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Author Archives: Arab America

Former West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall joins World Affairs Council

Former Democratic Congressman Nick Rahall has joined the board of directors for the World Affairs Council in Washington, D.C.

The council announced Rahall’s addition April 22 in a news release. The group also has added former Republican U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood.

The nonprofit, nonpartisan group offers a variety of programs and services to teach people about global issues.

Rahall represented southern West Virginia for 19 terms in the U.S. House. He lost to Republican Congressman Evan Jenkins in the 2014 general election.

Rahall will serve on the International Affairs Committee, providing guidance on public programming, including students and teachers.

Source: www.statejournal.com

World’s first auction of Iraqi modernist art sets new record

World’s first auction for Iraqi modern art in London has a new record, after it unexpectedly made a total of $1.9 mln, London-based Art Daily reported Wednesday.

The new record was the highest for any group of Iraqi paintings offered in any auction.

“This is an important moment in the history of Iraqi art,” Nima Sagharchi, Head of Modern and Contemporary Middle Eastern Art at Bonhams, said.

She added: “The auction brought together some of most significant works of Iraqi art from the past century and the response of collectors has shown that the international market now recognizes the value and significance of art from Iraq.”

The highlight was Cubist Cockerel (1955) by Shakir Hassan al-Said (1925-2004), which sold for $291,888 against an estimate of at least $37,52.

Al-Said and his teacher, Jewad Selim, (1919-1961), formed “The Baghdad Group of Modern Art;” the first modern art movement in Iraq in 1951.

Selim’s portrait of the celebrated Iraqi poet and academic, Lamea Abbas Amara, was estimated at least $90,057 but sold for $264,918, settling a new world record as well.

Other works setting new records were an untitled painting by Ismael Fattah which sold for $219,893 and View of Ashra by Abdul Kadir Al Rassam which made $147,863.

Source: english.alarabiya.net

Egyptian poet Abnudi dies at 76

Egyptian poet Abdel Rahman al-Abnudi, widely known for his revolutionary verse and criticism of two toppled presidents, died Tuesday at the age of 76, his wife said.

Abnudi, who underwent brain surgery at a Cairo hospital just days ago, rose to prominence in the 1960s for his poems, some performed by legendary Arab singer Abdel Halim Hafez.

In a career spanning four decades, Abnudi, known for his leftist views, published several volumes of medieval poems on Arab hero Abu Zeid al-Hilali and his tribe that travelled through the Middle East and North Africa.

Born in 1939, Abdnudi’s fans affectionately called him “uncle.”

President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi and Prime Minister Ibrahim Mahlab offered their condolences to Abnudi’s family.

“Egypt and the Arab world have lost a great poet… his contributions to poetry will remain a national and Arab symbol,” Sisi’s office said.

In recent years, Abnudi openly criticized former presidents Hosni Mubarak and Mohamed Morsi, both toppled after mass uprisings, but has supported Sisi.

While Mubarak was forced to quit after a popular uprising in early 2011, Morsi was ousted by Sisi in July 2013 following mass street protests against his single year of divisive rule.

Abnudi’s wife, Nehal Kamal, said her husband would be buried in the canal city of Ismailiya later on Tuesday, where he moved years ago.

