Expressions of Nakba

Under: Uncategorized, Palestine, Art & Culture, Around The World, What I Love, Memories @ 2:26 pm on Thursday, 05.15.08

Expressions of Nakba is an international competition and exhibition to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Nakba: the expulsion and dispossession of hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes and land in 1948.

The competition strives to present the extraordinary narrative of a dispossessed people through a diverse range of expressions that interpret the collective identity, historic struggle, and emotional experience of the Nakba for Palestinians.

Sponsored by the US Campaign to End the Israeli Occupation, this online gallery showcases the wining entries from the competition in addition to a wonderful range of selections in the form of visual arts, poetry, essays, music, video and digital media.

Check it out!

And check out the following, too:

Reading, very soon.

Under: Uncategorized, Around The World, Books & Journals, Interesting @ 12:00 pm on Monday, 05.5.08

Call Girl: Confession of a Double Life. by Jeanette Angell.
Jeannette Angell went to the US from France at the age of 21 after earning two university degrees. She went on to obtain three more in the United States, including a Masters in Divinity from Yale and studied for her PhD at Boston University.

At thirty-four, her live-in boyfriend ran off and cleaned out their joint bank account. She was left destitute. Despite lecturing and teaching at several universities, including Harvard, MIT and the London School of Economics, she saw no way out of her financial crisis until she read an ad for “escorts” in the Boston Phoenix.

This started a three-year dual career of teaching at universities in the daytime, while working as a $200/hour callgirl at night. Callgirl gives insight to a world usually distorted by caricature and stigma with honesty, humour and intelligence.(source)

Sounds very interesting…and what makes it so is that this person is not a random lost person. This is a highly educated person, with degrees from top universities (well. I guess this doesn’t really say much. I mean…George W. Bush went to Yale!)…is an educator. So what really drove her to take prostitution on as a second job while still keeping her daytime teaching job! I am looking forward to reading her confessions!
AND. Though this isn’t/wasn’t about prostitution, I still believe this (and similar) type of job could* be degrading to one’s dignity. But I will reserve my in-depth opinion of this book and prostitution till after I read it.

* (you know, because dignity means different things to different people and is measured differently)

P.S. I’ve always had a secret fetish for fishnet stockings!

Memorial to 418

Under: Palestine, Art & Culture, Around The World, What I Love, Memories @ 11:07 pm on Saturday, 05.3.08

“Everything in this world can be stolen, except the love that emanates from a human being towards a solid commitment to a just cause.” - Ghassan Kanafani

This Week In Palestine, May 2008

Some of this month’s In the Limelight:

“Memorial to 418 Palestinian Villages which Were Destroyed, Depopulated and Occupied by Israel in 1948″

Refugee tent and embroidery thread, 8’ X 10’ X 12’, 2001

This piece is a document (or the remains) of a three-month community-based project. More than 140 people came through [Emily Jacir’s] studio to sew, memorialize each village and socialize; oftentimes there was live Arabic music. The people who made this Memorial were bankers, lawyers, filmmakers, dentists, consultants, playwrights, artists, activists, teachers, etc.
(via Picturesque Palestine and Emily Jacir)

(Read more)

Pop Art ^2

Under: Uncategorized, Art & Culture, Around The World @ 7:48 pm on Wednesday, 04.30.08

“Put two Steinways head to toe so that they form a square. Draw a circle with a piece of chalk.

The whole turns into a geometric figure, a ying yang only longing to sound. These two surrounded pianos, that’s Pop Art.

Two iron harps, and, sitting at the keyboards like symmetric figures on one playing card, Rami and Francesco, two runaway accomplices.

One is from the Levant, and the deep oriental singing. The other from some kind of North where the heaves curl up at the feet of steel bridges. They face each other. Almost.

One glance and … go! Double play of Pop Art. The union of the olive tree and the sprout, far away from solfege in an age of digital after-piano.

Here, it is all done in a flash on dual mechanic. It’s a system captured in a mirror. A shared reflection for an improvised Sonatine at the crossroads of the preludes. The piano overcame baroque music when architecture was inventing sounding modules and scattered perspectives. There’s something happening today under the song of these ruins. It has become a solitary machine at the center of the world. A self-repeating chromatic belt.

