Tuesday, August 18, 2009

according to legend

1. According to legend, an Ethiopian goatherd saw his goats munching on coffee cherries. He did the same and was running along happily too. Coffee turned into a world wide success from a regular beverage of an African tribesman. Many countries depend on coffee trade for income and for living. In 1975 in brazil nearly half the coffee trees were gone due to frost. which created impact on the price, it happened again in 1979.it took some time to replace it all.

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

summary: mock exam

Lukas family was worried because he was missing. That night Anna had to go fetch the men as she knows the footpaths and she knows what to do when there is bigfeet. While
Malie, Sofie and Elias searched out for Lukas until dark. The was fog was clearing, Martiens assigned everyone into different areas to search. Martiens also asked Malie, and Sofie to start a big fire in the middle of the Island; so Lukas would see the glow and come back . Next morning, the fog was gone. Sofie's husband, informed the forester about the missing child. Some woodcutters including a constable came from the village to help. In the evening they heard the constable calling for help and had to go help him out. When he was back he told everyone there that the child can no longer be alive. After the search on the eighth day, Martiens had accepted the fact.

150 WORDS

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Tear Drops (DRAFT 6)

Amala kept hearing the shrill sounds of her mother calling her from across the field. It was time for lunch and she had to help her mother deliver food to her father who worked at the rubber plantation. Amala’mother would have completed packing food for her husband and her twin elder sons, Aryan and Chelvam. Amala was still lying down on the puffy grass patch chewing on dried grass. While enjoying the breezy wind, the Amala’s attention was captivated by every word of Parvati granny, one of the village grannies who often talked about the tales of Ceylon, an olden term used for Sri Lanka.

Amala got up, brushing away dried grass from her light floral skirt which Mrs. Horns, the teacher from England, presented her with. Amala waved goodbye to Parvati granny and sprinted away. She was gasping for breath when she reached her two roomed house shabbily built at the outskirts of the rubber plantation.

Seeing Amala, her younger brother Ayan eight that year, shouted out,

“Akka, where were you? Mother has been looking for you for a long time”. He stressed loudly on the “long” word, mischievously.

Amala shushed him and tapped his rear end and went inside quietly. Her exhausted mother was busily steaming banana cuisine to sell in the evening market. Amala grinned at her mother and then ran out of the house carrying the food. She walked along to the rubber plantation to serve the men, their lunch of sweet potato porridge and salted fish with small raw onions.

Amala’s hope was to follow Mrs. Horns to Britain soon as she mentioned that Amala can live with her while studying to become a teacher there. Amala has been living with high hopes with that in mind ever since.

Two years passed by and it was 1950, Amala woke up with a jolt as the baby woke her up abruptly. She carried the baby tenderly and slowly began to feed her. Thripshika, the four month old, who looked up at her mother with innocent eyes and Amala looked fondly at her daughter. She looked at her husband who was lying beside her, lost to the world after a long day at the rubber plantation. Amala’s mind went to Mrs. Horns whom she sent off at the harbour a year ago, with her dreams washed off by the ship liner as the teacher slowly started to dissappear further away from her view. Amala’s mother died of jaundice which changed her life thouroughly. Slowly starting to adapt to the new family life, Amala, like the other million girls in Sri Lanka, let go of her dreams and moulded into one of them. Amala put her baby back to sleep and found her eyes drooping into darkness.


Amongst the political commotion, Amala’s siblings and daughter started growing up and she did multiple jobs to cope so that she can help to assist her husband whose rubber plantation job went downhill due to the discrimination efforts of the Sinhalese people.

As active demonstrators, Amala’s husband and brothers were often arrested by the Sinhalese police and were thrown into prison for long weeks. Amala strived to keep her eight year old daughter from starving and slogged hard as a maid, working at rich people’s houses. Thripshika grew up like her mother in every senses Amala realized, as the years went past. When Thripshika sat for her SATS, Amala skived and saved for her daughter’s studies but the Sinhalese politic corruptions made Thripshika end her studies abruptly.

The government declared a state of emergency in May 1958 and relocated more than 25,000 Tamil refugees from Sinhalese areas to Tamil areas in the north. Amala relocated her house three times to escape the Sinhalese tortures which took her father’s life on one fateful night.

