Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Regine Normann

Why is it that we want what we can't have. I can not find any books in English of Regine Normann.

"North Norway’s great fairy tale writer, Regine Normann," Norway Post. 

http://www.norwaypost.no/museums/museum-north-a-unique-selection-of-history-and-knowledge-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417-26417.html

I did in the process find an interesting website out of the UK that will ship for free anywhere!
http://www.bookdepository.com
And you can search by language.


Submit your Query

I am not ready to submit. Wish I was. But this is way cool. Check it out. No strings attached. And possible feedback to see if what your doing is working....

http://writeoncon.com/


And the 14th and 15th, my moving days.... :'(
there is a free conference!
Here is the website that tells about that:

http://writeoncon.com/about/

Still Writing...

So, here is a sad update. I didn't win the Southwest Writers Contest. But, I was still with the top 20! I am still floating about that. If I had won, I probably would have been very distracted from my move to Utah. And the extra $1500 dollars, pish...who needs that.

I have been very busy and have not been able to write very much lately. But I have been reading some great books. Windswept Dawn, the author, William Heinesen, turned down a Nobel Prize! The other auther is Jorn Riel. I am not sure how to get the fancy "o" with the line through it. Also, not sure how to pronounce a lot of what I read? But, his book was for grade school readers. It was great! I love children's books. I think that is because I did not read very much as a kid. Yeah, Yeah, I hear writers always bragging about how they couldn't stop reading. I am not sure why I didn't read. Maybe, nothing interested me, maybe my mother never read to me (love you mom), maybe...books just weren't good in the 80's. High possibility. The Harry Potter generation was lucky to have J.K Rowling.

Ok, back to Jorn Riel


I found him from watching my Inuit movies. He wrote "Before Tomorrow" and it was the last of the three films I watched. This was my favorite film. I watched an interview with him and he talked about how he got his idea for the book. He went to visit Greenland and while with a hunter he came across the cave with the remains of a Grandmother and young boy. I love this stuff. This is the stuff that gets my mind going. I hear something and have to know the whole story with it. I am not just satisfied knowing that the old lady is bitter and stays in her house all day. I've got to know how and why she ended up that way. Or, how the bones got to the cave. Mysteries and why people do the things they do intrigue me
His book, "The Shipwreck" was great information about the Inuit. He is a wealth of information. I would love to be able to go to Greenland, or Northern Canada. Not going to happen. Unless I get a grant because of my love of writing this book. But, I don't see that happening.

My book is all up here

and if I can just finish this move, I will have the time to get it out onto paper. I am looking forward to that. In the mean time, I am reading "The Saga of King Hrolf Kraki". There is a lot to study for the Vikings. One of my many characters for my book. Along with the Inut woman and Foster boy from Liberia. 

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Windswept Dawn


Windswept DawnWindswept Dawn by William Heinesen





View all my reviewsFinished the book. It was good and the Faroe Islands really are the main characters. Loved it and the simplicity of everyday life.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Inuit

I have found some exciting information for my book. I searched and searched for Inuit information and found one of the most authentic, wonderful, AND FREE sources of information. I am so ready to write more after being stuck on one part of the story. How do I get an Inuk in America? Why would he come to America?


http://www.isuma.tv/hi/en/isuma-productions
Documentaries and Other Films
http://www.isuma.tv/isuma-productions/before-tomorrow



The film crew took a $5000 grant to make my favorite film, "Before Tomorrow." It ultimately got investors for 3.5 million.  A french woman Marie-Helene Cousineau helped write the script from the book by Jorn Riel. He has also written many other books of interest for me! (looking to see if they are in English). The film crew went from Iglooik, Nunavut to Puvirnituq, Quebec. Two Inuit cultures, different dialect. The Igloolik did teach many of the Puvirnituq Inut the traditional way of the Inuit that have disappeared. I agree with the interview, it is a different style of filming, documentary-like and using natural light providing a realism film that makes the audience feel like they are peeking into the Inuk life. This film also provided many jobs for people in a desolate area. 
http://www.isuma.tv/arnaitvideo/arnait-discussion

Saturday, July 14, 2012

South West Writers Contest

I am overly excited about an email I received yesterday.

