Compilation epreuves bac PARTIE ANGLAIS -FR EPREUVES DE BAC S DU DEUXIEME GROUPE C UNIVERSITE CHEIKH ANTA DIOP DE DAKAR OFFICE DU BACCALAUREAT Téléfax ?? Tél ?? LANGUE VIVANTE I G A Durée heures Séries L ? -L ?? Coef Série L a ?? Coef Série L b ?? Coef Ep
PARTIE ANGLAIS -FR EPREUVES DE BAC S DU DEUXIEME GROUPE C UNIVERSITE CHEIKH ANTA DIOP DE DAKAR OFFICE DU BACCALAUREAT Téléfax ?? Tél ?? LANGUE VIVANTE I G A Durée heures Séries L ? -L ?? Coef Série L a ?? Coef Série L b ?? Coef Epreuve du er groupe ANGLAIS When Archana Sharma got married in she saw it as a chance to keep her family out of poverty after her father ? s untimely death A strikingly beautiful folk dancer from the north Indian state of Haryana the then -year-old had turned down several o ?ers to act in regional-language ?lms because she came from a conservative family consenting instead to wed a Toronto-based astrologer she knew through her maternal uncle ??I agreed to marry a man I had never met thinking he would take me to a better life in Canada ? she says ??Once settled there I would take my two younger sisters and our mother too ? After a six-week visit for the wedding her husband returned to Toronto promising to complete the legal formalities for her to join him But her tickets never came After six years of waiting Sharma received documents informing her that she had been divorced Stories like Sharma ? s are growing increasingly common across India as changing values remove some of the social stigma surrounding failed marriages and concern from activists and o ?cials encourages more women to talk about it As many as women have been abandoned by their émigré husbands according to one Indian government estimate Activists say the real ?gures are probably much higher as most cases still go unreported The Ministry of Overseas Indian A ?airs MOIA established in to look after the welfare of an estimated million Non-resident Indians NRIs launched a scheme earlier this year to provide counseling legal and ?nancial aid for Indian wives abandoned abroad ? Despite impressive economic growth over the past decade some Indians emigrate to other countries to ?nd work every year while thousands more go illegally ??For some going abroad is about seeking better opportunities and social mobility ? says Rainuka Dagar senior research fellow at the Chandighar-based Institute for Development and Communication ??but for many it is about status It is a symbol of pride to have a member of the family living and earning abroad ? In many communities ??marriage to an NRI is considered a status symbol as it gets the entire family a chance to go abroad ? says Santosh Singh chairperson of the government-a ?liated Family Counseling Center in Chandigarh Most of these unions without doubt are successful ones But some overseas marriages can be problematic At an MOIA conference on the issue in February Girija Vyas chairperson of India ? s National Commission for women noted that brides going abroad can su ?er from culture shock if they have had no prior exposure to the West Their overseas- raised spouses can ?nd themselves pressured into a traditional marriage by émigré
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- Publié le Aoû 18, 2022
- Catégorie Literature / Litté...
- Langue French
- Taille du fichier 679kB