Home again ... and happy new year!
'm leaving for India, once again in Gujarat to make a documentary on the work of women's weaving. Weaving their fates through the cloth embroidered and encrusted with beads and mirrors the traditional Rabari, but also the Silk Patola, up to the white khadi and Gandhi's simple.
I leave you with a mini report on the production of turbans - intended for tourists - a guy she worked on a terrace roof of pink Jaipur.
Happy New Year to all!
Thursday, December 30, 2010
Saturday, December 25, 2010
Friday, December 24, 2010
Pilonidal Cyst Sebaceous
Nature never makes "things" the same!
Yes, as we strive to make a product is always the same, we realize that using real ingredients, the cookies are always different even within a certain range.
Yes, as we strive to make a product is always the same, we realize that using real ingredients, the cookies are always different even within a certain range.
In fact, when you use butter, olive oil, fresh eggs ... it is known that the percentage of components (water, proteins, sugars, ...) present in the ingredients themselves are constantly changing and so even if in production we can "adjust" the mix based on its consistency there will always be some variability. Therefore the product final will be slightly more or less brittle, more or less colorful ... but always good, tasty and 100% genuine!
This is to respond to the many consumers who want a side of a product made with fresh ingredients and always want the other side is identical to the previous production. You must choose which road to take and be aware that only with ingredients adjusted in the laboratory and chemical agents (enhancers, stabilizers, margarine, ...), as opposed to natural ingredients, you can get standardized products and are therefore always the same.
Standardization always clashes with nature!
Sunday, December 19, 2010
Weird Numbness In Face
House
Sabarmati Ashram , Ahmedabad, January 2010
In these busy days before Christmas (and the departure for India in January), I'm devoting most of my time looking for a new home. I was reminded of a quote from Gandhi that someone has painted on a board and hung on an outside wall of his house on the banks of Sabarmati, Ahmedabad.
I also think that the home of Gandhi, as well as all of us, first of all is our mentality, our language, our body. The way we inhabit the world and watch it transform.
But maybe I've found the house ... we will see developments
great week everyone!
Friday, December 10, 2010
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"The most important things in our lives are neither extraordinary nor grandiose.
are the moments when we feel touched each other."
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Free Tech Deck Printable For Mac
Panettoni industrial ball Altroconsumo all. Severe or realist?
who follows in a while 'this blog has certainly realized that I side, at least, very critical for industrial products. Of course, some might say that he has an interest (wrong, because an artisan product from head to toe it can not be in competition with an industrial product). But certainly the way of acting giants of the ambiguity of food certainly makes me be in good company among the critics of mass-produced, if I pass this term.

who follows in a while 'this blog has certainly realized that I side, at least, very critical for industrial products. Of course, some might say that he has an interest (wrong, because an artisan product from head to toe it can not be in competition with an industrial product). But certainly the way of acting giants of the ambiguity of food certainly makes me be in good company among the critics of mass-produced, if I pass this term.
the screen, this time, there THE Christmas cake: that is Panettone.
And this time, to inveigh against known brands, not just me. But Altroconsumo. That ball 15 out of 15 brands. We're talking names like Trunks, Balocco, Motta, Baptistery, and other Paluani. Laboratory tests were made real, and were also analyzed raw materials. The only survivor, a little, is the Tre Marie panettone. But just a little '. The lowest common denominator of the disaster of our industrial production is this: bitter crust, rising hastily and incorrectly implies that lack of softness and fragrance, raisins poor quality and too sour.
This is, say, the raw data base to which of course we have to add some observations.
yeast, but almost never true sourdough
a baked cake can be called only if it contains, in addition to specific percentages of raisins, candied fruit, etc.. pre-established, the leaven. It 'the law to say it. But the name "sourdough, sourdough ..." is at least very general. This ambiguity has led to the birth of what I like to call "the magic polverette. We speak of "nuclei panettone, mix (ie semi-finished ready to make panettone) and yeast powder which certainly facilitate the process and shorten them, but inevitably penalize the finished product (of which I already written in this post ).
Panettoni first, second and third-tier
Many large companies have, as a flagship product, just the cake, bring different qualities of the same cake. A clearly different prices. The end of last (the worst, qualitatively speaking) is what is, needless to say, in the supermarkets at bargain prices. The other, better, run them in different ways (you have to order them, for example ...). Here I am furious: it seems to me quite a joke for consumers to make panettone Series A and Series B (but there is a reason and covers retail, but there would take a separate blog to talk about it ....).
The different opinions
The news I learned from The future consumption, a blog that often follows is very well written and done. But I beg to move away from excessive gooders shown: "This rejection is out of tune [...] in most cases the number of eggs, butter, raisins exceed the statutory minimum" . We know that making the quality of a product often is not the quantity but the quality of an ingredient. Then, in yeast products, yet the first ingredient is the quality of the process of proving that it is of primary importance: without natural yeast fermentation and the right time you will never make a good product leavened (be it cake, but bread, pizza that ...). And yet "... reject the entire Italian production does not make sense ...". Thankfully, that there is not the whole Italian production. There are plenty of talented artisans who make wonderful products and true panettone. Unfortunately, not always accessible at a price ... but I always say better to eat something good but .
But even the craftsmen not joking ...
In all honesty, I must admit. Even if I am a great defender of the class, many alleged artisans selling off their trade manufacturing products that really low level. I happened, in my frequent tastings (yes, I do not eat only my panettone), eat panettone on 25 Euro per kg (then a lot ') inedible (some were totally acids, others were of the chewy as bubble gum ). Much better than those on industrial rejected at this point! So it takes a lot of attention there, too: do not trust dell'incarto hand and the word "craft". Try it first! Always!
conclusion
Panettone is the top product of Italian pastry. It has a huge resonance around the world precisely because, to do well, it is difficult e richiede enormi sacrifici (vi rimando al post precendente per vedere uno dei tanti modi per fare un panettone davvero artigianale e davvero a lievitazione naturale). Quindi vedendo bocciati panettoni che, in offerta, escono a 1.99 Euro...beh non ne sono proprio per niente sorpreso e sotto sotto, ne sono contento.