I am in the top 20 in the Picture Book category in the SWW Storyteller contest!
Here is a copy of the email:



Congratulation

Your entry was sent onto the acquiring judge to compete with the top twenty in the category #10 Children's Fiction or Nonfiction Picture Book. Here the top three will be selected.

The first place winner will go on to compete with all the first place winners from all twelve categories for the StoryTeller award. The StoryTeller award comes with a cash prize of $1,500.00 and the opportunity to be acquired for publication.

Good luck,
Cynthia Boyd
Contest Chairman 2012

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Broken Heart

It was a rainy summer night in Oklahoma. That is not what caused the accident though. Sandy was headed home with her three boys after shopping. She was thinking about getting dinner on the stove and the boys were arguing over who won the last wrestling match. They loved to wrestle in the living room with mom and dad watching.
BAM.
Then it happened. A truck drove over the median hitting Sandy's van and killing her and the boys. The father got the phone call nearly thirty  minutes after the accident. It took the 'jaws of life' forty-five minutes to cut them out. They had been dead upon impact. The cause of the accident, a drunk driver. Twenty-six year old Kevin was out drinking with his friends Thursday afternoon.  He had four beers when he realized he needed to pick up his girl friend from work. He wasn't a bad guy, he just made a bad choice.
Mark spent the night at the hospital. A nurse woke him up the next morning and asked him if he wanted her to call somebody to pick him up. He couldn't think of anybody. The dried tears on his cheek were wet once again as he dragged his unwilling body out the hospital sliding doors. The nurse wanted to help him, but walked away without knowing how. She had a busy day ahead of her.
He walked aimlessly home to his Oklahoma home. The flowers she planted. The boys' baseball bat and gloves. He tried to open the door and fell to the ground.  He stayed in fetal position until the mail-man came around noon. He wept to the mail man. The mail man was a 56 year old man that attempted to console his troubled heart. But what could one say. He helped him get into the house and made him some coffee. He had to get the mail delivered and walked out shaking his head in doubt that Mark would ever recover.
Mark spent two days in his house. He didn't call work. They called him. He didn't shower. He didn't eat. Finally, he packed a backpack of his oldest son with a few belongings and started walking west, to his sister's house in Utah. He walked his way through Oklahoma, to Texas, and into New Mexico.
It was in Santa Rosa, New Mexico where he decided to sleep next to a trash can. Home of the Blue Hole, a bell shaped lake and an Oasis in the middle of a desert that a stranger wakens him and tells him, "I am going to take you somewhere to get help."
The man drives him to Bernalillo, New Mexico and drops him off at a church. He says, "You will get help in there," and he points to the building that read, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. Mark makes his way up to the door and they are locked. He turns around to the man that helped him and there is nobody there. He walks around to a door and sees somebody and knocks on the glass door. A man opens the door.
"Yes, can I help you?"
"Do you not want anyone in there, all the doors are locked?"
"No, come on in." The man takes Mark to his office and sits down. "What can I do for you?"
Mark begins weeping. The man waits. Mark begins crying. The man waits. Mark is waling. The man walks over to Mark and sits beside him. He feels there is nothing in the world he can say to console this stranger that has come for help. He simply puts his arm on Mark's arm.
Mark begins to tell him what happened to his wife and children. The man listens. He is aching, Mark is in anguish. The man invites him to his house for dinner. They drive and talk. Mark is trying to hold back the constant flow of rivers. He feels that a dam has broken and he has no control. They sit down and eat dinner. The man's daughter plays "The Fox Hunt", a fun happy tune on the piano. Mark enjoys the music so much he asks her to play it four more times. The man's sons begin wrestling on the living room floor and Mark's memories flood him. He runs out of the home, unable to control the tears. The man chases him. He talks to him and they go to the porch. The man wants to help Mark, but he can see that there is nothing he can do. Mark has a broken heart.
The man invites him to sleep in their home that night and to get a good nights rest. He resists and says he needs to make it to Santa Fe by sundown. The son gives him a jacket, the wife makes him a lunch, the man gives him clean socks and the daughter plays one more jig on the piano for Mark.
The man drives him to Santa Fe. He drives to random corner off the 25. He hands Mark a twenty and a torn off piece of paper with his phone number. "Call me if you need anything." Mark thanks him and the man drives off.
Two weeks pass. The phone rings. It is not a recognizable number. The man picks up the phone. It is a hospital in Colorado. A man was brought into the hospital and they have pronounced him dead. There is no identity on him, only this phone number in his back pocket.
"Can you identify him for us, Sir?"
"Yes, I didn't know him well, but last time I saw him he had a broken heart." 