Source: english.alarabiya.net

Bible Stories, Thrillers Make Morocco a Top Filming Choice

“QUIET!” The cry rings out in English, French and Arabic across the cobblestoned streets of Jerusalem, as filming begins for a scene in the series “A.D. The Bible Continues.”
But while the arched doorways, balconies and furnishings all say Roman-era Israel, the real-life setting is southern Morocco.
Viewers in America and elsewhere in the world may not know it but they have seen a lot of Morocco in the past year. It has served as the Baghdad of “American Sniper,” the Tehran seen in TV series “Homeland,” the Mali of “American Odyssey” and the Egypt that will appear in the miniseries “King Tut.”
Morocco has also been Somalia numerous times, including in the 2001 film “Blackhawk Down,” and more recently in the 2013 “Captain Philips.” And it will be Saudi Arabia in this year’s “Hologram for a King” starring Tom Hanks.
All in all, it has been a banner year for Morocco’s status as a gigantic film-set – with $120 million spent by foreign film productions in the country last year, more than in the past five years put together.
The North African kingdom is riding high on its reputation for stability and exotic locales, but industry officials say that Morocco needs to do more – and offer more incentives – to realize its potential as a filming destination. It is contending with increasingly stiff competition from South Africa and other countries that offer deep tax rebates.
Movie-themed municipal art is seen on a traffic circle in Ouarzazate where dozens of foreign movies are filmed every year, Jan. 29, 2015.
For Morocco’s film industry, the future depends on the right package of sweeteners to persuade studios to do more than just film exteriors here but also use local facilities. The ultimate goal is to get Hollywood to film entire movies in Morocco, said Sarim Fassi-Fihri, head of the Moroccan Center for Cinematography, which oversees the industry.
“The day tax incentives come to Morocco, the whole industry will move here,” he said, cutting a cinematic figure himself, sporting a fedora and puffing on a cigar. “If we make $120 million today, with tax incentives we could go up to $200-$250 million.”
He pulled out a sheaf of publicity brochures from competitors in Turkey, Colombia, Macedonia, the Netherlands, Ireland, even the Canadian province of Manitoba, with promised tax rebates of 20-40 percent plastered across the covers to entice film companies.
Ever since 1962, when David Lean filmed scenes from “Lawrence of Arabia” in Morocco, film companies have been using its deserts, mountains and cities as stand-ins for exotic locations. At the vast Atlas Studios complex in Ouarzazate – Morocco’s desert Hollywood perched between the High Atlas and the Sahara – there are sets from dozens of movies from the past decades.
Here, it’s possible to ride the camel used by Nicole Kidman in the upcoming “Queen of the Desert” past the pharaonic sets from 2002 French film “Asterix and Obelix Meet Cleopatra” to the fortifications Ridley Scott built to recreate medieval Jerusalem for the 2005 crusader film “Kingdom of Heaven.”
A tailor sews costumes for the TV series “A.D.” in Ouarzazate, not far from where it’s being filmed, Jan. 30, 2015.
Morocco has fallen in and out of fashion as a movie set over the decades. One mainstay has been biblical films, and that business is booming now with the bible-craze taking off in America. At one point over the winter, there were three actors playing Jesus in different productions staying at the main hotel in Ouarzazate.
The new boom comes off some lean years, beginning with the 2008 global financial crisis and exacerbated by the 2011 Arab Spring unrest that led insurers to pull film companies out of the Middle East. But in the case of Morocco, they came back.
Morocco stands out for being blessed with the people and landscapes needed to satisfy renewed interest in the Middle East, while having none of the agitation common elsewhere.
“The Arab Spring did help us, actually, when everyone was more worried to come to Tunisia and everywhere else, they were coming to Morocco because it was a lot safer,” said Khadija Alami, head of one of Morocco’s several local production companies that partner with international companies.
Alami first worked on the 1985 Chevy Case comedy “Spies like Us,” soon followed by “Ishtar,” before founding her own production company in 1998. It organizes crews, permissions and filming locations for shoots.
The industry has also been boosted by official support. While the state has yet to approve tax rebates, it does make it easy to work in Morocco and is happy to lend the services of the Moroccan army for a reasonable fee.
Aside from the helicopters, the military equipment used in “Blackhawk Down” largely came from the Moroccan army. Soldiers also often play extras when huge crowd scenes are called for.
The government even allowed the main highway between Marrakech and the seaside town of Agadir to be closed for three weeks last year for “Mission Impossible 5.” Local media later credited the closure for a drug bust – when a car full of cocaine ran afoul of a police checkpoint in the detour.
Most important is Morocco’s reputation for tolerance regarding themes other Muslim countries might find unpalatable. Biblical stories are out of the question in some conservative countries and the current vogue for thrillers set in the Middle East is too political for many Islamic countries.
“There is a big boom here because of its nature as the most liberal of the Muslim countries,” said Eamon Patrick, a line producer for “A.D.”
“So any filming that uses a contemporary Middle East setting, they do a lot of it here,” Patrick said.

