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May 06, 2008

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

I remember when New York City began mandatory recycling of paper and cans. Nobody thought New Yorkers would ever cooperate, but within a few months everybody was bagging or tying up newspapers and setting them at the curb. Those of us who used to set out redeemable cans for the homeless to collect now put them in recycling bins. It seemed miraculous that citizens could change their behavior so quickly.

San Francisco diverts 70% of its trash from the landfill, but wants to do even better: A City Committed to Recycling Is Ready for More - New York Times.

Jared Blumenfeld, the director of the city’s environmental programs, addressed one of the main reasons the city keeps up the pressure to recycle. “The No. 1 export for the West Coast of the United States is scrap paper,” Mr. Blumenfeld said, explaining that the paper is sent to China and returns as packaging that holds the sneakers, electronics and toys sold in big-box stores.

It's sad that a once-great industrial power now exports mostly scrap and raw materials. To save the planet we all need to reduce what we consume so that we reduce what we trash (and reduce our carbon emissions). But I admire Gavin Newsom for fighting this good fight.

Here in Oakland we recycle paper, glass, plastic and kitchen scraps. The county subsidizes expensive back-yard compost bins for those of us who want to make our own mulch; we also have green bins for yard wastes, kitchen scraps and paper contaminated with food (i.e. pizza boxes and cardboard egg cartons).

In my father's hometown, Sidon, Lebanon, the municipal garbage dump keeps falling into the Mediterranean; it's a long-running, slow-motion environmental crisis. Naples has a similar, horrific garbage problem, and the press is full of reports of massive electronic waste dumps in Africa and South Asia. Being rich is a sickness that causes ill-health to the sea, the soil, the climate, and ultimately to ourselves. Fish, insects and birds are part of an interconnected web of life that supports our own life; we cannot survive long in a monoculture. We need all manner of bugs and life forms we don't even know. Garbage pollutes the world that is supposed to sustain us.

Mundane and stinky, garbage is still important. We can't just "throw it away" and forget about it. We have to confront our garbage if we want to survive as a species.

May 02, 2008

Not celebrating

Regarding Israel's 60th anniversary and the Palestinian Nakba, British Jews and others write: Letters: We're not celebrating Israel's anniversary | The Guardian.

Hat tip to Philip Weiss, who is running a Nakba watch at his blog. He celebrates Lila Abu-Lughod and her book, Nakba, published last year.

As'ad Abu-Khalil
alerts us to this letter to Nadine Gordimer from a professor in Gaza whose students are literally starving while reading her books.

My cold and hungry students have divided themselves into two groups, with one group adamant that you, like many of your courageous characters, will reconsider your participation in an Israeli festival that aims to celebrate the annihilation of Palestine and Palestinians. The other group believes that you have already crossed over to the side of the oppressor, negating every word you have ever written. We all wait for your next action.

April 13, 2008

The New York Times is watching me

I was kidding in a previous link about the NY Times stalking me. But now my referral log shows that the Times is running a link to my blog today: Guatemala News - Breaking World Guatemala News - The New York Times.

Nytdovecapturecrop

According to the little pop-up window, the editors of the Times monitor my blog and link to it intermittently, perhaps using a "robot" triggered by key words. I can only assume that a robot picked up my John Yoo post for their Guatemala page because I kept mentioning Guatemala and torture.

I'm tickled. They're paying attention to me! I have a strange psychic link to the Times, ever since I worked in its legal offices on 43d Street back in the '90s. I used to have epic dreams set in the Times building, and even years later, in California, I would find myself taking a night-time elevator to the board room. The most memorable dream while I worked there was when the elevator kept on going above the fifteenth floor penthouse and hovered over the building. ??? You can imagine the Times lawyers thought this dream was pretty wacky - because of course I shared it with them in the morning. I was a very fast and efficient legal secretary and I tried to express my intuitive side on the job, just to keep everybody awake.

In those days the boardroom was plastered with photographs of New York Times company owners back to the nineteenth century, meeting and greeting famous men (and women). I remember a picture of Herzl on a bridge. There were enormous color portraits of Sadat and the Shah, placed on a sideboard flanking an almost life-sized crystal swan. This was in early 1992 or so, and President G.H.W. Bush's portrait had its own spot at the head of the room next to an American flag. Sulzberger Sr., an ex-Marine, was the chairman of the board then and the photo placements were his doing (that and the candy dishes on the board table). To me these pictures say it all about the Times and its perceptions of the world.