Best Antenna Handbook
The paradox of art
These days I'm covering a very stimulating interview Kapila Vatsyayan, dancer of Indian classical dance and then founder and director of the National Center for the Arts Delhi's Indira Gandhi (pictured).
It is a monologue on the various aspects of art in the Indian tradition.
The Vatsyayan questions - among others - on the definition of art and tradition as a source for artistic forms.
In India the tradition 'Parampara' is never a static dimension: it is rather a continuous flow over time within well-defined tracks of an expression that changes and transforms.
A tradition can survive only if at the same time there is continuity and change.
Artistic expression then - in the form of storytelling, dance, music, sculpture, etc.. - Must flow along a certain predetermined direction, but as it flows generate changes. In other words, the tradition does in the metamorphosis of some basic laws that fanno da sostegno e da guida.
Questo particolare sistema di accettare il cambiamento come parte integrante della vita in continua trasformazione ha fatto sì, per esempio, che alcune storie cosiddette 'tradizionali' in realtà vengano raccontate in modi sempre diversi.
Lo sto constatando quotidianamente mentre collaboro alla stesura di alcune fiabe indiane che andranno a far parte di una antologia illustrata per la Mostra Internazionale dell'Illustrazione per l'Infanzia di Sarmede del 2011.
E' una bellissima occasione per approfondire e riprendere le fiabe del Pancatantra o alcuni miti contenuti nei poemi epici o nei Purana.
E' anche una sorta di viaggio nell'immaginario più semplice e potente in grado to tell the world through the eyes of wise animals, foolish Brahmins, imperfect deity, through an endless chain of events that tell the true and recreate, as if by transmigrating from one body to another.
These days I'm covering a very stimulating interview Kapila Vatsyayan, dancer of Indian classical dance and then founder and director of the National Center for the Arts Delhi's Indira Gandhi (pictured).
It is a monologue on the various aspects of art in the Indian tradition.
The Vatsyayan questions - among others - on the definition of art and tradition as a source for artistic forms.
In India the tradition 'Parampara' is never a static dimension: it is rather a continuous flow over time within well-defined tracks of an expression that changes and transforms.
A tradition can survive only if at the same time there is continuity and change.
Artistic expression then - in the form of storytelling, dance, music, sculpture, etc.. - Must flow along a certain predetermined direction, but as it flows generate changes. In other words, the tradition does in the metamorphosis of some basic laws that fanno da sostegno e da guida.
Questo particolare sistema di accettare il cambiamento come parte integrante della vita in continua trasformazione ha fatto sì, per esempio, che alcune storie cosiddette 'tradizionali' in realtà vengano raccontate in modi sempre diversi.
Lo sto constatando quotidianamente mentre collaboro alla stesura di alcune fiabe indiane che andranno a far parte di una antologia illustrata per la Mostra Internazionale dell'Illustrazione per l'Infanzia di Sarmede del 2011.
E' una bellissima occasione per approfondire e riprendere le fiabe del Pancatantra o alcuni miti contenuti nei poemi epici o nei Purana.
E' anche una sorta di viaggio nell'immaginario più semplice e potente in grado to tell the world through the eyes of wise animals, foolish Brahmins, imperfect deity, through an endless chain of events that tell the true and recreate, as if by transmigrating from one body to another.
Sunday, November 28, 2010
Change Tables Collation Phpmyadmin Utf-8
Warp and Weft
"it begins by the author. It 's the least beautiful part of the fabric, but sets the meridians, the longitudinal location of the plot. [...] Then comes the plot and everything is possible twists, thicknesses, colors, contrasts, knots, patterns, surprises, why it occurs.
But warp and weft are not just metaphors, they are the landscape of India with its fabrics, and its rails. [...] Textiles and fabrics brillano di colori non smettono di vestirla anche negli angoli più dimenticati. E naturalmente non parlano solo di bellezza, ma anche di lavoro, di fatica, di tradizioni, di vita quotidiana e di donne". (dal blog di Mariella Gramaglia, Ordito e Trama).
Manca un mese alla partenza per l'India, sempre in cerca di storie da raccontare che facciano bene a mente e cuore. Storie 'curative' contro lo scetticismo e l'indifferenza, due mali che mi piacerebbe riuscire a limitare il più possibile...
Tra un mese dunque si parte per il Gujarat, per documentare in un reportage di storie al femminile il lavoro di chi difende le culture tradizionali di questa parte dell'India dalla globalizzazione e dallo sfruttamento.
Let's go to Kutch, a salt desert on the border with Pakistan, where people still live semi-nomadic groups who live by farming. Rabari are divided into several jati, tribal groups have preserved their cultural identity and traditional crafts.
Women in particular are formidable weavers and embroiderers; retain a very special dress (dressed in black and covered with heavy jewelry) and are able to live thanks to the stories that embroider the tapestry woven with infinite patience and great skill.
In Gujarat have emerged in recent decades, many associations or real independent unions - as Sewa , Self Employed Women Association - per difendere il lavoro non riconosciuto e non valorizzato di queste donne, dare loro un ruolo più significativo nell'ambito della società, conservare questa forma di biodiversità.
Andremo a visitare anche Sewa, appunto, che ha il suo quartier generale ad Ahmedabad, per vedere il lavoro che si sta facendo nelle grandi città a favore delle donne che vivono in contesti urbani, estremamente difficili e competitivi.
