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      • Trusted Partner
        November 2010

        Istanbul war ein Märchen

        Roman

        by Mario Levi, Barbara Yurtdas, Hüseyin Yurtdas

        Istanbul, die Stadt der tausend Seelen, der tausend Schicksale, der tausend Sprachen … Seit Jahrhunderten haben Menschen aus allen Teilen Vorderasiens hier eine neue Heimat gefunden. Mario Levi, selbst ein Kind dieser Stadt, führt uns durch verschlungene Gassen und Wege in die Hinterhöfe und kleinen Geschäfte der Menschen, die dort leben. Ausgehend von seiner eigenen Familie, erzählt er vom Miteinander der vielen Völker und Kulturen, von Juden, Griechen, Armeniern und Türken, und entwirft dabei ein großartiges Panorama dieser Perle am Bosporus.

      • Trusted Partner
        February 2011

        Wo wart ihr, als die Finsternis hereinbrach

        Roman

        by Mario Levi, Barbara Yurtdas, Hüseyin Yurtdas

        Izak, ein 50jähriger gutsituierter Kaufmann, ist mit seinem Leben, das ereignislos und in geregelten Bahnen verläuft, unzufrieden. So besinnt er sich auf seine revolutionäre Jugendzeit und macht sich auf die Suche nach seinen ehemaligen Freunden. Er plant, mit ihnen ein einst gemeinsam verfaßtes Theaterstück über die bunte Völkermischung Istanbuls in seiner alten Schule noch einmal auf die Bühne zu bringen. Nach und nach findet er sie alle wieder: den Türken Necmi, den Griechen Yorgos, den Juden Niso, die Jüdin Seli und die Türkin Sebnem. Doch schon bald zeigt sich, wie sehr sich alle im Laufe der Zeit verändert haben. Keiner von ihnen hat mit seiner Jugendliebe das Glück gefunden, keiner hat seine ‚linken’ Vorstellungen von einer sozial gerechten Gesellschaft realisieren können. Sie haben schwere Schicksalsschläge erlitten, Gefangenschaft und Folter. Dennoch finden sie zu ihrer einst engen Freundschaft zurück. Die Ehrlichkeit, mit der sie sich ihren Gefühlen stellen, auch mit ihren dunklen Seiten, und der bittere Humor, mit der sie das Unausweichliche akzeptieren, hebt diese Begegnung weit über ein ‚Klassentreffen’ hinaus. Keiner von ihnen wird wieder in den gewohnten Alltag zurückkehren können …

      • Trusted Partner
        Technology, Engineering & Agriculture
        December 2017

        Handbook of Pest Management in Organic Farming

        by Vincenzo Vacante, Urs Niggli, Serge Kreiter, Massimo Benuzzi, Jorge E Peña, Gavino Delrio, B. Merle Shepard, Hüseyin Baspinar, Carmelo Bonsignore, Dominique Bordat, Qiang Xiao, Bernard Dufour, Régis Babin, Alberto Pantoja, Josep Anton Jacas Miret, Raija Komppula, Beate Bursta

        This book is an up-to-date and comprehensive reference covering pest management in organic farming in major crops of the world. General introductory chapters explore the management of crops to prevent pest outbreaks, plant protection tools in organic farming, and natural enemies and pest control. The remaining chapters are crop-based and discuss geographic distribution, economic importance and key pests. For each pest the fundamental aspects of its bio-ecology and the various methods of control are presented. Understanding of the scientific content is facilitated with practical advice, tables and diagrams, helping users to apply the theories and recommendations. Handbook of Pest Management in Organic Farming: · Consists of rational approaches and advice. · Is authored by a team of international specialists in pest control. · Represents the only available comprehensive review of insect pest management in organic systems. This is an essential resource for researchers and extension workers in crop protection, integrated pest management and biocontrol, and organic farming systems.

      • Trusted Partner
      • December 2018

        Storm the Little Stork

        by Hasan Hüseyin Doğru

        From the moment the brave stork first came out of his egg, he got himself into many adventures until he becomes an adult stork. His mother's support in his first flight and the help of their parents when a black snake attacked their nests, taught him how precious the family was. They had fun while hunting worms and fishing together. He learned that spending time with the loved ones makes his life precio us rather than being alone. üne day, the brave stork was wounded by the wind while flying and he was healed with the help of the people. He learned how animal lover people were but was warned about the presence of the opposite as well. And again, while hunting in the lake, he met his first love and migrated with her to build his own nest.

      • Peace studies & conflict resolution
        June 2016

        Balochistan

        Caught in the Fragility Trap

        by Ali Dayan Hasan

        Beset by multiple cyclical conflicts, Balochistan remains the most fragile province in Pakistan. This brief discusses recent attempts at ending the violence, as well as prospects for breaking out of the “fragility trap” as a consequence of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor project. Ali Dayan Hasan is a senior advisor at the Islamabad-based Jinnah Institute.

      • Tip: Search for English results only. You can specify your search language in Preferences Die Imame (a.s.) und ihr Weg

        by morteza motahary

        This book comprises the biographies of the twelve Shi’a Imams (a) in brief in order to acquaint the readers with certain aspects of their personality as well as the ethical virtues they exercised during their lifetime. The contents of the book include short biographies of Imam Ali, Imam Hasan, Imam Hosein, Imam Sajjād, Imam Sādeq, Imam Musā Kāzem, Imam Rezā, Imam Hasan Askari, and the Imam of the Age, the awaited Mahdi (a). The book begins with a brief discussion on the concept of “Taqiyyah”.

