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Nkosi's and is
Nkosi's Haven is an orphanage in Johannesburg, South Africa, founded with the aim of looking after mothers and children with HIV / AIDS.

Nkosi's and We
* Nkosi's words are the inspiration of the song " We Are All the Same " written by NALEDi in June 2001.

Nkosi's and All
* A song titled " Do All You Can " subtitled Nkosi's song was recorded by the spiritual musical group Devotion.

Nkosi's and .
Nkosi's birth mother died of HIV / AIDS in the same year that he started school.
Together with his foster mother, Nkosi founded a refuge for HIV positive mothers and their children, Nkosi's Haven, in Johannesburg.
Nkosi's Haven received a prize of US $ 100, 000 from the KidsRights Foundation.
Nkosi's Haven believes in the policy of keeping the mother and child together.

life and is
He knows that the economy of life in the `` outback '' is awful.
Nowhere in Isfahan is this rich aesthetic life of the Persians shown so well as during the promenade at the Khaju bridge.
Poetry in Persian life is far more than a common ground on which -- in a society deeply fissured by antagonisms -- all may stand.
The music director of the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra, William Steinberg, has molded his group into a prominent musical organization, which is his life.
All but the most rabid of Confederate flag wavers admit that the Old Southern tradition is defunct in actuality and sigh that its passing was accompanied by the disappearance of many genteel and aristocratic traditions of the reputedly languid ante-bellum way of life.
The resulting picture might appear a maze of restless confusions and contradictions, but it is more true to life than a portrait of an artificially contrived order.
The sequence of movements in a Cunningham dance is unlike any sequence to be seen in life.
Harold Clurman is right to say that `` Waiting For Godot '' is a reflection ( he calls it a distorted reflection ) `` of the impasse and disarray of Europe's present politics, ethic, and common way of life ''.
Nothing is more revealing of the way of life and literary aspirations of this group than their attitude toward sex.
The style of life chosen by the beat generation, the rhythm and ritual they have adopted as uniquely their own, is designed to enhance the value of the sexual experience.
they will destroy the shrines, temples, museums, and churches of the state that is the implacable enemy of the life they believe in.
The mind has betrayed them, reason is the foe of life ; ;
And the life they lead is undisciplined and for the most part unproductive, even though they make a fetish of devoting themselves to some creative pursuit -- writing, painting, music.
The professed mission of this disaffiliated generation is to find a new way of life which they can express in poetry and fiction, but what they produce is unfortunately disordered, nourished solely on the hysteria of negation.
This is the rhetoric of righteousness the beatniks use in defending their way of life, their search for wholeness, though their actual existence fails to reach these `` religious '' heights.
But the highroad, according to the description of its traffic, belongs to life as it is lived in unawareness of death, while the way to the churchyard belongs to some other sort of life: a suffering form, an existence wholly comprised in the awareness of death.
Life is further characterized, in antithesis to Piepsam, as animal: the image of a dog, which appears at several places, is first given as the criterion of amiable, irrelevant interest aroused by life considered simply as a spectacle: a dog in a wagon is `` admirable '', `` a pleasure to contemplate '' ; ;
In its place is a passionate consciousness grasped and molded to feelings of positive or negative values even as the actions of one's life are determined by constellations of process in which one is caught.
He is utterly disappointed in himself and in the desultory life he has been leading.

life and subject
This retelling by Louis Zara of the brief, anguished life of Stephen Crane -- poet and master novelist at 23, dead at 28 -- is in novelized form but does not abuse its tragic subject.
Absent-minded, subject to unexplained tears Jubal would have bet his life that if Anne were to witness the Second Coming, she would memorize date, time, personae, events, and barometric pressure without batting her calm blue eyes.
The election was for life, unless the abbot was canonically deprived by the chiefs of his order, or when he was directly subject to them, by the pope or the bishop.
The life of Amalasunta was made the subject of a tragedy, the first play written by the young Goldoni and presented at Milan in ( 1733 ).
An autobiography ( from the Greek, αὐτός-autos self + βίος-bios life + γράφειν-graphein to write ) is an account of the life of a person, written by its subject.
Antonio Salieri ( 18 August 17507 May 1825 ) was a classical composer, conductor and teacher born in Legnago, south of Verona, in the Republic of Venice, but who spent his adult life and career as a faithful subject of the Habsburg monarchy.
The acceptance of modernist design into everyday life was the subject of publicity campaigns, well-attended public exhibitions like the Weissenhof Estate, films, and sometimes fierce public debate.
The degree to which these external factors should influence adjudication is the subject of active debate, but that judges do draw of learning from other fields and jurisdictions is a fact of modern legal life.
The album's subject matter was largely centered on Love's tumultuous life between 2003 and 2007, and featured a polished folk-rock sound with much more acoustic work than previous Hole albums.
Beginning in the 1880s and 1890s through the end of his life in 1926, Monet worked on " series " paintings, in which a subject was depicted in varying light and weather conditions.
In 1756 he returned to the subject of the still life.
Like nearly all aspects of Cesare Borgia's life, the date of his birth is a subject of dispute.
: or shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb.
) Yet another of the remarkable events in Defoe's life, the storm was the subject of his book The Storm.
My subject is a barren one – the world of nature, or in other words life ; and that subject in its least elevated department, and employing either rustic terms or foreign, many barbarian words that actually have to be introduced with an apology.
Article 8 provides a right to respect for one's " private and family life, his home and his correspondence ", subject to certain restrictions that are " in accordance with law " and " necessary in a democratic society ".
The Lincoln School built its curriculum around “ units of work ” that reorganized traditional subject matter into forms embracing the development of children and the changing needs of adult life.
Our physical bodies, our relationships-all of our life circumstances-are fragile and subject to change.
The life and works of Giulio Alenio are the subject of several conventions which have taken place in 1994 and 2010.
Although, in theory, the pump could work without it, the efficiency would drop drastically and the pump would be subject to extraordinary stresses that could shorten its life considerably.
In most countries, life and non-life insurers are subject to different regulatory regimes and different tax and accounting rules.
These demi-gods are subject to suffering and change like all other living beings, and have limited life of enjoyment at their heavenly abodes.
All of them were subject to the Grand Master, appointed for life, who oversaw both the Order's military efforts in the East and their financial holdings in the West.

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