Canadianchildrenareveryhappywith theelapseofchildhood.
The American continentsouthof thecountry's environmentfortheirchildrentohave beenequal.
Canadianchildren, especially in developingcountries,muchlikeadifficult taskforthechildrento livetherefor aspecialtagada.
CountrieswitheasebecausetheredhanabadiCanada's kids canlive.
Newstoknow, 100%
percent ofCanadianbabiesto schoolcan bee. Thereis noinfant mortalityrate. Thereis nomalnutrition.
Eventhoughthey
havenoincometopayforsurvivalisnot.
Thesethoughtsaremayeraitheirparents.
Thechildren arehappyandfulfilledlife.
From whichtheycan
thinkof somethingnewinvention. All so Canadian babies spent there childhood time in very very
easy way.
CULTURE & CLIMATE
In Canada Summer is usually warm and sunny, and can get very
hot in some areas. It’s a good time to visit historic cities and places of
interest and to catch the many outdoor music and theatre events, from jazz to
Shakespeare. In June Toronto hosts Caribana, a festival of ethnic music, dance
and food. The Calgary Stampede in July is the place to see cowboys, rodeos,
bull riding and chuck wagon races. In late summer Vancouver has the Symphony of Fire,
four nights of spectacular foreworks set to music.
Canadians
love the great outdoors and many families use the summer to go kayaking,
hiking, and cycling. Every province has it’s “wilderness walks” and the newly
opened Trans Canada Trail, the longest recreational trail in the world, links Newfoundland in the east with Nunavut in the north. In winter you
can take part in sports like downhill skiing, cross-country skiing, skating,
ice hockey, snowboarding and curling. The Quebec City Winter Carnival, at the
end of February, has parades, ice sculptures, snow slides, music and dance.
Canadian towns and cities are well organised for low temperatures with indoor
malls and many culture attractions. Canadians like their creature comforts and
this is reflected in the many excellent restaurants found across the country,
from standard North American fare to world-class gourmet delights that reflect
the multi-culturalism of the country. Fortunately, there is plenty to do to
work off all that good living.
A diverse Nation
Canada’s experience with diversity
distinguishes it from most other countries. It’s 32 million inhabitants reflect
a cultural, ethnic and linguistic makeup found nowhere else on earth.
Approximately 200,000 immigrants a year from all parts of the globe continue to
choose Canada, drawn by its quality of
life and its reputation as an open, peaceful and caring society that welcomes
newcomers and values diversity.
After Second World war Japan
are economically increasing heavy day by day, Now a days Japan most Powerful of
the world. Japan's
initial encounter with globalization was also its encounter with modernity. (1)
In the mid- to late-19th century, Western imperialism in Asia
plunged Japan
into a new system of international relations, generating an unprecedented
volume of interactions with other parts of the world. Most consequential for Japan
were those interactions with the United States
and Europe, for they brought to Japan,
through a process of hegemony, the constellation of ideas and institutions
central to the experience of modernity. Of interest here are three closely
related points in this constellation: the political formation of the
nation-state, the institution of the school, and a concept of childhood as
distinct stage of life worthy of public discussion. (2) Japanese leaders during
the early decades of Meiji period (1868-1912) believed that the source of
Western power--and the key to Japan's
national survival in the face of Western imperialism--lay in the nationstate's
capacity for mobilizing human resources. When they set about creating
institutions to accomplish this goal, they recognized the particular importance
of the school, which extended the project of mobilization to Japanese children.
In turn, they opened up the child to public
inquiry, generating within an emerging mass society a new awareness of
childhood--an awareness informed by an international discussion among social
reformers in Europe and the United
States about the problems facing urban,
industrialized societies. The creation of modern childhood in Japan
thus provides a case study by which we can trace how pre-existing local
conceptions of childhood were transformed by an engagement with the field of
ideas and institutions that began to circulate globally during the 19th
century.
