harvest time

Sunday, September 24, 2006

it's truth time


this piece of news shows that nobody even the strongest power can hide the TRUTH!

BIG UP all the TRUTH FIGHTERS ALL AROUND THE WORLD whether they be in hi-rise buildings, pentagon, newspapers, street corners or inna di white house !


http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/5375064.stm

BBC
Last Updated:
Sunday, 24 September 2006, 10:17 GMT 11:17 UK



US report says Iraq fuels terror
Iraqi women mourning the loss of a relative
The violence in Iraq shows little sign of abating

The New York Times newspaper has published what it says are the findings of a classified US intelligence paper on the effects of the Iraq war.

The document reportedly blames the conflict for increasing the threat of terrorism and helping fuel Islamic radicalism worldwide.

Such a conclusion is at odds with the White House's persistent claim that going to war has made the world safer.

The paper has not seen the report, but spoke to people familiar with it.

Comprehensive study

The BBC's defence correspondent Rob Watson says this is not the first time the US intelligence community has said that the war in Iraq has made the problem of Islamist extremism worse.

Indeed it had warned that might happen even before the US-led invasion.

Pakistan man waving Osama Bin Laden poster
Many have been inspired by al-Qaeda chief Osama Bin Laden
But, our correspondent says, this latest finding, known as a National Intelligence Estimate, is the most comprehensive report yet, based on the considered analysis of all 16 of America's intelligence agencies.

According to the New York Times, which has spoken to officials who have either read it, or been involved in drafting it, the report says the invasion and occupation of Iraq has spawned a new generation of Islamic radicalism that has spread across the globe.

It also warns that Islamic militants who have fought in Iraq could foment radicalism and violence when they return to their home countries, much as returning Jihadis did after the war against the Soviet Union in Afghanistan in the 1980s.

Al-Qaeda threat

It reportedly concludes that, while al-Qaeda may have been weakened since the 11 September 2001 attacks, the radical Islamic movement worldwide has strengthened with the formation of new groups and cells who are inspired by Osama Bin Laden, but not under his direct control.

The report will make uncomfortable reading at the White House, our correspondent says. In a series of recent speeches, President George W Bush has been portraying the war in Iraq as the central front in the war on terrorism.

This report implies while that may be true, that it is a front of America's own making.

In the past, Mr Bush has dismissed such reasoning by arguing that Islamic militants had hated the US long before it invaded Iraq, or even Afghanistan for that matter.

wonder why .. !

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5375144.stm


BBC
Last Updated: Sunday, 24 September 2006, 10:20 GMT 11:20 UK


Venezuela rejects US apologies

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro (recent picture)
Mr Maduro says his detention was a breach of international law
Venezuela has made a formal complaint to the US authorities and the United Nations after its foreign minister was detained at a New York airport.

The US state department has apologised to Nicolas Maduro who was detained for 90 minutes at New York's JFK airport as he travelled home.

He had been attending this week's UN General Assembly meeting.

He said he was verbally abused and strip-searched in what he said was a "flagrant breach of international law".

President Hugo Chavez described Mr Maduro's detention as a provocation.

Our correspondent Pascale Harter says the apology has done little to ease the tense relations between the two countries.

Mr Maduro said the US apology was not enough.

"We were detained during an hour and a half, threatened by police with being beaten," he told reporters at Venezuela's mission to the UN. "We hold the US government responsible."

US authorities initially denied Mr Maduro had been detained and his documents seized, saying he had simply been asked to go through a second security screening.

The US state department later confirmed the incident had taken place and apologised.

"The state department can confirm there was an incident with Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro at JFK airport in New York," a spokesman said.

"The state department regrets this incident. The United States government apologised to Foreign Minister Maduro and the Venezuelan government."

Coup questions

President Chavez earlier said Mr Maduro had been questioned about his alleged role in a failed Venezuelan coup attempt in 1992, led by Mr Chavez.

US officials said airport security had questioned him, and diplomatic security was then sent to resolve the issue.

This latest episode shows that even small difficulties between the two governments are likely to trigger full-blown diplomatic rows, says the BBC's Greg Morsbach in Caracas.

Fire getting hotta !

