I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
I am a retired teacher who wrote 7 photocopiable books for Teachers and one book for children Union Jack Colouring Book.
The 7books covered Geography, History (Medieval/ Tudor/ Stuart), Travel and Transport, Myself and Events (this included diaries), Race Against Time Stories (SATS based), Church Dates for Children plus Nature and Seasons (including Sport). These 7 books have been mainly broken into a number of segments.
Challenging the Physical Elements, my Geography book, is complete.
Information from Wikipedia about 9 great Asian leaders.
Qin Shi Huang (259-210 BC) first emperor of unified China
Genghis Khan (c1158-1227) - originally known as Temujin, founder of the Mongol Empire - often regarded to be one of the greatest conqueror of all time.
Timur (1336-1405) - first ruler and founder of the Timurid Empire - an undefeated commander and regarded as one of the greatest military leaders and tacticians in history. patron of educational and religious institutions.
Kublai Khan (1215 -1294) - founder and first emperor of the Yuan dynasty (1271-1294) - first non-Han emperor to unite all of China
Babur (1483-1530), born Zahir ud-Din Muhammad. founder and first emperor of the Mughal dynasty (c 1526-30) in the Indian subcontinent- national hero in Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan.
Oda Nobunaga (1534- 1582) - regarded as the the first ‘Great Unifier’ of Japan.
Emperor Meiji (1852-1912) -first monarch of the Empire of Japan- instigated the transformation of Japan from an isolationist, feudal state to an industrialized world power.
Mahatma Gandhi (1869- 1948 - an Indian lawyer, anti-colonialist and political ethicist who employed non violent resistance to successfully lead India’s independence from British rule. Bapu - father - he was considered to be the *Father of the Nation * in India.
Mao Zedong - Chairman Mao (1893-1976) - founding father of the People’s Republic of China - a controversial figure- regarded as one of the most important individuals of the 20th century - credited with transforming china from a semicolony to a powerful sovereign state with increased literacy and life expectancy.
I came across information about 10 Asian Christian Women during my research. I have set them up in alphabetically order and found extra information on 8 of them.
Angie Hong - a Korean-American worship leader, speaker and writer.
Dr Grace Ji-Sun Kim - a Korean American theologian and professor - best known for her work on the social and religious experiences of Korean women immigrants in N. America.
Dr. Havilah Dharamraj - she is passionate about South Asian Christian leaders to understand the Word of God within the Asian context.
HeeSun Lee is a Christian hip hop artist. She is vocal about her faith and uses her singles and albums to not only talk about Jesus but elevate her diverse experiences as a bicultural Korean American Christian
Hosanna Wong - she has a unique storytelling voice in which she explores faith and identity through first hand experiences of lose, hope and redemption.
Dr. Jayachitra Lalitha- she is an ordained minister of the Church of South India, She holds a number of roles at Tamilnadu Theological Seminary - associate professor, dean of the women’s studies dept. and coordinator of the women’s centre. Plus co-chair and coeditor of 2 organizations
Dr Sydney Park - she is Associate professor of Divinity at Beeson Divinity School.
Her courses and writings emphasis the need for reconciliation and justice initiatives, both within the church and society at large
Sherrene DeLong- she is an Indian American doctoral student - she challenges what cultures are considered normal and the way in which American evangelism can become more open to eastern values like open -door hospitality.
Tara VanderWounde - is a nationwide speaker at conferences and is passionate about equipping parents for experiences and conversations their children encounter.
Vivian Mabuni - is a Chinese American author, speaker ans cancer survivor. She is passionate about raising up up the next generation of Asian American leaders.
She is the founder of SIH -* Someday is Here Podcast. a place where Asian American women can explore their heritage.
Ten Asian Christian women determined to forward the Christian Gospel.
Septimuis Severus (145-211) was born in Libya and became emperor of Rome from 193-211. He travelled to GB in 208. He strengthened Hadrian’s Wall and reoccupied the Antonine Wall. He invaded Scotland but fell fatally ill of an infectious disease and died on 4th February 211.