Il mondo della tessitura artigianale è per me sempre molto interessante: esercita un fascino che è fatto di tanti aspetti diversi.
E' un mestiere antichissimo, richiede una abilità e una memoria straordinarie, crea bellezza negli oggetti quotidiani di uso comune, come gli clothes that become cultural symbols besides real works of art.
But even the most simple stuff, like the white khadi is produced at the Sabarmati Ashram, Gandhi of Ahmedabad the same day Mahatma helped to produce, is charged with a story that turns it into an extraordinary symbol and a vehicle affirmation of each person's unique and irreplaceable.
"it begins by the author. It 's the least beautiful part of the fabric, but sets the meridians, the longitudinal location of the plot. [...] Then comes the plot and everything is possible twists, thicknesses, colors, contrasts, knots, patterns, surprises, why it occurs.
But warp and weft are not just metaphors, they are the landscape of India with its fabrics, and its rails. [...] Textiles and fabrics brillano di colori non smettono di vestirla anche negli angoli più dimenticati. E naturalmente non parlano solo di bellezza, ma anche di lavoro, di fatica, di tradizioni, di vita quotidiana e di donne". (dal blog di Mariella Gramaglia, Ordito e Trama).
Manca un mese alla partenza per l'India, sempre in cerca di storie da raccontare che facciano bene a mente e cuore. Storie 'curative' contro lo scetticismo e l'indifferenza, due mali che mi piacerebbe riuscire a limitare il più possibile...
Tra un mese dunque si parte per il Gujarat, per documentare in un reportage di storie al femminile il lavoro di chi difende le culture tradizionali di questa parte dell'India dalla globalizzazione e dallo sfruttamento.
Let's go to Kutch, a salt desert on the border with Pakistan, where people still live semi-nomadic groups who live by farming. Rabari are divided into several jati, tribal groups have preserved their cultural identity and traditional crafts.
Women in particular are formidable weavers and embroiderers; retain a very special dress (dressed in black and covered with heavy jewelry) and are able to live thanks to the stories that embroider the tapestry woven with infinite patience and great skill.
In Gujarat have emerged in recent decades, many associations or real independent unions - as Sewa , Self Employed Women Association - per difendere il lavoro non riconosciuto e non valorizzato di queste donne, dare loro un ruolo più significativo nell'ambito della società, conservare questa forma di biodiversità.
Andremo a visitare anche Sewa, appunto, che ha il suo quartier generale ad Ahmedabad, per vedere il lavoro che si sta facendo nelle grandi città a favore delle donne che vivono in contesti urbani, estremamente difficili e competitivi.
Il mondo della tessitura artigianale è per me sempre molto interessante: esercita un fascino che è fatto di tanti aspetti diversi.
E' un mestiere antichissimo, richiede una abilità e una memoria straordinarie, crea bellezza negli oggetti quotidiani di uso comune, come gli clothes that become cultural symbols besides real works of art.
But even the most simple stuff, like the white khadi is produced at the Sabarmati Ashram, Gandhi of Ahmedabad the same day Mahatma helped to produce, is charged with a story that turns it into an extraordinary symbol and a vehicle affirmation of each person's unique and irreplaceable.
Monday, November 22, 2010
Sand Rail Frame Plans
Did you know?
While preparing dinner, cleared the table and decide which program to watch TV, while we think of the Christmas holidays, the assumption that we can allow-or at best, while we wait to get to sleep, we aim to achieve an important goal for next year, while we are intent on living without notice it, the future runs on ...
This video fascinates me as much as I land ...
While preparing dinner, cleared the table and decide which program to watch TV, while we think of the Christmas holidays, the assumption that we can allow-or at best, while we wait to get to sleep, we aim to achieve an important goal for next year, while we are intent on living without notice it, the future runs on ...
This video fascinates me as much as I land ...
Saturday, November 20, 2010
Nakamichi Receiver Manual
is the sourdough panettone
La pausa dall'ultimo post, mi rendo conto, è stata lunghissima. Ma, credetemi, per tutti gli appassionati del genere ne varrà la pena aver aspettato tanto. Siamo riusciti, finalmente, per un paio di giorni, a portarvi nel nostro piccolo laboratorio di produzione per farvi vedere tutti i processi che portano alla realizzazione del panettone a lievitazione natural (with the legendary yeast, for instance). We had a great time doing it and please excuse our lack of experience in front of the video and some "horror " language early morning! Moreover believe it is right in front of a very traditional cake, make a video as craft!
La pausa dall'ultimo post, mi rendo conto, è stata lunghissima. Ma, credetemi, per tutti gli appassionati del genere ne varrà la pena aver aspettato tanto. Siamo riusciti, finalmente, per un paio di giorni, a portarvi nel nostro piccolo laboratorio di produzione per farvi vedere tutti i processi che portano alla realizzazione del panettone a lievitazione natural (with the legendary yeast, for instance). We had a great time doing it and please excuse our lack of experience in front of the video and some "horror " language early morning! Moreover believe it is right in front of a very traditional cake, make a video as craft!
I invite you to spend a few minutes of your time to see what really lies behind a sourdough panettone (besides the undeniable marketing idea that there may be behind these two amateur videos) and what it means to "respect the times "a natural product to the core. And 'in fact only after a very long fermentation (60 hours) si ottiene un prodotto buono, gustoso e digeribile. Le "sostanze dopanti" (più specificamente chiamati mix, additivi, nuclei e compagnia bella) da una parte ti snelliscono il lavoro, ma dall'altra, ti fanno digerire il panettone, se ti va bene, poco prima di Pasqua.
Scherzi a parte vi auguro buona visione. Aspetto i vostri commenti!