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5365142.stm

BBC
Last Updated: Wednesday, 20 September 2006, 21:13 GMT 22:13 UK

Chavez tells UN Bush is 'devil'
Hugo Chavez addressed the UN General Assembly
Hugo Chavez used his speech to lash at US influence


Venezuela's leader Hugo Chavez has called US President George W Bush "the devil" in a speech at the United Nations General Assembly.

"The devil came here yesterday," he said, referring to Mr Bush's speech on Tuesday. "It still smells of sulphur today," he added.

US State Department spokesman Tom Casey said it was disappointing to see a head of state speak in such a way.

Mr Chavez went on to criticise the UN system, which he said was "worthless".

The left-wing Venezuelan leader - allied to Cuba's Fidel Castro and with growing ties to fellow oil-producer Iran - has long had tense relations with the US.

UN 'worthless'

On Tuesday, Mr Bush had defended his policies on the Middle East and said democracy was gaining ground as terrorists were marginalised.

The UN system born after World War II collapsed. It's worthless
Hugo Chavez
Venezuelan President

Mr Chavez, who brandished a copy of American leftist writer Noam Chomsky's Hegemony or Survival: America's Quest for Global Dominance, said Mr Bush promoted "a false democracy of the elite" and a "democracy of bombs".

"He came here talking as if he were the owner of the world," the Venezuelan leader said.

He called for drastic reform of the UN to reduce what he called US influence.

The UN in its current form "doesn't work", he said.

"I don't think anybody in this room could defend the system," the Venezuelan leader added.

UN General Assembly in session on 20 September
The UN General Assembly is holding its 61st session

"Let's be honest. The UN system born after World War II collapsed. It's worthless."

Mr Chavez's criticism of the UN echoed Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's speech to the assembly late on Tuesday, BBC diplomatic correspondent Bridget Kendall reports from New York.

"As long as the UN Security Council is unable to act on behalf of the entire international community in a transparent, just and democratic manner, it will neither be legitimate nor effective," Mr Ahmadinejad said in a speech delivered a few hours after Mr Bush's appearance.

Afghan appeal

Wednesday's session opened with a speech by Afghan President Hamid Karzai who argued military action alone would not stop terrorism in his country.

They decapitate elderly women, blow up mosques full of worshipers and kill school-going children in indiscriminate bombings of civilian areas
Hamid Karzai
Afghan president

He called for the destruction of safe havens and elaborate networks operating in the region to recruit, train, finance, arm and deploy terrorists.

And he said the answer to defeating the drugs trade lay in international support for providing a "meaningful alternative livelihood to our farmers".

In other business at the General Assembly

  • The US and the three other members of the so-called quartet of Mid-East mediators endorsed the idea of a Palestinian national unity government
  • African Union leaders decided to extend the mandate of their peacekeeping force in Darfur until the end of the year
  • The UN was due to hold a special meeting to discuss the four-year-old crisis in Ivory Coast, divided since its civil war.

Saturday, September 16, 2006

latest news on the inappropriate remarks from missa pop

It is interesting to follow what willl evolve in pop's visit to Istanbul. Istanbul is the seat of Byzantine Orthodox Church which split with the Catholic 'pop' church in Rome in around 1050 after Iseyus Kristos -kNOWn in the Western World as Jesus Christ. Constantinople was conquered by the Turks in 1453. Since then Istanbul has been the heart of Muslim TurkIYE created by Ataturk and his hard working and peace loveing people.


-bold parts boldened by the blogger.



http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/5353208.stm

Security tight for Pope blessing
Security has been tightened in Rome ahead of Pope Benedict XVI's first public appearance since making comments deemed offensive by many Muslims.

The Pope will be under intense scrutiny as he issues Sunday's Angelus blessing.

In a speech on Tuesday he quoted a 14th Century Christian emperor who said the Prophet Muhammad had brought the world only "evil and inhuman" things.

A Vatican statement on Saturday said he was "very sorry" if his comments had offended and that he "esteems Muslims".

Insurgent 'threat'

Police are promising meticulous security checks in an extended area around Sunday's blessing at his residence at Castel Gandolfo near Rome but said they would be discreet so as not to disturb the prayers.


The Holy Father is very sorry that some passages of his speech may have sounded offensive to the sensibilities of Muslim believers
Tarcisio Bertone
Vatican secretary of state

The BBC's Christian Fraser in Rome says the Pope will be under huge diplomatic pressure and he knows that the world will be expecting a comment on the past week's events.

