NEWS

mor1212

New member
וואי הפפראצי האלה כאלה מציקים!+כנסו

פשוט זה לא מקפיץ לי אבל אני חייבת לכתוב על הסרט "אהבה ברובע ברונקס" (Love is all there is): איזה סרט חמודדדדד!!! כזה קליל ומצחיק! חחח הרגה אותי עם המבטא האיטלקי והצווחני שלה! חחחחחחחחח וואי סרט חמודדדדדדד!!!! 96' נראה כל כך לא רחוק אבל בעצם עברו 9 שנים! היא ממש חמודה שמה:)
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
../images/Emo41.gifקליפים+2 כתבות קטנות רבותיי ../images/Emo41.gif

Brad And Angelina Go On Sale!, It's offical It's official. BRAD PITT and ANGELINA JOLIE are going on sale. A show of photographer STEVEN KLEIN's faux-family shots of the 'Mr. & Mrs. Smith' stars in the current issue of W magazine opens at the Gagosian Gallery in Beverly Hills on July 7. How long it will run is still undecided. Proceeds may be going to charity. If all goes well, the show will travel overseas. No doubt that will happen. Klein had an international hit a few years ago with a MADONNA show inspired by their work together in W.
PITT AND JOLIE'S SECRET BABY BRAD PITT and ANGELINA JOLIE have had a secret baby - in the movie MR + MRS SMITH. According to screenwriter AKIVA GOLDSMAN, the movie couple, who stormed to the top of the US and UK box office last weekend (12JAN05), shot a scenario in which they had a baby - but the footage was cut from the finished film. Goldsman is convinced the scene will be added to an upcoming DVD release and may form part of a planned sequel to the hit action comedy. He says, "During the latter period of the shoot, the idea of a sequel was discussed and shot and we had an ending where they have a baby. You'll see this in the DVD in a year's time. "(The scene) seemed like a natural evolution - first they deal with how to manage a relationship in the face of selfish need, next will be how to do so in the face of a baby's need."
Clips W/ Ange And Brad And Vince!
http://movies.channel.aol.com/movie/main.adp?tab=main&mid=19793 גלגלו עד שתראו Video Q&A
http://www.ifilm.com/ifilmdetail/2658061?htv=12&htv=12&htv=12&htv=12&htv=12 גלגלו עד שתראו Vince Vaughn adlibs It's towards the end of the clip and Angelina's trying not to laugh at Vince and calls him "bizarre"​
 

¥EleVatioN¥

New member
כההההההה../images/Emo45.gif../images/Emo129.gif

גמאני אהבתי את הסרט מזה נהנתי!! אבל המבטא האיטלקי שלה הרס אותי
 

mor1212

New member
חחחח נכון! כזה צווחני.. ואיך היא

צעקה על האמא חחחח באמת העוגה הייתה מזוויעה
 

The Lost Girl18

New member
ארררררג כזאת מסוווווקסת!!!

מה זה החליפה המחוייטת הסקסית הזאתתתתתתתתת!!!!!!!!!!! ואיפה מאדוקס??? ארררררררררררררררררררררג
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
Ask actress Angelina Jolie

