• How-I-View-Africa. //
  • After seeing the negative images and stereotypes of Africa, I decided to create a blog dedicated to my beloved motherland in hopes of changing the misconceptions held by many. I am a college student; an AFRICAN of course, proudly Sierra Leonean/Gambian. I am a God-fearing, ambitious, curious, passionate, and a lover of life young gentleman. I take no credit for much of the material on my blog. I post anything and everything that has to do with uplifting AFRICA. I believe ALL Africans have the same VIEWS in seeing their respective countries striving to reach their full potential. In doing so, we also end up showing the rest of the world how blessed our Motherland is and the BEAUTY of its people. I hope you leave my blog with a sense of appreciation and a new outlook. Thanks for your time, be blessed and be a blessings. Follow! FACEBOOK Me @LaMin SaWaneh or E-Mail Me @ howiviewafrica@Gmail. //
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sister’s ♥.
100 ♥ / 8 June, 2012

Women have no king.
- (Bari, Sudan)

2 ♥ / 1 June, 2012
22 ♥ / 1 May, 2012
Simple but so beautiful.
23 ♥ / 30 April, 2012
6 ♥ / 18 April, 2012
African mothers.
10 ♥ / 18 April, 2012
African Art!
9 ♥ / 11 April, 2012
Ruby B. Johnson of Sierra Leone.
1 ♥ / 4 April, 2012
Blood of Africa.
55 ♥ / 4 April, 2012
nickturse:

People protest in the halls of the venue of UN Climate Talks on December 9, 2011, to demand that nations not sign a “death sentence” during the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Durban. Standing side-by-side with delegates from some of the world’s most vulnerable countries, civil society representatives sang traditional South African freedom songs and chanted slogans like, “Listen to the People, Not the Polluters. In the last 48 hours, over 700,000 people have signed petitions calling on major emitters to stand with the nations of Africa and resist any attempts to delay climate action until 2020. UN climate talks entered their second week entangled in a thick mesh of issues with no guarantee that negotiators and their ministers will be able to sort them out. The 194-nation process is facing, for the second time in two years, the prospect of a bustup, even as scientists warn against the mounting threat of disaster-provoking storms, droughts, flood and rising seas made worse by global warming. Getty
13 ♥ / 3 April, 2012
Taste of Africa.
16 ♥ / 2 April, 2012
Hot!
30 ♥ / 1 April, 2012
South African Model.
10 ♥ / 30 March, 2012
Bald and Beautiful.
26 ♥ / 30 March, 2012
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