Advertisement Close

Author Archives: Arab America

Music is cellist’s answer to blasts

The cellist set down his chair on the Baghdad sidewalk, leaned his instrument on his knee, closed his eyes and began to play. The music rose above the buzz of the busy shopping street, where just a day earlier a car bomb had exploded.

A crowd drew in: policemen, passers-by, friends of those killed by the blast. As the musician played the national anthem, the voices of the crowd rose with him.

Karim Wasfi, conductor of the Iraqi National Symphony Orchestra, had decided to play amid the wreckage to drive home a message.

Iraqis need to experience beauty, not just endure one bomb after another.

“It’s about reaching out to people exactly where someone had experienced something so grotesque and ugly earlier,” Wasfi said in an interview. “The spot where people lost their lives, the spot where people were still trying to stay alive, trying to function.”

He wanted, he said, to reach out to residents “at a higher level.”

The bomb site in the central Baghdad district of Karrada was the second where Wasfi has given an impromptu performance in recent days. A video of him playing at the site of an explosion near his home was posted on YouTube and has been viewed more than 47,000 times.

His performances have resonated in a city where bombings have been part of life for more than a decade. More often than not, the broken glass is swept aside after the blasts, shop fronts are quickly mended and people resume their routines, although the explosions inevitably leave a deep impact on the psyche of this city.

Late last year, the frequency of bombings declined, and a nighttime curfew was lifted after more than a decade, breathing a new vibrancy into the Iraqi capital. But in recent months, as Islamic State militants come under pressure elsewhere in the country, the explosions have begun again.

Some 319 civilians were killed in terrorism, violence and conflict in Baghdad governorate in April, according to the United Nations, the highest toll for any province.

The first time Wasfi played at a bomb site, he did it on an impulse. An evening explosion that had rocked the upscale district of Mansour was near his home. The next day, he went to the site to play.

“My house is just behind that main street, so it was very symbolic for me to wake up, grab my cello and walk to that spot, get my cello out of my case, sit by the rubble and the shrapnel and the whole scene of death and the scene of fire and the scene of human beings turning to ashes, and play,” he said. He performed one of his own compositions: “Baghdad Mourning Melancholy.”

Many of those who gathered had witnessed the horror of the bombing, which killed 10 people.

“What happened was extraordinary,” he said. “Everybody — soldiers, officers, street cleaners, the workers who were fixing the shop — they all left what they were doing and gathered around, and they were listening to this tune.” Drivers stopped their cars, snarling traffic, he said. “They were kind enough to understand the importance of civility and beauty.”

He returned later that evening to play again as mourners lit candles and laid flowers.

Wasfi worries that with constant conflict, Iraqis focus just on existing, while art and culture become sidelined.

“You see the impending doom of uncertainty hitting again, and people are only reacting by functioning,” he said.

News quickly spread of Wasfi’s first impromptu concert. One of those who shared the striking image of the maestro playing his cello in front of the scorched shop fronts was his friend Ammar al-Shahbander, 41, the Iraq director of the Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

A few days later, Wasfi was playing at another bomb site. Al-Shahbander had just been killed there, along with about 16 other people, when a parked car detonated.

Wasfi and al-Shahbander were part of a group of Iraqi intellectuals who had returned to their country after the 2003 U.S. invasion with hope of developing Iraq’s media and artistic communities.

“Ammar could have left” the country again, like many others seeking lucrative careers or just peaceful lives, Wasfi said. “Why do we keep on doing this? Because we appreciate beauty, and we want to build, not to destroy.”

The cellist’s performances come more than two decades after another musician, Vedran Smajlovic, became a symbol of artistic opposition to war’s destruction, by playing in battle-scarred Bosnia. He was dubbed the Cellist of Sarajevo.

In Iraq, a country fraught with division, Wasfi’s actions have inevitably also drawn criticism. Some online commentators have accused him of self-promotion, while others have pointed out that the conductor has played in only relatively well-to-do neighborhoods. The cellist said he tried to play in Hayy al-Amal, a Shiite neighborhood struck in recent days by a bombing.