However, our correspondent says it is unlikely he will go further than the apology issued on Saturday.

Reading the statement, new Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone said the Pope's position on Islam was in line with Vatican teaching that the Church "esteems Muslims, who adore the only God".

"The Holy Father is very sorry that some passages of his speech may have sounded offensive to the sensibilities of Muslim believers," the statement said.


HAVE YOUR SAY
Pope Benedict probably should self-criticise Christianity's violent past before commenting on the other faith
John Lin, Illinois

The incident led Morocco to withdraw its ambassador to the Vatican, calling the comments "offensive".

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood said the apology did not go far enough and called on the pontiff to say sorry in person.

"The Vatican Secretary of State says that the Pope is sorry because his statements had been badly interpreted, but there is no bad interpretation," Abdel Moneim Abul Futuh, a senior official from the party told AFP news agency.

A statement on a web site purportedly issued by the Iraqi insurgent group, the Mujahideen Army, threatened an attack on the Vatican. The statement could not be independently authenticated.

Our correspondent says the crisis could not have come at a worse time for the Pope.

Not only is he due to visit Muslim Turkey in November but he has also recently appointed two new men to the jobs of secretary of state and head of diplomacy at the Vatican.

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said the comments had been "ugly and unfortunate" and when asked if the Pope's trip would go ahead, he said: "I wouldn't know."

Protests

In his speech at Regensburg University on Tuesday, the German-born Pope quoted Emperor Manuel II Paleologos of the Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire.

Stressing that they were not his own words, he quoted the emperor saying: "Show me just what Muhammad brought that was new and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

He also said that violence was "incompatible with the nature of God and the nature of the soul".

Reactions to the speech have come from such leaders as Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf, who said efforts to link Islam and terrorism should be clearly opposed.

Street protests have been held in Pakistan, India, Turkey and Gaza.

In the West Bank city of Nablus, two churches were firebombed on Saturday in attacks claimed by a group which said it was protesting against the Pope's remarks.

mi fella sista blogging on natural black hair

http://naturallyyoumagazine.blogspot.com/2006/09/still-stuck-on-long-hair.html

StREET RasPeKT to ALL CONCIOUSNESS BEARING FRIAND FON ALLA DI WOLRD .

LOV E AND PEACE.


ba la n S.

latest discovery about movement of people in history

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5352430.stm

basically the article says that once Britain was connected to Mainland Europe. The river flows that were created by the melting of the ice-cold ice managed to make Britain and island.

Share your view of what you thought and/or learned from this article inna di comments sektion.

SEAN PAUL - big up mi jamaika muzik meayka

sean paul has been great music fi a long time now .

DOWNLOAD SEAN PAUL SONG MY NAME AND BLESS UP DI WORLD .

Monday, September 11, 2006

anniversary of beginning of the end

today is september 11. and some people are mourning the death of about 1500 people who died that day. for me this day means something else. it is the beginning of the ultra-agressive policies of the government of the us and a.

since that day usa killed 66,000 people in iraq and afghanistan and left 4.5 million people as refugees.

these figures are based on the organization IRAQI BODY COUNT which can be found at http://www.iraqbodycount.net/


usa spent about 455 million dollars until today for the war in iraq. according to the movement "make poverty history" the amount of money required to erase the debt of underdeveloped countries in the entire world is 375 million dollars.

we, the peace and human-loving citizens of the world are sick of this massacre. it is only benefiting the already-thick pockets of the politicians and their immediate surroundings.

STOP IT USA AND BRITAIN! WE ARE SICK OF YOUR SICK WAYS !

Monday, July 31, 2006

TURKIYE not turkey

It is a big insult on our country to be called Turkey in international forums. Just cuz English-speaking people somehow likened the sound of TURKIYE to a word they already knew, Turkey is not a reason that my country should be called after a bird.

Below is a call to all Turkish people to call our country by its original name in international dealings. It is also making a call on the government to make an international announcement to stop receiving all mail sent to Turkey and receive those sent to TURKIYE. It mentions that this is what Ethiopia did - I wander when, maybe in Emperor Haile Selassie's time??- and stopped other countries calling itself Abyssinia by putting a ban on international mail sent to Abyssinia and urging people to write ETHIOPIA on their mail. TURKIYE should follow the motherland's steps on this matter!