      • Biography & True Stories
        2018

        Manto-Saheb

        Friends and Enemies on the Great Maverick

        by Translated by Vibha Chauhan and Khalid Alvi

        ‘Saadat Hasan Manto has a good claim to be considered the greatest South Asian writer of the 20th century… [He] incarnated the exuberance, the madness, the alcoholic delirium of his time…’—Suketu Mehta, The New York Times This remarkable anthology brings together stories about Saadat Hasan Manto, essayist, scriptwriter, and a master of the short story, by his friends, family and rivals—among others, Ismat Chughtai, Upendranath Ashk, Balwant Gargi, Krishan Chander, his daughter Nuzhat and nephew Hamid Jalal. These are accounts of grand friendships and quarrels, protracted drinking bouts, cutthroat rivalries in the world of Urdu letters, and intense engagement with issues of that turbulent age. Together, they form an unprecedented portrait of the literary and film worlds of the time, and of the great cities of Bombay, Delhi and Lahore. They also offer a glimpse of the making of a legend even as they reveal Manto as a complex man of many contradictions. A devoted husband and father, he was as comfortable at home as he was at prostitutes’ quarters, seeking new material. Generous to a fault, he freely gave away his earnings and often put his family in financial jeopardy. Fiercely competitive and an outspoken critic of others’ writing, he brooked no criticism of his own, at times choosing to sever ties rather than have his words tampered with. And, for much of his adult life, right until the end, Manto was an alcoholic who fiercely defended his choice to remain one. Honest, frank and personal, at times sentimental, and critical—even gossipy—at others, the pieces in Manto-Saheb constitute an unparalleled, multi-faceted biography of a genius

      • The Other Lions - Öteki Aslanlar

        by Gökçe Gökçeer & Hüseyin Sönmezay

        Theme:Family, rights and freedoms, immigration, differences A mother lion with blue fur and her cubs have to leave theirhome forest as a fire breaks out. They go a long way to find anew place to live. As they reach to a new forest, a lion crossestheir path. He is the king of this forest and he has red fur.He behaves arrogant and unwelcoming. He doesn’t want tolet them in the forest because of their different color.Luckily the already some members of the forest appear. They all come together and stand up against the arrogant king.Thanks to their support the mother lion and cubs find a new home and make new friends.It is metaphorically stressed out that discriminating people by their color, race etc. and judging people from the way theylook is not a right thing and good hearts always win!This picture book is about forced migration, discrimination and all kind of differences… It’s written for the children to let thembelieve that all living things can live together. I doesn’t matter what skin color is, how they are looking, their race and gender.

      • Children's & YA
        July 2020

        Three Ants do wonders!

        by Hasan Benmuna

        Three friendly ants work seperately. Each of them makes something for the little animals. But , unfortunately couldn’t succeed in doing the same thing for the big ones....How did they solve the problem?? A story about the importance of cooperation in a funny way.

      • Humanities & Social Sciences

        Be a Great Husband and Father

        by Haikal Hasan

        In this book, the author describes marriage in eleven chapters using a male perspective. The author discusses several things about the process before marriage, the conflicts that may arise in marriage, and how to be a great husband and father to the family. Hopefully, the readers can benefit from this book and have a good struggle to become great husbands and fathers.

      • Akash Amay Vorlo Aloy

        by Syed Hasan Imam

        Akash Amay Vorlo Aloy talks from an individual’s perspective about the politics of the undivided India, the partition, the great liberation war, and the movement against communalism and fundamentalism in post-liberation Bangladesh.

      • Fiction
        November 2022

        Mansur

        by Vikramajit Ram

        Shortlisted for the JCB Prize for Literature 2023 Saturday, the 27th of February, 1627. The master artist Mansur, who works under the patronage of Mughal emperor Jahangir, must finish his painting of a dodo and prepare for an imminent journey to Kashmir when he is interrupted by a younger colleague, Bichitr. An innocuous remark from this visitor – first to Mansur and a little later to the portraitist Abu’l Hasan – has dire consequences as more characters at the imperial atelier, the library and the Women’s Quarter are drawn into a web of secrets, half-truths and petty rivalries. At the heart of the story is a jewel-like verse book whose pages Mansur has illuminated and filled with lifelike butterflies. On reaching Verinag, the royal summer retreat in Kashmir, the painter must present the book to its author, the empress Nur Jahan, who had commissioned it as a keepsake for her husband, the emperor Jahangir. A delay in the book reaching Mansur from the bindery adds to his apprehensions that its very existence is no longer a secret, coupled with dread that so precious an artefact might fall into the wrong hands. What must the painter confront before his masterwork is conveyed safely to Verinag?

      • Islam

        The Way of the Prophet

        A Selection of Hadith

        by Abd al-GhaffÕar ?Hasan

      • Peace studies & conflict resolution
        February 2015

        Conflict Dynamics in Sindh

        by Huma Yusuf, Syed Shoaib Hasan

        Pakistan’s southern province of Sindh has a reputation for stability, diversity, and tolerance. It is also at a tipping point—increasingly threatened by violent extremism, crime, political corruption, tribal feuds, and nationalist and separatist movements. If the province is not to become yet another base for militants, as areas to the north already are, the government needs to act promptly and decisively. Addressing the security situation in Sindh is also integral to stabilizing Karachi, which should be a top priority, given the economic ramifications of growing turbulence in the country’s financial capital.

      • Peace studies & conflict resolution
        September 2008

        Making Borders Irrelevant in Kashmir

        by P. R. Chari, Hasan Askari Rizvi

        This report analyzes the possibilities and practicalities of managing the Kashmir conflict by “making borders irrelevant”—softening the Line of Control to allow the easy movement of people, goods, and services across it. The report draws on the results of a survey of stakeholders and public opinion on both sides of the Line of Control. The results of that survey, together with an initial draft of this report, were shown to a group of opinion makers in both countries (former bureaucrats and diplomats, members of the armed forces, academics, and members of the media), whose comments were valuable in refining the report’s conclusions.

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