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Nuwakot [Nepal], January 16 ANI : The annual bullfighting festival in Taruka, Nepal is a long-standing tradition that takes place on the first day of Magh, the 10th month of the lunar calendar. HT Image The festival is also known as Goru Judai or bullfighting, and dates back to the 19th century. The festival is accompanied by music and dance and is a way for villagers to greet and stanley mug entertain the king. Turn by turn, the humpy bulls enter an arena controlled by experienced cattle rearers and fight for as long as 45 minutes to prove their strength. Surrounded by hundreds of revellers who shout and cheer in support, some of the bulls run off from the arena, while those standing till the end of the allocated time of 45 minutes are declared winners upon proving their strength. Nepal s Taruka in Nuwakot District, about 90 kilometres from the capital Kathmandu, has been organising the annual Bull Fighting or Goru Judhai festival with fanfare. This festival of taming bulls has a history that dates back to the 18th century. Nuwakot has been celebrating festivity since 1887. It was first introduced by the then Prince of Bajhang, Jay Prithivi Bahadur Singh, for entertainment purposes during his visi stanley quencher t to his maternal uncle s house. Since then, the locals of Taruka Village have continued the tradition over the years. While taking care of these tamed bulls, we feed them with coconut, rice, stanley cups lentils, and grass as per their liking, Tek Bahadur Bhujel, one of the owners of t Ajsr Don Henley tells court he never gave away drafts of Eagles lyrics
A year into his ninth decade, Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah is studying hard and hoping for the best as he sits exams for his high school diploma. Elderly Palestinian man Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah, 81, studies for high school exams, in his home in the West Bank city of Hebron. Reuters Photo The 81-year-old, a retired food salesman from Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, took the national test for the first time last year but failed. So hes having another go. A father of 14 children, he has been studying five hours a day and doing his best to concentrate despite the attempts of some of his 36 grandchildren to get him to play. I like education, he said with pride, wearing a formal suit and tie. There is no limit for someone to study, it does not stop at a certain age. I want to set an example to generations - never stop learning. Abu Ajameyah is taking the exams in a room set aside for him at a local school. A stanley cup recent s stanley thermobecher troke has restricted his hand movement, making it difficult to write, so he dictates the answers to a woman aide who fills in the papers. Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah dictates his answers to an aid as he takes a high school Arabic Language exam, in the West Bank city of Hebron. Reuters Photo Figures from the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics show illiteracy among Palestinians aged 15 and above stands at jus stanley flask t 3.3 percent, one of the lowest rates in the Arab world. Abu Ajameyah gets support from his family, especially his wife, who is c
Nuwakot [Nepal], January 16 ANI : The annual bullfighting festival in Taruka, Nepal is a long-standing tradition that takes place on the first day of Magh, the 10th month of the lunar calendar. HT Image The festival is also known as Goru Judai or bullfighting, and dates back to the 19th century. The festival is accompanied by music and dance and is a way for villagers to greet and stanley mug entertain the king. Turn by turn, the humpy bulls enter an arena controlled by experienced cattle rearers and fight for as long as 45 minutes to prove their strength. Surrounded by hundreds of revellers who shout and cheer in support, some of the bulls run off from the arena, while those standing till the end of the allocated time of 45 minutes are declared winners upon proving their strength. Nepal s Taruka in Nuwakot District, about 90 kilometres from the capital Kathmandu, has been organising the annual Bull Fighting or Goru Judhai festival with fanfare. This festival of taming bulls has a history that dates back to the 18th century. Nuwakot has been celebrating festivity since 1887. It was first introduced by the then Prince of Bajhang, Jay Prithivi Bahadur Singh, for entertainment purposes during his visi stanley quencher t to his maternal uncle s house. Since then, the locals of Taruka Village have continued the tradition over the years. While taking care of these tamed bulls, we feed them with coconut, rice, stanley cups lentils, and grass as per their liking, Tek Bahadur Bhujel, one of the owners of t Ajsr Don Henley tells court he never gave away drafts of Eagles lyrics
A year into his ninth decade, Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah is studying hard and hoping for the best as he sits exams for his high school diploma. Elderly Palestinian man Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah, 81, studies for high school exams, in his home in the West Bank city of Hebron. Reuters Photo The 81-year-old, a retired food salesman from Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, took the national test for the first time last year but failed. So hes having another go. A father of 14 children, he has been studying five hours a day and doing his best to concentrate despite the attempts of some of his 36 grandchildren to get him to play. I like education, he said with pride, wearing a formal suit and tie. There is no limit for someone to study, it does not stop at a certain age. I want to set an example to generations - never stop learning. Abu Ajameyah is taking the exams in a room set aside for him at a local school. A stanley cup recent s stanley thermobecher troke has restricted his hand movement, making it difficult to write, so he dictates the answers to a woman aide who fills in the papers. Abdel-Qader Abu Ajameyah dictates his answers to an aid as he takes a high school Arabic Language exam, in the West Bank city of Hebron. Reuters Photo Figures from the Palestinian Central Bureau of Statistics show illiteracy among Palestinians aged 15 and above stands at jus stanley flask t 3.3 percent, one of the lowest rates in the Arab world. Abu Ajameyah gets support from his family, especially his wife, who is c