A Somali-made movie has been nominated for an Oscar for the first time

Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s The Gravedigger’s Wife, shot in Djibouti, was nominated by the Oscar Committee, which was established for the first time …

Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s The Gravedigger’s Wife, shot in Djibouti, was nominated by the Oscar Committee, which was established for the first time by the Somali Culture and Tourism Ministry. The 94th Oscar Awards will find their owners in March next year.

was screened in Cannes, received an award in Toronto

The cinema, in which many distinguished names from the Somali cinema department took part, was screened at the Cannes Film Festival. While signing an element, he returned from the Toronto Film Festival with an award.

The director, born in 1981, defective to Finland with his family at the age of 16. The director, born in 1981, defective to Finland with his family at the age of 16.

Abdulrazak Gurnah wins 2021 Nobel Prize in Literature

In the statement made by the Swedish Academy, it was stated that Gurnah was awarded for penetrating the effects of colonialism in the abyss …

In the statement made by the Swedish Academy, it was stated that Gurnah was awarded for penetrating the effects of colonialism in the abyss between cultures and continents and the fortunes of refugees in a definitive and compassionate form.

“His novels tell about East African culture”

The statement conveys that Gurnah’s commitment to truth and avoidance of facilitation is remarkable, and “His novels are based on stereotypical descriptions”. “It opens us up to a culturally diverse East Africa that is remote and unfamiliar to many elsewhere in the world.”

Author of ten novels and a series of short stories, Gurnah was born in Zanzibar in 1948, her family immigrated to England in 1960. Gurnah has four novels translated into Turkish, namely ‘Abandonment’, ‘Sand Heart’ , ‘The Last Gift’ and ‘By the Sea’.

The 73-year-old writer will also receive a monetary gift of 10 million Swedish kronor (1.1 million dollars, approximately 9 million TL) in addition to the award.

The 21st International Frankfurt Turkish Cinema Festival will start on October 25

As part of the festival organized by the Intercultural Transfer Association, chaired by Hüseyin Sıtkı, nearly 25 Turkish, German and French …

As part of the festival organized by the Intercultural Transfer Association, chaired by Hüseyin Sıtkı, nearly 25 Turkish, German and French movies will be presented to the audience. The cinemas will be screened at CineStar Metropolis, German Cinema Museum and Cinema Forum Höchst, Mühlheim am Main, Rodgau-Jugesheim, Frankfurt am Main, Offenbach am Main, Michelstadt, Rödermark cinemas and JVA Preungesheim Frankfurt am Main Prison.

Golden Apple awards will find their owners

This year, Golden Apple awards will find their owners for the 21st time, in cooperation with the FILM-SAN Foundation, which provides support as a project partner in Turkey.

At the festival, the Lifetime Achievement Awards for 2021 will be given to Halil Ergün and Suna Yıldızoğlu, and the Loyalty Award to Bilge Olgaç.

“Selection Committee” consisting of Turkish and German filmmakers, “Feature Turkey Jury”, “Feature Germany Jury”, “Documentary Film Jury” and “Turkish-German Short Film Jury” will be given in 7 sections within the scope of the festival. The Golden Apple will determine the winners of the cinema awards.

For the festival where talks, panels and concerts will be held in addition to the cinema screenings, and last year’s awards will also be given, Damla Sönmez, Ece Yüksel, Mine Tugay, Helin Kandemir, Senan Kara, Halil Ergün, Suna Yıldızoğlu, Nilüfer Açıkalın, Reha It is expected that actors, producers and directors, including Özcan, Selçuk Method, Ömür Gedik, Saki Çimen, Alp Yenier, Serdar Akar, Ömer Faruk Sorak and Uluç Bayraktar, will come to Frankfurt.

The group was sent into space for the first movie to be shot in space

The group, who received special training at the Yuriy Gagarin Cosmonaut Preparation Center for the shooting of the movie named “Vyzov” (The Test …

The group, who received special training at the Yuriy Gagarin Cosmonaut Preparation Center for the shooting of the movie named “Vyzov” (The Test), a joint project of the Russian Space Agency (ROSCOSMOS), Perviy Kanal and a production company , completed the preparations for the MS-19 spacecraft at the Baikonur base. loaded into his vehicle.