Cultural Survival

http://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/canada/inuit-youth-changing-world


February 22, 2010
Author: 
CondonRichard G.
The rapid social changes that have taken place in the Canadian Arctic over the past 20 to 30 years have created a host of challenges and dilemmas for young Inuit. The members of this younger generation are coming of age during a period of fundamental change in northern society. A previously nomadic population has been concentrated into centralized settlements and towns, resulting in population growth and increased economic security. More Inuit are exposed to southern values through travel, schooling, television and radio. Because of all these changes, young people have grown not only more autonomous but have been able to delay the acceptance of adult roles and responsibilities. As a result the patterning and sequencing of traditional Inuit life stages has altered significantly, creating a prolonged adolescent life stage that has up until now been absent in Inuit tradition.
Few regions of the world have experienced such a rapid pace of development and change as the Canadian Arctic. Recognition of the strategic significance and resource potential of Canada's arctic regions has led to an increase in government and corporate involvement with the North and its residents. Such involvement has had both positive and negative consequences for young Inuit. On the positive side, the economy is more secure and schooling and advanced vocational training are more available, creating opportunities for young people that did not exist just 10 to 20 years ago. On the negative side, however, young people face the significant social and psychological stresses incurred by rapid social change, as they strive to find a place in this newly emerging social order. Many young people lack sufficient employment opportunities, are inadequately prepared for advanced high schooling and are unwilling or unable to relocate to larger northern communities where jobs are more available. These adjustment dilemmas have contributed, in part, to the high rates of alcohol and drug abuse, suicide and juvenile delinquency which are characteristic of Inuit teenagers and young adults throughout the North.
Inuit Youth: Past and Present
The world of today's Copper Inuit youth is markedly different from that of their parents and grandparents. In the past, young people not only made a rapid transition into adulthood, but faced predetermined roles and responsibilities imposed by the demands of a harsh and unproductive habitat. The Copper Inuit of the Holman region occupied one of the most marginal environments within Canada's Arctic. Gender roles were narrowly defined, and options were extremely limited. A young man could aspire only to be a skilled hunter and provider for his family; a woman could strive to acquire the skills necessary to be an expert seamstress and household manager. Gender roles were learned through observation of and intense interaction with parents and other adult relatives. Because residential units were small and infant mortality rates high, young people had no peers to draw them away from the socializing influence of their parents.
In the past, parents made marriage arrangements, especially for young women, when the child was an infant, and in some cases even before a child's birth.(1) Parentally arranged marriage and child betrothal were most adaptive in a society in which prospective spouses were few and far between and in which female infanticide reduced the number of marriageable females. As a result, parents sought marriage partners for their offspring through kinship and alliance networks. Most young women married at or just before their first menstrual period, and began bearing children three to four years later.
Young men, however, faced a different set of requirements. They were not considered old enough for marriage until they had proven themselves capable as hunters and providers. Until a man could develop the skills and strength necessary to build a snowhouse or hunt large game unassisted, he was not considered mature enough to take on and support a wife. In chronological terms, he would not reach marriageability until around 17 or 18 years of age. He then went through a period of bride service, during which he joined his future father-in-law's household, often while his betrothed was still pubescent. During this trial marriage period, the young man worked with his father-in-law for three to four years until the young couple was considered mature enough to establish a separate household.
The rather rapid transition from childhood to adulthood in traditional Copper Inuit society stands in marked contrast to the situation today. In the past, Inuit teenagers were raised exclusively within the context of small family groups and spent much of the year in isolated hunting/fishing/trapping camps where there were few, if any, activities to distract them from participating fully in assigned chores. Today, a large adolescent peer group dominates the recreational activities of teens. Young people now have a great deal more autonomy than they ever had in the presettlement era. When they are not in school, they pass much of their time with their peers, more often than not engaged in social rather than work activities. The increased economic security of contemporary settlement life now makes it possible for teenagers to delay taking on the roles and responsibilities of adulthood. As a result, young people now make their own decisions concerning when and who to marry, often only consulting minimally with their parents.