Jolie's UNHCR role has taken her to refugee camps throughout the world Actress and campaigner Angelina Jolie is a goodwill ambassador for the UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR). Her humanitarian work has taken her to refugee camps in Russia, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. The Oscar-winning actress has urged governments to do more to help refugees and has campaigned extensively for the UN refugee agency. What more does she think can be done to aid refugees worldwide? What are the worst affected areas she has visited? What has made the biggest impression on her in her role as goodwill ambassador? Angelina Jolie answered a selection of your questions via e-mail. Her responses appear below. You also put your questions to her on our global phone-in programme Talking Point on 20 June 2004. Nadil Sanghar, Mombasa, Kenya: What was the deciding factor for you to take on an active role in assisting refugees? Angelina Jolie: The deciding factor was having spent time with refugee families. They continue to inspire and teach me. They are amazing survivors. Emiko Harada, Singapore: Why did you choose to help out the UN's refugee agency when there are so many other UN agencies and causes to support? Angelina Jolie: I sat up a few nights reading everything I could about the different aid groups and projects. I was shocked when I read about 20 million people under the care of UNHCR and how they are the most vulnerable people in the world. I felt refugees were something I should have known about. I was then determined to tell others about it. Maria Saldanha, Rome, Italy: How has being a goodwill ambassador for UNHCR changed your life? Angelina Jolie: It has given me a life filled with purpose. Who are we if we are not useful to others? Gibril Njie, Glasgow, Scotland: What should be done by both the countries where refugees hail from and of course the richer and powerful nations to avoid people becoming refugees? Angelina Jolie: In countries where people have to flee their homes because of persecution and violence, political solutions must be found, peace and tolerance restored, so that refugees can return home. In my experience, going home is the deepest wish of most refugees. Rich and powerful nations need to be more fully invested in finding solutions for refugees, both through financial support for refugee operations and by placing solutions for refugees higher on the international political agenda. The rich nations could also do more, faster, to seize development opportunities to make sure that fragile solutions and peace are sustained in places like Afghanistan. Chris Prior, Wellington, New Zealand: Has the worldwide refugee problem improved in the last 10 years? Angelina Jolie: In terms of numbers, yes. In 1992 there were 18 million refugees and today there are about 10 million refugees in various parts of the world. In addition there are tens of millions of people displaced within their own countries because of persecution, violence, and war
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
המשך

Statistics tell only part of the story - behind the figures are families struggling to survive on minimal assistance There are also thousands of others who have recently returned home who need help in rebuilding their communities. There is still a huge job to do in finding lasting solutions for vulnerable families. Statistics tell only part of the story. Behind the figures are families struggling to survive on minimal assistance. This will be the case until solutions are found. In some countries, conflicts have been resolved, refugees have gone home, solutions have been found. But new crises keep erupting, creating new refugee populations. And some refugee situations have simply continued for years with no resolution in sight. All those lives in suspension, for years and years. Duane Quek, Singapore: What was your initial reaction when you first visited a refugee camp? Stella Pahinis, Barcelona, Spain: What is the most difficult part when you first visit a camp? How do the refugees react towards you? Angelina Jolie: When they come to you with desperate eyes and pleading hands and express all they have lost. They tell you their fears and concerns for their children. The most difficult part is not having a solution and for them to feel helpless. Prakash, Geneva, Switzerland: What is the biggest problem faced by refugees and how do you believe it should be addressed? Angelina Jolie: The biggest problem could be the hostility, negative stereotyping, misperception and in some cases, downright racism faced by refugees. The mistaken negative perceptions about refugees often result in a cascade of concrete problems for them including anti-refugee legislation, abuse of refugees' human rights, severe drops in donations for refugee operations, and even brutal behaviour toward them. Rob Poole, Lund, Sweden: I have often felt that the voices of those representing refugees go unheard in the din of international politics. Do you believe this is changing? What has been your biggest frustration? Angelina Jolie: This is linked to the previous question. A lot of people hold negative views about refugees without bothering to know the facts. It seems that increasingly, in some countries, being tough with refugees and asylum seekers has become part of the political game. In some places it's an election issue and in all the noise the refugee situation becomes distorted, and those of us trying to talk about the realities are drowned out. Lorik, Mitrovica, Kosovo: Are political solutions the only way to solve refugee problems? Angelina Jolie: At the end of the day, yes. Without political solutions, on some level, the problems that created refugees like persecution and war, continue to rage. Even if military intervention makes a difference in some situations, it still has to be followed up with a political solution. Negative stereotyping, hatred and violence can be fought by spreading awareness Some element of political change and agreement is always required, at whatever level - community, state, international - before refugees can feel safe to go home or other solutions can be found. But other refugee problems, like negative stereotyping, hatred and violence can be fought by spreading awareness. Andre Muberangabo, Quebec, Canada: I'm a Rwandan who grew up in a refugee camp in Burundi. The UNHCR enabled me to go to school. Do you encourage refugees you meet to return home if it's possible? Angelina Jolie: In many cases it is not safe to return home. But of course, when it is, I believe the future of your country and your people need you. So yes, I encourage many people to go home. Diep Nguyen Thi, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam: Do you think your work brings concrete success or is it only symbolic? Angelina Jolie: Fortunately I have seen concrete success. For example I was very vocal about a particular camp that was going to be closed, forcing many people back into danger. I fought with others and it was not closed. In other cases I have seen schools, homes and wells built that I funded. But the most rewarding aspect are the letters I receive from young people from around the world who want to tell me they are joining the fight to help others, and that they will educate themselves and do what they can. They give me more hope for our future. Muhammed, Iraq: Are you planning to visit Iraq? Angelina Jolie: I tend to go to areas that need attention - forgotten emergencies. So I don't feel I can be useful there at the moment. My next trip will be to the border of the Sudan. Shakir Wakil, Kabul, Afghanistan: Will you visit Afghanistan? Angelina Jolie: Yes, I feel the media has shifted focus to Iraq and I want us all not to forget the promises made. The needs of the people of Afghanistan and the long commitment to help properly rebuild the country should be met. Nirmala, Nepal: What do you think can be done about the Bhutanese refugees in Nepal, where the government hasn't been able to look after its own people? Angelina Jolie: I haven't been there. I don't have the necessary background to comment on this complex situation, but will be looking into it. James Clarke, Kigoma, Tanzania: You expressed dismay over the food shortages faced by refugees at the Lugufu camp in Tanzania. What do you think should be done, so that these refugees, many of whom have suffered so much already, get enough food? Angelina Jolie: It's a simple equation - when funding runs out, food rations are cut. Refugee operations are under-supported by the international community and refugees are not a popular cause with private donors either. So sometimes refugees have to go without essentials like enough food, clean water, shelter from the elements, not to even mention things like healthcare and education. Part of my job as goodwill ambassador is to draw attention to the many hidden refugee emergencies, and human tragedies that you will not find in the headlines​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
ועוד...