Dido Elizabeth Belle (1761-1804) was born into slavery. Her ‘father’ was Sir John Lindsay who returned to England with her in 1765. She became a British heiress and a member of the Lindsay family of Evelix. She lived for 31 years at Kenwood House. Two of her sons were employed by the East India Company - William Thomas in England and Charles in India.
Maharaja Sir Duleep Singh (1838-1893) was exiled to Britain aged 15. He was the last Maharaja of the Sikh Empire. He was befriended by Queen Victoria and she became godmother to several of his children.
In June 1861 he was one of the first 25 knights in the Order of the Star of India. He died young, living most of his final years in the UK…
Mainly in Wikipedia I have found further information about 10 case studies mentioned in *The History of the Asian Community in Britain.
Sake Dean Mahomed (1750-1851)- a surgeon. He the first Indian to publish a book in English. He also Introduced Bengali cuisine,plus shampoo baths and therapeutic massage to Europe.
Dadabhai Naoroji (1825-1917)- the first Asian to become a British MP.
Mancherjee Bhownaggree (1851-1933)- a British Conservative party politician.
Shapurji Saklatvala (1874-1936 - first Indian politician to become an MP for the Labour party. He was also a member of the Communist Party.
Kamal Chunchie became an ordained minister in the Methodist church. In 1926he started a mission called the Colour Men’s Institute in Canning Town, London - spoke 8 languages (died 1953
Jaint Dass Saggar (1898-1954) - an Indian doctor who became the first non-white local authority councilor in Scotland.
V.K. Krishna Menon (1896-1974) - an Indian politician. Described by some as the second most powerful man in India. Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru had most power. Read about his controversies.
Mohinder Sigh Pujji (1918-2010) was a squadron leader in the RAF and a distinguished fighter pilot. He campaigned to raise awareness of the Indian contribution to the British war effort. In 2009 the RAF Museum in Cosford opened a permanent exhibition ‘Diversity in the RAF.’
Noor Inayat Khan (1914-1944) served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE). She was the first female wireless operator to be sent form the UK to occupied France. She was betrayed, captured and executed - posthumously awarded the George Cross.** Read her story on Wikipedia**
Jayaben Desai (1933-2010) - always referred to as Mrs Desai, was a prominent female leader of the strikes in the Grunwick dispute in London in 1976
The History of the Asian Community in Britain is an excellent book - 45 pages of information- including 13 ‘case studies’ plus pictures. it begins in 1630s and takes through to Apache Indian -Steven Kapurat the beginning of the 21st century.
ISBN 0750-32736-3.
It was updated by Hodder Wayland in 2005. With a new cover it was updated in 2021.
I have looked through the book and then gone into Wikipedia to find out extra information to cut down the research.
East India Company appears for the first time on page 4.
Abdul Karim - the Munshi is mentioned on page 9
Ayahs- Asian nannies are mentioned on pages 10/11.
Lascars - Indian sailors are mentioned on pages 12/3.
Kharchedji Rustomji Cama is mentioned on page 16
Cornelia Sorabji, the first woman to study law in Britain also o page 16
Rahjitsnhji, the cricketer, on page 17.
Sophia Duleep Singh, a prominent suffragette, on page 24.
Pedlars on page 30
Apache Indian (Steven Kapur) p45
This is my first attempt at Asian History’
!0 Case Studies mentioned in the book to follow.
Work on Great Asian Leaders and Heroes to follow later.
Millions of birds migrate from the north to the south in early autumn to avoid the cold weather.
I found a map which illustrates what happens.
I have included 3 differentiated sheets…
Also included some pictures from ‘The Bird Atlas’ written by Barbara Taylor and beautifully illustrated by Richard Orr.
A very colourful book full of good ideas for Autumn written by Clair Beaton. Published in 1997 by B. Small publishing
ISBN 9781874735120. Well worth buying at £3.50 is still available or republished.
Didier Yves Drogba played for the Ivory Coast
He was captain of the Cote d’Ivore national team. Excellent header of the ball.