Demographic Changes
As of the early 1960s, the Canadian government sponsored population concentration in the Holman region, which significantly altered the demographic profile and social/physical context of contemporary Inuit society. Prior to this program, the regional population resided in isolated, scattered hunting and trapping camps. Through the construction of government-subsidized housing and a school, the government created a regional center from which it could more effectively deliver health care and social services.
Most importantly, the creation of settlements contributed to the unprecedented population growth of Holman and other northern communities. In 1963, for example, the population of the Holman region was 135. Since then, the Holman population has increased to its present size of more than 350. At present, children and teenagers comprise more than 52 percent of the population. Several factors have contributed to the rapid population growth since the early 1960s: (1) the introduction of bottle feeding, which has shortened birth intervals between offspring(2); (2) improvements in prenatal and postnatal health programs, which have lowered the Inuit infant mortality rate; (3) improvements in nutrition, which have probably increased fertility by eliminating periods of nutritional stress; and (4) increased economic security, which now makes it possible for parents to support larger numbers of offspring.
One result of these demographic changes is that the teenage sector is much larger today than it ever was in the past; settlement existence has provided the social context for a large, active adolescent peer group.
Economic Changes
Since the creation of the settlement, residents of Holman and other Inuit communities have experienced a degree of economic security unheard of in either the traditional period or in the immediate post-contact period. Many of the uncertainties associated with a subsistence level of existence have been eliminated by the availability of wage employment, social assistance payments and government-subsidized housing. The introduction of firearms (in the 1920s) and snowmobiles (in the 1970s) has allowed the Inuit to hunt game more efficiently and over a wider area. Most wage-generating and subsistence-hunting activities have become highly individualized, thus diminishing the amount of cooperation and sharing between households. Today's young generation of Inuit is no longer socialized within a value system that emphasizes the importance of mutual cooperation and sharing.
The shift from a predominantly hunting-oriented economy to one based upon wage employment and government subsidy is not without some complications. Although the available wage employment increases economic security, the relative shortage of local employment opportunities limits the income prospects for Inuit teenagers and young adults. The little employment that is available tends to be only temporary or part time. As a result, even older youths who would prefer to be working end up with a lot of free time. Even though young men could go out trapping or subsistence hunting, most display little interest in these activities because the high investment in time and energy far outweighs the return. The anti-trapping and anti-sealing campaigns waged by southern-based animal welfare groups also have undermined the economic viability of such pursuits in Holman and other Inuit communities. Many of the young people interviewed indicated that they preferred high-paying and highly skilled occupations such as carpentry, heavy-duty equipment operation, mechanics, welding, teaching and nursing.
Social and Attitudinal Changes
As Holman integrates with the outside world, its residents are exposed to southern lifestyles and behavioral standards. Much of this "attitudinal assimilation" is due to the introduction of formal schooling. The local school in Holman has been operating since the early 1960s and is staffed by southern teachers who use a predominantly southern Canadian curriculum. Since schooling is compulsory until age 16 (although, in fact, many students quit well before their sixteenth birthdays), children spend much of the day isolated from the socializing influence of parents and other adults. Thus, as expected, children learn more about the southern way of life than about their own cultural traditions. In addition, the Holman school has done much to create a whole category of individuals who, although physically mature, are chronologically labeled as teenagers (or schoolchildren) rather than adults.
In the fall of 1980, television was introduced in Holman and yearly school exchange trips to southern Canada were instituted. Both of these acculturation agents have increased young people's exposure to southern standards of teenage behavior, attitudes and expectations. Television is the most important source of increased knowledge and awareness of current events happening in the outside world. On the negative side, however, Graburn (1982) has gone so far as to suggest that television is a form of cultural genocide: it has reinforced use of the English language, disrupted social visiting patterns and contributed to a generation gap. Young people in northern communities have been profoundly affected by the assimilationist qualities of television programming; it has helped to alter their behavior, their outlook on life and even their language. The word teenager, in fact, was not used widely until after television was introduced in the community. Television not only is a window to the outside world; it is a window to the adolescent subculture of the US and southern Canada!