Saturday, November 13, 2010
Mount & Blade The Wedding Dance Guide
A thought for Burma, India
Burma is a beautiful country, I had the good fortune to visit twice, once in 1984, was little more than a child, and the last time in 1994.
Both times I was left with an impression due to the tremendous beauty of the place and the kindness of people encountered.
the first time in particular, since I was little and almost no child traveling in paesi come questo, i birmani, quelli delle guest house, dei ristorantini, ma anche i passanti che ci avvicinavano, mi 'adottavano' immediatamente e mi coccolavano facendomi dei regali: un pezzo di jaggery -zucchero di palma cristallizzato in dolcissimi cubetti- un cestino di bambù, una statuetta di legno.
La seconda volta ricordo il bisbigliare furtivo di qualcuno che ci chiedeva cosa si sapesse del loro paese in Italia e in occidente.
Mi ricordo in particolare una 'guida turistica' che ci scarrozzava su un carretto trainato da un cavallo gracile per la valle dell'Irravaddy a visitare i templi buddhisti di Pagan, che dopo essersi guardato attorno, ci chiese se Pagan a distanza di 10 anni ci sembrava lo stesso posto.
No, it was just like 10 years before: there were no hotels and shops, tea stalls no more. Just a couple of choices of government (a luxury and a decidedly not).
was deleted everything, and the families who ran the business for themselves transferred somewhere.
I also remember having met in Kalaw, a small town near Lake Inle an old missionary, Father Angelo, who in '94 had to have something like 85 years, who told us to be in Burma for 60 years, he saw with his own eyes the dramatic changes of those years and the repression of young students of Rangoon, killed by the regime to have been open their dissent. Father Angelo
but still want to resist and had to laugh ... and to give travelers a powdered Nescafe Osvego with cookies!
Knowing that Aung San Suu Kyi , after years of imprisonment and house arrest, has been released is a wonderful news, it's like to know that Mahatma Gandhi was brought out from prison obtuse British 100 years ago or that the Dalai Lama was included in its Tibet.
The background to this decision by the Burmese military government will come to know them one day, maybe, but now let's enjoy this memorable moment. Who knows what would have written
Tiziano Terzani, who he knew was always in right place at the right time ...

Burma is a beautiful country, I had the good fortune to visit twice, once in 1984, was little more than a child, and the last time in 1994.
Both times I was left with an impression due to the tremendous beauty of the place and the kindness of people encountered.
the first time in particular, since I was little and almost no child traveling in paesi come questo, i birmani, quelli delle guest house, dei ristorantini, ma anche i passanti che ci avvicinavano, mi 'adottavano' immediatamente e mi coccolavano facendomi dei regali: un pezzo di jaggery -zucchero di palma cristallizzato in dolcissimi cubetti- un cestino di bambù, una statuetta di legno.
La seconda volta ricordo il bisbigliare furtivo di qualcuno che ci chiedeva cosa si sapesse del loro paese in Italia e in occidente.
Mi ricordo in particolare una 'guida turistica' che ci scarrozzava su un carretto trainato da un cavallo gracile per la valle dell'Irravaddy a visitare i templi buddhisti di Pagan, che dopo essersi guardato attorno, ci chiese se Pagan a distanza di 10 anni ci sembrava lo stesso posto.

No, it was just like 10 years before: there were no hotels and shops, tea stalls no more. Just a couple of choices of government (a luxury and a decidedly not).
was deleted everything, and the families who ran the business for themselves transferred somewhere.
I also remember having met in Kalaw, a small town near Lake Inle an old missionary, Father Angelo, who in '94 had to have something like 85 years, who told us to be in Burma for 60 years, he saw with his own eyes the dramatic changes of those years and the repression of young students of Rangoon, killed by the regime to have been open their dissent. Father Angelo
but still want to resist and had to laugh ... and to give travelers a powdered Nescafe Osvego with cookies!
Knowing that Aung San Suu Kyi , after years of imprisonment and house arrest, has been released is a wonderful news, it's like to know that Mahatma Gandhi was brought out from prison obtuse British 100 years ago or that the Dalai Lama was included in its Tibet.
The background to this decision by the Burmese military government will come to know them one day, maybe, but now let's enjoy this memorable moment. Who knows what would have written
Tiziano Terzani, who he knew was always in right place at the right time ...
Sunday, November 7, 2010
Pokemon Silver Trades
of large numbers
Jaipur, India in January 2010
now live one billion 150 million people of which 220 million survive on less than a dollar a day, while another 500 million people live on less than two dollars a day.
Each year, graduating 2 million young people, of which 200 thousand engineers (twice the U.S. and Europe).
However, there are 380 million illiterate people, most of them are women.
India is a young nation: 70% of its population under 35 years, contributing to the development of the country whose growth rate is close to 9%.
Almost 2 million people homeless.
The density of people per square mile in the state of West Bengal touches the 903 people.
The population is divided into thousands of castes, of which 16% is classified as Dalits (nearly 167 million people).
We speak 23 official languages, about 2000 dialects, and they profess a dozen different religions, speaking to a large pantheon as surprising.
It travels on the world's longest rail network or one of the millions of bicycles on the road.
... and these are just some of the complexities of this amazing place!
now live one billion 150 million people of which 220 million survive on less than a dollar a day, while another 500 million people live on less than two dollars a day.
Each year, graduating 2 million young people, of which 200 thousand engineers (twice the U.S. and Europe).
However, there are 380 million illiterate people, most of them are women.
India is a young nation: 70% of its population under 35 years, contributing to the development of the country whose growth rate is close to 9%.
Almost 2 million people homeless.
The density of people per square mile in the state of West Bengal touches the 903 people.
The population is divided into thousands of castes, of which 16% is classified as Dalits (nearly 167 million people).
We speak 23 official languages, about 2000 dialects, and they profess a dozen different religions, speaking to a large pantheon as surprising.