So my feelings about the Times and its journalism are profoundly ambivalent. The Shah, Sadat, and Theodore Herzl are definitely NOT in my pantheon of history's heroes. Still I think it's cool that a little blog run by an obscure novelist and housewife in Oakland gets monitored by the editorial wizards at the Times website.

The internet is changing how information spreads.

April 12, 2008

Hold John Yoo To Account For His Crime

I was at a party on Wednesday night for an author whose latest novel deals with torture during Guatemala's civil war. My friend the Human Rights Lawyer had been in the Yucatan since before John Yoo's torture memo of 2003 was released, and I was filling her in on the latest as we sat on a plush sofa and ate dolmas and hummus; we were in the north Berkeley hills in a prosperous neighborhood.
Yoofacultyphotophp

"He lives around here," I said. Our other friend who writes about Argentina's torturers and their victims, listened in on the conversation. "He is part of our community. What are we going to do about him? If we just keep on worrying about torture in Guatemala or Argentina, and we don't address the man who enables torture by our government, who lives among us, then aren't we being hypocrites?"

John Yoo shops where we shop, he drives the streets we drive, we heard a rumor that he lives in this very neighborhood, close to Human Rights Lawyer and Guatemala Novelist. And he wrote the memo enabling Abu-Ghraib and Guantanamo torture. But we do nothing. We don't know what to do, so we keep on chauffeuring our children to school, and attending nice parties. Are we turning into good Germans, just going along with creeping fascism because it would be impolite or out of bounds to make a stink?

200pxabughraibabusestandingonbox

Well, maybe yes.

I believe I saw Mr. Yoo yesterday in the waiting room of a doctor I consult in Berkeley. I'm not positive. I have trouble lining up photos of people with the real person. But what if I did meet him in my doctor's waiting room? He looks like a frightened, dewy, pleading boy-man. I don't know how to be cold or cruel to such a person. And I wouldn't compromise doctor-patient confidentiality by asking about him or discussing where exactly we were. (not a shrink's office BTW)

I want to see Yoo held to account. I don't want him - or anyone - to believe that because I accept his right to decent treatment as a human being in his daily round, that means I accept what he has done.

John Yoo, in writing the torture memo, has undermined everything that matters about this Republic of which I am a citizen. And I am not certain that any institution of this Republic is going to call him to account. (or prosecute "the deciders", either). We're all too polite, too concerned with following the rules.

John Yoo must account for his actions, in public. It's not enough for him to be shunned or harassed or insulted around town, around campus, as some have suggested. He undermined the principles upon which this country was founded, and he must pay a public price for this. The nature of his mistake must be explained in public, so that the many other Americans who don't understand why torture is bad for the country may learn something.

I don't believe in mobs with pitchforks or public insult as the only action. Such methods do not promote justice or respect for the rule of law. I do believe in due process.

At the very least, can Berkeley lawyers and other faculty hold a teach-in? Invite Yoo to attend and defend himself; give plenty of time to those lawyers who have analyzed exactly what's wrong with his memo, his actions, and US torture policy under Bush.

This Republic's citizens hunger for justice; our constitutional law students need moral direction. The fabric of our democracy is torn. Mend it!

March 25, 2008

Arab-Jewish Peace Actions

American Goy is surprised to hear of the Israel Palestine Center for Research and Information, which I blogged in February 2004. I thought I'd review the last four years of this blog for other joint Arab-Jewish efforts:

Philip Weis reported on this Palestinian-Jewish protest at Gaza, 2008.

Palestinian-Jewish peace camp held yearly in California - one of several such camps around the nation.

September 2007: Islamic Society of North America Welcomes Jewish-Palestinian Dialogue.

The Sulha Peace Project (YouTube video) in Israel. Sulha is a traditional Arab mediation technique.

Jewish Voice for Peace sends a medical delegation to Palestine to work with partner groups including The Palestinian Medical Relief Society.

Jewish Voice for Peace's Olive Harvest Delegation goes to Palestine to help harvest olives with Palestinians under attack by violent Israeli settlers.

Some words from a Jewish teacher revered by Christians and Muslims alike.

IDF soldiers and Palestinian fighters form Combatants for Peace.

A Palestinian and Israeli, both professors, teach a joint history class in which they show each party's narrative side-by-side.

Palestinian teacher of Holocaust history.

