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NESLİN OZGUROGLU
*Sometimes, our “problems” seem to be as big as the shadoows in GOD’s eyes they are little.
* Without discrimination of religion, language and race, it is important to help all needy people wherever they are in the world.
*UNİCEF, UNESCO, UN (UNİTED NATIONS), UNWATER, UNWOMEN, UNAİDS, UNDP, UNFAO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNİCEF USA, WFP, WWF, WHO, WORLDBANK, SAVE THE CHİLDREN, SAVE THE CHILDREN USA, UNTWO
Didem: Turkish Culinary Art: A Journey Through Turkish Cuisine
Turkish Culinary Art is a rich collection of recipes for appetizers, soups, main dishes, salads, pastries, drinks, and dips. The variety of dishes that make up the Turkish cuisine, the complexity of flavors and the intricate techniques used to create those flavors, the diversity amongst dishes from various geographical and cultural regions, and the way in which all of the different components of a meal come together in a feast-like fashion offers enough material for a life-long study of Turkish culinary art. Using the easy to follow instructions and the helpful tips in the book, all those interested eaters can easily prepare and enjoy the rich combinations of Turkish flavors in the comfort of their homes.
UNICEF:COVID-19…Coronavirus



Mert; Meta-Trends and the Next Economy … Mark Parrott
Know the Knowable Future Meta-Trends and the Next Economy utilizes demographics to forecast the health of every economy/industry in the world. Meta-Trends allows you to know the knowable future i.e. Know which businesses should you start today, Know which industries will survive and thrive in the next 15 years, Know which areas of the economy are worth investing resources in, Know future government trends from a threat perspective, Know why past trends happened and were actually predictable The future breaks down into threats and opportunities.
Didem; The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership by John C. Maxwell
If you’ve never read The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership, you’ve been missing out on one of the best-selling leadership books of all time. If you have read the original version, then you’ll love this new expanded and updated one.
Internationally recognized leadership expert, speaker, and author John C. Maxwell has taken this million-seller and made it even better:
Every Law of Leadership has been sharpened and updated
Seventeen new leadership stories are included
Two new Laws of Leadership are introduced
New evaluation tool will reveal your leadership strengths-and weaknesses
New application exercises in every chapter will help you grow
Why would Dr. Maxwell make changes to his best-selling book?
“A book is a conversation between the author and reader,” says Maxwell. “It’s been ten years since I wrote The 21 Laws of Leadership. I’ve grown a lot since then. I’ve taught these laws in dozens of countries around the world. This new edition gives me the opportunity to share what I’ve learned.”
Neslin.: Moneyless Man, The: A Year Of Freeconomic Living…Mark Boyle
The Moneyless Man is jam-packed with interesting and startling bits and pieces of information, and great ideas that can be adapted to less radical life-changes as well. Did you know, for instance, that ‘two thirds of all the electricity that is produced and fed into the grid is lost before it even gets to your sockets’? Or that, when it comes to climate change, ‘it’s better to burn wood than let it rot’? To me, some of the most fascinating tidbits included making your own ink and paper from mushrooms (!), or using the birch polypore fungus to sharpen a razor’s edge. This book can also boast of the most lucid explanation that I’ve ever encountered (in only a couple of pages!) of the illusory nature of money. I never quite understood the credit crisis in such simple terms.
There is, in other words, much to inspire, but also much to digest; the big picture of this book sometimes gets lost in the details, but luckily the author’s enthusiasm more than makes up for it.
Because of its structure, The Moneyless Man is a book to dip into rather than read on one go, but I do wonder slightly what exactly it’s trying to be. It’s packed with information and useful tips, but the information isn’t organised quite well enough for the book to work as a resource book. It’s a memoir of the author’s personal experiences, and many of the chapters are of a very personal nature indeed, but the book lacks a narrative arc of Free, and ends up being rather disjointed. In the course of the book, the year passes by, but there’s actually no sense of a year having passed by. Partly, of course, this might be because it’s such a quick and easy but informative read; often it feels like the more effort you put into reading, the more you’ll get out of the book, though the opposite may just as well be true.
I did like The Moneyless Man better than Free – partly because of its more radical approach, and yet more practical nature; as well as its sheer enthusiasm – but it still left me with that nagging little feeling that it might have been an even better book, if…
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