-----

VALİLİK AÇIKLAMASI - LÜTFEN TÜM MAİL LİSTENİZE GÖNDERİN TÜM YURT DIŞI YAZIŞMALAR İÇİN VALİLİK AÇIKLAMASI "REPUBLIC OF TÜRKİYE" olmalı Turkey kelimesi Osmanlı İmparatorluğunun son zamanlarında ilk defa İngiliz kaynaklarında, biraz da alay ifade ederek kullanılmıştır. Bazı ülkeler kendilerini GREAT=BÜYÜK, ÖNEMLI - olarak nitelerken Ülkemizin bir kümes hayvanı ismi ile anılması kabul edilemez. Kelimenin iticiliği ve ülkemizi ne şekilde ifade edeceği düşünülmeden adeta ülkemizin isminin İngilizce ifadesi imiş gibi Türkler tarafından da kullanılmış ve kullanılmaktadır. Özel isimler bir başka dilde de aynı şekildedir. Bir zamanlar Habeşistan olarak bilinen ülke tüm Dünyaya adının Etiyopya olduğunu ve bundan böyle Habeşistan olarak gönderilen hiç bir postanın alınmayacağını açıklamış ve tüm dünya Etiyopya adını kullanmaya başlamıştır. Ya Türkiye !, Bir kümes hayvanının adı ile anılıyor. Uluslar arası toplantılarda ülkemizi temsil eden başta Sayın Cumhurbaşkanımız olmak üzere tüm görevlilerin önünde "HİNDİ" anlamında "TURKEY" yazıyor. Bundan rahatsız olmamak mümkün mü ? Bir başka örnek ise Hindistan. Siz hiç uluslararası bir toplantıda Hindistan diye bir kelime gördünüz mü? Aynı hata. Hindistan bu ülkeye sadece Türklerin verdiği bir isimdir. Uluslar arası isim değildir. Malezya mal mı oluyor ? diyenler de aynı şekilde. Türkiye kelimesi başka bir ülkenin dilinde başka anlama gelebilir. Bu önemli değil. Bütün dillerde tek, tek ülkemizin adının iyi anlama gelmesi gerekmez. Ancak bir de uluslararası ülke isimleri vardır. Uluslararası toplantılarda bu isim kullanılır. Türkiye'nin uluslararası toplantılarda adı İngilizlerin söylediği Turkey olarak geçiyor. Varsın İngilizler Turkey demeye devam etsin, Turchia, Turkia gibi değişik şekillerde söyleyenler var. Onlar da devam etsinler. Ancak uluslararası bir toplantıda ülkemizin adı bizim söylediğimiz şekilde Türkiye olarak geçmelidir. Diyorlar ki Türkiye kelimesinde bulunan "ü" harfi Avrupa dillerinde yokmuş, bu nedenle sorun oluyormuş. Avrupa Birliği toplantısında Türkiye delegesinin önünde Turkey=Hindi yazarken Yunanistan delegesinin önünde bırakın Latin harflerini Yunan alfabesi ile ELLAS yazıyor. Yunanlıların hiç bir harfi batı alfabesinde yok. Ülkesini ve dilini seven Yunan delegesini kutluyorum. Türk delegesine söyleyecek söz bulamıyorum.
" ASLINDA YAPILACAK ŞEY HÜKÜMETİN BİR AÇIKLAMA YAPARAK 1 YILLIK GEÇİŞ SÜRESİ SONUNDA TURKEY YAZILI HİÇ BİR POSTA'NIN KABUL EDİLMEYECEĞİNİ DÜNYAYA AÇIKLAMASIDIR. HABEŞİSTAN BÖYLE YAPTI, ETİYOPYA OLDU. BİZ BÜTÜN LOGOLARIMIZI TÜRKİYE OLARAK YAZSAK YİNE DE TURKEY DİYENLERE ENGEL OLAMAYABİLİRİZ. BU NEDENLE, ETİYOPYA'NIN YAPTIĞI GİBİ, YUKARIDA AÇIKLANAN
YOL İZLEMELİYİZ." Medyayı ve Hükümeti göreve davet edelim."Republic of Turkey = Hindi Cumhuriyeti" Bu ismi istemiyoruz."Republic of Türkiye" olmalı.
Bu kampanya sonuç alınıncaya kadar sürecektir. Elbet bir gün bu ülkenin adının Türkiye olduğu ve Turkey olarak gönderilen postaların alınmayacağı dünyaya ilan edilecektir. Uluslar arası toplantılarda Cumhurbaşkanımızın önünde Turkey (Hindi) değil "Türkiye" yazdığı günler gelecektir. Sadece eski Fotoğraflara bakarken Turkey yazısını görüp "Ne kadar duyarsız" olduğumuza şaşıracağımız günler gelecektir... siz de katılıyorsanız LÜTFEN bu mesajı olabildiğince çok dağıtın....
Melih AKGÜNGÖR
İstanbul Valiliği Protokol Müdürü