List of projects for coexistence and Palestinian-Jewish peace from Answers.com. I know I have blogged a lot of these groups... where are my old posts? Neve Shalom, Givat Haviva. Heck, my parents went to a fundraiser for Givat Haviva back in the late 1980s, when Camryn Manheim's uncle, the late Bill Nuchow, invited them to NY for the shindig. The Answers.com list also includes peace initiatives put out by both sides.

Mayors make peace in Jerusalem - 50 from Israel and Palestine.

Two cool projects for writers and artists.

There's more - I've only gone back to 2005 and there's another year's worth of posts to sift.

American Goy, are you happy?

March 24, 2008

NY Gov. Paterson says he used cocaine

Update: I edited the below to tone down one of my biggest sins, self-righteous anger. Love is the answer, not scolding. End update.

Oh good grief: NY Gov. Paterson says he used cocaine - Yahoo! News.

It's a good thing I'm not running for office, because I grew up in the 70s and came of age in the 1980s. At Oberlin, and then on the Lower East Side. If I had to start confessing my indiscretions from age 13 to about 33, I would just issue one (lengthy) list and be done with it.

Folks. Get a grip. Politicians, and lawyers, and fishermen, and waitresses, and priests, ballerinas, public school teachers, Republicans, evangelical Christians, Hasidim and every other category of humanity include numerous persons, otherwise upstanding citizens, who have done it all. Drugs, sex, alcohol, debt, gambling, hysteria, emotional meltdowns in public, ridiculous internet flames, petty gossip, and refusing to mow the lawn. (OK that last one only matters in certain neighborhoods).

The press knows it. They're all smoking weed or downloading internet porn or sleeping around with their college buddies, and they went to college with all the politicians their age so they know what they did.

The politicians know it too. You KNOW they know it.

I'm not going to confess my own indiscretions however, because my mother reads this blog, and because it's not all that interesting. In fact in my younger days I was often mistaken for more of a libertine than I really was, although you never know with me so keep guessing.

Now that I am respectably married and the mother of two sons (and I live a particularly clean life these days, so don't get excited) people assume that it was always thus. Of course not. In my teens and twenties I considered it my right as an American to do what I damn well pleased within the boundaries of safety, and those boundaries did not always line up with what I'd want published on the front page of the New York Times.

It's nobody's business if the Governor of NY snorted coke in his 20s, I don't care about his marital problems, and I really don't want to know about the ex-Governor of New Jersey's sex life.

Can we stop with the silly stuff? We're grownups and I hope we aren't such a bunch of damn prigs. In fact, if you have never ever committed any sexual, alcoholic, drug-related, financial or other personal indiscretion, then go sit by somebody else, because you're too pure to hang out with the likes of me.

However: if a priggish crusading martinet goes around persecuting people for their lifestyle choices and/or indiscretions, then gets caught doing same, that's newsworthy. Hence Eliot Spitzer, and Larry Craig, and Jim Bakker, etc.

What we need is to repeal or dial down the penalties for drug use in this country, because people from every strata of society experiment with or use drugs regularly. The hypocrisy and futility of the "war on drugs" has been long been obvious to just about everybody. George Bush is known to have been a cokehead, but he never suffered a penalty and he is president of the US. Furthermore, our hypocrisy and infantile response to sexual matters is just -- moronic. Grow up, America. Stop judging others And when it comes to the sexual failings of others, remember what Jesus said about casting stones. Let's be compassionate toward our brothers and sisters, because we all have sins of our own. And let's focus on real problems that need real solutions.

March 21, 2008

Salata Baladi ســلطة بـلدي

I was fortunate to attend a screening of this film last night: Salata Baladi ســلطة بـلدي. It tells the story of an Egyptian family with Jewish, Christian and Muslim members; the elderly mother was born a Rosenthal in Cairo, became a Communist and married an Egyptian Muslim. Her relatives now live in Italy - and Israel; she has a grandson who is a Palestinian living in Egypt. The film opens with relatives telling stories of their ancestors from all around Europe and the Middle East, a marvelous mix of complex identities.

The filmmaker, Nadia Kamel of Cairo, explains:

The original inspiration for this film was simple enough: a love for my family's stories and a wish to share them. It was a story telling project. The energy that eventually propelled me into this adventure was more complicated. I saw my octogenarian mother aging and my 10-year-old nephew growing up under a shadow of satellite dishes and a rising clamor about some inevitable clash of civilizations. And a mixture of hope and fear overtook me.