“I was warned not to go by some people I know,” he said. “I can’t be everywhere at once.”

But his actions have largely been met with support.

Mohammed Twaij, a visiting British-Iraqi pediatrician, was in Karrada when the bomb struck, and later took candles and black ribbons to hand out at the site. With his son, he put up cardboard signs on a nearby tree and encouraged people to draw and write messages.

Seeing Wasfi’s performance earlier in the week had inspired him, he said.

“It was something new and was one of the things on my mind when we decided to come to do this,” the 62-year-old doctor said. “It’s become sort of normal in this city, another explosion, another person being killed, but it’s an absolute tragedy.”

Later, Wasfi arrived unannounced to play, sitting among flickering candles that had been lit by passers-by.

“It was beautiful, even though it was painful,” said Hussein Mohammed, a 21-year-old engineering student who stopped to watch. “I don’t think any country could bear to go through what we have gone through, but despite everything, we are trying to live. This is evidence that we have the will to live.”

Information for this article was contributed by Mustafa Salim of the Washington Post.

Source: www.nwaonline.com

Brazilian conductor to lead orchestra in Beirut

São Paulo – The Brazilian maestro Ligia Amadio is conducting the Lebanese Philharmonic Orchestra next Friday (15th) in Beirut, the capital of Lebanon. The Brazilian artist arrived in the Arab country last weekend to rehearse with the local musicians. The performance will take place at 8:30 pm at the St Joseph Jesuit Church, free of charge.

The repertoire will include Bachianas No. 7, by the Brazilian composer and maestro Heitor Villa-Lobos, and Symphony No. 3 in F major, op.90, by Germany’s Johannes Brahms. “We will play Villa-Lobos to bring the best of Brazilian music to Lebanese audiences,” Amadio told by email. “With Brahms’s third symphony, we will perform one of the most beloved pieces of universal music, a composition that poses technical and expressive challenges to any orchestra and any conductor,” she said.

On justifying her choice of Villa Lobos, the artist noted that the Brazilian embassy in Lebanon, which is committed to the concert and collaborating actively for it to take place, works to spread Brazilian music in the Arab country. This is why a piece by a Brazilian composer is in the repertoire. The Friday performance is sponsored by the embassy in collaboration with the Lebanese Philharmonic Orchestra.

Amadio will rehearse with the group the entire week through Friday. She explains that the work process of conductor-orchestra interaction for a concert is an international one. “Adaptation is mutual, always,” she says. The maestro asserts that the musicians in the Lebanese Philharmonic Orchestra are world-class and that she anticipates a “wonderful” concert.

Amadio conducted the Lebanese orchestra in 2012 during the 19th Al Bustan International Festival of Music and of the Arts, in Beirut, at the request of the event’s president Myrna Bustani. The invitation for this year’s performance came from the current artistic director and principal conductor of the Lebanese Philharmonic Orchestra, maestro Harout Fazlian, who attended the 2012 concert.

Due to having worked with the orchestra before, Amadio says she has special feelings for it. Founded in 1988, it is the country’s foremost ensemble, maintained by the government, and connected with the Ministry of Culture and the Lebanese National Higher Conservatory of Music.

Brazilian conductor

Amadio is regarded by critics as one of Brazil’s leading maestros, for her high artistic standards, charisma, and corporal and verbal expressivity. She holds a degree in Industrial Engineering and studied at the Music Conservatory of the University of São Paulo (USP), where she ultimately opted for the orchestra.

The first woman ever to win the orchestral direction contest in Tokyo, Ligia Amadio was also the principal conductor of the USP Symphonic Orchestra, the Mendoza Philharmonic Orchestra, in Argentina, and the Bogota Symphonic Orchestra, in Colombia, among others. She has also served as guest director with various orchestras around the world.

