Kindle 101: How to use a kindle in a refugee camp

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Here is a great exchange between Rahma and students at Burbank High School!

Hello my friends Task Force students, Here is another video I want show you haw I am using the Kindle but we need kindle will include many another programs. Thanks yours Rahma

HOW COOL! Some students at Burbank High School use the Kindle, too. I think they are so useful and fun! How do you like it so far? Do you think that the Kindle is better than a regular book? Also, some people think regular books will disappear and the Kindle and similar e-books will replace them. What do you think?

Happily, Burbank High School

Hi my best friends at BurbankHighSchool How are you? And how is your Schools going? Thank you for your message and thank you for your support. Really I think that the Kindle is better than regular books because Kindle has many informations than regular books and I think they are not similar books. Maybe Kindle better and Kindle will include many informations. Thank you yours Rahma

Changing the Way Things Are

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Changing the Way Things Are

I spoke with Umbda T. about the R2E Library that will be coming to camp Goz Amer on our next trip. He loves the idea and sends his thanks to those involved in this project.

In our many conversations with Umbda, he often talks about the need for the refugee children, including his own, to learn about how they are just the same as any other person around the world.  He told us that, right now, the children and many of the adults believe that ”this is how life is supposed to be,” referring to a limited life in a refugee camp. They believe they have no rights or power over it.  The violence and difficulties they have experienced, “it’s just the way things are.”

Umbda is a strong believer in the power of education. He is a teacher at school, and he teaches English at home in the afternoons.  He then teaches his own children about Darfur and about the world in the evenings.  His oldest daughter wants to be a doctor, so she can help her people. His oldest son wants to be pilot, so he can fly.  Umbda says that, even with his son as a pilot, he would not get on one of those big metal machines that goes up in the sky.  Change is good, but trying to fly – for a change – that he is not willing to try.

Gabriel