Tuesday, June 30, 2009

FINGERS CROSSED

Ndugu wanaumoja wa TanzaniaIreland (TAI)
Kufuatia jitihada za kuendeleza umoja, tunaendelea na shughuli za usajiri wa umoja. Tumekwisha jaza form na kuzituma kwenye Offisi ya mapato ili tuweze kupata namba ya usajiri ambayo pia itatuwezesha kupata exemption. FINGERS CROSSED, tukisha pata namba hiyo basi tutaendelea na ufunguaji wa akounti ya umoja/chama. Kama kuna maulizo/swali kuhusu habari hii tafadhari tumeni maulizo hayo;swahili@live.ie
Wenu ktk huduma.
Mtumishi wa umoja

Tuesday, June 23, 2009

SHUKRANI

Shukrani kubwa ziwafikieni nyote mlioweza kuhudhuria kijisherehe kidogo cha kumuaga Maria Mnzava. Tunaweka uthibitisho hapo chini wakati tunajiandaa kuyarudi-tunapokea somo toka kwa Mdau Guy.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

AIB Street Performance World Championships 2009 ( DUBLIN)


18 June 2009 - 21 June 2009
The AIB Street Performance World Championship is back and it is universally agreed that it is time for some serious free fun! this June the best contortionists, piano jugglers, magicians, breakdancers, comedians and a whole assortment of world-class professional jesters will descend on Ireland to battle it out for the most coveted title in street performance, the AIB Street Performance World Champion. For the fourth year running, the Championship will explode onto Dublin’s Merrion Square, bringing with it unthinkable feats, unimaginable tricks and unbelievable hilarity. As always, competing in the Championship will be some of the most bizzarly talented and fantastically imaginative entertainers on the planet. Get ready for: 
-Betty Brawn, the strongest women alive who can (and will) tear any Irish man to pieces -The USA Breakdancers, one of the best breakdancing troupes in the world, who are as comfortable spinning on their head as they are at making you laugh out loud -Titan, the undisputed heavyweight of robots, who, at 8 ft 2in will makes Arnies T1000 look like a pussycat. -and a man who knows more about flying cabbages than anyone else on the planet And here’s some more of the gravity-defying, head-spinning highlights this year:-Alakazam, (Australia) the man who has made an incredible career out of his ability to squeeze his entire body through the mouth of a squash racket -The extraordinarily random, completely daft, hilariously funny Mike Wood (Canada), who catapults cabbages onto a spikey helmet on his head -Mr Toons (Denmark) – the perfect example of a grown man with too much time on his hands, resulting in a wonderfully bizarre act that leaves you asking, less how did he come up with that, but rather why on earth did he come up with that! -The crazily agile, beautifully charming and absurdly funny contortionist Bendy Em (UK), who will have audiences on the edge of their seats as she contorts herself in to mind-boggling positions -Rob Williams (USA) and the world’s first foot-sandwich restaurant (yes, those are sandwiches made with his feet) Plus: -The wonderful sign interpreters from the Centre of Deaf Studies will be in Dublin all day Saturday and Sunday, interpreting every show on both days -For those who want to get some more hands-on entertainment, there will be a whole host of other activites, including free clay modelling workshops, face painting, balloon modelling, juggling workshops, and a show that takes place in the belly of a 30-foot long sleeping sow!
Timetable:

Monday, June 15, 2009

INVITATION

The chairman of the Association of Tanzanians in Ireland, Maria Mnzava, has decided to relocate to Tanzania. Following this decision, the board of management of the Association of Tanzanians in Ireland has the honour to invite members to a special gathering with Maria on Sunday 21st June at Mr Guy's residence-#28 Luttrells Town Avenue, Castlenock. (How to get there: Bus #37 from City Centre)

The event will commence at 3pm-
please bring some drinks with you. If you wish to donate any gifts please bring them on this day.

As per constitution stipulation, the association is seeking for a new member to fill the leadership position vacated by Maria. Foward all queries to swahili@live.ie

Thursday, June 11, 2009

IRISH FOOTBALL TEAM: WORLD CUP 2010

Ndugu wadau
Tunapenda kukusanya mchango wa mawazo ili tuweze kuishawishi team ya mpira wa miguu ya Ireland kuweka kambi yao Tanzania kwa maandalizi ya kombe la dunia 2010; iwapo ita-qualify!
Kwa kushirikiana na ubalozi, sisi tutaandaa propasal yetu, kisha tutaituma kwa FAI (Football Association of Ireland). Tuma maoni yako kwa swahili@live.ie

Homes at extremely competitive price

Have you ever thought buying a home, and not a house, at a price wll below current market value?
Fingal county council offers incredible opportunity to get on the housing ladder with monthly mortgage payment less than €500. Check out details at www.fingalcoco.ie/housing/affordablehousing

FOOD FESTIVAL @www.tastefestivals.ie

For your leisure time, join Dublin's top restaurants for a great food and demostrations at Iveagh Gardens this Sunday. Festival starts 11th June, ends 14th June. Event on Friday 12-4pm, Sunday, 5:30-9:30pm.

