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== Abakwasɛm ==
Akoo, [[Epidemic|Nsaayadeɛ]] (Sɛ ebia AIDS), Nsaayadeɛ ne Ohia<ref>{{cite book|last1=Roman|first1=Nicoleta|chapter=Introduction|editor1-last=Roman|editor1-first=Nicoleta|title=Orphans and Abandoned Children in European History: Sixteenth to Twentieth Centuries|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-449DwAAQBAJ|series=Routledge Studies in Modern European History|date=8 November 2017|location=Abingdon|publisher=Routledge|publication-date=2017|isbn=9781351628839|access-date=25 November 2020|quote=The industrial revolution touched both villages and cities, with migration from one to the other going hand-in-hand with urban overpopulation and severe poverty. Urban population growth also led to an increase in abandonment, the poor swinging between finding work, begging or claiming social assistance from the State as a means of integrating themselves and their family, including their children, into society.}}</ref> na ama mmɔfra pii Naa yɛ nnyanka. Wiase ako a ɛtɔ so mmienu (1939-1945), ɛmu nnipa dodoɔ no ara na ɛwuiɛ , maa no gyaa nnyanka bebree wɔ Aman hodoɔ so—Europe wɔn bɛyɛ 1,000,000 Kɔpem 13,000,000. Judt (2006) Nnyanka bɛyɛ 9,000 na ɛwɔo Czechoslovakia, 60,000 nso wɔ Netherlands 300,000 Wɔ Poland Ɛna 200,000 nso wɔ Yugoslavia, ɛna ebi nso wɔ, Germany, [[Italy]], [[China]] ne nkuro afoforɔ so.<ref>For a high estimate see I.C.B. Dear and M.R.D. Foot, eds. ''The Oxford companion to World War II'' (1995) p. 208; for lower, see Tony Judt, ''Postwar: a history of Europe since 1945'' (2006) p. 21.</ref>
 
'''== Beaeɛ a menyaa mmoa firiiɛ''' ==