The team will stay for 12 days

The spacecraft with Klim Şipenko, actress Yuliya Peresild and cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, 11.55 TSI was launched into space.

The cinema, which will feature “the first feature-length drama film to be shot in space” in the history of cinematography, will take place on the International Space Station (ISS). The team will stay on the ISS for 12 days.

The cinema team is scheduled to return to Earth on October 17 aboard the Soyuz MS-18 spacecraft led by cosmonaut Oleg Noviskiy.

Art pleasure begins with 16. Contemporary Istanbul

Contemporary Istanbul is starting its second fifteenth year in Tersane Istanbul. In its first international fair to take place after the …

Contemporary Istanbul is starting its second fifteenth year in Tersane Istanbul. In its first international fair to take place after the pandemic, Contemporary Istanbul will host 57 galleries and institutions, artists, collectors, international press and art lovers in a 9500 m2 closed and 10,000 m2 open area at Shipyard Istanbul.

A different fair experience

Contemporary Istanbul, which is preparing to offer a different fair experience to art audiences in a wide area throughout Shipyard Istanbul, with its indoor and outdoor areas. an art fair is not just a fair; It continued its preparations on this side, with the aim of realizing in the 16th Edition that it is about education, artistic development and, more importantly, sustainability.

Contemporary Istanbul, which included specially themed stands in the 16th edition with this awareness, also fulfilled its duties for the sustainability of art and the world.

What awaits art lovers

Art lovers who will come to Shipyard Istanbul, scale works in the open space installation -The Yard- featuring large-scale works and sculptures by 30 artists The installation of Rachel Hayes, who prefers fabric to produce, the Flags for the Future stand that draws attention to the sustainability of art, the 100-year-old sculptor: İlhan Koman stand, the Akrasia stand with 15 female artists, the Sıtkı Kösemen – Transformations Stand in black and white Bodrum starting from the 1970s. will have the opportunity to see the photographs of Burhan Doğançay and Ekrem Yalçındağ’s works touching each other in the exhibition area throughout the week.

Also, within the scope of Akbank Art Jazz Festival, which celebrates its 31st birthday, jazz concerts will be held at the fairground in Shipyard Istanbul.

U.S. Customs Walks Back Ban on Canadians who Work in Cannabis Industry

Jenner often marks major holidays with limited edition makeup launches. This past mother’s day, she let momager Kris Jenner take over the brand to release a capsule …

In our previous article, Insights from Culture Amp’s 2018 Benchmarks, we shared the top five questions that were drivers of employee engagement across all of our customers. If you’re a People Geek like us, you’re probably hungry to learn more about what you can do to move the needle forward in these key areas. First, you can check out the in-platform inspiration engine for real-world examples that companies have seen success with. We share a few of these inspirations in, Three research-backed ways to improve employee engagement. If you’re looking for a deeper dive, there are great books by esteemed researchers that provide additional inspiration for action. Here are five inspiring books to help you improve employee engagement, based on the top five questions that drive employee engagement.

Many organizations view people development and business growth as forces pulling in opposite directions. This book profiles three “Deliberately Developmental Organizations” (Next Jump, Decurion, and Bridgewater) where development of their people isn’t separate from business growth, it’s a fundamental driver of business growth. The authors provide research-backed frameworks and tactical ideas for how you can transform your own organization into one where development is in your organizational DNA.

[bs-quote quote=”The everyday kindness of the back roads more than makes up for the acts of greed in the headlines. ” style=”style-23″ align=”left” author_name=”Charles Kuralt” author_job=”Charles Kuralt” author_avatar=”http://demo.betterstudio.com/publisher/trender-mag/wp-content/uploads/sites/482/2018/12/quotr.png”]

Pro-tip: This book is designed to be read in sections, so you can start with what’s most important to you (even if that’s not on page one) and then go back and read the rest if you’d like.
If you’re familiar with Brené Brown, you’re might be wondering what a book about vulnerability has to do with this question. Before taking action, you’ll want to explore.