Diptych – multiples – ornamentation – response – 4-had match – loop…

Pop Art sounds and grooves, flows and brews.

The sequence profuses a flow of woody notes. The strings cringe under the fingernail like a scratch board or a boat adrift, pushed around by a lukewarm breeze. The two of them lead to the dance. One from the moon, the other from the sun. One in the clouds, the other on basalt.

One is a winged cat, the other a hidden fox. Heads or Tails, Pop Art or a kind of inventive atmospheric music, arpeggiating on the hills of the Eixample like a musical hide and seek.

A reverse shot filled with eighth-notes and catchy hitches. It is a dream machine of sound transporting us until its extinction under the vaults of profound grottos. The vault itself traces the volutes like an arabesque. A phylactery scrolls on the inner wall of the gypsum like a massive convulsive body.”

I like the crafted connection between the CD description and tracks’ names…

Beautiful melodies evoking mental, emotional and maybe even physical release … maybe I’ll explain more later, but for now get your copy here! and decide which yourself…

and be sure to explore more of Rami Khalife’s and Francesco Tristano’s work

Dying: In Pursuit of the Truth

Under: Uncategorized, Palestine, Around The World @ 9:51 am on Thursday, 04.17.08

It’s always an accident. And through israeli lens, it is always justified.

“Joy, Sadness, Success, [Truth], Love and Memories” … Rest in Peace, Fadel.

There were two coffins in the funeral procession for Reuters cameraman Fadil Shana’a, one carried his lifeless corpse and the other his camera and his protective vest. Many tears were shed at the funeral. During his career Shana’a also shed many tears as he documented bereaved mothers and children.

Twenty three-year-old Shana’a always went in pursuit of the truth and the last moments of his life were spent in pursuit of that truth. His dead body was found lying among dead Gazan children targeted by Israeli tanks in the area of Juhor ad Dik in the Gaza Strip. The last shot his camera documented was the artillery shell that killed him. The Israeli authorities said he was killed accidentally.

An eyewitness, journalist Yassir Qadih, said, “Reuters journalist Fadil Shana’a was killed while he was in a jeep which was clearly marked ‘Press’.”

“There was nobody around us except a group of children who we were going to film. There were no resistance groups in the area” he added.
Television footage showed the jeep, with large signs reading “Press” and “TV” with a gaping hole blown in the driver’s side.

Reuter’s editor Nidal Al-Mughrabi was working with Shana’a up until he was killed, “The last picture Shana’a shot was a shell and suddenly we lost contact which meant he had been killed.” (Read on …)

An oversight?

Under: Uncategorized, Palestine, Around The World, How Outrageous @ 6:48 pm on Thursday, 04.10.08

Google Earth’s new mapping programme takes you on a virtual reality tour with the UN refugee agency of some of the world’s major displacement crises and the humanitarian efforts aimed at helping the victims.

Highlighted are not only the physical area of the camp and surrounding country, but key parts of daily life such as education and health in photo, text and video format. Within seconds, Google Earth brings the daily life of a refugee camp into your home thousands of kilometres away [source].

Well, whatever it was … it’s utterly outrageous…  Palestinian refugee camps (27 that exist in occupied Palestinian territories with approximately one million people) are not included and wont be experienced in the ‘virtual reality tour’ … It is a realitythe refugee problem is a bitter reality that needs to be recongized the very least…

Please sign this petition asking UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to correct this mistake and add all Palestinian refugee camps within the Occupied Palestinian Territories to their “Google Earth Refugee’s World Layer.”

Via Sabbah

Thanks!

Needing it.

Under: Uncategorized, Random Thoughts, Around The World @ 2:05 am on Tuesday, 03.25.08

I want to take time off from my current life and join the Peace Corps…in doing so, I hope to add more meaning to my life…

Sharing this with my parents, sisters and some friends was welcomed with some unneeded sarcasm…

I’m serious though! Waiting to see what will transpire…

Hoping to make it happen,

-Iman.

Going Home…

“I felt the ecstasy of a person who had not emigrated. I felt as though I had not emigrated, and that the time and geographical spans that had separated me from my family, friends and people had been metaphorical, because I had always been there, for even when I had visited far-flung corners of the earth, my point of reference had always been there, my heart had been there, and so had my first language.”