Eusebio da Silva Ferreira played for Portugal
First black player to win the Balloon d’ Or (1965) Athletic, fast & agile
Garrincha - Manuel Francisco dos Santos played for Brazil
Garrincoho means 'people.‘s Joy’. His wife was singer Elza Soares
George Manneh Oppong Weah played for Liberia
For important matches wore red boots. Powerful header of the ball.
Marta Vieira Silva (female) played for Brazil
World’s best female. Scored almost a goal a game in internationals.
Neymar da Silva Santos Junior plays for Brazil
PSG paid a World record £200 million for him - a dribbler - a virtuoso
Paul Pogba plays for France
Changes hairstyle for big matches. Imitates a rapper when he scores.
Pele - Edson Arantes do Nascimento played for Brazil
The greatest player. Scored more than 1,000 goals in his career.
Ronaldo Luis Nazario de Lima played for Brazil
Always kept the ball a few centimetres from his feet.
Samuel Eto’o Fils played for Cameroon
He was naturally 2 footed
Sources
Wikipedia
Fantastic Footballers by Jean-Michel Billioud
Jackie Robinson was one of the most influential sports figure of his day. he was the first African American to play Major League Basketball. He was the catalyst that broke basketball’s colour barrier.
Malala Yousafzai is now 24.
On 9th October 2012, aged 15 ,she was hit in the head from a bullet by a Tehrik-i Taliban Pakistan gunman who wanted to assassinate her for activism towards female education. She was transfered to the UK to recover…
In 2014, aged 17, she became the world’s youngest Nobel Prize laureate.
Pakistan’s Prime minister, Shahid Khaqan Abbasi, says she has become the country’s most prominent citizen.
I am Malala: the girl who was stood up for Education and was shot by the Taliban
Mohammad Ali, formerly known as Cassius Clay until 1964, was a world champion boxer. Changing his name was a religious and political act when he converted to Islam.
In 1967 he became a conscience objector and refused to do military service in Vietnam for the USA saying it was against his religious and moral beliefs. He avoided jail but was stripped and banned from boxing. ln 1970 returned to the ring to win back his title.
Rigoberta Menchu Tum is a K’iche Guatemalan human rights activist, feminist and Nobel Prize Laureate (1992). She rose in prominence in 1983. She has dedicated her life to publicizing the indigeous suffering of her people during and after the Guatemala Civil War (1960-99).
She is a UNESCO goodwill anbassador.
She founded the country’s first indigenous political party, Winaq.
Tegia Loroupe is a Kenyan long distance track and road runner ( won the New York marathon in 1994 and 1995, plus other marathons).
She is also a global spokeswoman for peace, women’s rights and education.
In 2003 created the Tegia Loroupe Peace Foundation- created to promote friendship between people and gender equality.
She organizes Peace marathons which are held in East Africa.
In 2016 organized the Refugee Team for the Rio Summer Olympics in Rio.
Wangari Muta Maathai (1940-2011) was a Kenyan social environmental and political activist.
In 1977 she founded the Green belt Movement which focused on the planning of trees ( combating deforestation and soil erosion), environmental conservation and women’s rights. She felt by improving the environment she was creating a system that would encourage progress and peace
In 2004 she was the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. In 2006 won the Indira Gandhi Peace prize.
Sources
People of Peace by Sandrine Mirza
Wikipedia
Those born earliest
Viv Anderson born 1956
Ian Wright born 1963 November 3rd
John Barnes born 1963 November 7th
Des Waler born 1965
Paul Ince born 1967
David James born 1970
Sol Campbell born 1974
Emile Heskey born 1978 January 11th
Rio Ferdinand born 1978 November 7th
Ashley Cole born 1980
10 of England’s former black footballers
Marguerite Annie Johnson Angelou was an American author, actress, screenwriter, ,dancer, poet and civil rights activist.
She is best known for her first memoir I know Why the Caged Bird Sings
this was the first nonfiction best seller by an African-American woman.