Using Japan
as a case study for examining global themes or processes is a time-honored
endeavor. For the first few decades following World War Two, the process under
scholarly consideration was not globalization, but a concept equally grand in
scope: modernization. As the only non-Western country to have modernized, Japan
was the focus of intense interest from scholars seeking to develop a universal
model of the process by which societies become modern. The implications of this
scholarship were presumed to be global--after all, the context for this Cold
War-era scholarship was the effort to present to unaligned developing countries
a non-Communist path to modernity. Yet because these scholars tended to see
societies as organic, self-contained units and modernization as
internally-generated (though manifested globally), they often studied Japan
in isolation. They also tended to emphasize the role of Japan's cultural values
in facilitating and shaping its modernization, thus contributing to assumptions
of Japanese exceptionalism that remain dominant outside of academia. (3)
History of Japan:
Traditional Japanese legend maintains that Japan
was founded in 600 BC by the Emperor Jimmu, a direct descendant of the sun
goddess and ancestor of the present ruling imperial family. About AD 405, the
Japanese court officially adopted the Chinese writing system. Together with the
introduction of Buddhism in the sixth century, these two events revolutionized
Japanese culture and marked the beginning of a long period of Chinese cultural
influence. From the establishment of the first fixed capital at Nara
in 710 until 1867, the emperors of the Yamato dynasty were the nominal rulers,
but actual power was usually held by powerful court nobles, regents, or
"shoguns" (military governors).
Contact With the West
The first recorded contact with the West occurred about 1542, when a Portuguese
ship, blown off its course to China,
landed in Japan.
During the next century, traders from Portugal,
the Netherlands,
England, and Spain
arrived, as did Jesuit, Dominican, and Franciscan missionaries. During the
early part of the 17th century, Japan's
shogunate suspected that the traders and missionaries were actually forerunners
of a military conquest by European powers. This caused the shogunate to place
foreigners under progressively tighter restrictions. Ultimately, Japan
forced all foreigners to leave and barred all relations with the outside world
except for severely restricted commercial contacts with Dutch and Chinese
merchants at Nagasaki. This
isolation lasted for 200 years, until Commodore Matthew Perry of the U.S. Navy
forced the opening of Japan
to the West with the Convention of Kanagawa in 1854.
Within several years, renewed contact with the
West profoundly altered Japanese society. The shogunate was forced to resign,
and the emperor was restored to power. The "Meiji restoration" of
1868 initiated many reforms. The feudal system was abolished, and numerous
Western institutions were adopted, including a Western legal system and
constitutional government along quasi-parliamentary lines. In 1898, the
last of the "unequal treaties" with Western powers was removed,
signaling Japan's
new status among the nations of the world. In a few decades, by creating modern
social, educational, economic, military, and industrial systems, the Emperor
Meiji's "controlled revolution" had transformed a feudal and isolated
state into a world power. Wars With China and Russia Japanese leaders of
the late 19th century regarded the KoreanPeninsula as a "dagger pointed
at the heart of Japan."
It was over Korea
that Japan
became involved in war with the Chinese Empire in 1894-95 and with Russia
in 1904-05. The war with China
established Japan's
domination of Korea,
while also giving it the PescadoresIslands
and Formosa
(now Taiwan).
After Japan
defeated Russia
in 1905, the resulting Treaty of Portsmouth awarded Japan
certain rights in Manchuria and in southern Sakhalin,
which Russia
had received in 1875 in exchange for the Kurile Islands.
Both wars gave Japan
a free hand in Korea,
which it formally annexed in 1910.
World War I to 1952 World War I permitted Japan,
which fought on the side of the victorious Allies, to expand its influence in Asia
and its territorial holdings in the Pacific. The postwar era brought Japan
unprecedented prosperity. Japan
went to the peace conference at Versailles
in 1919 as one of the great military and industrial powers of the world and
received official recognition as one of the "Big Five" of the new
international order. It joined the League of Nations and
received a mandate over Pacific islands north of the Equator formerly held by Germany.
During the 1920s, Japan
progressed toward a democratic system of government. However, parliamentary
government was not rooted deeply enough to withstand the economic and political
pressures of the 1930s, during which military leaders became increasingly
influential. Japan
invaded Manchuria in 1931 and set up the puppet state of
Manchukuo. In 1933, Japan
resigned from the League of Nations. The Japanese
invasion of China in 1937 followed Japan's signing of the "anti-Comintern
pact" with Nazi Germany the previous year and was part of a chain of
developments culminating in the Japanese attack on the United States at Pearl
Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941. After almost 4 years of war,
resulting in the loss of 3 million Japanese lives and the atomic bombings of Hiroshima
and Nagasaki, Japan
signed an instrument of surrender on the U.S.S. Missouri in TokyoHarbor on September 2, 1945. As a result of World
War II, Japan
lost all of its overseas possessions and retained only the home islands. Manchukuo
was dissolved, and Manchuria was returned to China;
Japan renounced
all claims to Formosa;
Korea was
granted independence; southern Sakhalin and the Kuriles
were occupied by the U.S.S.R.; and the United
States became the sole administering
authority of the Ryukyu, Bonin, and Volcano Islands. The
1972 reversion of Okinawa completed the U.S.
return of control of these islands to Japan.