[Sometimes, I could be relatively indifferent about the issue of Right of Return …I’m not sure why… sometimes I think - though not believe - if it’s the sole issue standing in the way of a stop to the chaos, bloodshed and injustice and the only issue getting in the way of peace then perhaps we can make concessions … perhaps compensation can work instead … however, deep within me I strongly believe that each Palestinian exiled from his homeland has the right to go back and live in it… and reading what Mahmoud Darwish says - as his words apply to all exiled Palestinians - about going home reinforces my belief of the Right of Return…]

You said when you felt the reality of your arrival “I am happy to the extent that I am jealous of myself.” What sort of joyous feeling created those words?

I experienced a strength of morale which I did not know how to use. And now, after that visit, I am not who I was a month ago. I feel that I am approaching life anew, that I can rearrange the progression of my life once again because I have actually just been born, and am going through life as though I were seeing it for the first time, because the magic of the place there and the beauty of the people overwhelmed me with the sensation of immediately coming to this life once again. And so, I had the opportunity of becoming acquainted with my birth. I had not been given such an opportunity before!

How did you enter your home? Did you say “In the name of God”, and what was your first memory as you stepped over the doorstep?

I was not aware of whether I entered on my own two feet, but my heart was jumping like a mischievous sparrow. I was taken up with all the hugging, and I forgot. The only words I had were tears, and all I remember of what I said is “Thank God.”

Did you drink coffee at home? How much coffee did you drink, and who made it: you or your mother, Hourieh?

Yes, I drank my mother’s coffee in her room without paying attention to who had brewed the coffee– myself, her or one of her pretty granddaughters. This time, the aroma of coffee did not transport me somewhere else as it used to do, but it took me back to another time far away. My mother accompanied me to my old study which was still the same, full of my first books, my first pictures and my late father’s pictures, and then she took me to his grave in the evening to recite Al-Fatiha. I did not spend much time with her because of the many guests, and she, for her part, did not try to monopolize me. From her far corner, she was a witness of her son’s return, as though she were admitting to people that he was not her son alone. This explains her unabashed ululations when I arrived in the courtyard. Those ululations did not address me by my first name, but by my full, official name, Mahmoud Darwish, as though she were addressing her gift to people.

Thousands of Arab young men and women who are away from home send messages to their mothers on the radio using your words, your song, “I yearn for my mother’s bread, my mother’s coffee and my mother’s touch.” Did you ask her whether she had known that her coffee was the one that was being referred to whenever that song was played?

Unfortunately, I was not able to do so, because the song returned to its original elements, and I became sensations melting into sensations. So why nostalgia, why words, and why the poem? I felt the lightness of my liberation, to a small or great extent, from literature, and the person was liberated from the text, and so I asked her another question: Why did you used to hit me when I was little? [ :) ]

As you returned from Haifa, did you feel that you needed a certain woman to tell her things about Palestine that could only be said to her?

I never felt such a need as I do now. How I need that woman. “I pass by your name when with myself I am alone As a Damascene by Andalussia does pass . . .”

What would you add to such a simile in a way that leaves no ray of nostalgia that would imprison your voice? How can we remake the Damascene spring within us?

I wish I could say, “Within your name I sleep” because I need to sleep within a name, or within the warmth left on a pillow or a cover by the name and the named. That formulation is the business of the poet who is preoccupied with documenting absence.

(from a 1997 interview highlighting Mahoumd Darwish’s return to Haifa after more than 35 years in exile.)

Just Image (s)…

Under: Uncategorized, Art & Culture, Around The World, What I Love @ 6:00 am on Tuesday, 02.26.08

Just Image:

JustImage.org features the work of photographer Matthew Cassel. The purpose of this site is to showcase photography that aims to bring about social change by exposing different stories of injustice throughout our world. This site is currently being developed. If you have any questions or interested in collaboration contact Matthew.

From all around Beirut, captured by a cell phone:
“Some friends in high school used to call me “White Cassel” because of the color of my skin + my last name. conveniently, it also sounds like an american fast food chain that spends a lot of money on marketing which should help people remember this blog. Updated with at least one picture daily (at least that’s the plan), all images are taken with my cell phone and mostly uploaded to this blog from it as well.”