Monday, June 8, 2009

THINGS TO DO IN DUBLIN THIS SUMMER

  
SIGHTS
Marsh's Library
One of the city's most beautiful open secrets is Marsh's Library (tel 454 3511; www.marshlibrary.ie; St Patrick's Close; adult/child/student €2.50/free/1.50; open 10am-1pm & 2-5pm Mon & Wed-Fri, 10.30am-1pm Sat), a barely visited antique library with a look and atmosphere that has hardly changed since it opened its doors to awkward scholars in 1707. It's just around the corner from St Patrick's Cathedral.
Crammed into its elaborately carved oak bookcases are over 25,000 books dating from the 16th to early 18th centuries, as well as maps, numerous manuscripts and a collection of incunabula (books printed before 1500). One of the oldest and finest tomes in the collection is a volume of Cicero's Letters to His Friends printed in Milan in 1472.
The building was commissioned by Archbishop Narcissus March (1638-1713) and designed by Sir William Robinson, the creator of the Royal Hospital Kilmainham; today it is one of the only 18th-century buildings in Dublin still used for the purpose for which it was built. In short, it's a bloody gorgeous place and you'd be mad not to visit.

War memorial gardens
By my reckoning, the most beautiful patch of landscaped greenery in Dublin is the War Memorial Gardens (tel 677 0236; www.heritageireland.ie; South Circular Rd, Islandbridge; admission free; open 8am-twilight Mon-Fri, from 10am Sat & Sun), if only because they're as tranquil a spot as any you'll find in the city. Designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, they commemorate the 49,400 Irish soldiers who died during WWI; their names are inscribed in the two huge granite bookrooms that stand at one end. A beautiful spot and a bit of history to boot. Take bus 25, 25A, 26, 68 or 69 from the city centre to get here.
  
Chester Beatty Library
The world-famous Chester Beatty Library (tel 407 0750; www.cbl.ie; Dublin Castle, Cork Hill; admission free; open 10am-5pm Mon-Fri, 11am-5pm Sat, 1-5pm Sun year-round, closed Mon Oct-Apr) houses the collection of mining engineer Sir Alfred Chester Beatty (1875-1968), bequeathed to the Irish State on his death. And we're immensely grateful for Chester's patronage: spread over two floors, the breathtaking collection includes more than 20,000 manuscripts, rare books, miniature paintings, clay tablets, costumes and other objects of artistic, historical and aesthetic importance. The library runs tours at 1pm Wednesday, and 3pm and 4pm Sunday.
The Artistic Traditions Gallery on the 1st floor begins with memorabilia from Beatty's life, before embarking on an exploration of the art of Mughal India, Persia, the Ottoman empire, Japan and China. Here you'll find intricately designed little medicine boxes and perhaps the finest collection of Chinese jade books in the world. The illuminated European texts are also worth examining.
The Sacred Traditions Gallery on the 2nd floor gives a fascinating insight into the major rituals and rites of passage of the major world religions - Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Hinduism. There are audiovisual explorations of the lives of Christ and the Buddha, as well as the Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca.
Head for the collection of Qurans from the 9th to the 19th centuries, considered to be among the best illuminated Islamic texts. You'll also find ancient Egyptian papyrus texts (including Egyptian love poems from around 1100 BC), scrolls and exquisite artwork from Burma, Indonesia and Tibet - as well as the second-oldest biblical fragment ever found (after the Dead Sea Scrolls).
The comprehensive Reference Library (hby appointment only), complete with a finely lacquered ceiling that Beatty himself had installed in his own London home, is a great resource for artists or students.
The library regularly holds specialist workshops, exhibitions and talks on everything from origami to calligraphy, and admission is free. It's easy to escape from the rigours of Western life on the serene rooftop Japanese garden or at the Silk Road Cafe on the ground floor, which serves delicious Middle Eastern cuisine.