After the war, Japan
was placed under international control of the Allies through the Supreme
Commander, Gen. Douglas MacArthur (the last Shogun in Japanese history). U.S.
objectives were to ensure that Japan
would become a peaceful nation and to establish democratic self-government
supported by the freely expressed will of the people. Political, economic, and
social reforms were introduced, such as a freely elected Japanese Diet
(legislature) and universal adult suffrage. The country's constitution took
effect on May 3, 1947. The United
States and 45 other Allied nations signed
the Treaty of Peace with Japan
in September 1951. The U.S. Senate ratified the treaty in March 1952, and under
the terms of the treaty, Japan regained full sovereignty on April 28, 1952. The post-World
War II years saw tremendous economic growth in Japan,
with the political system dominated by the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP). That
total domination lasted until the Diet Lower House elections on July 18, 1993 in which the LDP, in
power since the mid-1950s, failed to win a majority and saw the end of its
four-decade rule. A coalition of new parties and existing opposition parties
formed a governing majority and elected a new prime minister, Morihiro
Hosokawa, in August 1993. His government's major legislative objective was
political reform, consisting of a package of new political financing
restrictions and major changes in the electoral system. The coalition succeeded
in passing landmark political reform legislation in January 1994. In
April 1994, Prime Minister Hosokawa resigned. Prime Minister Tsutomu Hata
formed the successor coalition government, Japan's
first minority government in almost 40 years. Prime Minister Hata resigned less
than 2 months later. Prime Minister Tomiichi Murayama formed the next
government in June 1994, a coalition of his Japan Socialist Party (JSP), the
LDP, and the small Sakigake Party. The advent of a coalition containing the JSP
and LDP shocked many observers because of their previously fierce rivalry.
Prime Minister Murayama served from June 1994 to January 1996. He was succeeded
by Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto, who served from January 1996 to July 1998.
Prime Minister Hashimoto headed a loose coalition of three parties until July
1998, when he resigned due to a poor electoral showing by the LDP in Upper
House elections. He was succeeded as LDP President and Prime Minister by Keizo
Obuchi, who took office on July 30,
1998.
The LDP formed a governing coalition with the
Liberal Party in January 1999, and Keizo Obuchi remained prime minister. The
LDP-Liberal coalition expanded to include the Komeito Party in October 1999.
Prime Minister Obuchi suffered a stroke in April 2000 and was replaced by
Yoshiro Mori. After the Liberal Party left the coalition in April 2000, Prime
Minister Mori welcomed a Liberal Party splinter group, the New Conservative
Party, into the ruling coalition. The three-party coalition made up of the LDP,
Komeito, and the New Conservative Party maintained its majority in the Diet
following the June 2000 Lower House elections. The next Lower House election
must be held by June 2004. After a turbulent year in office, Prime
Minister Mori agreed to hold early elections for the LDP presidency in order to
improve his party's chances in crucial July 2001 Upper House elections. Riding
a wave of grassroots desire for change, political maverick Junichiro Koizumi
won an upset victory on April 24, 2001
over former Prime Minister Hashimoto and other party stalwarts on a platform of
economic and political reform. Koizumi was elected as Japan's
87th Prime Minister on April 26, 2001.
The New Conservative Party dissolved in December 2002, and elements of it and
defectors from the opposition DPJ formed the Conservative New Party (CNP). The
CNP joined the coalition with the LDP and Komeito at its inception. Prime
Minister Koizumi was re-elected as LDP President on September 20, 2003, securing a second 3-year term as Prime
Minister. In the fall of 2003, the Liberal Party merged with the Democratic
Party of Japan, combining party identification under the DPJ name. In
congressional elections held in November of 2003, the DPJ won 40 seats,
bringing to 177 the total number held by the party. This result has brought Japan
as close as it has ever been to a two-party political system.
