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Author Archives: Arab America

How Egypt is Becoming the Creative Hub of the Arab World

From isolated professionals to a budding eco-system firmly breaking through in Egypt’s economy: the Creative Industry summit kicks off this Friday, crystallising an industry that is rapidly gaining recognition as an important foundation for economic development.

Since the 25 January revolution shook Egypt’s ground, the country has witnessed a refreshing emergence of independent artists, filmmakers, and marketeers rooting out of the monopoly mainstream industry to create their own ventures. Young fashion designers, graphic artists, photographers, filmmakers, and creative entrepreneurs who are dismissing preconceived boundaries and redefining the country’s media landscape.   

The fact that the event was planned, promoted and executed by three young men in their 20s paints an eloquent outline of the industry’s panorama. “This year it is way bigger in terms of conferences and attendees,” says Hamza Sarawy, one of the organizers, who also runs Idea Bakers along with his partners Amr Ashraf and Mohanad El-Menoufy. Scheduled to begin at 11.00, the summit will host 590 attendees to showcasing inspiring panel discussions, talks and workshops and a promising Creative Pavillion, an exhibition lounge where creative entrepreneurs will exhibit their work and companies will host hiring booths.

“I’m glad that this is all coming together and I hope it becomes an ongoing event; we need to develop a network,” says Aisha Al Shabrawy, who will be leading a talk on fashion photography at the event. “I have a lot of faith in the potential of the creative industry, because it has always been there but it was never organised. Egyptian art directors and creative professionals have been winning prizes at an international level, but here it has been chaotic,” she says.

Reem Gamil, editor-in-chief at What Women Want magazine, agrees: “We need to work hard on becoming a regional hub, because even though we have plenty of professionals, we still lack facilities in media, photography and journalism to become leaders in the Middle East. As Egypt has traditionally led filmmaking and UAE leads in media and PR, we need to work on developing the ecosystem.”  

Female entrepreneurs, at the top of the game

As Reem and Aisha, plenty of women stand out at helm of an industry that was once dominated by male talent. “I am excited about sharing my experience as a woman entrepreneur with a startup in Egypt, says María S. Muñoz, founder of the fashion social network that has been taking Egypt by storm, Slickr. “The more we share our failures and successes, the more points of view we get to know, the more we can enrich others and ourselves,” she adds.

Leading the way in sectors such as fashion design, editorial content and PR, women entrepreneurs are rapidly gaining ground. From designer Sara Hegazy to co-founders of Okhtein, Aya and Mounaz Abdel Raouf, to art therapist Kiki Haddad and online host Khadiga Rehab, the gems of innovation at the summit this year are mostly female.

Gamil, who will be heading a panel on the evolution of media to online outlets, thinks fashion and editorial content are optimal tools to strive for women empowerment. “It is challenging in Egypt, as everyone thinks women only want ´fashion and make up’, but we proved them wrong,” she says. Overseeing the magazine What Women Want, Reem began showcasing stories of resilience and female entrepreneurship, “and they were a success,” she explains.

Trading models for professional women, entrepreneurs, and marketeers, the magazine offered fashion editorials with real bodies, pushing forward a healthier body image that women can identify with. “We create campaigns to highlight the real beauty, without make up. A few years ago, we weren´t able to convince writers to do a fashion shoot with real women, but now it goes viral”.

An opportunity to inspire youth

What is perhaps the Creative Industry summit’s highest potential is to bring the new generation of role models to the frontline, and inspire the next to come. “There is a flourishing creative scene in Egypt that is taking over the upcoming generation at a very fast pace. This kind of events encourage more young people to join this movement that is, without any doubts the best trend for the future of Egypt,” thinks María S. Muñoz.

“As a panelist myself, I´m very interested to attend other talks. There is a very selective list of young people and entrepreneurs, media people and publishers encouraging other people to work really hard,” adds Gamil.

Photographer El Shabrawy says she is looking forward to meet her amateur counterparts. “I expect it to be helpful for young students who are starting their career, and a nice experience for everyone working in the creative industry. People know each other but they are not really connected, and it is important to facilitate and give young people the does and don’ts of the industry. In the end, we are all learning.”

Among Sarawy’s most expected panelists, Daliah Galal, a media legend and “one of the most professional entrepreneurs I have met throughout my life,” the organiser says. 

Find out more about the Creative Industry summit and how to attend here.

Source: www.cairoscene.com

Michael Jeha reflects on the progress of fine art in Middle East

Christie’s Auction House is a name that has always championed the sale of the finest art and the most extraordinary jewelry for over 200 years. It has made a name for itself in collecting historic pieces of art, jewelry of kings, queens and historical figures and priceless artifacts from dynasties that once ruled the lands. The repertoire at Christie’s has kept its name on the top of the list of auction houses worldwide and the selected caretakers are ones that are reputable, their unparalleled expertise, keen eyes and knowledge that keeps with Christie’s fine tradition. Christie’s auctions have held some of the most grand and glamorous of pieces ever have been found, with over 50 global offices worldwide as well as 12 showrooms to cater to every buyer’s interests. One of its most recent offices opened in Dubai in 2005, with one of its finest directors, Michael Jeha, managing director of Christie’s Middle East, proved eventful and profitable since its venture into the MENA.
Michael Jeha, a Lebanese born and raised in London, found passion and comfort in art after venturing into it through a journey of discovery away from the finance and investment world. A graduate of City University Business School in London, he soon grew more interested in something other than the financial world. After a number of art courses, he landed a job at Christie’s where this new venture took him further away from the finance world into a world of fine art and allure. In 2005, he became the Managing Director of Christie’s Dubai chapter which has helped expand Christie’s growth.
Arab News interviewed Michael Jeha and received fascinating input on the art scene of the Middle East.