Tuesday, July 04, 2006

queen of sheba - a afrikan queen of the past

http://travel.guardian.co.uk/countries/story/0,,1811736,00.html?gusrc=rss

Mystery of an African queen


There are two versions of the legend of the Queen of Sheba - one set in Yemen and the other in Ethiopia. Catherine Arnold explores them both

Monday July 3, 2006

Sana'a, Yemen
'Time seems to have paused' ... the old city of Sana'a in Yemen is a Unesco World Heritage site. Photograph: Catherine Arnold


Inspiration for films, paintings and feminists, the Biblical story of the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon is tantalisingly brief.

"She came to Jerusalem with a very great retinue, with camels bearing spices, and very much gold, and precious stones," says the first book of Kings, chapter 10. By verse 13 she returns home. But, I often wondered, to where? In Yemen and Ethiopia apparently, anyone could tell me.

Unfortunately, they don't agree.

On a rocky plain, lapped by the sands of the Rub al-Khali - the Empty Quarter - the ancient, Southern Arabian civilisation flourished. A massive dam and complex irrigation system turned the desert around the trading town of Marib into verdant orchards and, as Yemenis insist, the home of the Queen of Sheba.

It was an orange-crested bird which, according to the Qur'an, first brought news to King Solomon of a green land in the south, beyond the desert. There a fearsome queen ruled, and she worshipped the sun. Solomon sent the bird, a hoopoe, back with a letter of invitation and Belqis, Queen of Sheba, travelled to Jerusalem.

After being put through a series of tests, she finally entered a glass hall Solomon had built specially for her. Mistaking the polished glass for a pool of water, Belqis lifted her skirts, only to bare her hairy legs to the assembled courtiers. Shamed and awed by Solomon's power, she turned to Allah.

With this story as companion, I bundle into a jeep on its way to Marib, today the main town in an oil-rich, north-eastern province of Yemen.

The Yemeni version
I never find early starts good for the imagination, still less so in a country where tea is stronger than coffee. Despite having given the world coffee - mocha takes its name from a port in southern Yemen - Yemenis brew only the outer husk of the bean, preferring to export the part that the rest of the world considers worth drinking.

Admittedly, with most of the population ruminating on qat, a mild amphetamine, they probably don't a need caffeine boost. Unfortunately, as I set off with the pink mountain dawn, I do.

The Yemeni capital, Sana'a, is one of the highest in the world at 2,200 metres, the slouching modern city corseted by a ring of barren and pockmarked mountains. The Marib road twists and turns as it plunges through grotesquely fissured clefts as though trying to shake off the mountains. The very sterility of the landscape is much of its charm; uncluttered by plants, the raw shapes of the mountain resolve into fleeting figures and imaginary beasts as the car whizzes past.

Marib: Yemen's palace ruins
By the time I reach Marib, the road has dropped over 1,000 meters to the very edge of the Empty Quarter. This is real desert: sand dunes, black, basalt lava flows, and scrub.

With the temperature rising and no sign of a tourist trail, I begin to wish the Queen of Sheba had chosen somewhere more temperate to live. And then, over the crest of a sand dune, in the midst of many more, the ruins of her palace suddenly appear.

Carved antelope curl across smooth stones, cavorting round runic inscriptions, and on the central dais, five austere pillars drop fat, black-fingered shadows over the yellowed stone and sand. Restive tribes and a shortage of funds have held back most attempts at further excavation, which leaves much of the complex still hidden by sand, but just on from the palace are the visible remains of an enormous dam and irrigation system.