As a result of these demographic, economic and social changes in settlement life, parents and children interact much less than in the past. When children and teenagers are not attending school, they spend time with their peers. Many parents complain about this dramatic increase in adolescent autonomy, saying that they rarely see their teenage sons and daughters.
Aspirational Dilemmas
As Holman teenagers struggle to acquire the customs and values of Inuit society, they are also mercilessly inundated with the values, social expectations and behavioral norms of southern society. Exposure to southern value systems has raised young people's aspirations at a time when the northern economy is changing, but not expanding sufficiently to accommodate the employment needs of the new generation. Lack of local employment opportunities may partially explain the delay in social maturity among Inuit adolescents.
In school, young people learn within a value system that promises high-paying and challenging careers after high school. High schooling, however, is not provided on the local level; students must be prepared to spend three years attending the regional high school in the territorial capital of Yellowknife. Although an increasing number of young people in Holman recognize the importance of a formal high school degree, few have the skills to complete the required course of study. (It is not unusual for a ninth-grade student in Holman to discover, after taking the high school entrance exam, that he or she is operating at a fifth- or sixth-grade level of academic achievement.) In addition, the stress of being separated from family and friends, combined with the regimented life in the school's residence hall, simply adds to the students' sense of frustration and helplessness. As a result, many drop out after several months or even weeks. Many of those who remain cut classes or turn to drugs and alcohol, which are more readily available in Yellowknife than in Holman. As of the fall of 1987, only five students from Holman had remained in Yellowknife long enough to complete their high school educations. The rest either did not try to attend or dropped out early, passing their time in Holman with casual work and hanging out with friends and peers.
Those Holman teens who are fortunate enough to receive either a high school diploma or vocational training often have to move to another community to find suitable employment, separating them from a close and supportive network of friends and relatives. As a small community, Holman does not have the employment base to support even a moderately sized work force; the young people who choose to stay in Holman have to settle for a combination of low-paying jobs and social assistance. The recent economic depression in the western Canadian Arctic, a result of the abandonment of oil and mineral exploration in the Beaufort Sea region, has made matters worse. With the promise of material wealth and job satisfaction unfulfilled, an increasing number of Holman's youth will turn to alcohol abuse, drug addiction and even suicide as a means of coping with their frustration. In addition, the lack of parental control and parental role models may further aggravate many youths' sense of alienation from the emerging social and economic order.
There is no doubt that further research, preferably of a longitudinal nature in a number of northern communities, is required to develop a full understanding of the wide-ranging impacts that rapid social change has had upon this new generation of Inuit. For example, many of the Holman youths studied in 1982-1983 have begun to raise families and assume important leadership and political positions within the community. How has their collective experience as a transitional generation affected their abilities to operate in a social environment increasingly oriented to the local control of political processes? Will recent settlement of land claims in the western Canadian Arctic and the subsequent creation of regional and village corporations increase local economic opportunities for young people in Holman and other small communities? Hopefully, as such economic and political opportunities become increasingly available, this transitional generation will find it possible to control the direction of their own lives and home communities.
Notes:
(1) In traditional Copper Inuit society, as in most other Inuit societies, marriage did not imply the same legal, ceremonial or religious obligations as it does in Western culture. The term marriage is used here in a rather loose sense, for lack of a better word. A man and woman were married only after they had established a separate household and were recognized as husband and wife by members of the community. Even today, Inuit consider a young couple living together in a separate household married, even if they have not had a formal marriage ceremony.
(2) Prior to the introduction of bottle feeding, Inuit mothers breastfed their offspring for three to four years, and sometimes up to five years. Recent studies have established that frequent and unrestricted suckling contributes to postpartum infertility. For the Inuit, such prolonged suckling provided an ideal system of population equilibrium, whereby prolonged birth intervals maximized each child's chances of survival. With the introduction of bottle feeding in the 1960s, however, traditional birth spacing altered significantly, resulting in botha shortening of birth intervals and an acceleration in the livebirth rate.
Article copyright Cultural Survival, Inc.

