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What situation do many people pass through?

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What situation do many people pass through? surgical repair of injury to the vulva by suturing. Episotomy is the surgical lengthening of the vaginal orifice through an incision in the perineum, made during labor with the aid of a scalpel or scissors and which requires suturing. The practice is indicated when there are difficulties with the delivery of the baby, in natural childbirth, and the first report of application of the practice dates from 1741. Episiorrhaphy is the name given to the suture made after cutting. The whole process is controversial, and many scholars in the area have been raised by the application of episiotomy only when strictly necessary. The indiscriminate use of the technique, as a way to forcefully accelerate labor, only results in unnecessary suffering for the woman. An episotomy takes about 6 weeks to heal, during which sexual intercourse is impossible. Although there are calls for a more sensible use of this cut in the perineum, application rates are still hi...

Should the Trail of Tears be taught in greater detail in U.S. schools? YES or NO?

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Should the Trail of Tears be taught in greater detail in U.S. schools? YES or NO?  PLEASE READ THIS  THOUSANDS OF NATIVE AMERICANS DIED SO AMERICA COULD EXPAND WESTWARD. That is the part of history many people were never fully taught. The Trail of Tears forced Native nations from their ancestral lands after the U.S. government ordered their removal. Families lost homes, farms, sacred places, and loved ones. Some walked over 1,000 miles in brutal conditions. Disease spread quickly. Food was scarce. Winter storms killed many who were already weak from exhaustion. Mothers carried sick children while trying to survive. Elders were left behind after collapsing from fatigue. Entire families disappeared during the journey. Yet Native communities endured. Today, descendants still remember the stories passed down by survivors. The trauma did not end when the marches ended. Its effects continued through generations. Many Indigenous people say schools often rush through this history too ...

Ivory anatomical figure, a pregnant female

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Ivory anatomical figure, a pregnant female , with some removable organs, lying on cloth-covered bier inside wooden box, possibly German, possibly 17th century This is a figure of a pregnant women lying on a cloth-covered bier. The figure is made of ivory and the front can be removed to reveal the internal organs, some of which can themselves be removed. The figure is inside a wooden box. This anatomical figure may have been manufactured in Germany in the 17th century.

Imagine surviving a battlefield injury so devastating that it removed your lower jaw,

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๐Ÿ›‘ Imagine surviving a battlefield injury so devastating that it removed your lower jaw, chin, and the floor of your mouth—yet you refused to give up. Against all odds, this soldier lived through one of the most severe facial injuries ever recorded. His remarkable survival became a testament to human resilience, determination, and the dedication of the medical teams who pushed the boundaries of reconstructive surgery. Stories like this remind us that history isn't only about battles—it’s also about the extraordinary strength of people who overcame unimaginable challenges. Would you have believed survival was possible after an injury like this?

"African President Who Was Assassinated 33 Days After His Fiery Speech Against the America"

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"African President Who Was Assassinated 33 Days After His Fiery Speech Against the America" General Murtala Muhammed, Nigeria's military Head of State, was assassinated on February 13, 1976, just 33 days after delivering one of Africa's most defiant speeches against foreign interference. The controversy began in late 1975 when civil war broke out in Angola shortly after the country gained independence from Portugal. The United States backed the UNITA rebel movement and urged African nations not to recognize the Soviet-backed MPLA government. U.S. President Gerald Ford even wrote to African leaders seeking support for Washington's position. Instead of responding privately, General Muhammed publicly released the letter and rejected what he viewed as foreign interference in Africa's affairs. During an extraordinary Organization of African Unity (OAU) summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on January 11, 1976, he declared that Africa was mature enough to determine its o...

In 1863, during the height of the American Civil War,

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In 1863, during the height of the American Civil War, a photograph emerged that would become one of the most powerful visual testaments to the cruelty of slavery. Known as "Whipped Peter," the man in the image was actually named Gordon, an enslaved man who had escaped from a Louisiana plantation. The photograph, taken during a medical examination after his escape, shows Gordon's back covered in a horrific web of scars—evidence of the brutal whippings he endured. At a time when many in the North doubted the full extent of the atrocities committed under slavery, this single image silenced skeptics by presenting undeniable proof. The photograph circulated widely and was published in major abolitionist newspapers and journals, galvanizing anti-slavery sentiment across the Union. It became a turning point in public perception, as the shocking reality etched into Gordon’s flesh exposed the dehumanizing violence enslaved people faced daily. His image became a symbol of both suff...

They said Britain brought “civilization.” But they never told us what Africa lost.

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They said Britain brought “civilization.” But they never told us what Africa lost. They never told us Britain didn’t just come with books and Bibles — it came with chains and contracts. They didn’t come to teach. They came to take. They built their empire with African gold, rubber, oil, cocoa, diamonds — and called it “trade.” London rose — while Africa bled. They never told us the classrooms were designed to make us admire Britain and doubt ourselves. They never told us that our grandfathers paid taxes to their own oppressors. They called our heroes “rebels.” They called our freedom “violence.” But they never told us who started the war. They never told us that when slavery ended, it was slave owners — not the enslaved — who got paid. They never told us that Britain only finished paying that blood money in 2015. They never told us about Benin’s stolen bronzes, Kemet’s stolen scrolls, or Ashanti’s stolen gold. They never told us that Africa’s knowledge built Western science. They never...

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