In this issue FAC visits Tsunami stricken Sri Lanka. Other highlights include a profile on John Graham, adventurer, peacemaker and risk-taker extraordinaire, a FAC essay on 'A heart and soul for Europe' and an article on an English couple who have fostered 360 children, while Ear to the ground comes from China.
本期有 18 文章
The latest book of a nonagenarian is a surprise hit in Britain's prisons.
Europe will not find the way forward by avoiding conflict, but by transforming it, maintains Brian Walker.
It took a shipwreck to turn John Graham into a giraffe.
A Long Way(En)
For many the war years were enough adventure to last a lifetime.
Ann Rignall meets Pete and June Pemberton, who have fostered 360 children over the past 40 years.
How are people in Galle, Sri Lanka, picking up the pieces following the disaster in December?
Kadi Fakondo's job involves overseeing complaints from the public and building community relations.
Create Answers (En)
Step Three to Remaking the World
John Paul II could capture anyone, and millions, not only by what he said but also by the way he was able to listen.
Matching the valiant attempts of the locals to learn English, growing numbers of foreign nationals are coming to Beijing to stud
Melville Carson tells Paul Williams about his'great escape' from guilt and bitterness.
To lose any child is devastating, but in rural India to lose a son is to lose all hope for your future.
Reasons for Hope(En)
'Reasons for Hope' conference in Liverpool, UK, focussed on healing history and the power of honest dialogue.
IT WAS only three days before the tsunami struck that Vijitha Yapa decided to give a day off to his staff of eight.
Walking along the slave routes of West Africa helped Kojo Jantuah to discover his identity - and his destiny.
Sweeping Changes(En)
The Sweepers of India are at the centre of a revolutionary initiative by the Indian Government to upgrade their status.
She had come to the 'Building Bridges For Peace' programme to condemn the Israelis for killing her father.
What a Waste(En)
The value of the food each Briton throws away each day is more than the sum half the world's population has to live on each day.