Kilmainham Jail
If you have any desire to understand Irish history - especially the juicy bits about resistance to English rule - then a visit to Kilmainham Jail (tel 453 5984; www.heritageireland.com; Inchicore Rd; adult/student/child €6/2/2; open 9.30am-5pm Apr-Oct, 9.30am-4pm Mon-Sat, 10am-4pm Sun Nov-Mar) is an absolute must. This threatening grey building, built between 1792 and 1795, has played a role in virtually every act of Ireland's painful path to independence.
The uprisings of 1798, 1803, 1848, 1867 and 1916 ended with the leaders' confinement here. Robert Emmet, Thomas Francis Meagher, Charles Stewart Parnell and the 1916 Easter Rising leaders were all visitors, but it was the executions in 1916 that most deeply etched the jail's name into the Irish consciousness. Of the 15 executions that took place between 3 May and 12 May after the rising, 14 were conducted here. As a finale, prisoners from the Civil War were held here from 1922. The jail closed in 1924.
An excellent audiovisual introduction to the building is followed by a thought- provoking tour through the eerie prison, the largest unoccupied building of its kind in Europe. Incongruously sitting outside in the yard is the Asgard, the ship that successfully ran the British blockade to deliver arms to nationalist forces in 1914. The tour finishes in the gloomy yard where the 1916 executions took place.  To get here, catch bus 23, 51, 51A, 78 or 79 from Aston Quay.

Old Jameson Distillery
Smithfield's biggest draw is the Old Jameson Distillery (tel 807 2355; www.jameson.ie; Bow St; adult/child/student €13.50/8/10; open for tours every 35min 9am-5.30pm), a huge museum devoted to uisce beatha (the water of life). To its more serious devotees, that is precisely what whiskey is, although they may be put off by the slickness of the museum, which shepherds visitors through a compulsory tour of the re-created factory and into the ubiquitous gift shop.
On the way, however, there's plenty to discover. Beginning with a short film, the tour runs through the whole process of distilling, from grain to bottle. There are plenty of interesting titbits, such as what makes a single malt, where whiskey gets its colour and bouquet, and what the difference is between Irish whiskey and Scotch (other than the spelling, which prompted one Scot to comment that the Irish thought of everything: they even put an 'e' into whisky).
Then it's straight to the bar for a drop of the subject matter; eager drinkers can volunteer for the tasting tour, where you get to sample whiskies from all over the world and learn about their differences. Finally, you head to the almighty shop. If you're buying whiskey, go for the stuff you can't buy at home, such as the excellent Red Breast or the super exclusive Midleton, a very limited reserve that is appropriately expensive.
  
THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF IRELAND
Two sites, both free: why is it only tourists visit the most important deposit of Irish artefacts and treasures in the country?
Designed by Sir Thomas Newenham Deane and completed in 1890, the star attraction of this branch of the National Museum of Ireland (tel 677 7444; www.museum.ie; Kildare St; admission free; open 10am-5pm Tue-Sat, 2-5pm Sun) is the Treasury, home to the finest collection of Bronze Age and Iron Age gold artefacts in the world, and the world's most complete collection of medieval Celtic metalwork.
Until it was decommissioned over a decade ago, Collins Barracks, built in 1704 on the orders of Queen Anne, was the largest military barracks in the world. In 1997 the early neoclassical grey stone building on the Liffey's northern bank was given a sparkling, modern makeover and now houses the decorative-arts-and-history collection of the National Museum of Ireland (tel 677 7444; www.museum.ie; Benburb St; admission free; open 10am-5pm Tue-Sat, 2-5pm Sun).
Inside the imposing exterior lies a treasure trove of artefacts ranging from silver, ceramics and glassware to weaponry, furniture and folk-life displays. Some of the best pieces are gathered in the exhibition Curator's Choice, a collection of 25 objects hand-picked by different curators, displayed with an account of why they were chosen.
The museum itself offers a glimpse at Ireland's social, economic and military history over the last millennium. It's a big ask - too big, say its critics - but well-designed displays, interactive multimedia and a dizzying array of disparate artefacts make for an interesting and valiant effort. On the 1st floor is the museum's Irish silver collection, one of the largest collections of silver in the world; on the 2nd floor you'll find Irish period furniture and scientific instruments; while the 3rd floor has simple and sturdy Irish country furniture.
Lovers of modern furniture and design will enjoy the exhibition on iconic Irish designer Eileen Gray (1878-1976), which is a museum highlight. Gray was one of the most influential designers of the 20th century, and the exhibition documents her life and work, and shows examples and models of her most famous pieces. The fascinating Way We Wore exhibit displays Irish clothing and jewellery from the past 250 years. An intriguing socio-cultural study, it highlights the role of jewellery and clothing in bestowing messages of mourning, love and identity.
It was once a barracks, so it's fitting that military history should be a feature: one exhibition chronicles Ireland's Easter 1916 Rising while the new Soldiers & Chiefs: The Irish At War Home & Abroad 1550-2001 explores the civil impact of conflict through original artefacts, audio accounts and replicas. At times harrowing and visceral, these exhibits bring to life these poignant episodes of Irish history with remarkable force.

