“Most people around here prefer undead drivers, so I never get a chance to make any money on steady contracts.”
T.K. Naliaka“If literacy was natural, the word ‘illiteracy’ would not exist.”
T.K. Naliaka, A Difficult Damsel to Rescue“If one could speak two languages well and was raised on tea and baguettes for breakfast,in places where the most mundane daily business on the street is conducted in four languages, where horse carts park at cyber cafes, where would one go? Where could one go? Why,with a smile and a handshake, very far, indeed!”
T.K. Naliaka“Even a little practical working familiarity with cattle goes a long way in Africa, but how many international relations studies include this?”
T.K. Naliaka“It’s not that easy living with malaria. The reality of the high annual death toll should make that very obvious.”
T.K. Naliaka“Shovels aren't very glamorous, but they've been liberating entire communities from malaria for the past 5,000 years.”
T.K. Naliaka“If people's night fears of sorcery - which negatively influences their decision to use mosquito nets - fail to impress the outsider, the brute everyday reality remains; in a number of rural African villages it is still much too common for very real hyenas to snatch people, especially children, out of their own homes as they lie sleeping at night, because of the lack of a good front door.”
T.K. Naliaka“To witness the awe of human beings delighting in their own hands forming the written word was humbling and he understood it profoundly at that moment watching those two, with the ancient land around them, in their traditional robes and the resting camels by their campfire, intently regarding writing with such immense respect … that illiteracy meant subsistence, while literacy meant human advancement, the base on which higher achievements and accomplishments of great civilizations could be built.”
T.K. Naliaka“Africa is a huge continent; it would take several lifetimes of thousands of researchers testing in hundreds of languages to collect a valid sample of anything, especially IQ. Most Africans do their schooling in a second language, not their mother tongue. How many people would accept to be tested for their IQ level not in their primary language?”
T.K. Naliaka“Will 2015 ever be noted as the year Ebola was decisively downgraded from a lurid horror meme to just one of many commonly treatable diseases?”
T.K. Naliaka“The strength of human instinct seems to be quite overrated as it is so feeble it requires a lifetime of guidance, education, training and practical experience to develop. More critically, without conscious and diligent effort across one generation to pass its knowledge on to the next generation, all that was gained will be lost, forewarned by an increasing rarity of the reminiscence, “Every secret of life I know, I learned at my grandfather’s knee.”
T.K. Naliaka