You’re a graduate of City University Business School in London and interned in JP Morgan yet your career path landed you at the famous Christie’s Auction House. How did this come by?
After graduation and my internship, I found myself not really interested in the finance world. I majored in finance, insurance and investment but wanted to change directions, so I searched for a while until I landed in Sotheby’s Institute where I took art courses. Six months later I received a diploma in fine art and decorative art and applied for an internship at Christie’s. I interned in each department for a year and my fascination grew and I knew then that this is what I wanted to get involved with, my love and appreciation for art grew then and there. In 1999, I’ve landed a job at one of the departments at Christie’s and my career took off from there.

Looking at it now, your degree in finance, insurance and investment has benefited you greatly now that you’re the managing director at Christie’s Dubai, how do you feel now that your passion and degree are fused?
That’s a good question actually, I graduated in my early 20’s and at the time the world of finance wasn’t very appealing, I wanted something different. So I ventured into the art world and art market not knowing what to fully expect but it was a great and interesting move at the time. It’s furthered me greatly now, I grew early on a strong passion for doing what I do now, I found the combination very helpful in aiding with the knowledge I have for both the financial/investment world and art world.

The art and jewelry scene in London is surely different than Dubai in various aspects. After years of working at Christie’s London and gaining a lot of experience from your time there, how has the transition been for you moving from London to Dubai?
On the personal perspective, I found the transition easy since I’m originally Lebanese, so I already have exposure to the Middle East. I’ve traveled throughout the region extensively and have visited Dubai many times before so I already had an idea of what was to come. It was very straight forward and easy for me. On the work related perspective, there was a challenge for me with the fact that it was an opportunity for me to build a market straight up for Christie’s. In London, New York and Geneva for example, you need a long standing market already in place, whereas in Dubai you can help grow and establish a market up to the shape and standard of your liking; that was the biggest difference of all but at the same time very exciting.

The art scene in the Gulf region is pretty new unlike how it is in Lebanon, Egypt and Iran where you’ve traveled extensively and explored. Since opening Christie’s Dubai, have you seen the art scene in the area progress and evolve?
The level and enthusiasm for art in the UAE and across the Gulf has definitely increased tremendously. When first opened, there weren’t many art galleries in Dubai for example, there are now over 50 galleries and exhibitions are opening on a weekly basis and the awareness level has grown. There is also a growing scene in Abu Dhabi, museums are taking shape like the Louvre and Guggenheim will be opening in the next few years, in Qatar there are museums opening up and a strong emphasis in art education as well. The awareness in Saudi Arabia is really starting to take off; we’re seeing more and more galleries opening in particular in the last three years, there are more contemporary artists emerging. There is absolutely no doubt the interest and appreciation for art is evident in the area and here at Christie’s we’re looking forward to getting to know more artists of the area and be able to feature their works.
Ten years is a very short time since establishing a market, we are very satisfied with the results as of now but let’s see how it goes in the next 10 years.

Christie’s auctions have featured a number of Saudi artists such as Reem Al-Faisal, Ayman Deban and Ahmad Mater Asiri, which has resulted in high sales at the time of their auctioning. Do you believe that your participation in the Jewelry Salon as a starting point would help more Saudi artists to come forward and produce pieces worthy of auction?
I believe there could certainly be a correlation between Christie’s participation and other agencies for example and the awareness that they can create that will help artists to go forward and create magnificent pieces. The more art initiatives throughout Saudi Arabia and the Gulf area, the more it will increase the appetite for art. That is why Christie’s is very keen to undertake more art education seminars, their interest in art will peak and result in more activities which will entice art collectors and creators to engage in such activities and events. All these will encourage Saudi artists to partake and engage in learning new mediums, methods, styles, techniques and help in self-development as well.

Since opening in 2005, a large collection of art pieces and magnificent jewelry from the Arab world was displayed at Christie’s and put up for auction. Do you believe that the collection will increase in the upcoming years?
In the past 10 years, we’ve been very happy with the sales at the Dubai auction. We’ve sold over $400 million worth of art, jewelry and watches in Dubai, so we’re definitely seeing an increase in sales and the way things are progressing, more importantly we’re seeing an increase in Arab clients participating globally, we’re seeing a large participation from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Lebanon and elsewhere around the region. A statistic shows that for every 1$ spent in the Dubai branch, 15$ is spent on a global scale from clients in the region.

One very significant and rare auction in Christie’s Dubai is the sales of watches, why is that more significant?
There are many reasons, but the significance is that watch collectors from the UAE and the region flog to this location because it’s closer and easier. There is a love for rare and beautiful watches amongst collectors in the area and the watch market is performing extremely well, they have a strong appetite for it and it’s highlighted by the fact that the last auction in March had a 100 percent sale. All 185 lots were sold which is an incredible achievement, something very rare in the auction world; it shows how strong the love for watches is in the Gulf area.
Their participation paves the way for them to be able to participate internationally; it’s a stepping stone to begin their auctioning experience. Dubai is a very effective entry point.