jeanie johnston
One of the city's most original tourist attractions is an exact, working replica of a 19th-century 'coffin ship,' as the sailing boats who transported starving emigrants away from Ireland during the Famine were gruesomely known. The good news is that the Jeanie Johnston (tel 066-712 9999; www.jeaniejohnston.ie; Custom House Quay; adult/child €5/3; open 10.30am-5pm Sat-Sun Oct-Apr), a three-masted barque originally built in Quebec in 1847, made 16 transatlantic voyages, carrying more than 2500 people and never suffered a single death. A small on-board museum details the harrowing plight of a typical journey, which usually took around 47 days. The ship also operates as a Sail Training vessel, with journeys taking place from May to September. If you are visiting during these times, check the website for details of when it will be in dock.

The Best Walk
On a summer's evening, just before the sun begins to set, wend your way to the South Bull Wall and walk the length of it to the Poolbeg Lighthouse. From here, the views of Dublin Bay are stunning, and if you have the weather, there's no better place to get a sense of the city.

iWalks
If you fancy a go-it-alone guided walk, why not download one of Pat Liddy's excellent iWalks ( to subscribe, go to www.visitdublin.com/iwalks/iwalks.xml ), which you can play on your ipod or equivalent mp3 player - all you have to do is subscribe to the podcasts at the above address (or search for them on itunes). There are a bunch of walks, from tours of the city's different districts to walks tailored to historical, architectural and activities themes.



Farmers' and organic markets
Dublin Food Co-op (tel 454 4258; www.dublinfoodcoop.com; 12 Newmarket; 2-8pm Thu, 9.30am-4.30pm Sat) A buzzing community market specialising in organic veg, homemade cheeses and organic wines; there's also a baker ands even baby-changing facilities.

Howth Fishermen's & Farmers' Market Bar (tel 611 5016; www.irishfarmersmarkets.ie; West Pier, Howth Harbour; 10am-5pm Sun & bank holidays) One of the best in Dublin, this is the place to come for fresh fish (obviously) but for organic meat, veg and homemade everything else, including jams, cakes and breads. A great option for Sunday lunch.


People's Park Market (tel 087-957 3647; People's Park, Dun Laoghaire; 11am-4pm Sun) Organic meat and veg, local seafood, Irish fruit and farm cheeses are the mainstay at this popular market in the south Dublin suburb of Dun Laoghaire. Grab a burger and sit on the lawn.
For more info on local markets, check out www.irishfarmersmarkets.ie, www.irishvillagemarkets.com or local county council sites like www.dlrcoco.ie/markets.

TRAVEL NEWS
Business Class is Dipping
Posh Travel is out and watching your wallet and holidaying at home are in. The signs are everywhere. The number of people flying business and first class fell sharply, by 19 per cent, in March, despite bargain business and first-class tickets. The decline in economy travel was lower, at 8 per cent, but will fall further, says the International Air Transport Association.
The only destination seeing a growth in passengers is the Middle East. Everywhere else demand has plummeted, prompting Iata to forecast a €4.7 billion loss this year, on top of losses of €8.5 billion last year.

E-passports for US travel
If you're travelling to the US this summer, be aware that from July 1st you'll need an e-passport to enter the country. If your passport was issued after October 25th, 2006, but is not an e-passport, apply for a visa before you travel or apply for a waiver at the US port of entry. This could cost $545 at the airport; customs officers can waive the fee.

Friday, June 5, 2009

CHEKA KIDOGO DUBLIN

Event Details: Cheka Kidogo
Cheka Kidogo
Cheka Kidogo an exhibition by fashion photographer Rankin will be in Wolfe Tone Park (beside the Jervis Centre) from May to July 2009. Rankin travelled with Oxfam to a refugee camp in Eastern Congo and used his celebrity portraiture with entirely different subjects – the residents of Mugunga camp, home to 250,000 people displaced by Congo’s harrowing violence. Photographed against Rankin’s trademark white backdrop rather than in their everyday surroundings, those in the portraits boldly defy the war victim tag and shine out as real people with individuality, humour and warmth. The exhibition’s name Cheka Kidogo, meaning “laugh a little” in Swahili, celebrates the spirit of the Congolese people in the face of adversity, but was also the phrase that people called out to their friends being photographed. For more details visit www.oxfamireland.org/drc
Friday, May 01, 2009 at N/A
Friday, July 31, 2009 at N/A
Arts & Culture
Wolfe Tone Park
Wolfe Tone Park Beside the Jervis Center, Dublin 1 
clare.quinlan@oxfamireland.org 
http://www.oxfamireland.org/rankin/

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

IS A COCONUT a FRUIT , NUT or SEED ?

answer
Botanically speaking, a coconut is a fibrous one-seeded drupe, also known as a dry drupe. However, when using loose definitions, the coconut can be all three: a fruit, a nut, and a seed.