Amadio says she admires and respects Arab culture, and her relationship with the region is like all other Brazilians’, one of integration in habits, culture and friendship. “Since my earliest childhood, I had countless friends of Arab descent, more specifically Lebanese. São Paulo’s current mayor Fernando Haddad is an admired friend of mine, as is the great Brazilian diplomat José Maurício Bustani,” she says.

Source: www2.anba.com.br

Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters Calls Dionne Warwick ‘Ignorant Of What Has Happened In Palestine’

Roger Waters, co-founder of Pink Floyd, got into an argument with American singer Dionne Warwick who is slated to perform in Tel Aviv later in May. 

Waters has been outspoken about Middle Eastern politics and pledged his support to the Gaza Freedom March in 2011. Back then he had said, “You can attack Israeli policy without being anti-Jewish … It’s like saying if you criticise the US policy you are being anti-Christian. I’m critical of the Israeli policy of occupying Palestinian land and their policy of building settlements, which is entirely illegal under international law, and also of ghettoising the people whose land they are building on … It’s that foreign policy I’m against. It’s nothing to do with the religion.”

Of late, the Pink Floyd frontman along with other organisations has been trying to get entertainers to cancel their performances in Israel as part of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement against Israel.

Recently American R&B and soul singer Lauryn Hill cancelled her show in the Jewish state, thanks to Waters.

A statement from Dionne Warwick’s side reads:

(Ms. Warwick) would never fall victim to the hard pressures of Roger Waters, from Pink Floyd, or other political people who have their views on politics in Israel. Waters’ political views are of no concern to Ms. Warwick, as she holds her own unique view on world matters. Art has no boundaries. Ms. Warwick will always honor her contracts. If Ms. Warwick had an objection to performing in Israel, no offer would have been entertained and no contract would have been signed.

In a response to this statement from Warwick’s representatives, Roger Waters wrote back:

Singer and U.N. global ambassador Dionne Warwick recently released an interesting if puzzling statement asserting that she would, and I quote, “never fall victim to the hard pressures of Roger Waters, from Pink Floyd, or other political people who have their views on politics in Israel.”

“Waters’ political views are of no concern,” I assume she means to her, the statement read. “Art,” she added, “has no boundaries.”

Until today, I have not publicly commented on Ms. Warwick’s Tel Aviv concert or reached out to her privately. But given her implicit invitation, I will comment now.

First, in my view, Dionne Warwick is a truly great singer. Secondly, I doubt not that she is deeply committed to her family and her fans.

But, ultimately, this whole conversation is not about her, her gig in Tel Aviv, or even her conception of boundaries and art, though I will touch on that conception later. This is about human rights and, more specifically, this is about the dystopia that can develop, as it has in Israel, when society lacks basic belief in equal human value, when it strays from the ability to feel empathy for our brothers and sisters of different faiths, nationalities, creeds or colors.

It strikes me as deeply disingenuous of Ms. Warwick to try to cast herself as a potential victim here. The victims are the occupied people of Palestine with no right to vote and the unequal Palestinian citizens of Israel, including Bedouin Israeli citizens of the village of al-Araqib, which has now been bulldozed 83 times by order of the Israeli government.

I believe you mean well, Ms. Warwick, but you are showing yourself to be profoundly ignorant of what has happened in Palestine since 1947, and I am sorry but you are wrong, art does know boundaries. In fact, it is an absolute responsibility of artists to stand up for human rights – social, political and religious – on behalf of all our brothers and sisters who are being oppressed, whoever and wherever they may be on the surface of this small planet.

Forgive me, Ms. Warwick, but I have done a little research, and know that you crossed the picket line to play Sun City at the height of the anti-apartheid movement. In those days, Little Steven, Bruce Springsteen and 50 or so other musicians protested against the vicious, racist oppression of the indigenous peoples of South Africa. Those artists allowed their art to cross boundaries, but for the purpose of political action. They released a record that struck a chord across the world. That record, “I Ain’t Gonna play Sun City,” showed the tremendous support of musicians all over the world for the anti-apartheid effort.