The other is that people genuinely don’t have confidence in the vision for your company. Whatever the reason, as a member of HR this will likely be a sensitive conversation to have with your leadership. It’s also likely a topic that employees may not feel fully comfortable discussing openly. By focusing on vulnerability as a strength, Daring Greatly provides a foundation for those tough conversations. If you were to ask most organizational leaders what’s important to them, quality and improvement would probably be high on the list. So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Sometimes leaders get so caught up in ambitious goals and condensed timing that they forget that people are, well, people. Dr. Dutton and Dr. Worline take over two decades of research to demonstrate the value of compassion to the individual and to the organization. They provide clear recommendations for how (regardless of who we are) we can foster an authentically compassionate workplace both as individuals and through organizational design.

In his “Golden Circle” framework, Sinek shares that when great leaders communicate inspiring and influential visions, they don’t start with the “what” or the “how,” they start with the WHY. They articulate the underlying shared belief or values that drives their message, and in doing so are able to motivate the rest of us along the way. Even if you’re familiar with Sinek’s work, this is a skill that’s easier said than done. The book provides a clean and simple framework that you can share with the rest of your team.

So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Tennessee Health Department Issues Warning About Dangers of CBD Products

Jenner often marks major holidays with limited edition makeup launches. This past mother’s day, she let momager Kris Jenner take over the brand to release a capsule …

In our previous article, Insights from Culture Amp’s 2018 Benchmarks, we shared the top five questions that were drivers of employee engagement across all of our customers. If you’re a People Geek like us, you’re probably hungry to learn more about what you can do to move the needle forward in these key areas. First, you can check out the in-platform inspiration engine for real-world examples that companies have seen success with. We share a few of these inspirations in, Three research-backed ways to improve employee engagement. If you’re looking for a deeper dive, there are great books by esteemed researchers that provide additional inspiration for action. Here are five inspiring books to help you improve employee engagement, based on the top five questions that drive employee engagement.

Many organizations view people development and business growth as forces pulling in opposite directions. This book profiles three “Deliberately Developmental Organizations” (Next Jump, Decurion, and Bridgewater) where development of their people isn’t separate from business growth, it’s a fundamental driver of business growth. The authors provide research-backed frameworks and tactical ideas for how you can transform your own organization into one where development is in your organizational DNA.

[bs-quote quote=”The everyday kindness of the back roads more than makes up for the acts of greed in the headlines. ” style=”style-23″ align=”left” author_name=”Charles Kuralt” author_job=”Charles Kuralt” author_avatar=”http://demo.betterstudio.com/publisher/trender-mag/wp-content/uploads/sites/482/2018/12/quotr.png”]

Pro-tip: This book is designed to be read in sections, so you can start with what’s most important to you (even if that’s not on page one) and then go back and read the rest if you’d like.
If you’re familiar with Brené Brown, you’re might be wondering what a book about vulnerability has to do with this question. Before taking action, you’ll want to explore.

The other is that people genuinely don’t have confidence in the vision for your company. Whatever the reason, as a member of HR this will likely be a sensitive conversation to have with your leadership. It’s also likely a topic that employees may not feel fully comfortable discussing openly. By focusing on vulnerability as a strength, Daring Greatly provides a foundation for those tough conversations. If you were to ask most organizational leaders what’s important to them, quality and improvement would probably be high on the list. So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Sometimes leaders get so caught up in ambitious goals and condensed timing that they forget that people are, well, people. Dr. Dutton and Dr. Worline take over two decades of research to demonstrate the value of compassion to the individual and to the organization. They provide clear recommendations for how (regardless of who we are) we can foster an authentically compassionate workplace both as individuals and through organizational design.

In his “Golden Circle” framework, Sinek shares that when great leaders communicate inspiring and influential visions, they don’t start with the “what” or the “how,” they start with the WHY. They articulate the underlying shared belief or values that drives their message, and in doing so are able to motivate the rest of us along the way. Even if you’re familiar with Sinek’s work, this is a skill that’s easier said than done. The book provides a clean and simple framework that you can share with the rest of your team.

So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Guam Legislators Approve Measures to Speed up Medical Cannabis Access

Jenner often marks major holidays with limited edition makeup launches. This past mother’s day, she let momager Kris Jenner take over the brand to release a capsule …

In our previous article, Insights from Culture Amp’s 2018 Benchmarks, we shared the top five questions that were drivers of employee engagement across all of our customers. If you’re a People Geek like us, you’re probably hungry to learn more about what you can do to move the needle forward in these key areas. First, you can check out the in-platform inspiration engine for real-world examples that companies have seen success with. We share a few of these inspirations in, Three research-backed ways to improve employee engagement. If you’re looking for a deeper dive, there are great books by esteemed researchers that provide additional inspiration for action. Here are five inspiring books to help you improve employee engagement, based on the top five questions that drive employee engagement.