She published 7 autobiographies, 3 books of essays, several books of poetry and is credited with a list of plays, movies and tv. shows spanning 50 years.
Her books centre on themes including racism, identity, family and travel.
In 1993 she recited her poem ‘On the Pulse of the morning’ at President Bill Clinton’s first inauguration.
She received dozens of awards and more than 50 honorary degrees
Sources
Wikipedia
Sojourner Truth was born Isabella Bornfree - a slave in Dutch speaking Ulster County, New York.
A former slave, bought and sold 4 times, became an outspoken advocate for temperance, civil and women’s rights in the nineteenth century.
She ran away with her infant daughter Sophia. The abolitionist family, the Van Wageners, bought her freedom for $20 in 1827 - the year before New York’s law freeing slaves took effect.
During the American civil war she played a major role in recruiting African-American soldiers to fight for the Union ( northern states) against the Confederacy (southern states)
Her work earned her an invitation to meet President Abraham Lincoln in 1864.
William Edward Burghardt Du Bois was the most important Black protest leader in the USA during the first half of the 20th century.
W.E.B. Du Bois was an American socialist, historian, author, editor and activist.
shared in the creation of the NAACP ( National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
The Soul of Black Folk (1903)- a collection of essays - was a landmark of African American literature
He was the editor of The Crisis ** for 24 years (1910-34). It contained many influential pieces.
His autobiography Dusk of Dawn (1940) is regarded as one of the first scientific treaties in the field of American sociology.
The United States Civil Rights act of 1964, enacted a year after his death, embodied many of the reforms he had campaigned for during hie life full equal civil rights and political representation for the black population.
Sources used
Britannica Online Encyclopedia
Wikipedia
Rosa Parks is best known for refusing to move to the back of the bus.
She was an American civil rights activist. She came from Montgomery where her young pastor was Martin Luther King.
She lived to be 92. She was laid in state in the rotunda of the U.S. capital. She was the first woman and only the second Black person to receive the distinction,
Source used
Encyclopedia Britannica
Thursday, 26th August 2021
Jaco van Gass, who was born in South Africa, has just won GB another gold medal.
Jaco, a member of the British Armed Forces Parachute Regiment before he was seriously injured by a RPG (Rocket Propelled Granade)has just won the Men’s 3,000 Cycling Pursuit gold medal.
3 out of the 5 Paralympic athletes are current Paralympic champions.
Claire Cashmore began competing in the Paralympic in 2004 in Athens. She won gold and silver in Rio in 2016 for swimming. In Tokyo 2021 she is running in the Paratriathlon.
Ellie Challis is a swimmer. Aged 16 months she developed sepsis and meningitis. The disease ravaged her tiny body resultingin her having both legs amputated below the knee and both arms at the elbow. In 2012 she won bronze in the S3 50m backstroke in the Paralympics in London. She is the world record holder for SB2 50m backstroke .
Hollie Beth Arnold is the reigning Paralympic F46 javelin thrower. In 2008, aged just 14, she was the youngest ever field event athlete. In 2018 she became the first ever javelin thrower to hold all 4 major titles in the same Paralympic/ Olympic 4 year cycle.
Kylie Grimes has returned to her first love wheelchair rugby after a life changing spinal injury in 2006.
Stef Reid, a long jumper, has won bronze at London 2012 and in Rio in 2016, but yet to win gold.
William Flororunso Kumuyi ( born 6th June 1941) is the founder and General Superintendent of the Deeper Christian Life Ministry situated at Kilometre 42 on the Lagos-Ibadan Expressway, Nigeria. He is the author of 10 Christian books and devotionals ( See books published).
William was brought up in a Christian family in Orunwa, Ogun State, western part of Nigeria. As a young child he read the Bible and sang songs and attended church regularly. In secondary school the principal taught atheism but he eventually started to go to various churches in town.
William began teaching mathematics in 1962 at Mayflower School.
He became a born again Christian on 5th April 1964.
