Matthew Tree

25.5K posts

Matthew Tree

Matthew Tree

@matthewtree

Writer/Escriptor. 12 books published in my second language (Catalan), 6 in English. So far! https://t.co/5yOraiUdv3 12 llibres publicats en català, 6 en anglès.

Banyoles, Catalunya Inscrit le Nisan 2009
1.9K Abonnements19.7K Abonnés
Matthew Tree
Matthew Tree@matthewtree·
Given that Sant Jordi's Day a.k.a World Book Day is creeping up, here's one suggestion: a novel published in 3 languages, described by one reader as 'only a lunatic could have written this'.
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Typical African
Typical African@Joe__Bassey·
Meet Valerie Thomas, the Black NASA physicist from Baltimore behind the technology that made 3D movies possible. Valerie Thomas joined NASA in the 1960s and invented the Illusion Transmitter, a system that creates real 3D images using mirrors. Throughout her NASA career, she worked on satellite image processing and helped develop systems to analyze Landsat satellite data. Today, Valerie Thomas is retired from NASA and is recognized for her contributions to science and technology, inspiring women and young Black scientists to pursue STEM careers.
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Maryam
Maryam@hell_line0·
Let us remember, men only reached the moon because of the tireless work of a segregated black woman who performed math none of them could. She was also born in WV and attended West Virginia University, where a scholarship program exists for other black students in STEM named after her. Katherine Johnson did this in a time when just getting an education as a black woman was far more difficult then it ever needed to be. May you look at every NASA rocket and think of her. She earned it.
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Joan-Lluís Lluís
Joan-Lluís Lluís@Joanlluislluis·
Avui totes les Senyeres, fossin on fossin, haurien d'onejar a mig pal, per commemorar la primera prohibició oficial del català, el 2 d'abril de 1700, per part de l'infame Lluís XIV. Una prohibició que les repúbliques successives han confirmat.
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Zoom Afrika
Zoom Afrika@zoomafrika1·
In 1906, the Herero people in modern Namibia were massacred by German colonizers. Survivors were sent to concentration camps. Entire communities were wiped out because Europe wanted land and diamonds
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Joan-Lluís Lluís
Joan-Lluís Lluís@Joanlluislluis·
Els francesos fan les innocentades el 1r d'abril. Així doncs, a tall d'"homenatge" (ehem) i per primer cop en 35 anys he escrit un poema en francès: és en francès, sí, i alhora no ho és gens! Més que un poema és un exercici d'estil (per això la qualitat literària és secundària).
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The Name of War
The Name of War@TheNameofWar·
A black U.S. soldier reads a message left by the Viet Cong during the Vietnam War, the message reads: "U.S. Negro Armymen, you are committing the same ignominious crimes in South Vietnam that the KKK clique is perpetrating against your family at home."
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African Hub
African Hub@AfricanHub_·
A history written in blood cannot be erased by lies written in ink
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Barry R McCaffrey
Barry R McCaffrey@mccaffreyr3·
Inspirational courage. RIP brave woman.
Lioness לביאה 🎗️💙✨🦁🌺@Lionesssa12

81 years ago this week, a 16-year-old girl in Nice, France passed her final school exam and the next day, the Gestapo came. 🕯️ Her name was Simone Jacob. The world would later know her as Simone Veil. Born on July 13, 1927, in Nice, France, Simone grew up in a secular Jewish family that believed passionately in the French values of liberty, equality, and brotherhood. Her father was an architect. Her mother was a trained chemist who gave up her career to raise four children. They were French first, Jewish second - patriots who believed their country would protect them. They were wrong. In March 1944, sixteen-year-old Simone sat her baccalauréat - her final school examination - using her real name. It was a small act of courage and normalcy in a city already suffocating under Nazi occupation. Her family had false identity papers. Her mother had begged her not to use her real name. She passed the exam. The next day, walking through the streets of Nice to celebrate with her classmates, she was stopped by two German officers in plain clothes. They checked her papers. They saw through the falsification. She was arrested on the spot. Within hours, the Gestapo had found her entire family. Simone, her mother, and her sisters were sent first to the transit camp at Drancy - then loaded onto Convoy 71, bound for Auschwitz-Birkenau. They arrived on April 15, 1944, after two and a half days locked in overcrowded, airless cattle cars. Simone was sixteen years old. She was given prisoner number 78651. At Auschwitz, Simone and her sisters survived through sheer will - supporting each other through forced labor, starvation, and cold so brutal it felt deliberate. Because it was. Her mother shielded them as much as she could, whispering courage into them in the dark. Her father and brother, deported separately, were never seen again. In early 1945 the three sisters were transferred to Bergen-Belsen. Their mother - weakened to nothing - died of typhus just weeks before the camp was liberated. She had kept her daughters alive long enough to see them survive. Then she was gone. Simone returned to France in May 1945. She was seventeen years old. She had no parents. She had no home. She had a number tattooed on her arm and a grief so vast it had no edges. She could have disappeared into it. Instead she went to university. She studied law. She became a magistrate. She fought for prison reform and the dignity of detainees. In 1974, she was appointed France's Minister of Health and stood alone in a parliament full of hostile men to argue for a law legalizing abortion - enduring hours of mockery and hatred and won. The law is still called the Veil Law today. In 1979 she became the first woman elected President of the European Parliament. In 2008 she was voted into the Académie Française - only the sixth woman in its history. In 2018, France buried her in the Panthéon - among the greatest heroes the nation has ever produced. When asked once how she carried everything she had survived, Simone Veil said simply: "I never forgot. But I chose to build." She died on June 30, 2017, aged 89. The girl who walked out of Auschwitz with nothing but her name and gave the world everything. 🕯️ Hidden History

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Chi
Chi@__Poisonivyyy·
Bobby Hutton was one of the original member of the Black Panther Party. After being bombed with tear gas and trapped in a burning basement, he came out shirtless to prove he was unarmed and the police immediately shot him 12 times and he died. He was just 17💔
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UFO Hunter
UFO Hunter@iamufohunter·
🚨 The guy on the left was arrested and convicted for illegally selling missiles to Iran during the Reagan Administration. The guy on the right is a Fox News "military analyst” who thinks Iran shouldn't have missiles. They're the same guy.
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Adam Nimoy
Adam Nimoy@adam_nimoy·
To commemorate my father’s 95th birthday, I want to remind Spock fans that dad’s parents were Ukrainian immigrants which shaped my father in many ways. Four years of Putin’s war has brought death and destruction to our people, our homeland. LLAP. #standwithukraine #ukraine
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