This year’s Jewelry Salon in Saudi Arabia will see Christie’s participating for the first time. How has your initial impression of the fair been and what do you hope for in future participation?
We’re very happy to be a part of the jewelry fair and in doing so it’s almost like a soft entry into Saudi Arabia. In doing so we’re looking forward to more participation in the next few years. It will also grant us a greater participation in activities such as seminars and more events and exhibitions.

On an ending point, as a person who has an appreciation for the art world and a keen eye for fine art, what advice would you give to future art collectors and artists?
First of all I would advise them to see as much art pieces as they can, visit exhibitions and shows and expose themselves to the art scene more. You say I have a good eye for art, that is due to my exposure to it on a daily basis, it helps those who are interested to check out local art galleries, museums and exhibitions. The more they are exposed, the more they’ll understand it. Second, get as much advice as you can to make an informed decision, one should always do their homework so to speak before buying a piece of art, they can do their research and they can even speak to employees of the auctions like we do at Christie’s to get more information for example. Last and more important, we at Christie’s tell our buyers they should go ahead and purchase a piece because they like it, buying something they like always turns out to be the best investment.
Christie’s Dubai has shown great success in the number of buyers and participants since its opening in 2005. It’s evident that the level of appreciation for art has grown and Christie’s auctions help aid in the understanding of local and international art and jewelry alike.

Source: www.arabnews.com

International football: Football Crisis in Egypt

Egyptian Premiere League (EPL) is back to action after long lull following the death of 22 fans outside Air Defense Stadium in Cairo in a stampede before a game between Cairo outfit Zamalek and Enppi in Egypt’s EPL on 8th February 2015.

The incident was the second in just 4 years when 72 of Al-Ahly fans lost their life in Port Said stadium in an EPL tie with the host city team.

Of course, such fatal scenes, in or outside football pitches are disappointing and unfortunate. It would not help Egypt restore their football pride. Football has been once up on time a medium for hope in a country that has been going through troubles for 4 years now.

In fact, Egypt football is now in a coma. The pharaohs, who appeared only twice in the FIFA World Cup finals, in Italy 1934 then again in Italy 1990, failed to qualify for the African football showpiece, Caf Nations Cup, in the last three times in a row leaving the country paying high price in the 2017 CAF Nations qualifier. The draw put Egypt in the tough group 7 along with African giants Nigeria, Chad, Tanzania. Only one team from the group would qualify to the Gabon 2017.

With CAF Nations Cup record 7 titles in their belt, Egypt has deep-rooted football history, with Cairo giant Al-Ahly is the most titled club in the World bagging 20 various continental titles of them 8 record CAF champions league title.

At present, Egypt football is not merely standing still, it is in fact deteriorating. Football now lacks vision while stadiums need upheaval in terms of safety & security regulations and procedures. EPL is back to action without allowing fans in. It is fine, but this should coincide with a real work to address the core problems most probably caused by Ultras groups with, again, no vision either from EFA or the security forces.

Football is an entertaining game and we should protect football fans but this cannot or should not be by denying them from watching their beloved game in the stadium.

EFA officials should find a way out as Egypt new national team coach Hector Cuper of Argentine, fomer Inter Milan boss is starting his reign with the Pharaoh. An urgent call is required for setting out clear safety & security regulations and upheaval should take place on how the EFA approach football following two revaluations in Egypt.

Source: www.marca.com

France urges Palestinians not to execute suspects in Arafat’s death

France has demanded that the Palestinian Authority promise that it would not impose the death penalty on anyone found guilty of killing former PLO leader Yasser Arafat, a senior Fatah official said on Wednesday.

Tawfik Tirawi, member of the Fatah Central Committee and head of the Palestinian commission of inquiry into the death of Arafat, revealed that the French demand was relayed to the PA about three weeks ago.

Tirawi’s statement came in response to reports that French judges have completed their investigation into the circumstances surrounding Arafat’s death in November 2004.

“We received a letter from the French authorities 20 days ago asking us to promise that we wouldn’t impose the death sentence or execute the killer of Yasser Arafat,” Tirawi said in an interview with the Voice of Palestine radio station. “They asked that we reply to their letter within 15 days.”

Source: www.jpost.com

The flute at the checkpoint: music and confinement in Palestine

The SUV slows as it approaches a military kiosk at a break in a dull gray wall. Inside, Ramzi Aburedwan, a Palestinian musician, prepares his documents for the Israeli soldier standing guard. On the other side of this West Bank military checkpoint lies the young man’s destination, the ancient Palestinian town of Sebastia. Fellow musicians are gathering there that afternoon to perform in the ruins of an amphitheater built during Roman times. In the back seat, his wife, Celine, tends their one-year-old son, Hussein, his blond locks curling over the collar of his soccer jersey.

Ramzi is in a hurry to set up for the concert, but it doesn’t matter. The soldier promptly informs him that he cannot pass. “Those are the orders,” he adds without further explanation, directing him to another entrance 45 minutes away. Turning the car around, Ramzi then drives beneath Shavei Shomron, a red-roofed Israeli settlement perched high on a hill, and then an “outpost” of hilltop trailers planted by a new wave of settlers. Finally, he passes through a series of barriers and looping barbed wire, reaching the designated entrance, where another soldier waves him through. He arrives in time for the concert.