As a super power country us childhood
is far different from third world. There
infamily lawand public policy,child support(or child maintenance) is an ongoing,
periodic payment made by a parent for the financial benefit of a child
following the end of a marriage or other relationship. Child maintenance is
paid directly or indirectly by an
obligorto anobligefor the care and support of children
of a relationship that has been terminated, or in some cases never existed.
Often the obligor is a non-custodial parent. The oblige is typically a
custodial parent, a caregiver, a guardian, or thestate.
Depending on
the jurisdiction, a custodial parent may pay child support to a non-custodial
parent. Typically one has the same duty to pay child support irrespective of
sex, so a mother is required to pay support to a father just as a father must
pay a mother. Where there is joint custody, the child is considered to have two
custodial parents and no non-custodial parents, and a custodial parent with a
higher income (obligor) may be required to pay the other custodial parent (oblige).
Infamily
law, child support is often arranged as part of divorce,marital separation,dissolution of marriage, annulment,
determination of parentage or dissolution of a civiland may supplementalimony(spousal support) arrangements.
The right to
child support and the responsibilities of parents to provide such support have
been internationally recognized. The 1992United
Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, a binding convention signed by
every member nation of the United Nations and formally ratified by all but
Somalia and the United States, declares that the upbringing and development of
children and a standard of living adequate for the children's development is a
common responsibility of both parents and a fundamental human right for
children, and asserts that the primary responsibility to provide such for the
children rests with their parents. Other United Nations documents and decisions
related to child support enforcement include the 1956 New York Convention on
the Recovery Abroad of Maintenance created under the auspices of theUnited Nations, which was ratified by
the vast majority of UN member nations.
In addition, the right to child
support, as well as specific implementation and enforcement measures, has been
recognized by various other international entities, including theCouncil of Europe,the
European Unionand the Hague
Conference.
Within
individual countries, examples of legislation pertaining to, and establishing
guidelines for, the implementation and collection of child maintenance include
the 1975Family Law Act(Australia), the Child Support Act
(United Kingdom)and the
Maintenance and Affiliation Act (Fiji) Child support in the United States, 45
C.F.R. 302.56 requires each state to establish and publish a Guideline that is
presumptively (but rebut table) correct, and Review the Guideline, at a minimum,
every four (4) years.Child
support laws and obligations are known to be recognized in a vast majority of
world nations, including the majority of countries in Europe, North America and
Australasia, as well as many in Africa, Asia and South America.
About
USA: Present super power TheUnited States of America(also
called theUnited States, theU.S., the USA,America, and theStates) is afederal constitutionalcomprisingfifty statesand a federal. The country is situated
mostly in central North, where itsstates
andWashington, D.C., thecapital district, lie between thePacificandAtlantic
Oceans, bordered byCanada to the
north andMexicoto the south. The state of Alaskais in the northwest of the continent,
with Canada to the east andRussiato the west, across theBering Strait. The state ofHawaiiis an archipelagoin the mid-Pacific. The country also
possessesseveral territoriesin the Pacific and Caribbean.
At 3.79 million square miles
(9.83 million km2) and with over 312 million people, the United
States is the thirdlargest
country by total area, and the third largest by bothland areaandpopulation.
It is one of the world's mostethnically
diverseand multiculturalnations, the product of large-scale
immigration. Theeconomy is the
world's largest national economy, with an estimated 2011 GDP of
$15.1 trillion (22% ofnominal
global GDPand over 19% of global
GDP at purchasing).
Indigenous peoplesdescended fromforebearswho migratedhave inhabited what is now the
mainland United States for many thousands of years. ThisNative American populationwas greatly reduced by disease and
warfare afterEuropean contact.
The United States was founded bycolonies
located along theAtlantic
seaboard. On July 4, 1776, they issued theDeclaration of Independence, which
proclaimed their right toself-determinationand their establishment of a
cooperative union. The rebellious states defeated theBritish Empirein theAmerican Revolution, the first
successfulcolonial war of
independence. The currentConstitution
was adopted on September 17, 1787; its ratification the following year
made the states part of a single republic with a strong central government. TheBill of Rights, comprising tenconstitutional amendmentsguaranteeing manyfundamental civil rights and freedoms,
was ratified in 1791.
