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@vonaru: Cách xin giấy cư trú ở Nhật #xaykenh #xaykenhtiktoktrieufollow #xaykenhtiktokvn #xuhuong #capcut_edit #cuocsongnhatban #cuocsongnhatban #duhocsinhnhatban #thuctapsinh #tokuteiginou #ttsnhatban #tts #kysunhatban #nguoiviettainhatban #nguoiviet #nhatban #visanhatban
Naru Vo
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Thursday 24 April 2025 02:24:59 GMT
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hoa hồng xanh :
mình hỏi chút là mình ra shi xin giấy này xong mình gửi vào bì thư gửi về shi cũ xin có được không bạn
2025-10-31 21:56:02
0
nguyen thequan :
Tuyệt vời lắm em ơi 🥰🥰🥰
2025-04-24 03:15:17
2
ᥫᩣホア🇯🇵ㅤूाीू :
Chị ơi,đang xin visa thì có xin đc giấy cư trú ở địa chỉ cũ k ạ
2025-10-04 01:16:31
1
hoa hồng xanh :
bạn ơi mình hỏi chút mình muốn xin giấy jyuminhyo ở shi cũ có được không ạ
2025-10-31 18:16:40
1
Nga 38 :
@Nghiện Dưa Hấu🍉🤪
2025-10-31 09:49:29
1
Robert Anthony :
🥰🥰🥰
2025-04-24 16:50:27
1
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#ppoohkt #สิงสาลาตาย
Pengabdian mereka adalah wujud nyata dari disiplin yang diwariskan para pendiri bangsa. Setiap detik, setiap tarikan napas, siap menjawab panggilan demi keselamatan rakyat." Dirgahayu Kemerdekaan Republik Indonesia Ke 80 Tahun 2025 Bersatu, Berdaulat, Rakyat Sejahtera, Indonesia Maju. Salam Yudha Brama Jaya #HUTRI80 #DamkarLindungiBangsa #IndonesiaMaju #BersatuBerdaulatRakyatSejahtera #Kemerdakaan80Tahun
Òrìṣà Ọko — The Spirit of the Land and Fertility Karele Oodua Series — The Sacred Covenant Between Humanity and the Earth Before the plough touched the soil, before the yam sprouted, the Yoruba people knew that the land was alive. They called him Òrìṣà Ọko — the guardian of fields, the spirit of fertility, and the silent witness to every harvest and every prayer. 🌍 1. The Living Earth In Yoruba cosmology, Ilẹ̀ (Earth) is not dirt or dust — it is a divine being, a consciousness that feels, remembers, and responds. Òrìṣà Ọko embodies that consciousness. He is the soul of soil, the one who transforms seeds into sustenance, and the invisible hand that turns labor into abundance. When the rains fall, he listens. When the sun shines, he awakens. When humans till the land, he watches — not as a god demanding sacrifice, but as a partner in creation. To work the land is to enter a covenant with Òrìṣà Ọko. 🌾 2. The Sacred Ceremony of First Fruits (Ìrè Ọkọ) Each planting season begins and ends with ritual. Before the first hoe strikes the earth, farmers gather in the fields. They call upon Òrìṣà Ọko with palm oil, yam, and kola nut offerings. Songs rise in ancient rhythms — drums speaking the language of rain, praise, and gratitude. The Babaláwo invokes Òrúnmìlà to bless the season, and women lay leaves of fertility (ewé àjẹ́) upon the soil. > “Òrìṣà Ọko, ọmọ Olódùmarè, bless our land, make our harvest bountiful. May the earth never close her womb against us.” After the first harvest, no one eats the new yam until Òrìṣà Ọko has been honored — a reminder that life begins with reverence. 🌦️ 3. The Science Hidden in Spirit Behind the poetry of Òrìṣà Ọko lies profound environmental science. His worship encoded ecological principles: Respect the land’s rhythm — never over-till. Rotate crops to let the soil breathe. Protect sacred groves — the Earth must have her rest. Offer thanks before taking — gratitude sustains balance. The Yoruba didn’t separate “religion” and “agriculture.” They understood that farming was a sacred technology — a way to feed both body and spirit. Òrìṣà Ọko’s temple was not stone — it was the open field itself. Every green shoot was his shrine. 🪶 4. The Symbolism of Òrìṣà Ọko In Ifá verses, Òrìṣà Ọko is described as: > “The farmer who tilled the earth with patience and brought wealth to the people.” He is often represented with: A staff carved with agricultural symbols, A hoe, symbolizing labor and transformation, A horn, representing fertility and abundance, A calabash, symbolizing nourishment and gratitude. He wears earth-toned garments — browns, reds, and greens — colors of life and rebirth. When festivals are held in his honor, masquerades dance through the villages, their movements mimicking the rhythm of planting and harvesting. Every step on the soil is a prayer. 🌳 5. Òrìṣà Ọko in Modern Times — A Forgotten Teacher Today, the world faces drought, famine, and the loss of natural balance. But Òrìṣà Ọko’s wisdom still whispers in the wind: > “You cannot eat from what you destroy. You cannot live apart from what you are.” His message is clear humanity must return to harmony with nature, to treat the land as ancestor, not resource. In him lies the Yoruba principle of “Aṣa àti Ìwà” — culture and character as the foundation of survival. He is not just the god of farmers. He is the reminder that Earth is sacred science. 🌾 KARELE OODUA — Return to Your Roots, Reclaim Your Pride. To honor Òrìṣà Ọko is to honor ourselves — to remember that our wealth grows only when the soil smiles. Every seed we plant carries our history. Every harvest we reap is a hymn of gratitude. When we return to the land, we return to the divine rhythm that shaped us. #KareleOodua #OrisaOko #YorubaEcology #SacredEarth #IfaWisdom #AfricanSpirituality #YorubaAgriculture #AncestralKnowledge #YorubaPhilosophy #ReturnToYourRoots #OoduaRenaissance #Sustainability #OrisaWisdom
#fyppppppppppppppppppppppp #xcyzba #trending #animate
#عاصم_اللحيدان #سورة_مريم #quran
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