The soldier peered in at Celine, awake now beside their blue-eyed toddler snoozing in his car seat. The French soccer jersey with Hussein’s name on the back — a gift from Celine’s sister — was still on him. The young soldier hesitated, glanced back at Ramzi, then waved them through: one tiny victory in a long struggle with no end in sight.

I witnessed the checkpoint incident, one of thousands of small daily indignities suffered by Palestinians, from the front seat of Ramzi’s SUV in 2010. We had met 12 years earlier when posters of Ramzi, pasted all over Ramallah, had captured my imagination. In a photo taken in 1988 during the first Palestinian intifada, eight-year-old Ramzi was hurling a stone at an unseen Israeli soldier. Juxtaposed behind it, on the same poster, was another photo taken 10 years later of 18-year-old Ramzi pulling a bow across viola strings.

The poster was an advertisement for the National Conservatory of Music in Palestine and a metaphor for the hopes of many Palestinians at the time: that the era of the Oslo Peace Accords would bring an independent Palestinian state. In the story I produced at the time for National Public Radio, Ramzi expressed a double wish: to perform in the first national symphony orchestra of Palestine and someday to open music schools for Palestinian children.

“I want to see many conservatories opening up in all of Palestine,” he told me. A lovely dream, I thought, though an unlikely one for a teenager from a refugee camp who had been raised by his impoverished grandparents. Still, shortly thereafter, a determined Ramzi landed a scholarship to study the viola in France. A year or two later, we lost touch.

Then, in late 2009, in a chance encounter at a West Bank Italian restaurant, I saw Ramzi again. “What are you doing here?” I asked him. “I thought you were still in France.”

“No, I’m back,” he replied. “I’ve opened a music school here in Palestine.” (It also has branches across the West Bank and in refugee camps in Lebanon.) In other words, exactly what he had told me he wanted to do as a teenager in the al-Amari refugee camp. Six months later, in June 2010, I began to document his dream — now a reality — to build a music school in occupied Palestine.

Now, his SUV bound for Sebastia is cutting through the West Bank, a land smaller than the state of Delaware but dotted with more than 600 checkpoints, earthen barriers, and other obstacles to normal travel. His detour and the incident that accompanied it are part of a system that hems Palestinians into ever more confined enclaves surrounded by Jewish settlements over which looms Israel’s military presence. Yet this kind of everyday humiliation and confinement remains unknown to most Americans. Despite the torrents of press coverage here about Israel and its relationship with the United States, the daily reality of half the people in a century-old conflict is essentially off the American radar screen.

The reasons for this are rooted in culture, politics, and money. Millions of Americans were raised on the Leon Uris version of Israeli history, as told in his novel Exodus. In that story, the focus was on the heroic birth of the Jewish state out of the ashes of the Holocaust. “Arabs” — that is, Palestinians — remained on the sidelines of the tale, pathetic, obstructionist, and violent.  That long ago became the American media’s basic narrative of the struggle in the region: that Israel, surrounded by a sea of enemies, must be secure. But like the narrative that dominated media discourse before the U.S. invasion of Iraq — that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass destruction — the facts on the ground are often ignored.

Money clouds the picture even more. Millions of dollars from billionaire casino magnate and Israeli settlement advocate Sheldon Adelson (who has also advocated using nuclear weapons against Iran) and billionaire Paul Singer, on the board of the Republican Jewish Coalition, as well as from the bankrollers of neocon William Kristol’s Emergency Committee for Israel, have further distorted the conversation. In the process, such funders have helped elevate war hawks like Arkansas Senator Tom Cotton to prominence.

The money and political leverage of backers of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) has had a similar effect on some Democrats. It helps explain, for instance, the growing challenges from New York Senator Charles Schumer and New Jersey’s recently indicted Senator Robert Menendez to the Obama administration’s framework nuclear agreement with Iran.  But the problem has been around for so much longer. For years, as journalist Connie Bruck revealed last September in the New Yorker, AIPAC has strong-armed elected officials, the recipients of the lavish campaign donations it facilitates, into drafting legislation favorable to Israel. Such bills are often written by AIPAC staff and then introduced under the name of some member of Congress.

All of this has had a ruinous effect on debate in this country about Israel and Palestine. Almost invariably left out of any discussion here is the devastating impact on Palestinian lives of Israel’s military occupation, which goes hand-in-hand with relentless settlement expansion that undermines any prospect of a just and lasting peace in the region.

Being Confined

American politicians frequently declare that “Israel has a right to defend itself.” Seldom does anyone ask if Palestinians have that same right, or even the right to enjoy freedom of movement in their own homeland.

I have spent the last five years documenting both the harsh realities of Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and Ramzi Aburedwan’s dream of building a music school that could provide Palestinian children with an alternative to the violence and humiliation that is their everyday lives. I sat with children in the South Hebron hills, who had been stoned by Israeli settlers and set upon by German shepherds as they walked two miles to school. I met a 14-year-old girl who was forced to play a song for a soldier at a checkpoint, supposedly to prove her flute was not a weapon.

Farmers in villages shared their anguish with me over their lost livelihoods, because the 430-mile-long separation barrier Israel has built on Palestinian land, essentially confiscating nearly 10% of the West Bank, cuts them off from their beloved olive groves.  I’ve seen men crammed into metal holding pens before being taken to minimum-wage jobs in Israel, and women squeezed between seven-foot-high concrete blocks, waiting to pray at Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque. I’ve spoken with countless families who have been subject to night raids by the Israeli military, including one young mother, home alone with her one-year-old boy, who woke up to the sight of 10 Israeli soldiers breaking down her door and pointing guns at her. They had, it turned out, raided the wrong apartment. The baby slept through it all.

