (Matthew 16:18). 2 Said by Romeo, after asking (tendentiously) what light through yonder window broke. Juliet also "hangs upon the cheek of night/Like a rich jewel in an Ethiop's ear," but that was back in Act I and I hope he thought better of it. 3 Richard III, I. i. 1. 4 Hamlet, I. iii. 11617. But the most elaborately mixed of Shakespeare's metaphors known to me is patriotic: This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle, This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars, This other Eden, demi-paradise, This fortress built by Nature for herself Against infection and the hand of war, This happy breed of men, this little world, This precious stone set in the silver sea, Which serves it in the office of a wall, Or as a moat defensive to a house, Against the envy of less happier lands,
T h e devilish possi bility is suggested by his name, revealed for the first time as "Devlin." As he advances into the room to deliver the Call to Adventure, Hitchcock follows him in a dizzying point-of-view shot that reflects the hung-over state of the hero, Bergman, as she lies in bed. Grant seems to walk on the ceiling. In the symbolic language of film the shot expresses his change of position from playboy to Herald, and its disorienting effect on the hero. Grant gives the Call, a patriotic invitation to infiltrate a Nazi spy ring. As it is delivered, Grant is seen right side up and in full light for the first time, representing the Call's sobering effect on Bergman's character. As they talk, a crown-like, artificial hairpiece slides from Bergman's head, showing that her fairy tale existence as a deluded, addicted princess must now come to an end. Simultaneously on the soundtrack can be heard the distant call of a train