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"Don't take this thing to heart"

By Rev Angela C Bosfield Palacious

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Time to end the suffering at Potter's Cay

This is a plea for the saving of the economic lives of the Bahamian Potters Cay licensed businesses, that sell conch salad, food, and drinks to many visitors and locals alike.

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A LIFE OF CRIME: Cries from a victim

MERE words cannot describe the agony that I have felt over the past few weeks. The loss of my son, Sean, has been unbearable.

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Spiritual warfare

LUKE 19:45-48 relates to us the familiar story of Jesus after he had thrown the money changers out of the temple. In a deeper sense, this story depicts salvation and the steps Christ takes and is taking to save us. The temple represents you and me (1 Corinthians 6:19). Christ chasing out all who had set up shop in the temple represents him cleansing us from all sin (1 John 1:9).

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Buyer demand rising as post-Dorian prices halve

Buyer demand for Abaco homes is increasing with properties selling at about 50 percent of their pre-Dorian value, a Hope Town-based realtor. Jane Patterson, a Damianos Sotheby’s International Realty estate agent, said: “Most of the buyers I have bee

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Man handed keys to new home by Prime Minister

AN elderly man was handed the keys to his brand new home on Thompson Lane yesterday, courtesy of Urban Renewal 2.0.

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Affliction hits the big screen today

FEVER induced madness cripples the city of Nassau and sends three people on a hunt for food and clean water in a new Bahamian film to premiere tonight.

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Adelaide’s St James Anglican Church: 170 turbulent years of history

The Slave Trade Abolition Act passed by the British Parliament on March 23, 1807 prohibited an vessel engaging in slave trade from being cleared at any port located in British Territory after March 1, 1808. Thereafter, slave ships were boarded by the British, the slaves were confiscated and were landed at the nearest British port. The same procedure was followed in the case of a shipwreck.

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The long and rich history of Adelaide's St James Anglican Church

The anti-slavery legislation passed by the British Parliament on March 23, 1807 prohibited an vessel engaging in slave traffic from being cleared from any port which was located in British Territory after March 1, 1808. Thereafter, slave ships were b

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Record heat causing coral bleaching

THE record heat this summer is causing widespread coral bleaching, “killing off entire reef systems,” according to the Perry Institute for Marine Science (PIMS).

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EDITORIAL: Downtown demolitions welcome

THE start of demolition in the downtown area – getting rid of buildings that are nothing more than an eyesore these days – is both welcome and overdue.

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Surviving the seasons

Surviving the Seasons
 
AS we consider the life of St Mary, the Mother of Our Lord, we recognise distinct periods of time in her life when she experienced the different seasons of spirituality.

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Shaunae pledges $25,000 to help with hurricane recovery

SHAUNAE Miller-Uibo became the latest high profile Bahamian athlete to use their platform to aid the Hurricane Dorian relief effort. The national 200m record holder and reigning 400m Olympic champion pledged $25,000 to assist the rebuilding of churc

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Meditation: New Year Blessings

“For this God is our God for ever and ever; he will be our guide even to the end.” (Psalm 48:14 NIV)

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'Relentless brain drain' hurts local healthcare

The "relentless brain drain" means the Bahamian healthcare system continues to suffer from a shortage of nurses, midwives, pharmacists and other healthcare professionals, a senior government official reiterated yesterday.

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EDITORIAL: Downtown dilemma that won’t go away

TO say that a transformation of Downtown Nassau is overdue is an understatement in the extreme.

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‘Haiti is struggling with 60 percent unemployment’

HAITIAN Chargé d‘affaires Louis Harold Joseph yesterday gave more insight into the social and criminal element in Haiti, which he said now has a 60 percent unemployment rate, causing much of the country’s problems.

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Surviving the horrors of history

Do we believe that the spate of violent crimes is the result of slavery, piracy, colonialism, lack of identity, economic hardship, greed, abuse, addiction and affliction known to humankind? Are we trapped forever in a cycle of the horrors of history? Is there a glimmer of hope that we can find healing, wholeness and wellness of soul?

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Time to clean up Downtown

DOWNTOWN Nassau desperately needs aggressive transformation, not the incremental changes that have defined improvements to the city over the years, Deputy Prime Minister Chester Cooper said yesterday.

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THE LAW OF ANTAGONISM

By Kevin Ewing All relationships are governed by laws whether we admit it or not. As a matter of fact I would further my point by saying everything, be it seen or unseen meaning physical or spiritual has its boundaries or limits set by laws that governs

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