Ramzi and the teachers at his school, Al Kamandjati (Arabic for “The Violinist”), see it as an antidote to the sense of oppression and confinement that pervades Palestinian life. And it’s true that the students I talked to there regularly reported that playing music gave them a transformative sense of calm and protection — and not only in the moments when they picked up their instruments and disappeared into Bach, Beethoven, or Fairuz.

Rasha, the young flute player detained and forced to perform at an Israeli checkpoint, told me that music enabled her to face previously overwhelming difficulties. “I felt like I was in a forest, all by myself in a little cottage with no people, no noise, nothing,” she recalled. “Mountains, sea, something pure blue, not like the Dead Sea. It was an escape to another world, a better world. I owned that world.”  Her teachers reported that an angry, traumatized girl was growing into a self-aware, self-respecting, and assertive young musician.

Nevertheless, creative expression, however personally transformative, can’t alter the reality of the increasing confinement of Palestinians or of Israel’s creeping militarization of their lands, all of which is a direct result of settlement expansion. At the time the Oslo Peace Accords were signed in 1993, just before I first started traveling to the Holy Land, about 109,000 Jewish settlers had claimed West Bank Palestinian lands. They were encouraged by Israeli incentives that made it cheaper to be a settler than a city dweller.

In the years that followed, a network of new West Bank roads reserved only for settlers and VIPs began to crisscross land supposedly set aside for a Palestinian state. Each year, despite the ongoing “peace process,” thousands more settlers arrived and with them came more Israeli military bases. 60 percent of the West Bank remains directly controlled by the Israeli military, which guards the settlements, the surrounding “buffer zones,” and the exclusive roads that whisk Jewish settlers into Jerusalem and Tel Aviv for work, prayer, shopping, and the beach.

More than two decades after the beginning of the Oslo era, 350,000 Jewish settlers live mostly on the hilltops of seized West Bank lands, and Palestinians are increasingly confined to an archipelago of “islands” within a sea of Israeli military control. In reality, what now exists in the Holy Land is a single state controlled by Israel in which some enjoy full rights as citizens and others next to none.

Ironically, the re-election of the hyper-nationalistic Benjamin Netanyahu to a fourth term as Israeli prime minister only clarified the essential truth on the ground. His election-season pronouncement that a Palestinian state would never be on his negotiating table (whatever his post-election backtracking) said it all: Israel’s 48-year-long settlement-building project and military occupation is now and will remain the preeminent fact of the conflict. In other words, the two-state solution is dead. 

If Americans grasp that, the conversation here can now shift to one focused on human, civil, and voting rights. However, Palestinians living under occupation have understood this one-state reality for a long time and are not waiting for Americans to come to grips with the obvious facts on the ground.

In recent years, Palestinian civil society and its supporters internationally have moved in new directions, embracing direct nonviolent confrontation with Israel. Last summer, when negotiations on a new peace settlement led by Secretary of State John Kerry collapsed spectacularly and the Obama administration uncharacteristically blamed Israeli intransigence, Palestinians and their supporters cited the need to embrace a new strategy that included the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement, or BDS. With it came a renewed push by the Palestinian Authority to win UN recognition as an independent state and membership in the International Criminal Court, which could result in war crimes charges against Israeli leaders.

The BDS campaign has claimed some modest victories. In May 2013, physicist Stephen Hawking canceled a visit to a conference in Israel. In early 2014, actress Scarlett Johansson was forced to resign as an Oxfam global ambassador after she refused to cut her ties as a pitchwoman to the beverage maker SodaStream which operates a factory in the occupied territories. The boycott of the company appeared to significantly affect its bottom line.

Last June, the Presbyterian Church USA narrowly voted to divest from Caterpillar, makers of the D-9 bulldozer responsible for demolishing thousands of Palestinian homes and plowing under tens of thousands of Palestinian olive trees. Late last year, the European Union announced a ban on importing food from Israeli settlements; and earlier this year, after reportedly losing a $4 billion Massachusetts commuter rail contract due to pressure from Boston BDS activists, the French infrastructure conglomerate Veolia sold off much of its operations in Israel.

Supporters of BDS believe they are building momentum from these victories as part of a strategy of shaming Israel in the international arena.  In the process, economic pressure and international condemnation have replaced the Oslo-era approach of well-intended dialogue. That, activists say, created an impression that all was getting better on the ground, while actually facilitating the building of more settlements and the ever-greater confinement of Palestinians. In recent years Palestinian groups, including Ramzi’s Aburedwan’s music school, have embraced BDS.

Life in the Fast Lane

After the concert in Sebastia — part of an Al Kamandjati “Music Days” festival — Ramzi drove through the darkness toward Ramallah. His wife and baby son slept fitfully in the backseat. The SUV curved along West Bank Highway 60, passing again beneath Shavei Shomron, glowing yellow in the night sky.

He chatted with me about what it meant that Al Kamandjati had recently joined the BDS campaign.  He viewed it as an assertive step toward Palestinian freedom. “Because we believe in pacifist resistance and in our right to be here,” declared the school’s Music Days program, “we ask all people who believe in human rights and in freedom to boycott Israeli products as well as cultural and academic institutions until Israeli understands that it cannot kill a people’s will by force, respects the international laws, and ends the occupation.”

