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Marie from Maunu
BMW very good condition, well service, original German Built, Give me a ring , talk to me if you are interested on 0273443633.
Price: $6,500
Zela from Glenbervie
I have too many free-ranging chooks. If you would like some - various ages, genders, some black, some Barred Rock, 6 white - please contact me . Phone 09 4375822 or 0211835108.
Free
Alison Neighbourly Lead from Kamo
Fun for all the family this Easter Sunday. Bring your family and your visitors - Costume Parade at 12 noon - plus all the Fun of the Fair until 3pm.
Alison Neighbourly Lead from Kamo
Ben the Kiwi, Flash the Tuatara, Fat Albert, Pounamu, Fred and the other gecko are all spending the weekend preening, bathing and shedding skins to make sure they look their very best for all the School Holiday visitors over he next 2 weeks starting on Monday.
First tuatara encounter of the … View moreBen the Kiwi, Flash the Tuatara, Fat Albert, Pounamu, Fred and the other gecko are all spending the weekend preening, bathing and shedding skins to make sure they look their very best for all the School Holiday visitors over he next 2 weeks starting on Monday.
First tuatara encounter of the holidays Monday morning after 11am kiwi feeding!
The Team from KidsCan Charitable Trust
Hi Neighbours
Our littlest people need your help. Poverty doesn’t start at 5, but until now there’s been no nationwide programme to help preschoolers who are hungry and cold.
KidsCan is changing that. They’re delivering raincoats, shoes and five fresh meals a week to 25 early childhood … View moreHi Neighbours
Our littlest people need your help. Poverty doesn’t start at 5, but until now there’s been no nationwide programme to help preschoolers who are hungry and cold.
KidsCan is changing that. They’re delivering raincoats, shoes and five fresh meals a week to 25 early childhood centres. Attendance is up, and the children are happier and more settled.
"Everyone has the same meal so children don't feel like they have less," Manaia View Kindergarten teacher Kathy Belz says. "It's upholding everyone's mana.”
40 more centres are waiting for help. KidsCan, Stuff and Neighbourly have partnered up to raise enough money to support 1000 more children - and we need 400 more generous Kiwis to hold little hands. To support a child, sign up at KidsCan.org.nz
Support a little Kiwi now
Vicky from South Whangarei
Help,we need a rental urgently as our landlord wants to move into the one we are in.Preferably Mangapai area,or surrounding areas.Need a shed or a bit of land for storage.Excellent tenants.No children,no pets, we are self employed.
Denise Piper Reporter from Whangārei Leader
Te Kura Kaupapa Maori o Te Rawhitiroa was just one of 30 schools performing at Te Tai Tokerau Festival this week - share your photos heree
Anna Holley from Beaurepaires Whangarei
Did you know that you can buy Shell Helix motor oils in store and online at Beaurepaires? Either pop in or browse the range through our webstore and get it delivered to your door.
The Team from Resene ColorShop Whangarei
Plants make a lovely gift for young and old. Personalise your gift by creating a potato print wrap for it using a favourite Resene testpot colour and a potato cut to your chosen shape. It’s easy to do – you can even get the kids to help. It’s also a handy way to disguise any old or stained … View morePlants make a lovely gift for young and old. Personalise your gift by creating a potato print wrap for it using a favourite Resene testpot colour and a potato cut to your chosen shape. It’s easy to do – you can even get the kids to help. It’s also a handy way to disguise any old or stained plant pots you may have in your home. Make the most of your weekend with this easy step by step project idea from Resene. Find out how to create this quick and easy project yourself
Kerry from Glenbervie
In response to the recent crusade to rally support for a name change of a rugby team, let me be quite clear, I don’t care if the consensus decides they should be called “The Marshmallow Puffs”. The real issue of note here is the not so subtle underlying message that this call for a name … View moreIn response to the recent crusade to rally support for a name change of a rugby team, let me be quite clear, I don’t care if the consensus decides they should be called “The Marshmallow Puffs”. The real issue of note here is the not so subtle underlying message that this call for a name change entails.
It’s a question of history.
Whether we like it or not, our history shapes us. It influences us now, and will influence our future and thus it’s vital we acknowledge that the measure of accuracy by which we as a nation perceive our past- will have a bearing on what sort of society we will be in the future.
For too long now I have observed a loosely unified ideology firmly controlling the general narrative, such that we have come to accept a gross distortion of our recent history which has become a political football to conform us. For too long we have played dumbly into the hands of an ideology bent on engineering our attitudes and shaping NZ society. And I don’t like where we are headed.
And now the Christchurch terror attacks are being used to further this agenda.
To put this in perspective, and because our recent history is perhaps too big of a game, a game we are not yet fit to tackle right now, I want to put some distance in here and go further back in time. In effect, the name change being demanded of the Crusaders is an issue being played out in the public square, and is somewhat going to be decided in the court of public opinion. Trial by media. But, as in every trial, things like truth, accuracy and justice are paramount. It is vital that we not be blindsided by prejudice.
The Crusades, a series of historical events, are being portrayed as an ugly blot on our track record. Being a nation comprised mostly of European descent and culture, the West, whose history we share, whose values we hold in common, are feeling the pressure of collective guilt. Guilt, as we know is a powerful tool in shaping who we are. But to focus entirely on the Crusades without taking into account the contextual background in which they took place opens a way for being manipulated into an unwarranted perception of ourselves.