JOLIE CLASHED WITH LIMAN OVER MARRIAGE ANGELINA JOLIE and director DOUG LIMAN's differing views on marriage caused tension on the set of MR AND MRS SMITH. The movie, which stars Jolie and BRAD PITT as assassins hired to kill each other, was dogged by poor relations which saw Liman refusing to speak to his lead actress. During shooting for some scenes, Liman handed over directing Jolie to Pitt. Twice married Jolie tells EMPIRE magazine, "Oh, we had troubles! The movie is all about marriage, and Doug would be saying, 'Well, in my relationship this would happen....' And we'd all say, 'F**k you!' and I'd say, 'Well, in my marriage I would never do that.'" Despite the difficulties it may have caused, Jolie insists the bickering was not entirely a bad thing: "Everyone has an opinion, but that's healthy."
Angelina Jolie on Her UN Refugee Role ANGELINA JOLIE ON HER UN REFUGEE ROLE "What was really shocking was that every individual person you meet will tell you that their immediate family was [affected]. Somebody's child was killed, somebody's husband. Someone was beaten." So wrote Angelina Jolie during a visit to refugee camps in Ecuador last year. Jolie, an Oscar-winning actress for her role in Girl, Interrupted, and the iconic action adventure babe Lara Croft of Tomb Raider fame, has the ultimate alternate identity. Since August 2001 she has been the Goodwill Ambassador for the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR). During that time, she has visited UNHCR refugee operations in the Balkans, Sierra Leone, Namibia, Tanzania, Kenya, Cambodia, Thailand, and Pakistan in addition to Ecuador. On Friday, June 20, Jolie will launch World Refugee Day celebrations in Washington D.C. In an interview with National Geographic News, she talks about a role that is truly personal to her. Q: How did you happen to become the UNHCR's Goodwill Ambassador? I started to travel and realized there was so much I was unaware of. There were many things I hadn't been taught in school and daily global events I was not hearing about in the news. So I wanted to understand. I believe in what the UN has always stood for—equality and the protection of human rights for all people. So I read many books. When I read about the 20 million people under the care of UNHCR I wanted to understand how in this day and age that many people could be displaced. Q: What surprised you most in your first months as ambassador? The extreme imbalance of wealth and resources in the world. More than 35 million people in the world today have been forced to run for their lives, and are either temporarily or permanently exiled from their homes. Half of them are children. Roughly 20 million fall under the auspices of the UNHCR and are currently receiving assistance from the agency. Around 12 million live in refugee camps, fleeing persecution, armed conflict, murder, rape, and mutilation. The smaller camps of 200 to 300 people in many cases are essentially whole villages that have fled together. Larger camps can be the size of small cities. Q: Can you describe what some of the camps are like? Some of the camps have hundreds of thousand people in horrible living conditions. One of the biggest problems is food distribution. Food is distributed in the camps every two weeks, but sometimes due to funding levels, food rations are cut. In some camps people are living on rations that provide only 60 to 80 percent of their daily nutritional needs. UNHCR camps provide refugees a safe haven, food, medical care, and primary school for the children. Funding levels and the political realities of hosting countries, however, can make living conditions extremely difficult. A recent outbreak of fighting in Liberia has forced Sierra Leonian refugees living in UNHCR camps close to Monrovia, the Liberian capitol, to flee the camps and go into hiding. Reports of violence against civilian populations, including refugees, are widespread. The children from the camps are hiding from both government and rebel forces to avoid being kidnapped and forced into becoming soldiers or sex slaves. Tanzania is currently hosting 357,000 Burundian refugees, 80 percent of whom are women and children. More than 8,000 refugees have arrived from Burundi since January, many of them seriously malnourished. But a shortfall in funding has lead to cuts in food rations. Non-food items, like soap, blankets, and plastic sheeting to sleep under, fell by the wayside long ago. In addition, the Tanzanian government wants to force the refugees to return home, and so is doing its best to make living conditions at the camps intolerable by imposing curfews, restricting movement outside and between camps, and refusing travel permits even for medical emergencies. Q: How are the children affected by life in the camps? The trauma children face as a result of being uprooted from their homes, often very suddenly, is devastating, and affects the rest of their lives. The very young children still have dreams. But the young teens have very little hope. They are more realistic. There is nothing for them to do in the camps, and they seem defeated. It is very sad.​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
המשך קצר של הכתבה הראיון השני