It travels on the world's longest rail network or one of the millions of bicycles on the road.
... and these are just some of the complexities of this amazing place!
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Gay Cruising Grounds Nyc
Thanks again!
This experience at the Festival della Scienza di Genova è finita.
E' stata una giornata piena di soddisfazioni e ritrovare Bunker Roy, parlare con lui del lavoro fatto e di quello in programma per il futuro, una bellissima opportunità.
La sala era piena di persone con tanti interrogativi, domande sul sistema Barefoot e sul destino dei poveri in India e nel mondo, ma anche sul senso di vivere in questo occidente pieno di difficoltà, di incertezze, di dubbi sul modo di affrontare la vita.
Gli interventi del pubblico dopo la conferenza ed il documentario erano tutti estremamente commossi e grati di poter avere finalmente qualche risposta rispetto al disagio di chi come tanti di noi si rende conto di non poter più reggere un sistema che si auto distrugge.
Qualcuno ha manifestato la propria vergogna o il proprio senso di impotenza. Qualcuno ha chiesto se vale ancora la pena di rimanere qui per affrontare una realtà che sembra tanto povera di prospettive quanto quella della gente a piedi scalzi delle campagne indiane alle prese con la sussistenza quotidiana.
Ognuno di noi sentiva, nei confronti di Bunker e della sua folle e utopica invenzione, un senso di gratitudine e di solidarietà.
Mi è sembrato chiaro ancora di più come il Barefoot College sia stato creato non solo per gli 'altri', ma forse proprio per tutti, anche per 'noi'.
This experience at the Festival della Scienza di Genova è finita.
E' stata una giornata piena di soddisfazioni e ritrovare Bunker Roy, parlare con lui del lavoro fatto e di quello in programma per il futuro, una bellissima opportunità.
La sala era piena di persone con tanti interrogativi, domande sul sistema Barefoot e sul destino dei poveri in India e nel mondo, ma anche sul senso di vivere in questo occidente pieno di difficoltà, di incertezze, di dubbi sul modo di affrontare la vita.
Gli interventi del pubblico dopo la conferenza ed il documentario erano tutti estremamente commossi e grati di poter avere finalmente qualche risposta rispetto al disagio di chi come tanti di noi si rende conto di non poter più reggere un sistema che si auto distrugge.
Qualcuno ha manifestato la propria vergogna o il proprio senso di impotenza. Qualcuno ha chiesto se vale ancora la pena di rimanere qui per affrontare una realtà che sembra tanto povera di prospettive quanto quella della gente a piedi scalzi delle campagne indiane alle prese con la sussistenza quotidiana.
Ognuno di noi sentiva, nei confronti di Bunker e della sua folle e utopica invenzione, un senso di gratitudine e di solidarietà.
Mi è sembrato chiaro ancora di più come il Barefoot College sia stato creato non solo per gli 'altri', ma forse proprio per tutti, anche per 'noi'.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Small Bathroom Move Toilet
two appointments with the Barefoot College
Due appuntamenti con il Barefoot College, both Sunday, October 31: The first in Genoa, for a conference with the Bunker Roy Festival of Science. During the conference, the documentary will be screened the footsteps of Gandhi - the Barefoot College, Bunker Roy, that my father and I have made this year.
The event is scheduled at 18.00 in the Palazzo Ducale, Sala del Minor Consiglio.
Earlier, at about 15.00 in Brescia, on the occasion of the 23rd National Congress of the Movement Nonviolent still a screening of the documentary.
I will be in Genoa and I'm already excited!

Due appuntamenti con il Barefoot College, both Sunday, October 31: The first in Genoa, for a conference with the Bunker Roy Festival of Science. During the conference, the documentary will be screened the footsteps of Gandhi - the Barefoot College, Bunker Roy, that my father and I have made this year.
The event is scheduled at 18.00 in the Palazzo Ducale, Sala del Minor Consiglio.
Earlier, at about 15.00 in Brescia, on the occasion of the 23rd National Congress of the Movement Nonviolent still a screening of the documentary.
I will be in Genoa and I'm already excited!
Thursday, October 21, 2010
Snowmobile Salvage Michigan
Just
Did you know that
cotton is the most important non-food raw material in the world? It grows a bit 'all over the planet, but the larger producing countries are China, India, USA, Pakistan, Brazil, Uzbekistan, which in 2009 produced all together 85% cotton. The cotton is then 40% of the fiber used in textile industry, power industry, involving 60 million workers worldwide, who are often young people (women and children), immigrants, underpaid, unorganized, in unhealthy working conditions and exhausting.
In 2008, however, these workers have led to a total production quota, which reached 600 billion dollars.
Since 2005, with the termination of the Multifibre agreements, the World Trade Organization has finally liberalized world trade in textiles and clothing, resulting in a competitive war between multinational production and trade of textile products.
chains such as Zara and H & M, whose stores we have seen appear a few years ago in our cities, are just a consequence of this liberalization, and gave rise to the phenomenon of fast-fashion, or fashion-and-use casts, which is cheap and lasts less. Zara
for example, English brand popular now all over the world, founded by Orange Ortega, tenth among the richest men in the world, has 3000 stores in 64 countries.
But behind the success of Zara, is a production system which, according to Deborah Lucchetti in his book 'The Consumer's New Clothes', means that "that dress, designed in Spain, may have been sewn into Bangladesh, with fabrics from India and finished in Spain with the quality control unit, or (...) may have been packed on vessels departing from China by Chinese workers with labels "Made-in-Bangladesh, to make up course Madrid, to avoid customs duties and further reduce production costs. "
It 's a fact comunque che anche alcune delle nostre griffe made in Italy si servono del lavoro di asiatici e sudamericani, i quali intascano tra lo 0,5 e il 3% del prezzo finale del prodotto, mentre i grandi distributori e i marchi si riservano l’80% del prezzo.
