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How Italy Turned Ethiopia into a Chemical Battlefield: Italian Chemical Warfare During the Second Italo-Ethiopian War (1935–1936)

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  Mustard Gas and Empire: Italian Chemical Warfare During the Second Italo-Ethiopian War (1935–1936)  A Colonial War in the Age of Prohibited Weapons The Second Italo-Ethiopian War (1935–1936) stands as one of the most documented cases of large-scale chemical warfare in the interwar period. It was also a decisive moment in the crisis of the international order established after World War I, particularly the fragile prohibition regime surrounding chemical weapons. Italy’s extensive use of mustard gas (sulfur mustard) and other chemical agents against Ethiopian forces and civilians represented a deliberate violation of the 1925 Geneva Protocol, which Italy had signed but reserved the right to retaliate under contested conditions. Historian Angelo Del Boca, one of the foremost scholars on Italian colonial violence, emphasizes that the war “was not merely a conventional military campaign, but a laboratory of total colonial warfare in which the boundaries between combatant and civi...

The Traditional Hairstyles of Afro-Colombian Women and Their Hidden Historical Meanings

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  Across the Caribbean coast and Pacific regions of Colombia, the hairstyles of Afro-Colombian women have long represented far more than beauty or fashion. Braids, twists, knots, and woven hair patterns became historical archives carried on the human body. They preserved African memory, encoded resistance, expressed identity, and sometimes even functioned as tools of survival during slavery. For centuries, Afro-Colombian women transformed hair into language. Among Afro-descendant communities such as the people of San Basilio de Palenque — the famous maroon settlement founded by escaped enslaved Africans — hairstyling evolved into a deeply symbolic cultural practice. Hair became a social map of ancestry, spirituality, resistance, femininity, and collective memory. Modern scholars increasingly recognize that Afro-Colombian hairstyles were not simply decorative traditions but sophisticated systems of communication shaped by colonial violence and African resilience. ( Colombianistas ...

The Rwandan Genocide's Church Role: Sanctuary or Complicity?

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The Crossroads of Faith and Atrocity Between April and July 1994, the world witnessed one of the most rapid and brutal genocides in modern history. In just one hundred days, an estimated 800,000 Tutsi and moderate Hutu were systematically murdered by Hutu Power militias, the Interahamwe, alongside elements of the Rwandan armed forces and civilian populations. What renders this catastrophe particularly disturbing for scholars of religion and ethics is a singular, haunting fact: Rwanda, before the genocide, was often celebrated as "one of the most Catholic countries in Africa" - 8 . The nation had been transformed through decades of missionary endeavor into a predominantly Christian nation, with the Catholic Church wielding immense spiritual, educational, and political influence. This reality gives rise to a pressing and painful question: Did the churches in Rwanda serve as sanctuaries protecting the innocent, or did they become complicit in the machinery of genocide? The answe...