Many organizations view people development and business growth as forces pulling in opposite directions. This book profiles three “Deliberately Developmental Organizations” (Next Jump, Decurion, and Bridgewater) where development of their people isn’t separate from business growth, it’s a fundamental driver of business growth. The authors provide research-backed frameworks and tactical ideas for how you can transform your own organization into one where development is in your organizational DNA.

[bs-quote quote=”The everyday kindness of the back roads more than makes up for the acts of greed in the headlines. ” style=”style-23″ align=”left” author_name=”Charles Kuralt” author_job=”Charles Kuralt” author_avatar=”http://demo.betterstudio.com/publisher/trender-mag/wp-content/uploads/sites/482/2018/12/quotr.png”]

Pro-tip: This book is designed to be read in sections, so you can start with what’s most important to you (even if that’s not on page one) and then go back and read the rest if you’d like.
If you’re familiar with Brené Brown, you’re might be wondering what a book about vulnerability has to do with this question. Before taking action, you’ll want to explore.

The other is that people genuinely don’t have confidence in the vision for your company. Whatever the reason, as a member of HR this will likely be a sensitive conversation to have with your leadership. It’s also likely a topic that employees may not feel fully comfortable discussing openly. By focusing on vulnerability as a strength, Daring Greatly provides a foundation for those tough conversations. If you were to ask most organizational leaders what’s important to them, quality and improvement would probably be high on the list. So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Sometimes leaders get so caught up in ambitious goals and condensed timing that they forget that people are, well, people. Dr. Dutton and Dr. Worline take over two decades of research to demonstrate the value of compassion to the individual and to the organization. They provide clear recommendations for how (regardless of who we are) we can foster an authentically compassionate workplace both as individuals and through organizational design.

In his “Golden Circle” framework, Sinek shares that when great leaders communicate inspiring and influential visions, they don’t start with the “what” or the “how,” they start with the WHY. They articulate the underlying shared belief or values that drives their message, and in doing so are able to motivate the rest of us along the way. Even if you’re familiar with Sinek’s work, this is a skill that’s easier said than done. The book provides a clean and simple framework that you can share with the rest of your team.

So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Study Finds Whole-Plant Medicines More Effective Than CBD-Only Extracts

Jenner often marks major holidays with limited edition makeup launches. This past mother’s day, she let momager Kris Jenner take over the brand to release a capsule …

In our previous article, Insights from Culture Amp’s 2018 Benchmarks, we shared the top five questions that were drivers of employee engagement across all of our customers. If you’re a People Geek like us, you’re probably hungry to learn more about what you can do to move the needle forward in these key areas. First, you can check out the in-platform inspiration engine for real-world examples that companies have seen success with. We share a few of these inspirations in, Three research-backed ways to improve employee engagement. If you’re looking for a deeper dive, there are great books by esteemed researchers that provide additional inspiration for action. Here are five inspiring books to help you improve employee engagement, based on the top five questions that drive employee engagement.

Many organizations view people development and business growth as forces pulling in opposite directions. This book profiles three “Deliberately Developmental Organizations” (Next Jump, Decurion, and Bridgewater) where development of their people isn’t separate from business growth, it’s a fundamental driver of business growth. The authors provide research-backed frameworks and tactical ideas for how you can transform your own organization into one where development is in your organizational DNA.

[bs-quote quote=”The everyday kindness of the back roads more than makes up for the acts of greed in the headlines. ” style=”style-23″ align=”left” author_name=”Charles Kuralt” author_job=”Charles Kuralt” author_avatar=”http://demo.betterstudio.com/publisher/trender-mag/wp-content/uploads/sites/482/2018/12/quotr.png”]

Pro-tip: This book is designed to be read in sections, so you can start with what’s most important to you (even if that’s not on page one) and then go back and read the rest if you’d like.
If you’re familiar with Brené Brown, you’re might be wondering what a book about vulnerability has to do with this question. Before taking action, you’ll want to explore.