Source: www.bignewsnetwork.com

Inside Morocco’s Campaign To Influence Hillary Clinton And Other U.S. Leaders

BY LEE FANG @lhfang The Intercept Morocco’s team of American lobbyists regularly communicated with State Department officials during Hillary Rodham Clinton’s four-year tenure and several are supporting her candidacy for the 2016 presidential election, according to disclosures filed with the Justice Department. Meanwhile, a controversial cache of what appear to be Moroccan diplomatic documents show how the … Continued

UK government giving £30m to UNRWA for 2015/16

The UK’s Department for International Development is giving the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) £30 million of funding for the financial year 2015/16.

The money is a one year bridge between the previous multi-year funding agreement that ran from 2012-2015 and was worth a total of £107 million.

Since £36.3 million of that total was allocated for the year 2014/15, the current one year stop-gap thus constitutes a 17 per cent drop in funding, though this does not include contributions to emergency appeals for Syria and Gaza.

DFID will commence a new multi-year agreement with UNRWA from 2016. The UK is currently the third largest donor to UNRWA’s general fund, which provides health, education and social protection services to registered Palestinian refugees.

The British government has previously praised the UN agency for its practice, with DFID “linking funding to performance.”

UNRWA spokesperson Chris Gunness described Britain as “a strong supporter of our general fund”, adding that the agency is “grateful to the UK government and colleagues in DFID in particular for their responsiveness and engagement with our many complex issues.”

Gunness also highlighted Britain’s “very generous supporter of our emergency work in Gaza and Syria”, with the UK giving UNRWA nearly £13 million last year for their humanitarian response to the Syrian conflict.

Source: www.middleeastmonitor.com

Alexandria to Host Moroccan Days Cultural Festival

The City of Alexandria will host the Moroccan Days cultural festival Sunday through Wednesday at Market Square, 301 King Street. Admission is free.

The Festival will showcase the rich cultural and artistic traditions of Morocco. An opening ceremony on Monday, April 27, at noon will feature remarks by Mayor William D. Euille, and Fatima Marouan, Morocco’s Minister of Handicrafts & Social and Solidarity-based Economy.

Morocco’s handicraft marketplaces–a mix of Amazigh, Sephardic, European, Arab-Islamic and African cultures—have become melting pots of diverse artistic influences, the City points out in a news release. Selling handicraft goods has become a major economic force in the country, with more than 2.3 million artisans generating 8 percent of the country’s total gross domestic product. The sector creates sustainable jobs that benefit many families in urban centers, as well as in rural areas where work opportunities are in short supply.

For more information, call the City’s Special Events Hotline at 703.746.5592 or visit alexandriava.gov/Recreation.

The City of Alexandria is committed to compliance with the City’s Human Rights Code and the Americans with Disabilities Act. To request a reasonable accommodation or to request materials in an alternative format, call Cheryl Lawrence of the Department of Recreation, Parks and Cultural Activities at 703.746.5419, Virginia Relay 711, or e-mail cheryl.lawrence@alexandriava.gov prior to the event.

Source: patch.com

5 Arabic words I wish we had in English

As a second-generation nuss-nuss (“half n’ half”) Arab American who is Lebanese and German,  it was only in my adult life that I took a keen interest in my grandparents’ language. I took a standard Arabic course in Seattle, then traveled to Lebanon to learn the spoken language, only to be evacuated in the summer … Continued

US media silent on Mideast meeting addressing the Israel lobby

A well-attended conference was held earlier this month at the prestigious National Press Club in Washington, one block from the White House, featuring 15 prominent speakers — among them American Arabs, American Jews and Israelis, who discussed ‘The Israel lobby: Is it good for the US? Is it good for Israel?’ The last panel of three speakers focused on: ‘Is there an Iraq-Iran continuum?’

But the nine-hour session was not — repeat — not reported in the US media, including the Washington Post, New York Times or any other national newspaper as well as the television network known as C-Span — a private, non-profit cable network, despite the fact that several prominent journalists and former Congressmen and United Nations officials were participating.

The conference was organised by Washington-based Institute for Research: Middle East Policy (IRmep) and the Washington Report on Middle East Affairs (WRMEA). The last-mentioned being an eight-issue-a-year magazine founded in 1982 by the American Educational Trust (AEI), which was established by retired foreign service officers “to provide the American public with balanced and accurate information concerning US relations with Middle Eastern states”.