Source: www.outlookindia.com

Abu Dhabi to finance Tom Hanks film

Image Nation Abu Dhabi, the emirate’s film production arm, has announced that it will fully finance American filmmaker James Ponsoldt’s upcoming film ‘The Circle’, which is co-produced by actor Tom Hanks.

The film, based on Dave Eggers’ novel of the same name, will be presented in association with Parkes MacDonald Productions.

Eggers’ novel follows the story of a young woman working at a high position in an Internet company called the Circle.

The company links the personal emails, social media, and banking details, of their users, with their universal operating system.

The result is “one online identity and a new age of civility and transparency,” according to Image Nation.

The contemporary thriller novel emphasises the threats of life in a digital age, where personal data is constantly monitored and examined, resulting in zero privacy.

The project marks Hanks’ second collaboration with Eggers, as he starred in Eggers’ adaptation ‘A Hologram for the King’.

“The Circle is a fantastic modern day thriller that shines a light on the role of the Internet and our own identities in a world of increasing transparency and privacy issues,” the CEO of Image Nation, Michael Garin, commented.

“Image Nation’s international projects have helped subsidise and build our local industry here in Abu Dhabi and the region, while creating opportunities for our local talent to work on large scale international productions and this film will help continue that effort,” Garin added.

Handling the film’s international sales will be IM Global, who will also represent the work at this year’s Cannes Film Festival.

Shooting for The Circle will start on August 2015 in California.

Image Nation and Parkes MacDonald Productions have also partnered on the upcoming documentary ‘He Named Me Malala’, which portrays Malala Yousafzai, who was wounded by the Taliban when they opened fire on her school bus in Pakistan.

Source: m.arabianbusiness.com

New dishes to try at the Lebanese Food Festival

The Lebanese Food Festival, a Richmond favorite, returns for its 31st year this weekend with homemade Lebanese dishes, traditional music and colorful dancing.
The three-day festival has added a handful of new dishes that are prepared on-site, cooked in an outdoor conveyer oven and served hot. They are:
• Manouch Bejibn, an open-face flatbread cheese pie topped with mozzarella, Asiago, Parmesan and Romano;
• Laham Bi Ajeen, an open-face pita with fresh ground beef, tomatoes, onions, parsley and Lebanese spices; and
• Zaatar bread, an open-face pita topped with Lebanese pesto, sesame seed, olive oil, lemon and Lebanese spices.
But don’t worry, the menu hasn’t changed much because of the new additions. You’ll still find plenty of tasty standbys, such as stuffed squash, spinach pies, roasted lamb, falafel, baked kibbee and enough stuffed grape leaves to stretch from St. Anthony Maronite Church to Short Pump Town Center and back.
Another festival favorite is to buy in bulk. Festivalgoers like to stock up on such favorites as pies, kibbee, hummus, tabbouleh and more to freeze for later.
New this year, the festival will be offering off-site parking with a shuttle from the nearby parking lot at Markel Corp.
The festival is held rain or shine on the church’s 15 acres of rolling grounds. There also is an indoor dining area that seats 300.
Last year, more than 20,000 people came out during the course of the festival, which is a labor of love by the 250 families in the church parish. Church members as young as 4 participate in the cultural dances, while mothers and grandmothers cook side by side in the kitchen.
“No one is a stranger here,” said festival volunteer Sandra Brown. “Everyone is treated like a guest in our home. I think that’s part of the reason people come

Source: www.richmond.com

Roger Waters And Dionne Warwick Argue About Palestine

Singer and U.N. global ambassador Dionne Warwick recently released an interesting if puzzling statement asserting that she would, and I quote, “never fall victim to the hard pressures of Roger Waters, from Pink Floyd, or other political people who have their views on politics in Israel.” “Waters’ political views are of no concern,” I assume … Continued

