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Traveling Between Sanar and the Saint-Louis International Jazz Festival in Senegal

Traveling Between Sanar and the Saint-Louis International Jazz Festival in Senegal The Saint-Louis International Jazz Festival is one of West Africa’s most celebrated cultural events, bringing musicians, artists, students, travelers, and residents together in the historic city of Saint-Louis. During the festival, the city becomes filled with music, conversation, cafés, riverfront activity, and nighttime performances that spill across the old colonial island and surrounding neighborhoods. For visitors staying in Sanar Peulh Mbambara, transportation planning is important because the main festival venues are usually centered around Place Faidherbe and nearby cultural spaces on the historic island district of Saint-Louis. Distance From Sanar to the Festival Area Sanar is located on the mainland side of Saint-Louis near the university district. The festival center on the island is approximately: 6–9 kilometers away About 15–25 minutes by taxi depending on traffic and bridge access While it ...

Université Gaston Berger

Université Gaston Berger Université Gaston Berger (UGB) appears to have a strong environmental focus, both in academic study and in hands-on community projects. This makes sense given Saint-Louis’s environmental challenges: coastal erosion, desertification, water management, biodiversity loss, and agricultural sustainability. Here are some of the university’s main environmental studies and projects: Environmental Research and Academic Programs Water and Environmental Governance (Pôle Eau) One of UGB’s major environmental research initiatives is the Pôle Eau (Water Pole), a specialized research group focused on water systems and ecological management. � Gteau +1 Their work includes: Senegal River and delta management Water security in the Sahel Urban water systems Biodiversity and wetlands Ecohydrology (the relationship between ecosystems and water) Climate adaptation in coastal and rural communities This is especially important in Saint-Louis, where the city sits between the Senegal Ri...

Gaston Berger University

Gaston Berger University area where the bungalow is located.  Gaston Berger University is one of Senegal’s stronger universities for environmental research and sustainability studies, especially because of where it is located. Saint-Louis sits in one of West Africa’s most environmentally sensitive regions — where the Senegal River, the Atlantic coast, wetlands, agriculture zones, and Sahel climate pressures all meet. That makes the university a natural center for environmental field research. � Nordic Development Fund +1 Some of their major environmental work includes: Water and Wetland Research UGB has a major research group called the Pôle Eau (Water Governance Research Team) that studies: water systems in the Senegal River basin climate impacts on water access coastal vulnerability biodiversity and wetlands water governance for communities adaptation to desertification and drought This work is especially important because Saint-Louis faces: saltwater intrusion coastal erosion fl...

The Living Blueprint: How Biodialaw is Redefining Coastal Restoration

  The Living Blueprint: How Biodialaw is Redefining Coastal Restoration ​In the quiet coastal village of Toubab Dialaw, Senegal, a transformative experiment is unfolding. It isn't just a construction site or a garden; it is a living laboratory known as Biodialaw . At a time when environmental headlines are often dominated by crisis, this project offers a refreshing pivot toward active restoration and regenerative design. ​Architecture That Breathes ​Standard modern construction often relies on heavy energy use to keep interiors habitable. Biodialaw takes the opposite approach through bioclimatic architecture . By studying the local climate—the intensity of the West African sun and the reliable rhythm of Atlantic breezes—the structures are built to "breathe." ​ Thermal Intelligence: Using earth, stone, and lime, the buildings act as thermal sponges, absorbing heat during the peak of the day and releasing it slowly, maintaining a natural cool without air conditioning...

Howard Dilworth Woodson

Howard Dilworth Woodson (1877–1962) Howard Dilworth Woodson was an African American civil engineer, educator, civic activist, and community leader in Washington, D.C.. He became known for his advocacy on behalf of Black residents in the Deanwood section of Northeast Washington during the early and mid-20th century. Woodson worked to improve public education, transportation, sanitation, and infrastructure for African American communities at a time when segregation and racial inequality shaped daily life in the nation’s capital. Woodson’s legacy is most closely associated with the establishment of H. D. Woodson High School, which was named in his honor because of his decades-long campaign for educational access and opportunity for Black youth in Far Northeast Washington. Early life and education Howard Dilworth Woodson was born in 1877 during the post-Reconstruction era, a period in which African Americans were struggling to secure political rights, educational access, and economic indep...

Let Them Find Us Still Human

Below a contemporary version inspired by the spirit of C. S. Lewis but reflecting today’s atmosphere of fear, outrage, division, and ideological extremism: Let Them Find Us Still Human If fear and hatred are spreading through our society, let them not find us surrendering our humanity. Let them not find us becoming puppets repeating anger without thought, cruelty without reflection, or division without understanding. Let them find us still thinking clearly. Still evaluating. Still listening. Still questioning. Still capable of kindness. Let them find us reading, learning, helping our neighbors, caring for children and elders, planting gardens, making art, studying truth, and protecting the dignity of human beings. Scientific thought is not blind obedience to slogans. It is observation, evaluation, humility, and the willingness to correct oneself when evidence reveals a deeper truth. A fearful society teaches people to react. A healthy society teaches people to think. Let us not become ...

Shennong: The Divine Farmer, Healing Plants, and the Ancient Roots of Herbal Knowledge

Shennong: The Divine Farmer, Healing Plants, and the Ancient Roots of Herbal Knowledge Long before modern laboratories, pharmaceutical industries, and scientific journals, ancient civilizations looked to the forests, mountains, rivers, and fields for healing. In Chinese tradition, one of the most important figures connected to this search for knowledge is Shennong — the legendary “Divine Farmer.” Part cultural hero, part mythological ruler, and part symbolic healer, Shennong occupies a sacred place in the history of Chinese agriculture and herbal medicine. His story represents humanity’s early attempt to understand the relationship between plants, health, suffering, nourishment, and balance. Though historians debate whether Shennong existed as an actual historical individual, his influence on Chinese thought is profound. His legacy survives through medicine, folklore, agriculture, and philosophical ideas about living in harmony with nature. The Divine Farmer The name Shennong translate...