Through the 19th century, the United
States displaced native tribes, acquired theLouisiana
territoryfrom France,Floridafrom Spain, part of theCountry from the United Kingdom,Alta California and New Mexicofrom Mexico, andAlaskafrom Russia, and annexed theRepublic of Texasand theRepublic of Hawaii. Disputes between
theagrarian Southand industrialover the expansion of theinstitution of slaveryandstates'
rightsprovoked theCivil Warof the 1860s. The North's victory
prevented a permanent split of the country and led to theend of legal slaveryin the United States. By the 1870s,
its national economy was the world's largest. TheWar
andWorld War Iconfirmed the country's status as a
military power. It emerged fromWorld
War IIas the firstand a permanent member of theUnited Nations Security Council. The
end of theCold Warand thedissolution of the Soviet Unionleft the United States as the solesuperpower. The country accounts for
41% ofglobal military spending, and
is a leading economic, political, and cultural force in the world.
I
am a bangladeshi, I spand my Childhood in Bangladesh. I love Bangladesh. Bangladesh
is one of the world’s poorest and most densely-populated countries.
Poverty in Bangladesh is deep and widespread: almost half the population
lives on less than $1 a day. According to UNICEF, 26.5 million Bangladeshi
children live below the national poverty line, 33 million below the
international poverty line.
Consequently the plight of poor families in Bangladesh is desperate and access
to basic essentials is scarce. UNICEF estimates that over 5 million children
between 5 and 14 years old are sent out to work, often in dangerous conditions,
leaving them vulnerable to exploitation and abuse.
.
Location and Geography.Bangladesh straddles the Bay of Bengal in south Asia. To the west and
north it is bounded by India; to the southeast, it borders Myanmar. The
topography is predominantly a low-lying floodplain. About half the total area
is actively deltaic and is prone to flooding in the monsoon season from May
through September. The Ganges/Padma River flows into the country from the
northwest, while the Brahmaputra/ Jamuna enters from the north. The capital
city, Dhaka, is near the point where those river systems meet. The land is
suitable for rice cultivation. In the north and the southeast the land is more
hilly and dry, and tea is grown. The Chittagong Hill Tracts have extensive
hardwood forests. The vast river delta area is home to the dominant plains
culture. The hilly areas of the northeast and southeast are occupied by much
smaller tribal groups, many of which have strongly resisted domination by the
national government and the population pressure from Bangladeshis who move into
and attempt to settle in their traditional areas. In 1998 an accord was reached
between the armed tribal group Shanti Bahini and the government.
Emergence of the Nation.The creation of the independent nation represents the
triumph of ethnic and cultural politics. The region that is now Bangladesh has
been part of a number of important political entities, including Indian
empires, Buddhist kingdoms, the Moghul empire, the British empire and the
Pakistani nation. Until 1947 Bangladesh was known as East Bengal province and
had been part of Great Britain's India holding since the 1700s. In 1947,
Britain, in conjunction with India's leading indigenous political
organizations, partitioned the Indian colony into India and Pakistan. The
province of East Bengal was made part of Pakistan and was referred to as East
Pakistan. West Pakistan was carved from the northwest provinces of the British
Indian empire. This division of territory represented an attempt to create a
Muslim nation on Hindu India's peripheries. However, the west and east wings of
Pakistan were separated by more than 1,000 miles of India, creating cultural
discontinuity between the two wings. The ethnic groups of Pakistan and the
Indian Muslims who left India after partition were greatly different in
language and way of life from the former East Bengalis: West Pakistan was more
oriented toward the Middle East and Arab Islamic influence than was East
Pakistan, which contained Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic, and British cultural
influences. From the beginning of Pakistan's creation, the Bengali population
in the east was more numerous than the Pakistani population in the western
wing, yet West Pakistan became the seat of government and controlled nearly all
national resources. West Pakistanis generally viewed Bengalis as inferior,
weak, and less Islamic.
From
1947 to 1970, West Pakistan reluctantly gave in to Bengali calls for power
within the government, armed forces, and civil service, but increasing social
unrest in the east led to a perception among government officials that the
people of Bengal were unruly and untrust worthy "Hinduized" citizens.