U.S.-ARAB CHAMBER SUPPORTS “WORLD TRADE WEEK” IN LOS ANGELES

Los Angeles, CA – This past week, the National U.S. – Arab Chamber of Commerce (NUSACC) and other local institutions supported the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce in celebration of the 89th Annual World Trade Week. NUSACC’s Los Angeles Office – represented by Ms. Huda Salman – participated in the “kickoff” breakfast held at … Continued

Rooftop gardens link Palestinians to land lost in Nakba

Dheishe refugee camp (Palestinian Territories) (AFP) – Hijar Hamdan al-Ayess picks off a few yellowing leaves, before pouring water into a hollowed-out pipe filled with soil where she has planted rows of aubergines, cucumbers and tomatoes.

This is her way of escaping the narrow streets of Dheishe refugee camp in the southern West Bank town of Bethlehem, which is home to some 15,000 people who once lived in 45 Palestinian villages that no longer exist.

“The Jews took our land, so to compensate and because we love the land, we decided to set up greenhouses on our rooftops,” says Ayess whose parents came to Dheishe in 1952 after fleeing their village of Zakariyya near Hebron.

Ayess, who was born in the camp, would like to grow more plants but she has no space left on the roof, so she is making do with what she has while hoping for better days.

“The most important thing is for us to return to our lands, to find them again,” she says as the Palestinians prepare to formally mark 67 years since the Nakba, or “catastrophe” that befell them when Israel was established in 1948.

For the Palestinians, the right to return to homes they fled or were forced out of is a prerequisite for any peace agreement with Israel, but it is a demand the Jewish state has rejected out of hand.

Yasser al-Haj, director of Karama, a local camp-based NGO which works to create opportunities for its residents, says that creating these gardens is a way of keeping alive the spirit of lands which today belong to others.

“When we cultivate land, it creates an attachment, you become tied to this land and through that to this country,” he tells AFP in his office, a map of “Palestine before 1948” on the wall.

– ‘They were wrong’ –

“The Jews were wrong. They hoped that the generation which lived through the Nakba would die out and that their descendants would forget,” he said.

But that is not the case.

“The young people have not forgotten and they will never forget,” he says as he shows a group of children how to grow tomatoes that he has brought back from Holland: oxheart tomatoes, striped tomatoes and even varieties which are pink or yellow.

Abu Fuad, who will be 100 this year, is one of those forced into exile. 

He even took part in the fighting in 1948 “with a gun bought from an Egyptian who was selling weapons dating back to World War I” in order to fight and save his village, Beit Aatab some 40 kilometres (25 miles) from Bethlehem.

More than 760,000 Palestinians — estimated today to number around 5.5 million with their descendants — fled or were driven from their homes in 1948, with the Nakba marked every May 15.

Abu Fuad was one of them, leaving his home with everything inside it “because people thought they would come back.”

Moving from place to place, he finally found a single room measuring just over six square metres (65 sq feet) which had to provide shelter for 12 people.

With no work and no money, they were forced to rely on the support of the Red Cross and the UN, with the UN’s agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) today still helping more than five million refugees spread across Jordan, Syria, Lebanon and the occupied territories.

– A sacred key –

When Abu Fuad left his house, he locked it with a heavy iron key which he still guards closely.

“It is sacred,” he says, kissing it and touching it to his forehead.

Over decades of exile this young man wrote poems about his now destroyed home, eventually becoming a great-grandfather, still bright-eyed but going slightly deaf.

Before Israel built the separation barrier which now surrounds Bethlehem, he went back to Beit Aatab.

“I found the place where my school was,” he says, his eyes glistening as he recites one of his poems.

“Oh Muslims, Oh Christians, you have too easily abandoned Palestine!” he says, still bitter over the Arab armies who were defeated more than six decades ago.

Source: www.businessinsider.com

1,787 Results (Page 6 of 149)