In this way, Ramzi, like many of his students and teachers, sees himself as part of a larger movement of nonviolent action to protest the occupation and support Palestinian independence. “You have to insist on the positive energy,” he told me, his eyes fixed on a white necklace of lights that represented Palestinian villages to the south. He stroked his bearded chin. “The more you believe in what you are doing, the more you keep going on. It’s like a snowball.” Light pooled in an orb in front of the SUV as it cut through the darkened land. “I see it in the young, who are living in just a whole world of music.”

To the east, the lights of the Palestinian village of Beit Wazan came into view. Of his students, he said, “Their world is music now. Their life is now committed to the music.”

He slowed down for the two-lane Zatara checkpoint. On the left was the express lane for the vehicles of settlers and VIPs with their telltale yellow license plates. On the right, the Palestinian lane, where all the plates were white with green lettering, and a long line of cars already were idling for a seemingly endless wait.

Ramzi took one look at that dismal line and quickly decided on his own version of nighttime direct nonviolent confrontation with Israeli rule.  He swung his white-plated SUV into the empty left lane and pulled up at the guard post reserved for settlers, other Israelis, and the few privileged Palestinians who had special connections.

“Why do you come here?” the soldier asked indignantly. “You wait in the other line.”

“I would like to know,” Ramzi replied in English, “if there is a difference between Israeli babies and Palestinian babies.”

“What?” the startled soldier replied.

“I said,” Ramzi repeated, his tone sharpening, “is there a difference between Israeli babies and Palestinian babies? Between your babies and my babies. I would really like to know the answer to this question.”

The soldier peered in at Celine, awake now beside their blue-eyed toddler snoozing in his car seat. The French soccer jersey with Hussein’s name on the back — a gift from Celine’s sister — was still on him. The young soldier hesitated, glanced back at Ramzi, then waved them through: one tiny victory in a long struggle with no end in sight.

Source: www.opendemocracy.net

Jailed moms celebrate Mother’s Day

Female inmates incarcerated at San Francisco County Jail No. 2 celebrated Mother’s Day early Tuesday with a live musical performance and live album recording by a Bay Area singer-songwriter and advocate for incarcerated women.
The incarcerated women, many of whom said they were mothers, watched and listened to a performance by Oakland resident Naima Shalhoub, 33, and her band at the jailhouse today.
Shalhoub’s performance comes exactly one year since she started facilitating music sessions with a group of women in the jails. Many of the women at the performance sang and danced along to her songs as she performed.
Many of her lyrics, such as “San Francisco jail doors opened and we walked right out” and “coming back home” resonated with the incarcerated women and moved them to cheer and clap.
Shalhoub, who has a master’s degree in postcolonial and cultural anthropology and is a self-described community organizer, said her decision to teach women inside the jail stemmed from a desire “to not just understand statistically” but understand women’s relationship to incarceration on a personal level.
San Francisco Sheriff Ross Mirkarimi said in a statement today, “Naima sings from her heart for the poor, the incarcerated and the oppressed.” The women in the audience were dressed in orange jail clothes and sat in chairs in front of Shalhoub and her band, which consisted of a stand-up bass player, a pianist, and a drummer, as well as a musician who played the oud, tabla and guitar interchangeably.
The songs performed by Shalhoub today make up her debut album, Borderlands, which she expects to release on iTunes this summer.
Shalhoub, who is a Lebanese-American, shows off her Arab roots with references to the bulldozing of olive trees by the Israel Defense Forces and vocals that she said are partially inspired by the famous Lebanese singer Fairuz.
Inmate and San Francisco resident Tameika Smith, who is also 33 years old, participated in an open mic session held following Shalhoub’s performance today and read two of her 150 poems.
Smith said she has been in jail for 28 days today, but that this is her 92nd time in jail since she was 18 years old.
When asked what has led her to return to jail so many times, she said it “has to do with self worth and drug abuse.” Smith said she’s been using drugs, including crack, since she was 18 and that all of her arrests relate back to her addiction.
While in jail Smith’s three children, ages 12, 11, and 2, are with various family members and growing up without their mother, she said:
“I don’t blame anyone but me.”
She said she has been hearing Shalhoub sing for the past year and that is helps her not feel hopeless about her situation.
“Recidivism,” Smith said, “can be stopped.” She said she is currently working on the eighth chapter of her autobiography, working towards obtaining her high school diploma and attending meetings to help her overcome her addiction.
Shalhoub has told the women in jail No. 2 that she plans to give half of any and all profits from her debut album to re-entry programs that will help support incarcerated women.
After having spoken with incarcerated women during classes about where they think the money should go, she said it’s clear it needs to go toward getting recidivism numbers down.
“What I heard the most is that there are re-entry programs that support them” by helping them gain access to housing and jobs.
Shalhoub said she is trying to better understand how these incarcerated women feel in order to better support them.