Rightly or wrongly, the Crusades, some call the Christian Crusades, were an attempt to re-open and defend the pilgrimage routes to the “Holy Lands”. Though certainly violent, they weren’t acts of aggressive expansionism which had already been evident for hundreds of years and which provided the catalyst for them. In terms of time, the response from nominally Christianized nations were interspersed over the space of less than two hundred years against a background within fourteen hundred years of violent aggression. In numerical terms, the Crusades were 16 major battles, relative to over five hundred forty battles to overcome classical civilization. In geographical terms they took place in the immediate vicinity of the traditional routes of pilgrimage to the birthplace of Christianity in stark contrast to the deliberate extension of Islamic dominance from Spain in the west, east to Asia, from North Africa, the Middle East to the countries North of the Mediterranean.
It is crucial to put this in perspective, and I see no better way of doing it than by graphic representations courtesy of the Center for the Study of Political Islam.
The elephant in the room.
Some may claim that in presenting the history this way there is already a conflation of issues. We will no doubt be told, for instance, that there is a need to distinguish the violent aggressive expansionist programme of the Ottoman Empire from the ideology of the religion of Islam. But if that is to be, then why are we, on the other hand, told incessantly that the violence of the Crusades were directly attributable to the ideology of Christianity? Are there not double standards in the way we treat these issues?
The only way to really know whether the correlations are real is to study the source material, the ancient texts and also to rightly appreciate the effects these two opposing ideologies have had on human history.
Having spent the last couple of years coming to an understanding of Islam, it is clear that the correlation between 1400 years of bloody aggression and the ideology of Islam is no mere accident of history. On the other hand, it is equally clear that to blame the Crusades on the ideology of Christianity is not so clearcut. I would be happy to elaborate further.
I will be the first to admit, (and have already done so in a previous letter www.nzherald.co.nz...),
that the majority of the world's Muslim population are moderate, and appreciate the ideal of peace. However, Islam is, as the recent controversies regarding the Hijab have shown, a belief system with two faces. Just as many women expressed it, in the regions in which Islam has been practiced for centuries, the hijab is a mark of oppression, of subjugation. In the liberal West it is a sign of solidarity, of choice, of cultural expression, of peace and compassion, and each is a legitimate expression of Islam. And each appearance has a common goal. While we may think that this dualism, like a house divided against itself that cannot stand, will tear itself apart, it is in fact a direct consequence of the theology of Islam and is one of the reasons for it’s astounding expansion which isn’t confined to conquest by violence.
While Islam has many iterations, just as in Christianity, there is consensus on major issues. The apparent tensions between, peace and violent Jihad, between choice and compulsion, the contrast between difficulty in assimilation with other cultures, and the seeming contradiction to this with the appearance of Muslim people exerting an influence at every level of society- is not a sign of conflict within Islam, but an overarching expression of its brilliance.
To understand this one must venture into the musty halls of history and examine the life of Muhammad, beyond the scope of this letter.
In a very real way this issue, and whether or not it reaches the public at large, is a litmus test for knowing just how tightly the narrative is being controlled.
14 replies (Members only)
Anna Holley from Beaurepaires Whangarei
Before heading out on the roads this weekend, make sure you stop in at your local Beaurepaires and get a FREE 4 Point Safety Check. Life can be busy sometimes, but you’ll never regret taking a few minutes out of your day to ensure your family’s safety. It only takes 15 minutes to complete and … View moreBefore heading out on the roads this weekend, make sure you stop in at your local Beaurepaires and get a FREE 4 Point Safety Check. Life can be busy sometimes, but you’ll never regret taking a few minutes out of your day to ensure your family’s safety. It only takes 15 minutes to complete and no appointment is necessary, however, you can book in online!
Ian Crayton-Brown from Northland Road Safety
Support for youth beneficiaries to get driver licences by Government.
Mei Leng Wong Reporter from NZ Gardener & Get Growing
Yippeee! Just received the early copies of How to Grow Flowers 1944-2019, a special edition celebrating our 75th year (making us the oldest continuously published magazine in New Zealand), and it's beautiful! The first of a set coming out this year, How to Grow Flowers features the best advice… View moreYippeee! Just received the early copies of How to Grow Flowers 1944-2019, a special edition celebrating our 75th year (making us the oldest continuously published magazine in New Zealand), and it's beautiful! The first of a set coming out this year, How to Grow Flowers features the best advice from our archive, complete with vintage wisdom from long-time subscribers, garden clubs and knowledgeable experts. You have until April 14 to get the pre-sale price of $11.90 (25% off retail price). Order online or phone 0800 624 744.
Liz from Rural West Whangarei
Come and help yourself. My neighbour felled all these trees and is leaving it for anyone who wants to come and get the wood. Take as much or as little as you like.
Easy access.
Free
Jo Haywood Reporter from Homed
Thanks to everyone who joined us or submitted questions for our live chat with Resene colour experts Christine Hawkings and Merenia Patira.
If you missed it, you can still check out their answers and get some fresh decorating ideas, here.
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