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#Qazaqstan
kutyozh · 1 year
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Queering the Map, Almaty, Kazakhstan
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haveyouheardthisband · 2 months
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unhonestlymirror · 6 months
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kafkaesquegf · 3 months
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nazarbayev prospect & karasai batyr street // almaty, qazaqstan // october 2023
shot on kodak gold 200 with kodak kb-10
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naykeed · 1 year
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Naruto as Sultan from "Menıñ atym Qoja"
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ohsalome · 8 months
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Sarah Cameron - The Hungry Steppe: Famine, Violence and Making of Soviet Kazakhstan
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downfalldestiny · 1 year
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Merke Qazaqstan 🐎 !.
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istern99 · 1 year
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Qazaq traditional carpets 😍
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jojou2 · 4 months
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Kazakhstan Almaty😍🇰🇿
🐎
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tomirida · 3 days
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Tasqyn Studio — Kunshikter (a play on күн - sun and күшіктер - puppies), a Qazaq cartoon about three siblings getting into silly shenanigans, with a distinct Qazaq cultural flavour. From the studio's summary:
Brother and his two sisters are very different puppies. Their different personalities help them to invent fun games and get into adventures. They love traveling with mom and dad around their native land Kazakhstan and visiting relatives!
A compilation of 12 episodes. Includes subtitles in Qazaq, English, and Russian.
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qforqazaq · 2 months
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Hi! I know you haven't posted in a couple months so I don't know if you'll see this, but I have followed you for a long time and I really appreciate your candor in talking about Qazaqstan. I'm so glad you choose to share your perspective here. It can be very difficult to learn about Qazaqstan in an authentic way outside of first person perspectives, especially with the lack of resources in English.
I am currently working on an assignment for a class where I need to right 1000 words about a country I want to go to, and specifically about the deep culture (people’s attitudes, beliefs, and core values, including attitudes towards gender, social status, age, raising children, perception of time, the role of family) and classroom and educational culture. I immediately thought of your blog as a great resource that goes beyond surface culture like cuisine, clothing and holidays.
I would like to dig through your blog and some other Qazaqstan focused blogs on here as one part of my research, and I hope you're okay with me citing you as a source! Additionally, if there's anything more you would like to share about these topics if you do see this that you think I should include, I would be super grateful for your contribution! It's not a super academically rigorous assignment, but I want to represent Qazaq & Qazaqstani culture well.
Appreciate you so much, hope you're well!
Hey,
Thanks for the message!
Glad to know you still find the info here useful.
Sure, feel free to cite this blog as a source, I would be honoured, actually 😄
Not sure if I'll be adding anything else anytime soon though. Still, I hope you'll find something citable for your assignment here.
Good luck with that, and cheers ✌️
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gribosek1988 · 1 year
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@nqz_airport @avia_kot #ту154м #туполев #tupolev #авиация #sky #qazaqstan #kazahstan #astana #aero #aeroport #photo #photography #kz #skylovers #skyphotography #canon #canonr #70300 #ef70300l #aviation #plane #aircraft #airforce #небо #airforce @1931.aero @nqz_airport @avia_kot (at Nursultan Nazarbayev International Airport) https://www.instagram.com/p/CpfGHLut2cf/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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unhonestlymirror · 8 days
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70 years ago, in 1954, one of the most massive in the history of the Gulag and the most tragic in the post-Stalin era, the Kengir uprising of prisoners began in Steplag (Zheskazgan, Qazaqstan). About 5200 people took part in the uprising, about 40 percent of them were women. At the core, among the organizers are political prisoners from Lithuania and Ukraine.
The soviet authorities were able to suppress the uprising only on the 40th day and only with the army and tanks. According to the testimonies of participants in the event, around 700 people died, according to official documents - 46. Seven leaders of the Kengir rebels were sentenced to death.
"These were well-organised people," according to historian Ramunė Driaučiūnaitė who works at the Museum of Occupation and Freedom Fights. “They knew conspiracy, they knew how to conduct intelligence, security, and how to pass on information. And these people used their organisational field experience in the camp.”
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naykeed · 1 year
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qazaq outfit
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ohsalome · 8 months
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Both the Soviet and the German empires have achieved their genocidal goals through the destruction of local institutions and networks. Both were claiming they were doing it for the sake of "creating the better world". Both were painting the victims of their policy as "the necessary sacrifice". One regime was destroyed, and has become synonymous with evil. The other was left to live, and now people are still defending their actions as being "good in theory, but failed in practice due to human factor".
[source: Sarah Cameron - The Hungry Steppe: Famine, Violence and Making of Soviet Kazakhstan]
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downfalldestiny · 1 year
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Merke Qazaqstan 🇰🇿🐎😍!.
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