On a picture taken - which you can see on his picture blog:

“taking this picture in the Hamra area of Beirut got me in trouble with the Hariri security folks or “shebab” (guys) who “guard” (sit) on the street. They made me erase the pic, little did they know I am a photographer and photographers always take 2 images! This is the first pic of many to come uploaded from my new cell phone!”

Visit Whitecassel’s Picture Blog to see daily images from Beirut…

On this Day

Under: Uncategorized, Around The World @ 6:45 am on Thursday, 02.14.08

Three years ago - 2/14/2005 - marks Lebanon’s former Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri’s Three-year assassination.

By midmorning, thousands poured into Beirut’s main Martyrs’ Square for the third anniversary of Hariri’s assassination, braving the rain and the cold, waving Lebanese flags and carrying pictures of the [ex-Prime Minister].

Crowds paid respects at Hariri’s gravesite next to the downtown square as his brother, Shafik, unveiled a statue of him at the spot where he was killed, a few hundred yards away on a seaside boulevard.

A flame was lit and a taped message broadcast from Hariri’s widow, Nazek, who lives in Paris, urging against “falling into hatred” and calling on “unity to save the country.”[Source]

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3:

God bless his soul.

Let’s Party…

Under: Uncategorized, Palestine, Around The World @ 9:27 am on Friday, 02.1.08

The de facto government in the Gaza Strip released a senior advisor to Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad on Friday after holding him for almost 50 days in a Gaza prison.

Omar Al-Ghoul, a well-known journalist and frequent critic of Hamas, was taken from his home in Gaza in December, Fatah officials said. Hamas said they released Ghoul after lengthy mediation with Palestinian factions.

Al-Ghoul was the most senior Fatah official to be arrested by Hamas forces in the Gaza Strip since the Hamas takeover of the coastal region in June 2007. He thanked all those who assisted in securing his release, describing the 46 days he spent in prison as “a sign of defending the legitimate government.”

After spending the day in Gaza Al-Ghoul will head to Ramallah to join his wife and children. Hamas leader in the West Bank, Nasser Ash-Sha’ir, said that Islamic Jihad had helped negotiate Al-Ghoul’s release, adding that he hoped his release would indicate the start of dialogue between Hamas and Fatah.[Source]

But the dude is not Fatah!

Wain 3a Ramallah…?!

Under: Uncategorized, Palestine, Around The World @ 9:23 am on Thursday, 01.10.08

—I was in Palestine when King Abduallah of Jordan was scheduled to make a visit to Ramallah…witnessed the intense security in preparation for his visit, but it was canceled. I would have loved to be in Ramallah at this time to witness, first hand, the amount of security in preparation for President Bush’s visit…immense is an understatement… and it was not canceled. Anyway, I have to admit that this is probably the first time that I wholeheartedly agree with Mr. President… Hamas has brought nothing but misery to Palestine and the Palestinian people… and I quote: Hamas — which I thought ran on the campaign, ‘We’re going to improve your lives through better education and better health’ — has delivered nothing but misery. Doesn’t it sound like the most eloquent and logical thing ever uttered out of his mouth?!

Now, as far as his confidence in a peace treaty being signed before he leaves office, bearing in mind that he’s on a “timeline” and has “got only 12 months” left…well, it’s always good to have dreams! But then again, maybe God communicated to him that it will happen.

—Watching him live in Bethlehem - in the Church of Nativity was truly moving … Being the religious person he is, being a person whom God speaks to and instructs, I am sure it was a blessed, spiritual and peaceful experience for him to be in the birth place of Jesus. (not to mention Bush stood in the same place I stood last year…the only minute difference is the fact that he didn’t have to wait 3+ hours at the check-point to get to it… despite the challenges and obstacles to get there [Yes, even with my American passport], the Church of Nativity is always a destination I never miss on my annual visits to Palestine. I’ve established the ritual of lighting a candle for peace in Palestine and worldwide!)

—And so Bush goes down in history as the first US President to visit the West Bank! See: (Read on …)

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