Un altro aspetto inquietante di questo nuovo sistema globalizzato di produrre e vendere abbigliamento è lo scarso controllo sulla materia prima, che viene coltivata in zone del mondo dove le leggi che regolamentano l’ impatto ambientale della produzione di cotone, per esempio, non sono uniformi.
Pare che circa 2 miliardi di dollari vengano spesi ogni anno per i pesticidi chimici necessari per scongiurare the attack on the cotton plants (often genetically modified) by pests and weeds. With obvious effects on farmers in terms of threat to their health, given they are constantly at risk of poisoning contact or inhalation.
And introducing GM cotton, which the big agribusiness (Monsanto in the head) was to promote the yield and the reduction of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, has done nothing but worsen dramatically that the environmental conditions and life farmers.
In the larger producing countries, the GM cotton was in 2007, already 43% of the total, and India in particular have been seen in these years, many cases of suicides among farmers in debt up to his neck to repay the purchase of GM seeds sterile, toxic pesticides and fertilizers are harmful to the environment, the result would instead be the assurance of well-being of their families.
Today you are trying to act internationally to push for greater awareness on these issues and to defend and improve, where possible, the conditions of textile manufacturers and workers. In particular, the Clean Clothes Campaign , born in Amsterdam in the 90s, has worked hard to denounce the conditions of exploitation and unfairness of the millions of textile workers, mostly invisible and ignored by everyone, working to provide jeans, shirts and shoes to fashion.
But ultimately, it is from our individual choice that depends on our future and those who live beside us know the reality of things is certainly a first step, ask, do not rely on official statements and alleged ethical products we consume, because the same ethics is becoming a commodity of trade. In short, our effort is to try each to put our intelligence at the service of a common good.
Utopia? Perhaps, but it's worth a try.
If you want to read more:
‘I vestiti nuovi del consumatore’, Deborah Lucchetti, ed. Altreconomia, 2010
‘Le navi delle false griffe’, Rita Fatiguso, Il Sole 24 Ore
‘Clean Clothes. A global movement to end sweatshops’, Liesbeth Sluiter, Pluto Press, 2009
On line:
Campagna Abiti Puliti
Clean Clothes Campaign
la rivista mensile Altreconomia
Assemblea Generale Italiana Commercio Equo e Solidale

cotton is the most important non-food raw material in the world? It grows a bit 'all over the planet, but the larger producing countries are China, India, USA, Pakistan, Brazil, Uzbekistan, which in 2009 produced all together 85% cotton. The cotton is then 40% of the fiber used in textile industry, power industry, involving 60 million workers worldwide, who are often young people (women and children), immigrants, underpaid, unorganized, in unhealthy working conditions and exhausting.
In 2008, however, these workers have led to a total production quota, which reached 600 billion dollars.
Since 2005, with the termination of the Multifibre agreements, the World Trade Organization has finally liberalized world trade in textiles and clothing, resulting in a competitive war between multinational production and trade of textile products.
chains such as Zara and H & M, whose stores we have seen appear a few years ago in our cities, are just a consequence of this liberalization, and gave rise to the phenomenon of fast-fashion, or fashion-and-use casts, which is cheap and lasts less. Zara
for example, English brand popular now all over the world, founded by Orange Ortega, tenth among the richest men in the world, has 3000 stores in 64 countries.
But behind the success of Zara, is a production system which, according to Deborah Lucchetti in his book 'The Consumer's New Clothes', means that "that dress, designed in Spain, may have been sewn into Bangladesh, with fabrics from India and finished in Spain with the quality control unit, or (...) may have been packed on vessels departing from China by Chinese workers with labels "Made-in-Bangladesh, to make up course Madrid, to avoid customs duties and further reduce production costs. "
It 's a fact comunque che anche alcune delle nostre griffe made in Italy si servono del lavoro di asiatici e sudamericani, i quali intascano tra lo 0,5 e il 3% del prezzo finale del prodotto, mentre i grandi distributori e i marchi si riservano l’80% del prezzo.
Un altro aspetto inquietante di questo nuovo sistema globalizzato di produrre e vendere abbigliamento è lo scarso controllo sulla materia prima, che viene coltivata in zone del mondo dove le leggi che regolamentano l’ impatto ambientale della produzione di cotone, per esempio, non sono uniformi.
Pare che circa 2 miliardi di dollari vengano spesi ogni anno per i pesticidi chimici necessari per scongiurare the attack on the cotton plants (often genetically modified) by pests and weeds. With obvious effects on farmers in terms of threat to their health, given they are constantly at risk of poisoning contact or inhalation.
And introducing GM cotton, which the big agribusiness (Monsanto in the head) was to promote the yield and the reduction of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, has done nothing but worsen dramatically that the environmental conditions and life farmers.
In the larger producing countries, the GM cotton was in 2007, already 43% of the total, and India in particular have been seen in these years, many cases of suicides among farmers in debt up to his neck to repay the purchase of GM seeds sterile, toxic pesticides and fertilizers are harmful to the environment, the result would instead be the assurance of well-being of their families.
Today you are trying to act internationally to push for greater awareness on these issues and to defend and improve, where possible, the conditions of textile manufacturers and workers. In particular, the Clean Clothes Campaign , born in Amsterdam in the 90s, has worked hard to denounce the conditions of exploitation and unfairness of the millions of textile workers, mostly invisible and ignored by everyone, working to provide jeans, shirts and shoes to fashion.
But ultimately, it is from our individual choice that depends on our future and those who live beside us know the reality of things is certainly a first step, ask, do not rely on official statements and alleged ethical products we consume, because the same ethics is becoming a commodity of trade. In short, our effort is to try each to put our intelligence at the service of a common good.