The other is that people genuinely don’t have confidence in the vision for your company. Whatever the reason, as a member of HR this will likely be a sensitive conversation to have with your leadership. It’s also likely a topic that employees may not feel fully comfortable discussing openly. By focusing on vulnerability as a strength, Daring Greatly provides a foundation for those tough conversations. If you were to ask most organizational leaders what’s important to them, quality and improvement would probably be high on the list. So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Sometimes leaders get so caught up in ambitious goals and condensed timing that they forget that people are, well, people. Dr. Dutton and Dr. Worline take over two decades of research to demonstrate the value of compassion to the individual and to the organization. They provide clear recommendations for how (regardless of who we are) we can foster an authentically compassionate workplace both as individuals and through organizational design.

In his “Golden Circle” framework, Sinek shares that when great leaders communicate inspiring and influential visions, they don’t start with the “what” or the “how,” they start with the WHY. They articulate the underlying shared belief or values that drives their message, and in doing so are able to motivate the rest of us along the way. Even if you’re familiar with Sinek’s work, this is a skill that’s easier said than done. The book provides a clean and simple framework that you can share with the rest of your team.

So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Ricki Lake’s New Documentary Weed the People Shows Benefits of Cannabis

Jenner often marks major holidays with limited edition makeup launches. This past mother’s day, she let momager Kris Jenner take over the brand to release a capsule …

In our previous article, Insights from Culture Amp’s 2018 Benchmarks, we shared the top five questions that were drivers of employee engagement across all of our customers. If you’re a People Geek like us, you’re probably hungry to learn more about what you can do to move the needle forward in these key areas. First, you can check out the in-platform inspiration engine for real-world examples that companies have seen success with. We share a few of these inspirations in, Three research-backed ways to improve employee engagement. If you’re looking for a deeper dive, there are great books by esteemed researchers that provide additional inspiration for action. Here are five inspiring books to help you improve employee engagement, based on the top five questions that drive employee engagement.

Many organizations view people development and business growth as forces pulling in opposite directions. This book profiles three “Deliberately Developmental Organizations” (Next Jump, Decurion, and Bridgewater) where development of their people isn’t separate from business growth, it’s a fundamental driver of business growth. The authors provide research-backed frameworks and tactical ideas for how you can transform your own organization into one where development is in your organizational DNA.

[bs-quote quote=”The everyday kindness of the back roads more than makes up for the acts of greed in the headlines. ” style=”style-23″ align=”left” author_name=”Charles Kuralt” author_job=”Charles Kuralt” author_avatar=”http://demo.betterstudio.com/publisher/trender-mag/wp-content/uploads/sites/482/2018/12/quotr.png”]

Pro-tip: This book is designed to be read in sections, so you can start with what’s most important to you (even if that’s not on page one) and then go back and read the rest if you’d like.
If you’re familiar with Brené Brown, you’re might be wondering what a book about vulnerability has to do with this question. Before taking action, you’ll want to explore.

The other is that people genuinely don’t have confidence in the vision for your company. Whatever the reason, as a member of HR this will likely be a sensitive conversation to have with your leadership. It’s also likely a topic that employees may not feel fully comfortable discussing openly. By focusing on vulnerability as a strength, Daring Greatly provides a foundation for those tough conversations. If you were to ask most organizational leaders what’s important to them, quality and improvement would probably be high on the list. So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.

Sometimes leaders get so caught up in ambitious goals and condensed timing that they forget that people are, well, people. Dr. Dutton and Dr. Worline take over two decades of research to demonstrate the value of compassion to the individual and to the organization. They provide clear recommendations for how (regardless of who we are) we can foster an authentically compassionate workplace both as individuals and through organizational design.

In his “Golden Circle” framework, Sinek shares that when great leaders communicate inspiring and influential visions, they don’t start with the “what” or the “how,” they start with the WHY. They articulate the underlying shared belief or values that drives their message, and in doing so are able to motivate the rest of us along the way. Even if you’re familiar with Sinek’s work, this is a skill that’s easier said than done. The book provides a clean and simple framework that you can share with the rest of your team.

So why don’t your employees feel the same way? One potential reason is a lack of alignment in organizational priorities. Based on his extensive experience consulting with Google and other top-tier organizations, venture capitalist John Doer (Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers) shares a roadmap for how to build OKRs (Objectives & Key Results) to create that alignment from top-to-bottom and bottom-to-top.