An estimated 20,000 children and 20,000 women have been displaced by the recent outbreak of fighting in the Ituri province of Eastern Congo. The UN is receiving reports of thousands of women and girls being brutally raped, mutilated, and killed. Many of the children reaching camps have seen their mothers, fathers, and siblings killed. Thousands of children, some younger than 10 years old, have been recruited by the various armed groups and forced to act as soldiers. The UN estimates that as many as a third of the 30,000 fighters in Congo are children. When funding gets tight, as it always is in Africa, the first item to be cut is trauma counseling for the children. More Information on UNHCR: UNHCR provides protection and assistance to refugees, asylum seekers, refugees who have returned home but still need help in rebuilding their lives, local civilian communities which are directly affected by the movements of refugees and, perhaps most importantly, growing numbers of internally displaced persons (IDPs). IDPs are people who have been forced to flee their homes, but have not crossed the border into another country. As the nature of war has changed in the last few decades, with more internal conflicts replacing interstate wars, the number of IDPs has increased significantly and they are now the second largest group of concern to UNHCR. The number of IDPs is estimated to be between 20-25 million worldwide, with major concentrations in Sudan, Angola, Colombia, Democratic Republic of Congo, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Bosnia-Herzegovina and countries of the former Soviet Union. UNHCR helps an estimated 5.3 million of these people​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
Most Requested Father's Day Gift

