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Mr. Sima Guje from Guyuk LGA of Adamawa
State is appealing to well meaning Nigerians to help him find his
daughter, Blessing who was kidnapped by one Bilhadi Yakubu in 2010.
Below is the full statement posted by Ena Ofugara...
"Mr Sima Guje hereby appeals to Nigerians to help him recover his daughter
BLESSING (NYIMJIR) SIMAN, Born 13th June 1996 who was abducted by one
BILHADI YAKUBA alias Dan Daura since September 2010 at the age of
14years in Connivance with the Chief Judge of KUJE Upper Area Court and
Police Authorities who exhibited lackadaisical attitude towards his
plight. The said daughter Blessing (Nyimjir) Siman who was a Christian
and JSS 2 student of FHA Junior Secondary School Lugbe, Airport Road
Abuja was renamed Kadijat by her abductors and forcefully converted to
Islam. Although Mr. SIMAN reported the matter at the Lugbe Police
Station, the Police couldn't help him because the young girl's abductors
summoned him at the KujeUpper Area Court where their kinsman was the
Judge. The Judge ordered for the arrest of MR. SIMAN, the girl's father
and 5 other relatives who accompanied him to Court. They were
incarcerated at the Court premises thus paving an easy passage for the
girl and her abductors to leave Abuja unchallenged and since October
2010 MR. SIMAN and his family have not set eyes on their child. All
attempts made to get help from Human Rights Commission and the Nigeria
Police Force proved abortive. Imagine the mental torture and trauma of
not seeing your child for years and waking up every morning to the fact
that your daughter is in the hands of your worst enemies. Volunteers,
Girl Child NGOs & Humanitarians willing to help can Contact MR.
SIMAN GUJE on Telephone No:- +2348080996352 or +2347036012011, Pls
kindly Like & Share widely until Help gets to Blessing & Family"
The Cussons Baby Moments Season 3 competition promised to be exciting
and indeed it was!
This season featured 2 categories: - the maiden edition of the Cussons
Baby Toddler Grow and Shine contest(for toddlers aged 2-5years) withImisioluwa Oladapo emerging the
winner and Cussons Baby of the Year
contest (for babies aged 0-3years)...
The Cussons
Baby of the Year grand finale held on Sunday, February 28th,
2016. It was a day filled with fun, excitement and celebration, especially for
the family and friends of the Grants, as their daughter, Oritsejolomisan Nina
Grant, emerged the overall winner.
Nina Grant won for herself the N1million educational grant grand
prize, Cussons Baby products, a smart learning tablet, shopping voucher and
Thermocool refrigerator.
Baby Nina was closely followed by Similola Alexis Onabanjo and
Obianamma Adele Anammah who emerged first and second runners up, winning
educational grants of N500,000 and N250,000 respectively. Apart from the
educational grants, both babies went home with Cussons Baby products, smart
learning tablets, shopping vouchers, and Thermocoolproducts.
In the world of Cussons Baby, every baby is a winner! And as such,
the babies who made it to the semi-final stage were not left out, as they were
rewarded alongside the babies that didn’t win the top 3 positions with shopping
vouchers and Cussons Baby products.
The 3rd
edition of the Cussons Baby of the Yearcompetition, recorded over 500entries
and they were pruned down to the final 10 by a combination of judges selection
and public votes. Thepanel of judges who sat to decide the eventual winner were-
Mai Atafo, Yetunde Babaeko, Mercy Aigbe-Gentry and Obi Somto.
Prizes were also presented to deserving
babies in the special category segment. Winners of the special categories wereKanyitochuwuUche-Anyanwu
forBaby Gat Swag, Tioluwanimi
Martins Adetunji for the Best Costume,ObiajuluObiabakafor Baby Trendyand Oritsejolomisan Nina
Grantfor Toothy Smile. They were all
rewarded with Cussons Baby products, shopping vouchers and smart learning
tablets individually.
Congratulations to all the winnersand best
wishes to Oritsejolomisan Nina Grant as she reigns as the Cussons Baby of the
Year 2016.