In 1967 he graduated from the University of Ibadanand as the best overall best graduating student in his year, with a first class degree in Mathematics. he also took a post graduate course in Education at the University of Lagos.
In the 1970s he became a lecturer of Mathematics at the University of Lagos.
In 1973 he started a Bible study group with 15 Lagos university students. By the early 1980’s that small group had grown to several 1000. This training became the foundation of the Deeper Christian Life Ministry.
Deeper Life Bible Church was formerly established in 1982.
By 1988 the congregation had grown to 50,000
By 2005 the Christian ministry is said to have over 800, 000 affiliates
September 2016 William addressed over 50,000 youths *to inculcate in them the highest virtues in youths and stay away from antisocial and push-pull tendencies.
On 24th of April 2018 the auditorium, holding 30,000 worshippers, at the church in Gbagade, Lagos was inaugurated. Yemi Osinbajo, Vice President of Nigeria, attended the .
In 2013 the Foreign Policy magazine listed William *among the 500 most powerful people on the planet.
Source use
Wikipedia *
Ezekiel Handinawangu Guti was born on the 5th of May 1923 in Ngaone, Chipinge, Manicaland Province, Rhodesia. He is a gifted evangelist and has distinguished himself as a leading personality in the Pentecostal World.
His academic credentials include a BA, Ma, DD, D.MIn and Ph.D in Religion. Plus BA in Christian education and a Doctorate from Northgate Graduate school and Zoe College.
His ministry began on the 12th may 1960 under a gum tree in Bindura, Zimbabwe.
He founded the Zimbabwe Assemblies of God Africa (ZAOGA) Christian church in 1959 when the Apostolic Faith Mission broke away from the South African Pentecostal church. The church is now established in over 143 nations, with over 2,000 in Southern Africa.
ZAOGA is also known internationally as Forward in Faith Ministeries International. Its headquarters is to be found in Waterfalls, Harara Zimbabwe
Ezekiel initiated the building of Zimbabwe Ezekiel college and the Mbuya Dorcas Hospital. He oversees 5,000 pastors and evangelists world wide.
Victor Schoelcher was Frenchman who travelled to Mexico, Florida, Louisiana and Cuba on a business trip. During his travels he realised how appalling the slaves were treated and became a leading figure in the abolitionist movement.
He is seen as the father of the abolition of Slavery in the French colonies.
He was appointed in 1848 as under-secretary of the navy and the colonies. As part of the provisional government of the brand new Second Republic in France he wrote the decree abolishing slavery in all French colonies signed on27th April 1848. In the decree he stated that Slavery is a violation of Human dignity.
The government rejected his proposal to compensate the former slaves with grants for plots of land.
Sources used
People of Peace by Sandrine Mirza
Wikipedia
Mildred ‘Babe’ Didrikson was born in Port Arthur, Texas. Her parents were immigrants from Norway. She was the sixth of seven children. The family moved to 850 Doucette in Beaumont, Texas aged 4.
Her mother called her ‘Bebe’ from a toddler. She was nicknamed Babe - after Babe Ruth - when she scored 5 home runs in a chidlhood baseball game.
She left school without graduating and went on to become an American athlete who excelled in golf, basketball, baseball, plus track and field.
At the 1932 Los Angeles Olympics she set 4 world records.
80 metres hurdles -11.7
Javelin 43.69 metres - the first woman Olympic champion
high jump 1.657 metres then 1,67 (same height as Jean Shiley who got the gold because Mildred used an improper technique).
(Apparently she also twice broke the long jump record but the judges ruled them
as fouls.)
Mildred is the only athlete, male or female, to win individual Olympic medals in separate running, throwing and jumping events.
In 1934 she tried Baseball . Mildred is still recognized as the world record holder for the farthest baseball thrown by a woman.
She then became America’s first female golf celebrity and was the leading player of the 1940s and early 1950s. As an amateur and professional she won many golf tournaments. Serious illness ended her golfing career in the mid 1950s.
Mildred was indeed a very talented sports woman.
Sources
Wikipedia
Amazing Athletes by Jean-Michal Billioud