The magazine’s masthead stresses that “as a solution to the Palestinian-Israeli dispute, it endorses UN Security Council Resolution 242’s land-for-peace formula, supported by nine successive US presidents”.

Delinda C. Hanley, WRMEA’s news editor, recalled in an email that last March, the American press “blanketed America with speeches from the annual meeting of the America Israel Public Affairs Committee (Aipac), not to mention Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s speech on Capitol Hill. “But,” she continued, “you would think our ‘free press’ would spare a few minutes or paragraphs to an alternative view … seeking to shine a light on the Israel lobby’s shady activities.” She wondered whether Israel’s “watchdogs” like the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) and other Israeli lobbyists “outraged at last year’s events convinced C-Span and other journalists to stay away? Was it ‘behind-the-scenes’ censorship that created a news blackout?”

The first speaker and one of the conference organisers, Grant Smith, the director of IRrmep, maintained that 60.7 per cent of Americans do not currently support the level of aid to Israel — $3 billion (Dh11 billion) a year — labelling it “as either much too much, or too much aid”, and that “68 per cent of Americans believe that resolutions condemning Palestinians do not represent American views and the majority of Americans do not take one side over the other regarding the Palestinian-Israeli conflict”. His point is that “it takes large amounts of money and political clout to pass legislation in the midst of public opposition”.

Former US Congressman Nick Rahal (Democrat-West Virginia), protesting the recent performance of Netanyahu in US Congress over the talks with Iran, declared: “The message we are sending is that we trust the prime minister of another country before we trust the leader of our own — what is that [we are] saying to other countries? We can’t be trusted!”

Rahal added that the “unconditional support for Israel and the blank-cheque mentality is not in America’s national interest. If it were, why would we need such a well-organised and well-oiled special interest group to pressure Congress?”

Former UN Special Rapporteur in the Middle East, Richard Falk, focused on the “weakening and discrediting” efforts in the Palestine-Israel conflict, complaining that despite recent US tensions with the Israeli prime minister over his speech before Congress, he quoted US Secretary of State John Kerry as bragging that “we have intervened on Israel’s behalf a couple of hundred times in over 75 forums within the UN”.

He went on: “The UN has increasingly been neutralised in any effort to produce sustainable peace that is just for both people. It is the UN that failed the Palestinian people when the British gave up their colonial mandate and dumped the future of Palestine into the hands of the UN. Over 65 years, it failed to realise the right of self-determination for the Palestinian people that every other major people on the globe achieved.”

Gideon Levy, a long-time columnist for Haaretz, the liberal Israeli daily, came up with the unexpected as he spoke “in desperation of a society that had lost all connection with the world”. He dropped his bombshell thus: “We have to face reality and reality is that there is no chance from within the Israeli society. No way … The only hope is for an international intervention, and the only hope is from this place, from Washington, from the United States, from the European Union. Only from there. Because Israeli society is today by far too brainwashed. Life in Israel [is] by far too good. Israel, let’s face it, [is] a society which lives in denial, totally disconnected from reality. Would it be a private person, I would recommend either medication or hospitalisation. Because people who lose connection to reality might be very dangerous to themselves or to society. And the Israeli society lost connection with reality, it lost connection with the reality in its backyard, it totally [lost] connection with international environment.”

Levy went on to denounce the role of the Israeli lobby in producing this mess. He concluded his remarks by denouncing the two-state solution. “I truly believe the two-state solution is dead. I think that this train [has] left the station. I think that all those who talk about the two-state solution do so deliberately only to gain more time in order to base the occupation even deeper and deeper.” He failed to offer any suggestion for the future, however, recognising that “Israeli society has surrounded itself with shields, with walls, not just physical walls but also mental walls”.