That was when Thripshika fall in love with a Sinhalese navy officer for which her whole family showed disapproval except for her mother. Amala got Thripshika married off to Veer Pritam, the Sinhalese navy officer on a bright Sunday morning in the outskirts of their village temple and watched them board the ship liner and again she waved her hands to a loved one till they disappeared from her eyes.
Amala was delighted to find that Thripshika had entered the local university in India and had started to study literature like she always wanted to. In July 1983, communal riots in Sri Lanka erupted which took Amala’s twin brothers and her husband’s lives.

Amala’s son-in-law came to Sri Lanka with Thripshika and this time, Amala crossed the border, and as she went up the ship liner, with her daughter, as her tears dropping heavily, she felt as a sixteen year old girl once again, who kept waving her hand as the liner cruised away and this time,her motherland slowly started to disappear from her view, with her dreams lefts at the shores of Sri Lanka.

Tear Drops (Draft 5)

Amala kept hearing the shrill sounds of her mother calling her from across the field. It was time for lunch and she had to help her mother deliver food to her father who worked at the rubber plantation. Amala’mother would have completed packing food for her husband and her twin elder sons, Aryan and Chelvam. Amala was still lying down on the puffy grass patch chewing on dried grass. While enjoying the breezy wind, the Amala’s attention was captivated by every word of Parvati granny, one of the village grannies who often talked about the tales of Ceylon, an olden term used for Sri Lanka.

Amala got up, brushing away dried grass from her light floral skirt and the checkered button shirt which Mrs. Horns, the teacher from England, presented her with. Amala said a quick bye to Parvati granny and sprinted away.
She found herself gasping for breath when she reached her two roomed house standing shabbily along the outskirts of the rubber plantation. Seeing Amala, her younger brother Ayan eight that year, shouted out,
“Akka, where were you? Mother has been looking for you for a long time”. He stressed loudly on the “long” word, mischievously.
Amala shushed him and tapped his rear end and went inside quietly. Her exhausted mother was busily steaming banana cuisine to sell in the evening market. Amala grinned at her mother and then ran out of the house carrying the food in both hands. She walked along to the rubber plantation to serve her the men, their lunch of sweet potato porridge and salted fish with small raw onions.
Amala was hoping that Mrs. Horns will bring her to Britain soon as she mentioned that Amala can live with her while studying to become a teacher. Amala has been living with high hopes with that in mind.
It was the year 1950, Amala woke up with a jolt as the baby woke her up abruptly. She carried the baby tenderly and slowly began to feed her. Thripshika, the four month old, looked up at her mother with innocent eyes and Amala felt herself tearing. She looked at her husband who was lying down beside her lost to the world after a long dayt at the rubber plantation. Amala’s mind went to Mrs. Horns whom she sent off at the harbour a year ago, with her dreams washed off by the ship liner as the teacher slowly started to dissappear further away from her view. Amala’s mother died of jaundice which changed her life thouroughly. Slowly starting to adapt to the new family life, Amala, just as the other million girls in Sri Lanka, let go of her dreams and moulded into one of them and Amala put her baby back to sleep and found her eyes drooping into darkness.



Amongst the political commotion, Amala’s siblings and daughter started growing up and she did multiple jobs to cope so that she can help to assist her husband whose rubber plantation work went downhill due to the discrimination efforts of the Sinhalese people.
As active demonstrators, Amala’s husband and brothers were often arrested by the Sinhalese police and were thrown into prison for long weeks. Amala ended striving to keep her eight year old daughter from starving and managed to feed her. Thripshika was growing up to be exactly like her mother in every sense as Amala realized as the years went past. When Thripshika sat for her SATS, Amala skived and saved for her daughter’s studies but the Sinhalese politic corruptions made Thripshika end her studies abruptly.
The government declared a state of emergency in May 1958 and relocated more than 25,000 Tamil refugees from Sinhalese areas to Tamil areas in the north. Amala relocated her house three times to escape the Sinhalese tortures which took her father’s life on one fateful night.
That was when Thripshika fall in love with a Sinhalese navy officer in which her whole family except for Amala showed disapproval. Amala got Thripshika married off to Veer Pritam, the Sinhalese navy officer on a bright Sunday morning in the outskirts town temple and watched them board the ship liner and again she waved her hands to a loved one till they disappeared from her eyes.
Amala was delighted to find that Thripshika had entered the local university in India and had started to study literature like she always wanted to. In July 1983, communal riots in Sri Lanka erupted which took Amala’s twin brothers and her husband’s lives.
Amala’s son-in-law came to Sri Lanka with Thripshika and this time, Amala crossed the border, and as she went up the ship liner, with her daughter, she felt herself as the sixteen year old girl once again who kept waving her hand as the liner cruised away and her motherland slowly started to disappear as the liner reached the wide ocean, this time with her dreams lefts at the shores of her Motherland, Sri Lanka.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Tear Drops(DRAFT4)