Utopia? Perhaps, but it's worth a try.
If you want to read more:
‘I vestiti nuovi del consumatore’, Deborah Lucchetti, ed. Altreconomia, 2010
‘Le navi delle false griffe’, Rita Fatiguso, Il Sole 24 Ore
‘Clean Clothes. A global movement to end sweatshops’, Liesbeth Sluiter, Pluto Press, 2009
On line:
Campagna Abiti Puliti
Clean Clothes Campaign
la rivista mensile Altreconomia
Assemblea Generale Italiana Commercio Equo e Solidale


Wednesday, October 20, 2010
What Kind Of Weave Does Lauren London
But where are you going are the chemical did not you?
demand, just to put it Lubrano, arises. In many factories hear about the presence of chemicals. Not to mention the pharmaceutical industry, of course, but the food industry. To clear the field of simple misunderstandings (and also to prevent the lynching of passionate cooks "modern", "molecular" ... call it a bit 'as you like) I should clarify that my concerns are about the presence of chemicals for the construction product that, frankly, a chemical not really need (while it seems that the experimental kitchen ... everything can be lawful ) . We think of

demand, just to put it Lubrano, arises. In many factories hear about the presence of chemicals. Not to mention the pharmaceutical industry, of course, but the food industry. To clear the field of simple misunderstandings (and also to prevent the lynching of passionate cooks "modern", "molecular" ... call it a bit 'as you like) I should clarify that my concerns are about the presence of chemicals for the construction product that, frankly, a chemical not really need (while it seems that the experimental kitchen ... everything can be lawful ) . We think of
and mozzarella cheese production: just a good and experienced cheesemaker ... but more often we find the chemical the .
Think of the classic production of bakery products (cakes belief, cookies ...): there are also there.
Here I just want to understand, so ... to serving in this area, you think?
And again, I continue to live in a fairy-tale world made of pastry chefs who get up at 4 am, go to the dairymen who make their dough while the world is actually going on?
To mix flour, fresh eggs, butter, sugar .... we really want a chemist?
rennet and salt to mix well?
Meanwhile we continue to find stores crammed with expired raw materials and ready to be used .... but I would not have written anything.
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Fastest Flash Point And Shoot Camera
100% Cotton Green Kerala Masala
Parte del mio lavoro quotidiano is to promote at the elementary and middle schools creative educational workshops name to which the cooperative work.
In particular, projects that are personally propose that the so-called laboratories 'intercultural', an adjective now entered the everyday language of the school environment that is Italian to deal with children who come from around the world without being prepared to understand to fund the different points of view and exploit them properly.
I must say that among the teachers I have met many people still sensitive and genuinely interested in offering students the possibility of new knowledge and stimulate their curiosity to meet the cultures 'Other'.
Moreover, it is no longer possible to ignore part of an increasingly interconnected world, where the choices of those who live far from us about us closely and, conversely, our willingness to become aware of our behavior in terms of environment, politics and culture have an impact in the short and long term in the rest of the world.
I think it is right now more than ever realize how we are already consisting of a mix between so-called 'Italian culture' and the cultures of those living-I-lived beside us.
We can do better and look more closely at our neighbor.
very interesting and I must say, even fun, reflections who made the ' American anthropologist Ralph Linton in 1937 about naive and unaware of the idea that the average American has its own culture: "The average American wakes up in a bed built to a design which originated in neighboring East. He pulled back the sheets and blankets that can be cotton, plant native to India, or flax, a plant native to the Near East, or sheep's wool, animal originally domesticated in the Near East, or silk, which use was discovered in China. All these materials have been invented yarns and fabrics according to procedures in the Near East. He puts on his moccasins invented by Indians in the wooded districts of the east, and goes to the bathroom, whose accessories are a mix of European and American inventions, both of recent date. Takes off his pajamas, a garment invented in India, and washes with soap invented by the ancient Gauls. Then he shaves, a masochistic rite which seems to be derived from the ancient Sumerians and Egyptians.
Back in the bedroom, took his clothes from a chair to the model was developed in southern and dresses. She wears garments whose form originally derived from the leather-clad nomads from the steppes of Asia, puts on shoes made of leather, dyed by a process invented in ancient Egypt, cut according to a model derived from the classical civilizations of the Mediterranean and begins around neck a brightly colored strip that is a surviving vestige of the shawls that the Croats were held on the shoulders of the seventeenth century [...]
Going to breakfast stops to buy a newspaper, paying with currencies which are an ancient Lydian invention. At the restaurant ... his plate is made of a type of pottery invented in China, and his knife is of steel, an alloy made for the first time in southern India, the origins of medieval Italian fork, spoon is derived from ' Roman original. It takes its coffee, Abyssinian plant, with cream and sugar. Both the idea of \u200b\u200bbreeding cows to milk them originated in the Near East, while sugar was extracted in India for the first time. After the fruit and coffee, eat waffles, cakes, according to a Scandinavian technique, wheat, a native of Asia Minor [...]
When our friend has finished eating, leans back in his chair and smokes, second habit of the Indians of America, consuming the plant domesticated in Brazil or smoking a pipe, derived from the Indians of Virginia, or a cigarette, derived from Mexico. It can also smoke a cigar, transmitted to us from the West Indies, through Spain. While smoking reads the news of the day, printed in characters invented by the ancient Semites upon a material invented in China and by a process invented in Germany. While reading the accounts of the problems which trouble abroad, if it is a good conservative citizen, an Indo-European language, thank a Hebrew deity to have done it one hundred percent American. "(From Marco Aime, excesses of culture, Einaudi 2004)
Parte del mio lavoro quotidiano is to promote at the elementary and middle schools creative educational workshops name to which the cooperative work.