George S. Hishmeh is a Washington-based columnist. He can be contacted at ghishmeh@gulfnews.com

Source: gulfnews.com

US Returns $2.5M In Egyptian Antiquities As Experts Call For Tougher Punishment On Smugglers

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) repatriated dozens of illegally smuggled ancient artifacts to the government of Egypt, including a Greco-Roman style Egyptian sarcophagus, at a ceremony Wednesday at the National Geographic Society in Washington. The return of these ancient artifacts was made possible by “Operation Mummy’s Curse,” an ongoing five-year investigation by an Immigration … Continued

Zeina Barhoum gives us opera with an Arabian twist

Zeina Barhoum is popularly known as “The Arabic Soprano”. But who cooked up the nickname? “I think I did,” she admits. “I wanted it so badly. I thought to myself, if we’re not necessarily geographically united as an Arab world, I’d like to do that through music.”

It’s a noble goal – and a fitting moniker. An opera singer who was trained by some of the world’s greats, Barhoum stands out from the crowd by subtly mixing traditional western opera with uniquely Arabic influences and inflections.

It’s an approach that was well demonstrated on her debut album, Alcantara, which will be launched with a live concert in Dubai on Saturday. Symbolically, the title is a Mediterranean reading of the Arabic word for “bridge”.

“I wanted a word that was Arabic, but also in the English dictionary,” says Barhoum, who is a Jordanian of Palestinian origin. “As an artist I always wanted to do something that reflected my background, my culture, my identity – I wanted to make a difference through my voice and my music.”

Recorded alongside the Amman Symphony Orchestra, the music on Alcantara includes classic Italian arias – such as Là ci Darem la Mano, from Mozart’s Don Giovanni, and Sempre libera, from Verdi’s La Traviata – and popular Napoleonian staples such as Funiculì, Funiculà and O Sole Mio (yes, the one from the famous UK TV advert for Cornetto ice cream cones).

So far, so familiar – the twist is the way the arrangements subtly incorporate smatterings of Arabic instrumentation, such as the kanoun, while Barhoum has freshly translated many of those famous verses into Arabic herself.

“I wanted to pick music that people knew, but re-imagined in some way,” says the 31-year-old. “But a subtle way – there’s a lot of Arabic fusion out there. I didn’t want to do anything that might one day be seen as kitsch, I wanted to make an album that would sound timeless.”

Three tracks break the mould: Lamma, a traditional Andalusian composition dating from the 12th century, which was adapted to sound “more classical”; Ftani Os Edo, an original composition written in Greek specially for the project; and an Arabic version of what might be the French language’s best-known song, La Vie en Rose.

“No one’s done that before,” says Barhoum. “It’s a very special piece to me, and I wanted to do something very special.”

The album’s release closes a circle that was opened nearly two decades ago when, at the age of 12, Barhoum was set on her path after a music teacher identified her potential as an opera singer.

“It left a huge impact on me, it was the main push,” she says. “Since then, I’ve always known that one day I wanted to have an album.”

Growing up in Jordan, with time spent living in the UAE and the United States, Barhoum began performing regularly, singing in a range of musical styles, from musicals to jazz and pop.

She also studied dance extensively – ballet, tap, flamenco – and tried her hand at acting in school plays.

“I was very shy at that time, an introvert, and performing helped me to overcome my shyness,” she says. “I felt I was a natural on the stage – it never felt like anything I didn’t love.”

After leaving school she moved to the UAE for six years, first to study visual communication at the American University of Sharjah, before starting her own branding design firm. She also found time to host solo art exhibitions, and launched a jewellery line.

But she never lost her passion for music. “I just felt this was my calling, I always had this goal,” she says.

No longer lacking in confidence, at 22 Barhoum applied for a spot at Rome’s Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, one of the oldest and most esteemed music schools in the world. After a nervy audition in front of renowned soprano and opera director Renata Scotto, Barhoum was tutored by the likes of Alberta Valentini and Walter Alberti, splitting her time between Italy and Jordan during her five years of study.

The reward for all of those efforts comes with the release of her debut album, which was launched in Jordan in November. Saturday’s concert marks the album’s international release across the Arabian Gulf.

It doesn’t stop there. This summer, Barhoum will travel to Rome for the European launch, driven by a heartfelt passion to share the album’s musical fusions with the world.

“I’ve always believed that every artist or person, if you’re given a gift, you’re given it for a reason, and it really should be [used] for that purpose or message,” she says. “And even though it’s very difficult to change the world … it’s nice to think that you could.”

Source: www.thenational.ae

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