Angelina Jolie Is Most Requested Father's Day Gift Unconfirmed sources report that a poll taken by the men's magazine Handy Dads has determined that Angelina Jolie is what most men want for Fathers Day. The poll taken last month shows that dads prefer Angelina Jolie over power tools by a four to one margin. The second most wanted gift for fathers day, formerly number one, is the Delta 10 In. 5500RPM Table Saw Model 4286746. "This is a huge surprise" says Handy Dads magazine publisher Buck Fuller. "We have been taking this poll every year and power tools have always dominated the top five gifts men want. Angelina Jolie capturing the top slot has got a lot us scratching our heads around here. I mean, sure she is hot as heck, but a Delta 10 In. 5500RPM Table Saw Model 4286746 is a great saw. We are going to have to recheck the data and examine our sampling technique for next year's to poll to assure it's accuracy." "This result just doesn't surprise me." Says home renovation expert Bob Vila. "I've been watching the demographics of this poll for years have identified trends that explain what happened. Over that past few years the proliferation of hot chicks on home renovation television shows has linked power tools and total babes together in the minds of handy dads. There is nothing more appealing to dads than an attractive woman using a big power tool. Angelina Jolie with a Delta 10 In. 5500RPM Table Saw Model 4286746, that's heaven." The rest of the list can be found in the latest issue of Handy Dads magazine in the special Fathers Day pull out section. We also recommend a visit to the Handy Dads web site for exclusive photos of Angelina Jolie, the Delta 10 In. 5500RPM Table Saw Model 4286746, and the other gifts most wanted by dads this Fathers Day.​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
Rice spotlight world's refugees

Angelina Jolie, Rice spotlight world's refugees WASHINGTON - (KRT) - Angelina Jolie hopes on-screen chemistry isn't the only way to appeal to human compassion. The Oscar-winning actress joined Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Wednesday to kick off the 2005 World Refugee Day celebration to support the 17 million refugees worldwide. "I feel fortunate I can do something good with celebrity... something much more important than movies," said Jolie, who has served as the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees goodwill ambassador since 2001. She joined Rice and others on stage at the National Geographic Museum to commemorate the people identified by the U.N. refugee agency to have fled from racial, religious or ethnic persecution. "Each of the 17 million refugees has a story to tell," Rice said. "Their resilience, their strength and their humanity teach us a profound lesson in courage." The United States remains the largest donor to the U.N. refugee agency, Rice said, giving more than $250 million in 2004. The country also opened its doors to 52,000 refugees last year. "We can always do more," Jolie said. She and Rice also recognized the winners of the fifth-annual World Refugee Day poster contest and the first World Refugee Day Humanitarian Award. Jessica Shenoi, 10, of Tulsa, Okla.; Vicente Echeverria, 14, from Des Plaines, Ill.; and Katherine Ricker, 16, of Scottsdale, Ariz., won this year's poster contest in the elementary, middle and high school divisions, respectively. The drawings, which reflect the struggle refugees face, are on display in the National Geographic Museum. "As time goes on, we should be more like global citizens and less like Americans," Ricker said, who donned a green bracelet to raise awareness about the political conflicts in Sudan's Darfur region. "Morally, we should just help." The first World Refugee Day Humanitarian Award was awarded to Paul Rusesabagina and film director Terry George. Rusesabagina is the inspiration for George's Oscar-nominated film, "Hotel Rwanda." The film tells the story of a man who houses hundreds of refugees in his Hotel Mille Collines in 1994 during the Rwandan genocide. "Small acts are not enough," Rusesabagina said. "We need to give our fellow men and women hope ... so we do not see a `Hotel Darfur' 10 years from now." Jolie said World Refugee Day is one of the best opportunities to remember refugees' struggles and contributions. She pointed out that even Jesus was once a refugee in Egypt and Albert Einstein was a refugee from Germany. "(Each year), I try to find the right words that will inspire you, move you ... to realize these refugees are just like us," she said. "They are us and often they are the best of us. World Refugee Day is the day ... to commemorate the humanity that binds us all." World Refugee Day is officially Monday. In addition to several events through the weekend, the National Geographic Museum also is hosting a photo exhibit, titled "Surviving Darfur."​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
JOLIE IN TEARS