Monday, June 25, 2012

The Coffee Mugs


Here are the coffee mugs
We used to sit and sip
Sometime we needed a hug
Most times we laughed at the kids

Then one day they were grown
And our lives had changed
No more time to sit and sip
But our dreams were never tamed

Use your mugs to sit and sip
Enjoy one another
Enjoy your kids
And most of all your new found love

Writing Goals

Goals are funny things. If they are not set right they are not achieved. Goals have to be reviewed periodically and changed to fit what you are capable of. For instance, her is what I learned about my writing style.

1. keep writing. Set a time aside each day and write and do not stop.
Re evaluated after I felt I did not need a required time.
Presently, I have a goal to write 2,000 words a day.
This is what works for me, for now. Beginning with writing 2,000 words a day would not have worked in the beginning. Everybody is different. I am at 20,000 words!
What works for you?

Friday, June 8, 2012

Group Work

Writing is something that those hermits like because it is a loner activity. Scientist no longer work alone in a lab over long hours. They work in teams. The latest example is the Eliminate Dengue has scientist all over the world. They are working in a group and it doesn't always end happily. The team needs to be cooperative and listen. Some scientist get kicked out because they can't hang in a group setting. But, the Dengue team has succeeded.
So, back to my question...Is writing a solititude activity? Movies are written by a team. Pixar picks a team and they write a movie. 'Up' is created by a team. Then they promote the next movie as "from the creators of 'Up' comes a new movie.   Groups are the new thing, schools don't allow kids to sit by themselves, they have to work in groups. Why is this so important in our society? Some books are written by two people, but rarely a team. I wonder if books will be written by teams one day? Worth a thought...

Saturday, June 2, 2012

Afghan Girl flees to US military, NPR

http://www.npr.org/2012/05/01/151768550/facing-death-afghan-girl-runs-to-u-s-military