Source: sfbay.ca

Hot off the Arab press

Sellma Hayek visits Lebanon
An-Nahar, Lebanon, May 1

The streets of Bshari, a northern town in Lebanon with a population of roughly 100,000 people, came to life last week. For a change, this wasn’t because of a security concern or yet another incident of political upheaval. Rather, it was because of a visit paid to the city by Salma Hayek, a renowned Mexican actress of Lebanese heritage. Hayek arrived on her first-ever trip to Lebanon last week in order to promote her new film The Prophet, based on a book written by the famous Lebanese-American poet Khalil Gibran, bearing the same title. Hayek explained her decision to produce the film as a part of the exploration of her Lebanese heritage and the desire to reconnect with her grandfather, who admired Gibran’s work. Hayek paid tribute to Gibran by visiting Bshari, the poet’s birthplace and home to a museum documenting his work and life. She also made a stop at Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley in order to visit a Syrian refugee camp and meet with children. In her interview with An-Nahar, she described her visit as “an emotional journey to her past” that allowed to her to finally connect with her ancestral home.

Source: www.jpost.com

Unite against wars at home, abroad

The present national upsurge against racist police violence needs the support of every progressive political movement in the U.S.

Every gathering, whatever else is on the agenda, needs to refocus attention on the millions of youth who have heroically taken to the streets again and again in shutdowns and standoffs against police killings of Black and Brown youth. Protesters have consistently gone up against massive police offensives. This is a challenge that cannot be ignored or postponed.

The approach of the United National Antiwar Coalition’s conference, titled “Stop the War at Home and Abroad,” is an example of the kind of solidarity that is needed. The national conference, to be held in Secaucus N.J., just 20 minutes from New York City’s Times Square, is seen as an opportunity to put the anti-war movement on a different footing.

Every panel in the weekend conference is designed to link struggles and connect international movements to resistance in the U.S. fighting racist repression and mass incarceration. The overwhelming police presence in full-body armor, equipped with tanks, drones, stun guns and sound cannons, is the clearest example that the many U.S. wars abroad do come home to U.S. cities.

Over 500 activists are expected to participate at the national weekend conference, which begins on May 8 at 6 p.m. and closes on May 10 at 3 p.m. The national gathering will be live streamed and panels will be available on YouTube, with assistance from GoProRadio and CPRmetro radio, along with numerous alternative news, social media and video activists.

A youth flyer designed for the conference makes the connection between the U.S. ranking 57th on a world scale in government expenditures for education and first in military spending.

Two formerly imprisoned members of the Cuban 5 plan to Skype in from Havana. Pam Africa will give an update on Mumia Abu-Jamal’s grave health crisis. Lamis Deek of Al-Awda NY and Susan Abulhawa, Palestinian author of “Mornings in Jenin,” are scheduled to speak.

Ajamu Baraka, Joe Iosbaker, Cynthia McKinney, Ramsey Clark, Medea Benjamin, Glen Ford, Ray McGovern, Imam Malik Mujahid, Anne Wright, Kathy Kelly and three guests from Ukraine (coming with a display showing the burning of the House of Labor in Odessa one year ago) will also participate.

BAYAN Philippine activists, Syrian-American activists and Latin American activists are working on shaping workshops and panels.

A Saturday afternoon panel focusing on the cost of endless war and deepening austerity will include Shafeah M’Balia, Black Workers for Justice in North Carolina; Lawrence Hamm, chair of Peoples Organization for Progress; and Clarence Thomas from the Oakland International Longshore Workers Union local that has scheduled a port shutdown and mass union meeting on May Day against police violence.

Source: www.workers.org

Shooting Clouds Life as Both Muslim and Texan

When Muslim leaders in the Dallas area learned in February that a provocative blogger had rented space to exhibit caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, they decided to ignore her.

They were well acquainted with Pamela Geller’s vitriol against Islam and figured that there was no point protesting and giving her free publicity.

“We don’t want to be falling for her tactics,” Alia Salem, the executive director of the Dallas and Fort Worth chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, said to her colleagues. “She’s trying to bait the Muslim community.”

So it was that on Sunday night, Ms. Salem was at a festive interfaith women’s event with hundreds of Jewish, Christian and Muslim women when she received a text message from a friend saying that two gunmen had been shot and killed while attacking the center where Ms. Geller was hosting her event. First, Ms. Salem said, she started to cry, fearing news of more deaths.

Source: www.nytimes.com

Arab Cinema Center Lands Its Second Edition at Cannes Film Festival

Following a successful launching at Berlin International Film Festival, theArab Cinema Center (ACC) is going forward with its second step through the Cannes Film Festival (May 13-24 , 2015). The center continues to provide new spaces for Arab cinema through its venue in the FilmMarket of the festival (Le Marché du Film) which boasts 17 … Continued

Mosque Installed at Venice Biennale Tests City’s Tolerance

The 18th-century novelist William Beckford wrote that he couldn’t help thinking of this city’s most beloved sight, St. Mark’s Basilica, as a mosque, with its “pinnacles and semicircular arches” all “so oriental in appearance.” But despite the profound stamp that Islamic culture has left on Venice’s art and architecture over centuries, it remains one of the few prominent European cities without a mosque near its historic center, leaving Islamic residents who work there to pray in storerooms and shops amid the tourist crush.

For the next seven months, however, Venice will find itself in the middle of the roiling debate about Islam’s place in Europe. On Friday, as part of the Venice Biennale, a former Catholic church in the Cannaregio neighborhood will open its doors as a functioning mosque, its Baroque walls adorned with Arabic script, its floor covered with a prayer rug angled toward Mecca and its crucifix mosaics hidden behind a 

The transformation is the work of a Swiss-Icelandic artist, Christoph Büchel, who has become known for politically barbed provocations. But the mosque, which will serve as Iceland’s national pavilion during the Biennale, is a cultural symbol and a kind of ready-made sculpture conceived with the active involvement of leaders of the area’s Islamic population, which has been growing for many years.