Amala kept hearing the shrill sounds of her mother calling her name far across from the field. It was time for lunch and she had to help her mother deliver food to her father who worked at the rubber plantation. Amala’mother would have finished packing food for her husband and her twin elder sons, Aryan and Chelvam. Amala was still lying down on the puffy grass patch chewing on dried grass. While enjoying the breezy wind, the Amala’s attention was again captivated by every word of Parvati granny’s of the tales of Ceylon, the olden term used for Sri Lanka.

Amala got up, brushing away dried grass from her light floral skirt which Mrs. Horns, the teacher from England, presented her with. Amala said a quick bye to Parvati granny and sprinted away.
She found herself gasping for breath when she reached her two roomed house standing shabbily along the outskirts of the rubber plantation. Seeing Amala, her younger brother Ayan eight that year, shouted out,
“Akka, where were you? Mother has been looking for you for a long time”. He stressed loudly on the “long” word, mischievously.
Amala shushed him and tapped his rear end and went inside quietly. Her exhausted mother was busily steaming banana cuisine to sell in the evening market. Amala ran out of the house carrying the food in both hands. She walked along to the rubber plantation to serve her the men, their lunch of sweet potato porridge and salted fish with small raw onions.
Amala was hoping that Mrs. Horns will bring her to Britain soon as she mentioned that Amala can live with her while studying to become a teacher. Amala has been living with high hopes with that in mind.
It was the year 1950, Amala woke up with a jolt as the baby woke her up abruptly. She carried the baby tenderly and slowly began to feed her. Thripshika, the four month old, looked up at her mother with innocent eyes and Amala felt herself tearing. She looked at her husband who was lying down beside her lost to the world after a long day at the rubber plantation. Amala’s mind went to Mrs. Horns whom she sent off at the harbour a year ago, with her dreams washed off by the ship liner as the teacher slowly started to dissappear further away from her view. Amala’s mother died of jaundice which changed her life thouroughly. Slowly starting to adapt to the new family life, Amala, just as the other million girls in Sri Lanka, let go of her dreams and moulded into one of them and Amala put her baby back to sleep and found her eyes drooping into darkness.



Amongst the political commotion, Amala’s siblings and daughter started growing up and she did multiple jobs to cope so that she can help to assist her husband whose rubber plantation work went downhill due to the discrimination efforts of the Sinhalese people.
As active demonstrators, Amala’s husband and brothers were often arrested by the Sinhalese police and were thrown into prison for long weeks. Amala ended striving to keep her eight year old daughter from starving and managed to feed her. Thripshika was growing up to be exactly like her mother in every sense as Amala realized as the years went past. When Thripshika sat for her SATS, Amala skived and saved for her daughter’s studies but the Sinhalese politic corruptions made Thripshika end her studies abruptly.
After government declared a state of emergency in 1958, Amala relocated her house three times to escape the Sinhalese tortures which took her father’s life on one fateful night.
That was when Thripshika fall in love with a Sinhalese navy officer in which her whole family except for Amala showed disapproval. Amala got Thripshika married off to Veer Pritam, the Sinhalese navy officer on a bright Sunday morning in the outskirts town temple and watched them board the ship liner and again she waved her hands to a loved one till they disappeared from her eyes.
Amala was delighted to find that Thripshika had entered the local university in India and had started to study literature like she always wanted to. In July 1983, communal riots in Sri Lanka erupted which took Amala’s twin brothers and her husband’s lives.
Amala’s son-in-law came to Sri Lanka with Thripshika and this time, Amala crossed the border, and as she went up the ship liner, with her daughter, she felt herself as the sixteen year old girl once again who kept waving her hand as the liner cruised away and her motherland slowly started to disappear as the liner reached the wide ocean, this time with her dreams lefts at the shores of her Motherland, Sri Lanka.