May 1, 2012
In a remote part of Afghanistan early last year, a girl was sentenced to death. Her crime was possession of a cellphone. Her executioners were to be her brothers. They suspected her of talking on the phone with a boy. The girl, in her late teens, had dishonored the family, her brothers said.
"My older brother took the cellphone from me and beat me very badly. It was dinnertime. They told me that they would execute me after dinner. They said to me this would be my last meal," says "Lina," a pseudonym.
The question of how to protect the rights of Afghan women after U.S. troops leave the country has become a key question. But this task hasn't been easy, even with a huge American troop presence in Afghanistan.
Lina's story illustrates the point: When she came to an American military base pleading for help, U.S. officials had to figure out how to save her life without enraging the local community.
"I was terrified to think of running away from home, but suddenly a voice from inside told me to flee before my brothers killed me. Maybe the devil made me do it," says Lina. "I took one of their cloaks and wrapped it around me to look like a man. Then I slipped out of the house and started walking to the foreigner's base nearby."
An Afghan woman makes handcrafts last October at a shelter run by women, for women. So-called honor killings are common in deeply conservative Afghanistan, along with other punishments for women suspected of contact with men outside their family.
EnlargeAdek Berry/AFP/Getty Images
An Afghan woman makes handcrafts last October at a shelter run by women, for women. So-called honor killings are common in deeply conservative Afghanistan, along with other punishments for women suspected of contact with men outside their family.
So-called honor killings are common in Afghanistan, along with other gruesome punishments for women suspected of contact with men outside their family. It's considered a dishonor even when a woman is the victim of sexual assault. Hundreds of women are in Afghan prisons for "moral crimes" such as being the victims of rape.
Seeking Refuge
It's not clear if her brothers knew it, but Lina says one of her in-laws was regularly abusing her — physically and sexually. Women in remote villages have little recourse, almost no route of escape. Most spend their lives barely leaving the house. Advocates say they have heard of only a few cases where Afghan women approached American bases for help.
"She approached the gate. When they realized she was in danger, they took her in," says U.S. Marine Maj. Jennifer Larsen, who was to become Lina's almost constant companion for the next several weeks. (The location of the base is also being withheld to protect Lina.)
Larsen says the guards at the gate saw the same car passing again and again. Each time it drew near, Lina looked petrified. They took her to a doctor who discovered fresh bruises on her back and knees from the beating. After treating her, Lina moved into a tent with three American women and an Afghan translator — her exposure to male soldiers on the base was limited.
[Lina] wanted to get away from where she was. Anytime you asked her a question, her answer was, 'Do I have to go back?' Our answer at the time was no, and we had to figure out how to keep that promise.
But even that small corner of the American base was a new world for Lina, after a life of sequester in the village. Things like television and hot running water were new — as was the existence of books, written words and even written numbers.
But Larsen says the girl embraced them. She devoured new foods from the cafeteria, especially ice cream and Doritos. She quickly gained a small English vocabulary, including phrases from the PG-rated movies they watched to pass the time. Some showed men and women kissing. "Kiss" was a favorite new word, says Larsen.
"She was scared and overwhelmed, but she was a strong person, and as she had new things come to her, she adapted quickly. I found out she was very bright," says Larsen.
"She wanted to get away from where she was. Anytime you asked her a question, her answer was, 'Do I have to go back?' Our answer at the time was 'no,' and we had to figure out how to keep that promise," Larsen says.
Pressure To Return
But saving a teenage girl was not part of the battle plan for U.S. forces in Afghanistan — it might even have jeopardized that mission.
Afghan advisers told Americans at the base very bluntly: To keep peace with the community, Lina had to go home, even if it meant her death. Her original "crime" now paled in comparison to the fact that Lina had spent weeks living with non-Muslim soldiers, says Huma Safi, a women's rights advocate in Kabul.
"In Afghan society, women stay with their families. When they spend nights in other places, it's a dishonor for their families. It's not just the military base ... they don't want their daughters to spend the night anywhere," says Safi.
I have everything I ever dreamed of. I live with a big family, and they all love me very much.
An elder from the community stayed on the base with Lina, but he stopped speaking to her once she said she wanted to stay with the foreigners. Her family also tried to convince her to come home, but Lina knew it was a trick, says Larsen.
"The hard part was as I watched her sister beg her to come home. Even her niece and nephew, who were very young, were there as well," Larsen says. "She was glad to see them, she hugged them and kissed them. But as soon as her sister even suggested that she come back home, the whole meeting came to a screeching halt. She had no time for her sister, and she asked her to leave. It was hard to watch. At that moment, an interpreter was unnecessary."
Lina also saw her brothers again — they surprised her by showing up at a meeting near the base. Larsen says she feared the brothers might try to kidnap Lina or even throw acid on her at the meeting. Lina says she knew her family planned to lure her home to kill her.
"My brothers pleaded with me to return home. I told them no. They said they would let me marry whoever makes me happy. I asked them, 'Why would I ever believe you?' " Lina says.
This is where the story in Afghanistan often ends: The woman is sent home, and later killed by her family to cleanse the dishonor.
But Lina's tale has a rare happy ending. U.S. officials helped fly her to a women's shelter in a larger city, while Afghan officials in her province agreed to look the other way.
A Life Of Hope
Women's shelters in Afghanistan can be virtual prisons, and Lina says she felt depressed after about eight months there. But the same pluck that helped her escape death served her again.
When she was brought before a female Afghan judge, Lina asked for help. The judge said she knew a young man looking for a wife. Lina insisted on seeing him first, and that she not be made a second wife to a married man. They met, and after a short discussion, decided to get married. She is now expecting her first child.
Larsen, Lina's Marine caretaker, says that news brought tears to her eyes.
"It's overwhelming sometimes. I don't even know what to say. There are so many women who have this issue. It would be nice if there was something we could do that was tangible, but I don't know what that thing is," Larsen says. "We did help one, and hopefully she'll be able to help others in the future."
Speaking by phone from her new home, Lina says she wants for nothing. After fleeing her home with only the clothes on her back, she now wears the traditional rings and necklaces given to a bride by her husband.
Lina's husband is aware of her past and, unlike most men in this deeply conservative society, is still accepting of her. She says she'll never forget the Afghans and the Americans who helped her escape.
"I have everything I ever dreamed of," Lina says. "I live with a big family, and they all love me very much."