Against a backdrop of rising Islamophobia in Italy and fears, like those at full throttle in France, of terrorism committed in the name of Islam, Muslim leaders in Venice said they saw the proposal to create a temporary mosque in the international spotlight of the Biennale as a perfect way to communicate their desire to more fully participate in the life of their city.

“Sometimes you need to show yourself, to show that you are peaceful and that you want people to see your culture,” said Mohamed Amin Al Ahdab, president of the Islamic Community of Venice, which represents Muslims of about 30 nationalities living in greater Venice.

While a large Islamic center serves as a mosque in Marghera, a part of the city on the mainland where many Muslims live, Mr. Ahdab said it had been a dream of longtime residents like himself to have a mosque in Venice’s historic center. (The closest thing to one existed in the 17th and 18th centuries in the Fondaco dei Turchi, a building along the Grand Canal that served as a ghetto for the city’s Ottoman Turkish population.)

“There are many Muslims who commute in to work, and they don’t have a good place for prayer,” said Mr. Ahdab, a Syrian-born architect who has lived in Venice since 1984. “And there are tens of thousands of Muslim tourists coming through Venice every month, who wonder why there is no mosque, in a city where you can see Islamic history with your eyes.”

Reminders of Venice’s history of mercantile and cultural commerce with the Islamic world are indeed everywhere. Mr. Büchel notes that the first mechanically printed Quran is believed to have been produced in Venice, by Paganino and Alessandro Paganini in the 16th century, as a commercial venture aimed at the Ottoman market. (Mr. Büchel has printed his own version of this Quran for the mosque project, in an edition of 1,001 copies to nod to the “Arabian Nights,” whose tales were first popularized not by Islamic scholars but by a Frenchman, Antoine Galland.)

But despite the city’s connection to the East and Venice’s relatively tolerant attitude toward immigrants, contemporary Venetians have been wary about a more visible presence of Islam. A proposal by Qatar to help build a museum of Islamic art and history in a palazzo near the Rialto Bridge has been met with opposition, vocally so by the right-wing, anti-immigrant Northern League party, whose leader vowed to occupy the space proposed for the museum to prevent its construction.

Mr. Büchel, 48, is a famously combative artist who has specialized in hyper-real installations that often lay bare the art world’s hypocrisies and political contradictions (he once built a working community center, with classes for the elderly, inside an elegant London gallery). In an interview, he said he wanted a church to host the mosque in order to create a quintessentially Venetian layering of cultures. But he spent months with no luck trying to find a willing partner for “The Mosque: The First Mosque in the Historic City of Venice,” as the project is titled. He was finally able to rent a small Catholic church, Santa Maria della Misericordia, that has not been used for worship for more than 40 years and is now owned by a lighting company. But his real difficulties in creating the project began only then.

In meetings with Venetian leaders, the police and officials of the Biennale, Mr. Büchel was told that he would not be allowed to make temporary changes to the church’s exterior, including a bas-relief he had planned near the entrance that would have said “Allahu akbar” (or “God is great”) in Arabic script.

The project came close to collapsing in mid-April, after Venetian officials sent a letter to the Icelandic Art Center, which is organizing the pavilion, with warnings that the police considered the mosque a security threat. In the letter, police officials said the mosque’s site, along a canal near a small footbridge, would be too hard to monitor and that such surveillance was necessary in light of “the current international situation and the possible risks of attack by some religious extremist.” Officials of the Biennale have also kept their distance from the project. (Biennale representatives did not respond on Wednesday to requests for comment.)

But Mr. Büchel and the project’s curator, Nina Magnúsdóttir, in consultation with lawyers, decided to continue building. And as of Wednesday, two days before a dedication ceremony that is expected to include Friday prayers by dozens of worshipers, it appeared almost ready to open, with a worker hanging blown-glass mosque lamps and a painter adding final touches to the faux-marble mihrab. Hamad Mahamed, a local imam who has been involved in the planning and will serve as the mosque’s leader, arrived that afternoon and led prayers for a small group of Muslim men who were there to help.

“It’s important for us to do this,” Mr. Mahamed said, “to show people what Islam is about, and not what people see in the media.” He added that the mosque’s incarnation inside a Christian church did not trouble him — he cited traditional stories of the Prophet Muhammad allowing Christian travelers to worship in his mosque in Medina — and he hoped it would not trouble others.

Some Venetian observers predicted that it might not. Bruce Leimsidor, a professor of immigration and asylum law at Ca’ Foscari University in Venice, said: “I think if you really wanted to pour salt in the wounds you would do something like this in Rome or Milan, where anti-Islamic feelings run much higher. But Venice is without a doubt the most tolerant city in Italy and proud of it, and so I think it’s the wrong place to make this kind of statement.”

Mr. Büchel said he had seen little evidence of such tolerance in his dealings with the city over the mosque. And he added that he believed Venice was the right place for it because it is one of the premier tourist-driven showplaces of European culture, never more so than during the Biennale, whose contradictions he hopes the mosque will illuminate, along with a growing social crisis facing Europe. “Venice has always been a town of trade, and it is still to this day,” he said. “Right now the business is art, and if you do anything to upset that business, they will try to stop you any way they can.”

Source: www.nytimes.com

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