Written on February 11, 2011
Exploring the relationship between different faiths and religions is a confusing exercise. Each religion and its followers often claim to follow the one true faith, the one pathway to salvation that exists
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Written on January 21, 2011
A great deal of things seem to be slowing down and returning to their roots these days. A new generation is rediscovering a lot of the artistry that was lost to the fast-paced technological revolution.
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Written on November 11, 2010
Train stations often get a bad rep, but our very own London St Pancras International turns out to be something of a sparkling diamond in the rough, as Corinne of the discerning foodie travel blog Gourmantic reports.
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Written on November 4, 2010
Chancellor Angela Merkel recently declared that Germany’s experiment with multiculturalism had “utterly failed.”
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Written on September 9, 2010
I am not a linguist, so when people find out that I am conversant in five foreign languages (French, Estonian, Czech, Russian, and Spanish) – most of which I’ve picked up on the fly instead of through formal study – they often ask me how I do it.
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Written on August 28, 2010
For the most part, my life in Cambodia is not nearly as “exotic” as people living in cities like Chicago and Cleveland might think it is. I ride my bike around our small town, I work in an office with cement walls
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Written on August 27, 2010
Of all the English stereotypes, the obsession with tea drinking is perhaps the most accurate and what better way to get a first-hand experience for English culture than by joining in the traditional Afternoon Tea ritual when the clock strikes 4 o’clock.
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Written on August 2, 2010
Far away from the humdrum sights you’ll encounter on an average bus tour in the U.S. are some seriously offbeat attractions you won’t find anywhere else.
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At the turn of the 20th century racial segregation became prominent in South Africa and the history of community removals and marginalisation had begun.
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During my recent stay in Miami I decided to take my travel networking offline. How? With the oldest trick in the book. It goes a little something like this…
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Category Archives: Cultural
Cultural
Why there cannot be just one true faith
Exploring the relationship between different faiths and religions is a confusing exercise. Each religion and its followers often claim to follow the one true faith, the one pathway to salvation that exists
Continue Reading »
The slow photography movement
A great deal of things seem to be slowing down and returning to their roots these days. A new generation is rediscovering a lot of the artistry that was lost to the fast-paced technological revolution.
Continue Reading »
Trains, Art and Eateries at London’s St Pancras Station
Train stations often get a bad rep, but our very own London St Pancras International turns out to be something of a sparkling diamond in the rough, as Corinne of the discerning foodie travel blog Gourmantic reports.
Continue Reading »
Berlin cheap eats: Top 10 under 5 euros
Chancellor Angela Merkel recently declared that Germany’s experiment with multiculturalism had “utterly failed.”
Continue Reading »
7 Tips for learning foreign languages on the road
I am not a linguist, so when people find out that I am conversant in five foreign languages (French, Estonian, Czech, Russian, and Spanish) – most of which I’ve picked up on the fly instead of through formal study – they often ask me how I do it.
Continue Reading »
A prostitute stole my cell phone
For the most part, my life in Cambodia is not nearly as “exotic” as people living in cities like Chicago and Cleveland might think it is. I ride my bike around our small town, I work in an office with cement walls
Continue Reading »
Afternoon Tea – A traditional English experience
Of all the English stereotypes, the obsession with tea drinking is perhaps the most accurate and what better way to get a first-hand experience for English culture than by joining in the traditional Afternoon Tea ritual when the clock strikes 4 o’clock.
Continue Reading »
Land of the free, home of the weird
Far away from the humdrum sights you’ll encounter on an average bus tour in the U.S. are some seriously offbeat attractions you won’t find anywhere else.
Continue Reading »
Experiencing the Townships in South Africa
At the turn of the 20th century racial segregation became prominent in South Africa and the history of community removals and marginalisation had begun.
Continue Reading »
Offline networking: tips for travelling solo
During my recent stay in Miami I decided to take my travel networking offline. How? With the oldest trick in the book. It goes a little something like this…
Continue Reading »
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