Tear Drops(draft 3)

Amala kept hearing the shrill sounds of her mother calling her name far across from the field. It was time for lunch and she had to help her mother deliver food to her father who worked at the rubber plantation. Amala’mother would have finished packing food for her husband and her twin elder sons, Aryan and Chelvam. Amala was still lying down on the puffy grass patch chewing on dried grass. While enjoying the breezy wind, the Amala’s attention was again captivated by every word of Parvati granny’s of the tales of Ceylon, the olden term used for Sri Lanka.

Amala got up, brushing away dried grass from her light floral skirt which Mrs. Horns, the teacher from England, presented her with. Amala said a quick bye to Parvati granny and sprinted away.
She found herself gasping for breath when she reached her two roomed house standing shabbily along the outskirts of the rubber plantation. Seeing Amala, her younger brother Ayan eight that year, shouted out,
“Akka, where were you? Mother has been looking for you for a long time”. He stressed loudly on the “long” word, mischievously.
Amala shushed him and tapped his rear end and went inside quietly. Her exhausted mother was busily steaming banana cuisine to sell in the evening market. Amala ran out of the house carrying the food in both hands. She walked along to the rubber plantation to serve her the men, their lunch of sweet potato porridge and salted fish with small raw onions.
Amala was hoping that Mrs. Horns will bring her to Britain soon as she mentioned that Amala can live with her while studying to become a teacher. Amala has been living with high hopes with that in mind.
It was the year 1950, Amala woke up with a jolt as the baby woke her up abruptly. She carried the baby tenderly and slowly began to feed her. Thripshika, the four month old, looked up at her mother with innocent eyes and Amala felt herself tearing. She looked at her husband who was lying down beside her lost to the world after a long dayt at the rubber plantation. Amala’s mind went to Mrs. Horns whom she sent off at the harbour a year ago, with her dreams washed off by the ship liner as the teacher slowly started to dissappear further away from her view. Amala’s mother died of jaundice which changed her life thouroughly. Slowly starting to adapt to the new family life, Amala, just as the other million girls in Sri Lanka, let go of her dreams and moulded into one of them and Amala put her baby back to sleep and found her eyes drooping into darkness.



Amongst the political commotion, Amala’s siblings and daughter started growing up and she did multiple jobs to cope so that she can help to assist her husband whose rubber plantation work went downhill due to the discrimination efforts of the Sinhalese people.
As active demonstrators, Amala’s husband and brothers were often arrested by the Sinhalese police and were thrown into prison for long weeks. Amala ended striving to keep her eight year old daughter from starving and managed to feed her. Thripshika was growing up to be exactly like her mother in every sense as Amala realized as the years went past. When Thripshika sat for her SATS, Amala skived and saved for her daughter’s studies but the Sinhalese politic corruptions made Thripshika end her studies abruptly.
The government declared a state of emergency in May 1958 and relocated more than 25,000 Tamil refugees from Sinhalese areas to Tamil areas in the north. Amala relocated her house three times to escape the Sinhalese tortures which took her father’s life on one fateful night.
That was when Thripshika fall in love with a Sinhalese navy officer in which her whole family except for Amala showed disapproval. Amala got Thripshika married off to Veer Pritam, the Sinhalese navy officer on a bright Sunday morning in the outskirts town temple and watched them board the ship liner and again she waved her hands to a loved one till they disappeared from her eyes.
Amala was delighted to find that Thripshika had entered the local university in India and had started to study literature like she always wanted to. In July 1983, communal riots in Sri Lanka erupted which took Amala’s twin brothers and her husband’s lives.
Amala’s son-in-law came to Sri Lanka with Thripshika and this time, Amala crossed the border, and as she went up the ship liner, with her daughter, she felt herself as the sixteen year old girl once again who kept waving her hand as the liner cruised away and her motherland slowly started to disappear as the liner reached the wide ocean, this time with her dreams lefts at the shores of her Motherland, Sri Lanka.