To learn more about Cussons Baby and the competition,
you can visit their website or
follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram
An army of lions were captured by tourists preying on a buffalo at
the Kruder National Park in South Africa. The dramatic footage recorded
by a field guide, Marten Lange showed a lion forcing a buffalo onto the
road. The lion then ferociously pounces on the buffalo, grabbing at its
throat, while other lions rush over and holds down the prey...see more photos after the cut...
It is hard to see why we need a food culture unless we understand
what one really is and where it comes from. Certainly those regions that
do have their own food culture fully intact might not even recognize
the term ‘food culture’.
Food culture is a connection to food in a pure and deep sense. It is
knowing what it takes to bring forth food, rejoicing in times of plenty,
and doing all we can to help one another in times of scarcity. It is
the conversation had around a table three times a day and it is the
health given to our bodies from the essence of those plants and animals.
Food culture has always existed in rural homes and communities. There
were summer afternoons of snapping green beans on the porch with
grandma, hog butchering in January, and hours upon hours of tilling,
planting, weeding, and sowing in order to simply feed the family and
neighbors.
It is impossible to have a full concept of food culture if you are
not in the business of producing food at some level. Because, to an
agrarian society, life is about food – the production of it, the
preservation of it, and the sharing of it. And not in an obsessive
“foodie” type way, but in the way that a simple people work hard day-in
and day-out to till the ground and bring forth fruit.
And from that there’s also a simple truth that doesn’t even need to
be spoken: the best food always comes from those we hold dear.
The Melting Pot Has Skewed Our Vision
Isn’t it interesting that we are a nation who orders Chinese, goes
out for Italian, and cooks up a Mexican fiesta? But if you were to stay
in an authentic, rural area in any of those countries you would probably
find two things:
they only eat their cuisine based on a short list of ingredients that they produce themselves.
it looks nothing like the Americanized version that we order in a restaurant.
That is to say that those flavors and ingredients we think of in
Tex-Mex food such as beans, cumin, cilantro, garlic, meats, homemade
corn tortillas, and vegetables are all one would eat every single day of
the week because that is the food that grows in the region and
therefore that is the food that they eat.
Food Culture Starts with a Seed
As I sift through southern heirloom seed catalogs it hits me like a
smack in the face: when we lost the act of passing seed down from one
generation to the next… when we lost the act of standing next to grandma
and learning how to cook the fruit of those seeds… when we lost the act
of saving that seed at the end of the season and placing it into the
soil the next year – that is when we lost our food culture. Food culture is the fruit of an agrarian way of life.
What we so desperately seek after as Americans, because it has created
such a vacuum in our society, is rooted in the very act of growing the
food, toiling in the field, and having to butcher that chicken yourself.
It is those rituals that surround these practices that we truly seek
after, not just the meal itself.
So creating a food culture starts not with a change in the way you
eat – from industrial to local – but with a change in the way you live –
from industrial to agrarian. And it starts when we begin to move back
to the days when those who grew food outnumbered those who did not.
My Tips
I suppose this is the part where I tell you there are lots of other
ways to have a food culture in an urban setting. You know: make family
rituals, buy from a local farmer, don’t be too busy to gather everyone
around the table.
These things are all good, but if we define food culture as I did
above then these are only the first steps. If what I defined as food
culture is what you crave, what you want to instill in your children,
and what is just a part of simple living; then stopping there just isn’t
going to cut it for you.
So yeah, maybe this is me recommending that you move towards a more
rural, agrarian, simple way of living. Maybe this is me recommending
that you look into hybrids and GMOs and how they are ruining our ability
to grow seed, let alone pass it down. Maybe this is me recommending
that you talk to your neighbors, bring them a meal, and see about
getting some land.
Because I don’t know about you, but I don’t really want to live in a
place where only 2% of the population knows what it really means to grow
food and share it with those around them.
Shannon is a lover of real food - the kind that you
can grow in your own backyard - and the nourishment it provides a
family. She's a wife and mother to three, a cook and fermented foods
enthusiast, a chicken wrangler and a seed planter, a helpmeet and a
homemaker, an off-grid dweller and a homesteader. When she can she
enjoys writing about it all here at the Plan to Eat blog, and on her
sustainable living blog Nourishing Days.