Successive Pakistani regimes, increasingly concerned with consolidating their
power over the entire country, often criticized the Hindu minority in Bengal.
This was evident in Prime Minister Nazimuddin's attempt in 1952 to make Urdu,
the predominant language of West Pakistan, the state language. The effect in
the east was to energize opposition movements, radicalize students at Dhaka
University, and give new meaning to a Bengali identity that stressed the
cultural unity of the east instead of a pan-Islamic brotherhood. Through the
1960s, the Bengali public welcomed a message that stressed the uniqueness of
Bengali culture, and this formed the basis for calls for self-determination or
autonomy. In the late 1960s, the Pakistani government attempted to fore-stall
scheduled elections. The elections were held on 7 December 1970, and Pakistanis
voted directly for members of the National Assembly. The Awami League, led by
Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, was largely a Bengali party which called for autonomy
for the east. Sheikh Mujib wanted to reconfigure Pakistan as a confederation of
two equal partners. His party won one of 162 seats in the East Pakistan
provincial assembly and 160 of the three hundred seats in the National
Assembly. The Awami League would control national politics and have the ability
to name the prime minister. President Yahya, however, postponed the convening
of the National Assembly to prevent a Bengali power grab. In response, Sheikh
Mujib and the Awami League led civil disobedience in East Pakistan. West
Pakistan began to move more troops into the east, and on 25 March 1971, the
Pakistani army carried out a systematic execution of several hundred people,
arrested Mujib, and transported him to the west. On 26 March the Awami League
declared East Pakistan an independent nation, and by April the Bengalis were in
open conflict with the Pakistani military.
In
a 10-month war of liberation, Bangladeshi units called Mukhti Bahini (freedom
fighters), largely trained and armed by Indian forces, battled Pakistani troops
throughout the country in guerrilla skirmishes. The Pakistanis systematically
sought out political opponents and executed Hindu men on sight. Close to 10
million people fled Bangladesh for West Bengal, in India. In early December
1971, the Indian army entered Bangladesh, engaged Pakistani military forces
with the help of the Mukhti Bahini, and in a ten-day period subdued the
Pakistani forces. On 16 December the Pakistani military surrendered. In January
1972, Mujib was released from confinement and became the prime minister of
Bangladesh. Bangladesh was founded as a "democratic, secular, socialist
state," but the new state represented the triumph of a Bangladeshi Muslim
culture and language. The administration degenerated into corruption, and Mujib
attempted to create a one-party state. On 15 August 1975 he was assassinated,
along with much of his family, by army officers. Since that time, Bangladesh
has been both less socialistic and less secular. General Ziaur Rahman became
martial law administrator in December 1976 and president in 1977. On 30 May
1981, Zia was assassinated by army officers. His rule had been violent and
repressive, but he had improved national economy. After a short-lived civilian
government, a bloodless coup placed Army chief of staff General Mohammed Ershad
in office as martial law administrator; he later became president.
Civilian
opposition increased, and the Awami League, the Bangladesh National Party
(BNP), and the religious fundamentalist party Jamaat-i-Islami united in a
seven-year series of crippling strikes. In December 1990, Ershad was forced to
resign. A caretaker government held national elections early in 1991. The BNP,
headed by Khaleda Zia, widow of former President Zia, formed a government in an
alliance with the Jamaat-i-Islami. Political factionalism intensified over the
next five years, and on 23 June 1996, the Awami League took control of
Parliament. At its head was Sheikh Hasina Wazed, the daughter of Sheikh Mujib.
National Identity.Bangladeshi
national identity is rooted in a Bengali culture that transcends international
borders and includes the area of Bangladesh itself and West Bengal, India.
Symbolically, Bangladeshi identity is centered on the 1971 struggle for
independence from Pakistan. During that struggle, the key elements of
Bangladeshi identity coalesced around the importance of the Bengali mother
tongue and the distinctiveness of a culture or way of life connected to the
floodplains of the region. Since that time, national identity has become
increasingly linked to Islamic symbols as opposed to the Hindu Bengali, a fact
that serves to reinforce the difference between Hindu West Bengal and Islamic
Bangladesh. Being Bangladeshi in some sense means feeling connected to the
natural land–water systems of the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and other rivers that
drain into the Bay of Bengal.
Hello world, Allover we are well & U? U are Invited our Bangladesh. Good Bye.