Tear Drops(draft2)

Amala kept hearing the shrill sounds of her mother calling her name far across from the field. It was time for lunch and she had to help her mother deliver food to her father who worked at the rubber plantation. Amala’mother would have finished packing food for her husband and her twin elder sons, Aryan and Chelvam. Amala was still lying down on the puffy grass patch chewing on dried grass. While enjoying the breezy wind, the Amala’s attention was again captivated by every word of Parvati granny’s of the tales of Ceylon, the olden term used for Sri Lanka.

Amala got up, brushing away dried grass from her light floral skirt and the checkered button shirt which Mrs. Horns, the teacher from England, presented her with. Amala said a quick bye to Parvati granny and sprinted away.
She found herself gasping for breath when she reached her two roomed house standing shabbily along the outskirts of the rubber plantation. Seeing Amala, her younger brother Ayan eight that year, shouted out,
“Akka, where were you? Mother has been looking for you for a long time”. He stressed loudly on the “long” word, mischievously.
Amala shushed him and tapped his rear end and went inside quietly. Her exhausted mother was busily steaming banana cuisine to sell in the evening market. Amala ran out of the house carrying the food in both hands. She walked along to the rubber plantation to serve her the men, their lunch of sweet potato porridge and salted fish with small raw onions.
Amala was hoping that Mrs. Horns will bring her to Britain soon as she mentioned that Amala can live with her while studying to become a teacher. Amala has been living with high hopes with that in mind.
It was the year 1950, Amala woke up with a jolt as the baby woke her up abruptly. She carried the baby tenderly and slowly began to feed her. Thripshika, the four month old, looked up at her mother with innocent eyes and Amala felt herself tearing. She looked at her husband who was lying down beside her lost to the world after a long dayt at the rubber plantation. Amala’s mind went to Mrs. Horns whom she sent off at the harbour a year ago, with her dreams washed off by the ship liner as the teacher slowly started to dissappear further away from her view. Amala’s mother died of jaundice which changed her life thouroughly. Slowly starting to adapt to the new family life, Amala, just as the other million girls in Sri Lanka, let go of her dreams and moulded into one of them and Amala put her baby back to sleep and found her eyes drooping into darkness.



Amongst the political commotion, Amala’s siblings and daughter started growing up and she did multiple jobs to cope so that she can help to assist her husband whose rubber plantation work went downhill due to the discrimination efforts of the Sinhalese people.
As active demonstrators, Amala’s husband and brothers were often arrested by the Sinhalese police and were thrown into prison for long weeks. Amala ended striving to keep her eight year old daughter from starving and managed to feed her. Thripshika was growing up to be exactly like her mother in every sense as Amala realized as the years went past. When Thripshika sat for her SATS, Amala skived and saved for her daughter’s studies but the Sinhalese politic corruptions made Thripshika end her studies abruptly.
The government declared a state of emergency in May 1958 and relocated more than 25,000 Tamil refugees from Sinhalese areas to Tamil areas in the north. Amala relocated her house three times to escape the Sinhalese tortures which took her father’s life on one fateful night.
That was when Thripshika fall in love with a Sinhalese navy officer in which her whole family except for Amala showed disapproval. Amala got Thripshika married off to Veer Pritam, the Sinhalese navy officer on a bright Sunday morning in the outskirts town temple and watched them board the ship liner and again she waved her hands to a loved one till they disappeared from her eyes.
Amala was delighted to find that Thripshika had entered the local university in India and had started to study literature like she always wanted to. In July 1983, communal riots in Sri Lanka erupted which took Amala’s twin brothers and her husband’s lives.
Amala’s son-in-law came to Sri Lanka with Thripshika and this time, Amala crossed the border, and as she went up the ship liner, with her daughter, she felt herself as the sixteen year old girl once again who kept waving her hand as the liner cruised away and her motherland slowly started to disappear as the liner reached the wide ocean, this time with her dreams lefts at the shores of her Motherland, Sri Lanka.