ANISTON CAUGHT IN FALSE REVELATIONS Jennifer Aniston has been hit with false reports that she disclosed her estranged husband Brad Pitt cheated on her in a magazine interview. This week, articles surfaced in the US reporting that Aniston had told Vanity Fair magazine Pitt had committed infidelity and that she doesn't want to have children. While it's expected that Aniston will break her silence in the pages of the publication, nothing has yet been revealed. Beth Kseniak, a spokeswoman for Vanity Fair, tells People magazine, "That conversation is not true," adding that the sit-down interview with Aniston hasn't even happened yet. JOLIE IN TEARS OVER REFUGEE MEMORIES ANGELINA JOLIE broke down in a CNN interview taped on Wednesday (15JUN05) when she recalled the first time she watched a child die in a refugee camp. The TOMB RAIDER actress agreed to sit down for the chat as part of her International Refugee Day celebrations in Washington DC, where she joined politicians and refugees at Capitol Hill. And Jolie confessed she'll always regret not doing more the first time she witnessed death at a refugee camp. The star tearfully confessed, "I went home and I thought, 'I should have at least taken one (child),' and I'll always kick myself for not trying with just that one. "You realise that there are hundreds of thousands of people in the exact same situation and that a lot of these kids were going to die."​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
launch World Refugee Day