Iceland Polar Bear 2008


The polar lies dead after being shot by police in Iceland

A polar bear that swam more than 200 miles in near-freezing waters to reach Iceland was shot on arrival in case it posed a threat to humans.
The bear, thought to be the first to reach the country in at least 15 years, was killed after local police claimed it was a danger to humans, triggering an outcry from animal lovers. Police claimed it was not possible to sedate the bear.
The operation to kill the animal was captured on film.
The adult male, weighing 250kg, was presumed to have swum some 200 miles from Greenland, or from a distant chunk of Arctic ice, to Skagafjordur in northern Iceland.
"There was fog up in the hills and we took the decision to kill the bear before it could disappear into the fog," said the police spokesman Petur Bjornsson.
Iceland's environment minister, Thorunn Sveinbjarnardottir, gave the green light for police to shoot the bear because the correct tranquiliser would have taken 24 hours to be flown in, the Icelandic news channel Visir.is reported.
Sveinbjarnardottir's account was disputed by the chief vet in the town of Blönduó, Egill Steingrímsson, who said he had the drugs necessary to immobilise the bear in the boot of his car. "If the narcotics gun would have been sent by plane, it would have arrived within an hour," he said. "They could keep tabs on the bear for that long."
Steingrímsson also criticised police for not closing a mountain road where people congregated after hearing news of the bear. "There were around 50 to 60 people there watching. The police did not have many options when the bear ran down the hill, approaching the crowd," Steingrimsson said. "I'm very unsatisfied that the police did not try to catch it alive and did not close the road."
The oldest record of polar bears being sighted in Iceland is from 890, 16 years after the first settlers arrived. The last visit was in 1993, when sailors saw a bear swimming off the coast of Strandir. It was also killed.
Polar bears were frequently tamed during the middle ages, but since then no bear has been captured alive in Iceland. Receding North Pole ice is diminishing their hunting and mating grounds and jeopardising their survival.
A spokesman for PolarWorld, a German group dedicated to the preservation of the polar regions and the creatures which inhabit it, called the bear's death "an avoidable tragedy ... another great day for mankind".


 http://website.lineone.net/~polar.publishing/curseofthedriftice.htm

Curse of the Drift Ice

by Thor Edward Jakobsson, translated by Keneva Kunz

Dr Thor Jakobsson is the head of the Sea Ice Research Unit of the Icelandic Meteorological Office and a member of the Expert Team on Sea Ice at the World Meteorological Organisation. His article looks at the chief characteristics of sea ice in Icelandic waters and its impact on the country and its people. Translated by Keneva Kunz.



The habitat of the polar bear extends across the polar ice. The animal ranges widely, travelling great distances across the frozen ocean surface. It catches fish and seals by diving skilfully off the edge of the ice in pursuit of its prey. It can also swim great distances, across long stretches of open water or from one ice flow to another. A polar bear has no easy life, but it is a hardy animal, which can withstand all sorts of trials.
Viewing a polar bear in its natural environment is an engaging experience. The author was once aboard an icebreaker in midwinter, located in Baffin Bay between Greenland and Canada. Endless, gleaming white stretches of ice surrounded us on all sides. We were stuck fast, aboard Canada's largest icebreaker, so thick and solidly frozen was the ice.
One day we saw a grey spot on the horizon to the south, which appeared to be moving. Through binoculars we could see that it was a polar bear travelling across the ice in the direction of the vessel. As it approached we could see two cubs trotting along beside their mother. The she-bear forged ahead and passed the icebreaker at what she must have considered a reasonable distance. The cubs were curious and sniffed in the direction of the icebreaker. But their mother had no time for foolishness and the little family gradually disappeared from our sight on its journey north across the expanse of ice.
Icelandic annals contain fairly frequent reports of polar bears which had been transported to Iceland by polar ice. As might be expected, they were more frequent visitors in past centuries when the ice was more extensive. All the same, they were a rare enough sight to cause a flurry of excitement when word spread of a polar bear in the vicinity. People closed themselves securely in their dwellings while the most daring men joined up to take on the uninvited guest.
There are stories, for example, of the shooting of a polar bear in 1792 in the West Fjords and another in North Iceland. In 1802 two bears came ashore in the Strandir district of the West Fjords. After spending several days visiting fish-storage shacks, one of the bears was killed. Nothing more was heard of the other. In 1874, a number of polar bears came to Iceland; three were killed in the Hornstrandir region of the West Fjords while three came ashore in Mjóifjörður in the East Fjords. Bears have not been known in Iceland since the year 1988, although in 1993 fishermen noticed a polar bear swimming several miles offshore.
In recent years polar bears have been a rarity, since the polar ice has been much less extensive, as was mentioned. Polar bears also decreased in number due to human impact, but since they have become protected their numbers have grown once more. Some scientists are concerned that the shrinking polar ice cap resulting from the Greenhouse Effect will make it more difficult for the polar bear to survive.