In particular, projects that are personally propose that the so-called laboratories 'intercultural', an adjective now entered the everyday language of the school environment that is Italian to deal with children who come from around the world without being prepared to understand to fund the different points of view and exploit them properly.
I must say that among the teachers I have met many people still sensitive and genuinely interested in offering students the possibility of new knowledge and stimulate their curiosity to meet the cultures 'Other'.
Moreover, it is no longer possible to ignore part of an increasingly interconnected world, where the choices of those who live far from us about us closely and, conversely, our willingness to become aware of our behavior in terms of environment, politics and culture have an impact in the short and long term in the rest of the world.
I think it is right now more than ever realize how we are already consisting of a mix between so-called 'Italian culture' and the cultures of those living-I-lived beside us.
We can do better and look more closely at our neighbor.
very interesting and I must say, even fun, reflections who made the ' American anthropologist Ralph Linton in 1937 about naive and unaware of the idea that the average American has its own culture: "The average American wakes up in a bed built to a design which originated in neighboring East. He pulled back the sheets and blankets that can be cotton, plant native to India, or flax, a plant native to the Near East, or sheep's wool, animal originally domesticated in the Near East, or silk, which use was discovered in China. All these materials have been invented yarns and fabrics according to procedures in the Near East. He puts on his moccasins invented by Indians in the wooded districts of the east, and goes to the bathroom, whose accessories are a mix of European and American inventions, both of recent date. Takes off his pajamas, a garment invented in India, and washes with soap invented by the ancient Gauls. Then he shaves, a masochistic rite which seems to be derived from the ancient Sumerians and Egyptians.
Back in the bedroom, took his clothes from a chair to the model was developed in southern and dresses. She wears garments whose form originally derived from the leather-clad nomads from the steppes of Asia, puts on shoes made of leather, dyed by a process invented in ancient Egypt, cut according to a model derived from the classical civilizations of the Mediterranean and begins around neck a brightly colored strip that is a surviving vestige of the shawls that the Croats were held on the shoulders of the seventeenth century [...]
Going to breakfast stops to buy a newspaper, paying with currencies which are an ancient Lydian invention. At the restaurant ... his plate is made of a type of pottery invented in China, and his knife is of steel, an alloy made for the first time in southern India, the origins of medieval Italian fork, spoon is derived from ' Roman original. It takes its coffee, Abyssinian plant, with cream and sugar. Both the idea of \u200b\u200bbreeding cows to milk them originated in the Near East, while sugar was extracted in India for the first time. After the fruit and coffee, eat waffles, cakes, according to a Scandinavian technique, wheat, a native of Asia Minor [...]
When our friend has finished eating, leans back in his chair and smokes, second habit of the Indians of America, consuming the plant domesticated in Brazil or smoking a pipe, derived from the Indians of Virginia, or a cigarette, derived from Mexico. It can also smoke a cigar, transmitted to us from the West Indies, through Spain. While smoking reads the news of the day, printed in characters invented by the ancient Semites upon a material invented in China and by a process invented in Germany. While reading the accounts of the problems which trouble abroad, if it is a good conservative citizen, an Indo-European language, thank a Hebrew deity to have done it one hundred percent American. "(From Marco Aime, excesses of culture, Einaudi 2004)
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Old Town Canoe Factory Outlet Store
Today I allowed myself a break I turned on the computer and searched the Malayalam film songs sung by old KJ Yesudas, a popular musician in the world and in many Indian film playback singer in Hindi and in several other languages \u200b\u200bof the subcontinent (below the song from the movie Manjubhashini Kodungallooramma , 1968).
One of these in particular links to the dazzling colors of Kerala, a beautiful place that I visited a few times, offering a fertile ground in the eyes all the shades of green. The dazzling green paddy fields of neatly combed the dark green of the forests that cover the mountains, the green moss that covers every exposed surface gently with drops of warm rain of the monsoon.
Since I was in the mood pappadum I opened a box of black pepper and I have 3 or 4 fried in ghee to accompany a bowl of mango pickle.
What a party!

NB: If you are around, try to go to shop for oriental products (of which a good part Indian) in Bologna in Via Mascarella from Asia Mach : I've been there last week and came home with two bags full of good things! in particular, the brand Patak , which produces sauces and condiments I was advised by several Indian friends. And effettti the tandoori paste, I tried a few times the chicken is delicious!
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Master Lock Words And Number Combination
Thanks
Many thanks to all the people attended to Ferrara International last Saturday and thanks to those who wanted to come but then did not have it done, and who I had already warned that he would not come.
Well, I am really happy del risultato della proiezione sul Barefoot College; spero davvero di poterne parlare ancora, di poter mostrare cosa l'entusiasmo, la determinazione e il cuore delle persone è in grado di fare.
Ringrazio in particolare il Movimento non Violento , i ragazzi che hanno promosso l'incontro nel pomeriggio e il suo fantastico presidente, Daniele Lugli, per la bella introduzione; e ringrazio mio padre per il gran lavoro nei mesi scorsi.
(la foto è di Alejandro Ventura)

Many thanks to all the people attended to Ferrara International last Saturday and thanks to those who wanted to come but then did not have it done, and who I had already warned that he would not come.
Well, I am really happy del risultato della proiezione sul Barefoot College; spero davvero di poterne parlare ancora, di poter mostrare cosa l'entusiasmo, la determinazione e il cuore delle persone è in grado di fare.
Ringrazio in particolare il Movimento non Violento , i ragazzi che hanno promosso l'incontro nel pomeriggio e il suo fantastico presidente, Daniele Lugli, per la bella introduzione; e ringrazio mio padre per il gran lavoro nei mesi scorsi.
(la foto è di Alejandro Ventura)
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