Jolie, Rice and Rusesabagina launch World Refugee Day events WASHINGTON, June 17 (UNHCR) – It takes a lot to steal the show from UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie and US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, but this week, an unassuming 51-year-old Rwandan did just that. Launching the 5th Annual World Refugee Day Celebrations with Rice and Jolie at the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. on Wednesday, Paul Rusesabagina was welcomed by thunderous applause that briefly stopped the ceremony. Rusesabagina, whose role in saving more than 1,200 people during the 1994 genocide in Rwanda was immortalised in the movie, "Hotel Rwanda", received UNHCR's first annual World Refugee Day Humanitarian Award along with the film's producer-director, Terry George, at the ceremony. Rusesabagina, who was also celebrating his birthday on Wednesday, humbly welcomed the ovation but insisted he was no hero: "I am simply a man who made a decision to hold on to my family, my life and my beliefs until the end. If I was going to die, I wanted to be able to live with myself during my last days on earth." UNHCR Regional Representative Kolude Doherty described the dramatic scene 11 years ago along the border of Tanzania and Rwanda, when hundreds of thousands of frightened and traumatized refugees crossed the bridge into Tanzania as mutilated bodies drifted along the river below. "It takes tremendous courage to be a refugee," he said, taking a moment to reflect on this year's World Refugee Day theme, "Courage". Secretary Rice and Goodwill Ambassador Jolie presented awards to three winners of the 4th Annual World Refugee Day Poster Contest, which Jolie sponsors. This year's winners were: Jessica Shenoi from Tulsa, Oklahoma; Vicente Echevarria from Des Plaines, Illinois; and Katherine Ricker from Phoenix, Arizona. Admiring the posters, Rice said, "The young poster contest winners we applaud today have answered the call of conscience in an exceptionally creative way." Addressing the audience, the US Secretary of State read a letter of support from First Lady Laura Bush, then voiced her concern for the world's displaced people, "ensuring that the United States remains a global leader for refugees." Jolie eloquently and passionately reminded everyone that the United States was founded by refugees. "One of America's most inspiring symbols is the Statue of Liberty," she said. "She is the Mother of Exiles with her promise of refuge to the world's tired, poor, to those huddled masses yearning to breathe free, she welcomed millions of 'new Americans' over the years." She also reminded the audience that there are millions of refugees whose futures are still uncertain: "World Refugee Day is the day we make sure they aren't forgotten." Later that evening, Paul Rusesabingina, Terry George and UNHCR's Craig Sanders chaired a question-and-answer panel following a special screening of "Hotel Rwanda". One of the audience members asked Rusesabagina how he found his courage to save over 1,200 Rwandans during the genocide, to which the Rwandan replied: "I remained who I was and did not follow the majority. The majority is not always right. Whoever kills knows that killing is never right." Another audience member questioned the movie's authenticity. Rusesabingina revealed that the script adhered to actual events almost entirely, joking that only 10 percent of it was "Hollywood spice". UNHCR's Sanders, who was one of the guests at Rusesabingina's Milles Collines hotel during the first days of the genocide, concurred that the scenes depicting the unfolding of events were entirely accurate. Director George explained the need to stay true to reality within his script and when editing the film. Rusesabingina ended the evening by noting that the best gift everyone could give him for his birthday would be to fight genocide and criminality, emphasizing that bringing peace to Africa is a fight everyone should support. The Rwandan hero has established a foundation to help orphans of the genocide and victims of rape in Rwanda. On Thursday evening, the World Refugee Day commemoration continued with a special lecture to accompany the photographic exhibition, "Surviving Darfur", by photographer and UNHCR staff member Helene Caux. The exhibition, which is held at the National Geographic Museum's Explorers Hall for three months, is a collection of powerful and moving photographs compiled by Caux over the past two years in Chad and Sudan. The photos are as diverse as a woman weeping at the site of what was her home in Darfur but is now nothing more than scorched ground and ash, children peeping through the tarps of makeshift shelters, and the decimated carcasses of livestock that could not survive the harsh trek to the camps in Chad. In her lecture, Caux noted that "these photos are a homage to courage and the strong will to survive", adding that she values the relationships developed with the people she photographed. She shared with the audience one particular story of a 28-year-old woman who watched her father and brothers massacred by the Janjaweed militia and became pregnant after being raped repeatedly by five of the assailants who now must stand trial for adultery. While stories like this leave Caux feeling quite "powerless", she explained that it is "being the go-between on my own little level" that motivates her even more to expose the atrocities taking place. At the close of the lecture, whose ticket sales will benefit the UNHCR Sudan/Chad operation, she reminded the audience that "being aware is the key issue to acting further". The week-long UNHCR World Refugee Day celebrations in Washington will continue over the weekend with performances by musicians and dancers from all over the world on Saturday at the National Geographic and finish with a special performance at the Kennedy Center on World Refugee Day itself. June 20 has been publicly recognized by the US Congress as World Refugee Day through a special resolution introduced by Congresswoman Eddie Bernice Johnson, a Democrat Representative from Texas.​
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
אה! אממ זהו בעיקרון להיום

תשרשרו נכון לכל מאמר/ראיון/מה שזה לא יהיה...
לילה טוף
 

Ma E

New member
היא לא נראת פה במיטבה אבל היא לבושה

מדהייייייייםםםםםם
עם המעיל השחור הארוך גרררררררררררררררררררררררררררררררררררררר זה הכי יפה בעולם.. מחויט כזה סקסססססיייי תודה רבה על התמונות
 

PRINCESS GINA

New member
איך../images/Emo35.gif../images/Emo70.gif../images/Emo12.gif

איך צירפת כל כך הרבה קישורים?!?!?!?!?!?
 

FIRE GODDESS

New member
פשוט מאוד-כנסי

כשאת כותבת הודעה אז יש לך בתחתית כאלה דברים: תחילת הדגשה] [סיום הדגשה] [תחילת לינק] [סיום לינק] [סמיילים וסימנים לתוכן] [תחילת קוד] [סיום קוד] [עברית] פשוט לחצתי על [תחילת קוד] ואז שמתי את הקישור ואז לחצתי [סיום קוד] ואת יכולה לעשות את זה כמה פעמים ופשוט לרשום את הקישור...
 
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