Possibly constructed as early as 1000BC, the dam turned Marib into the "two paradises" of the Qur'an, lush with fruit trees. Standing at the foot of the mighty sluices and looking out over the searing desolation it's almost impossible to believe that this land could once have been filled with bird-song and the court of the Queen of Sheba.

Sana'a: city from another time
But back in Sana'a, it isn't so hard to imagine her in Yemen.

Old Sana'a is a Unesco World Heritage site and - quickly getting lost in a warren of alleys made gloomy by seven-storey, mud-brick houses - it is easy to see why.

Slim men in traditional, tribal dress sporting large daggers, lounge in doorways and shop fronts. Before each of them lies a carpet of twigs and discarded leaves and hamstered into a cheek is a massive bolus of qat. Women bustle past with baskets full of vegetables freshly gathered from walled gardens scattered around the city. The older ones bind their entire face in black gauze and drape a gaudy block-print cloth over their heads.

Like girls anywhere the younger generation don't want to look like their grandmothers. Giggling and haggling over sequined and provocatively plunging dresses, all are in austere black burqas, most of which aren't quite long enough to conceal their painted toes and cripplingly high stilettos.

Time seems to have paused, in this dreamy medieval city of wedding-cake houses and countless mosques. Perhaps, like me, it wants to linger a little longer under a mulberry tree with a sweet milk-tea, but at the airport it is pressing on and I have plane to catch. I'm booked on the 90-minute flight across the Red Sea to Ethiopia, where they tell a completely different story about the Queen of Sheba. There she is not Belqis, but the African Queen Mekeda.

The Ethiopian version
Today her former capital, Axum, is little more than a village, a sleepy jumble of whitewashed lean-to houses and small, half-built tourist hotels in northern Ethiopia. In one of the numerous roadside bars, armed with a cold, locally brewed beer, there is no shortage of people eager to practise their English and tell me more about the Queen of Sheba.

Here they recount how, on hearing tell of Solomon's wisdom, Mekeda travelled from Axum, to quiz him in person. He passed her tests, fell in love with his beautiful guest and tricked her into bed. Trickery seemed to play a large part in these new stories I was being told about King Solomon, more famous in the west for wisdom than wiliness.

The one part of the tale on which Ethiopians and Yemenis agree is that the Queen of Sheba gave birth to Solomon's son Menelik. Ethiopia's last king, Haile Selassie, or Ras Tafari - as revered by the Rastafarians - claimed to be the last of his Solomonic line.

Axum: Ark of the Covenant
Many of Axum's sights, including fields of huge, carved granite monoliths are so shrouded in mystery that to be shown the bath of the Queen of Sheba seems reassuringly factual. Part hewn and part built around a natural outcrop of bare rock, capped with a tangle of grass and tortured succulents, the setting, if not the bath itself, is superb.

Once a year in January the bath becomes the focal point for the Timkat, or Epiphany celebrations, when priests arrayed in golden vestments parade with a replica of the Ark of the Covenant. The true Ark of the Covenant, as it so happens, is said to be just down the road in the church of St Mary of Zion.

Legend has it that Menelik travelled to Jerusalem to visit his father, Solomon. On the night of his departure, angels came to him and told him to take the Ark to Axum. Here it still rests, tended day and night by a solitary monk who will watch over it until his death. Sadly, everyone else just gets to see the peeling exterior of St Mary's. Like the Holy Grail in Spielberg's Indiana Jones epic, there is nothing to indicate that one of the holiest relics of two world faiths might lie within.

Ethiopia's palace ruins
My final stop is the ruins of Queen of Sheba's palace. A dusty half-hour tramp out of town, down a pitted mire of cow dung, mud and vegetable ends, I am cheered on by a personal army of souvenir sellers and aspirant guides. The floor plan of the 50-room palace is still clearly visible, and the Ethiopian Tourist Board has conveniently placed a viewing platform at one end.

From there, gazing over fields swaddled in green to the pepper-pot hills in the distance, I know where my queen would have lived. If historians can't decide where the Queen of Sheba came from, then I'm happy to leave it to the imagination. It all depends on whether you'd rather head home with the image of a fearsome Arab queen forging paradise out of the desert, or of an African queen, quietly bathing in some limpid and moss-filled pool, languidly dreaming of wisdom and a far-off king.