  Botanists love classification. However, classification of plants can be a complicated matter for the average person. Coconuts are classified as a fibrous one-seeded drupe. A drupe is a fruit with a hard stony covering enclosing the seed (like a peach or olive) and comes from the word drupa meaning overripe olive. A coconut, and all drupes, have three layers: the exocarp (outer layer), the mesocarp (fleshy middle layer), and the endocarp (hard, woody layer that surrounds the seed).

  The coconut we buy in the store does not resemble the coconut you find growing on a coconut palm. An untouched coconut has three layers. The outermost layer, which is typically smooth with a greenish color, is called the exocarp. The next layer is the fibrous husk, or mesocarp, which ultimately surrounds the hard woody layer called the endocarp. The endocarp surrounds the seed. Generally speaking, when you buy a coconut at the supermarket the exocarp and the mesocarp are removed and what you see is the endocarp.

  Some scientists like to refer to the coconut as a water dispersal fruit and seed. A seed is the reproductive unit of a flowering plant. From a reproductive point of view, a seed has the “baby” plant inside, with two basic parts: the embryo root (hypocotyl) and the embryo leaves (epicotyl). In the coconut’s case, if you look at one end of the coconut, you’ll see three pores (also called eyes). The coconut seed germinates and a shoot emerges from one of the pores. In addition to the “baby” plant in the seed, there is the food to kick off its life called the endosperm. The endosperm is what makes up most of the seed and, in the coconut’s case, is the yummy white stuff we eat.

  The word coconut itself can also be confusing because the word “nut” is contained in the word. A nut can be defined as a one- seeded fruit. With that loose definition, a coconut can also be a nut. However, a coconut is not a true nut. A true nut, such as the acorn, are indehiscent or do not open at maturity to release its seeds. The seeds are released when the fruit wall decays or are digested by an animal.

  Yet another interesting aspect of the coconut that has baffled scientists for over 200 years is where did it originate? Is it of Old World or New World origin? Scientists have used art, botany, entomology, etymology, folklore, fossils, genetics, and travel records to try to figure out where the coconut first appeared.

  Odoardo Beccari, a renowned palm specialist from the early 20th century, suggests that the coconut is of Old World origin and more than likely came from the Indian Archipelago or Polynesia. To strengthen his argument, there are more varieties of coconut palms in the Eastern hemisphere than in the Americas.


Interesting Coconut Facts

  • Every bit of the coconut is used. As a result, coconuts are called the “Tree of Life” and can produce drink, fiber, food, fuel, utensils, musical instruments, and much more.
  • When intra-venous (IV) solution was in short supply, doctors during World War II and Vietnam used coconut water in substitution of IV solutions.
  • Botanically, the coconut palm is not a tree since there is no bark, no branches, or secondary growth. A coconut palm is a woody perennial monocotyledon with the trunk being the stem.
  • Possibly the oldest reference is from Cosmas, a 5th century AD Egyptian traveler. He wrote about the “Indian nut” or “nut of India” after visiting India and Ceylon, Some scholars believe Cosmas was describing a coconut.
  • Soleyman, an Arab merchant, visited China in the 9th century and describes the use of coir fiber and toddy made from coconuts.
  • In 16th century, Sir Francis Drake called coconut “nargils”, which was the common term used until the 1700’s when the word coconut was established.
  • It takes 11 -12 months for the coconut to mature.
  • At one time scientists identified over 60 species of Cocos palm. Today, the coconut is a monotypic with one species, nucifera. However, there are over 80 varieties of coconut palms, which are defined by characteristics such as dwarf and tall.
  • Coconut growing regions are as far north as Hawaii and as far south as Madagascar

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Tuesday, June 2, 2009

WARNING: DO NOT SHOP ON NEKCN WEBSITE

DEAR ALL
IT HAS COME TO OUR ATTENTION THAT NEKCN WEBSITE IS A FICTITIOUS WEBSITE OPERATED BY
FRAUDSTERS WHO CON PEOPLE ONLINE. PLEASE BE ALERT, DO NOT PURCHASE ITEMS ON NEKCN WEBSITE. THE POST FOR THAT LINK HAS BEEN REMOVED.
REGARDS


ADMIN