My mother's stories, woven across the 20th century, confound any straightforward understanding of the historical events during which they were played out and are almost always an exception to the reductive homogeneity with which we are taught to view 'History.' In my family, religions and cultures get married when they appear to be divorcing in the global arena. In a world where my family's identities are being squeezed into irreconcilable positions, I needed to document my history before I became apologetic about it and the myth of its extinction was realized.

But as my mother told her stories, I discovered that the film could not simply be a reclaiming of our treasured past: we found ourselves colliding with pockets of denial and silence. Without confronting the taboos of our present, my mother's stories were reduced to self indulgence and nostalgia. And so my story telling film became a witness to a new story still in the making -- a story about my family's efforts to once more climb the wall that unjustly insists on separating our principles from our humanity.

A note on the title: A Dutch writer on the Salata Baladi blog translates the film's title to "Salad House." This is a literal translation of the film's French title, "Salade Maison", which I think seems to connote the "house salad" of a restaurant, the salad put together by the proprietors, as well as the salad of home.

However the Arabic title is "Salata Baladi", which means literally "Country Salad". This has the connotations of "rural" in Egypt, but also "very Egyptian" - "baladi" bread in Cairo is whole wheat, rustic, for "country" people to eat. Furthermore, to this Lebanese-American, "baladi" has the connotation of "my country" as in my nation, the nation to which I belong. And baladi means also my local area - my village or region. The title in Arabic has nationalist, class and geographic implications that are important, I believe, to the film's context and purpose.

The salad may be a melange of ingredients but it is a salad of the film-maker's country, Egypt. It is an Egyptian salad. Not just the house salad of some restaurant, or the salad of the film-maker's home (maison). The salad's mix of seemingly disparate ingredients reflects the cosmopolitan nature of Egypt, in the old days and even now.

One of the Israeli cousins in the film bestowed this word "cosmopolitan" upon Egypt, and when asked, said that he and his own countrymen were no longer cosmopolitan. "We are local patriots," he said with a laugh. I suppose his English did not extend to the antonym for cosmopolitan: "provincial."

Most of the relatives on either side of the Egyptian border have become provincials under pressure of decades of war. Meanwhile Mary (the elderly mother), her husband, their daughter the filmmaker, and her Palestinian and activist friends remain able to see the bigger, "cosmopolitan" picture.

These friends and the Kamel family are all leftists; the Kamels were Communists in fact. I grew up in a family that was very liberal, with occasional socialist leanings; there are branches of my family that are Phalangist, and the political split has caused hard feelings over the years, which we paper over because we love each other. Meanwhile, my parents associated with all manner of lefties, including some famous Communists, whose perspectives I engaged.

Although Communism always struck me as a futile, dead-end movement (sorry, comrades), and I never wanted to follow my various Communist friends along their path, I must say that it's the Communists of this world, Jews and Arabs, who keep the ideals of humanity alive. Perhaps the extreme idealism of Communists helps them maintain their larger perspective even when modern society goes insane and tries to divide itself into nations, civilizations, warring factions which must oppose each other.

If you probe the family backgrounds of my Jewish friends and relations here in America, (my husband is half-Jewish), you'll find that every last one of them has a Socialist or Communist ancestor somewhere. None of them are that far to the left now, but I think it's interesting that the Jews I associate with in America almost all have such family backgrounds.

And my Arab-American friends are also descended from lefties. I don't feel "sympatico" with Arab-American investment bankers much, even when they're my cousins whom I love; but some random Arab-American middle-aged hipster I meet in a pizzeria or a poetry reading will turn out to have a father who belonged to the secular pan-Arabist party favored by some of my lefty relatives.

I can't become a Communist any more than I could become an Evangelical Christian. But I understand and respect some of the core principles.

This film affected me so much that when I woke up at 3 a.m., a little while ago, I could not stop thinking about it. So I'm blogging, hoping to get it off my chest and go to bed. I have to go get more chemo in San Francisco six hours from now.

By the way, Salata Baladi will show in New York City and at Cornell University next week. Details:

March 28, 2008 @ 4:00 pm
Kevorkian Center 50 Washington Square South at 255 Sullivan Street
New York, NY 10012

March 30, 2008 @ 7:00 pm
Cornell University, New York
Cornell Cinema, Ithaca, New York

Update:
Joseph Massad criticizes Salata Baladi with a complex view of the family's larger historical context. He elaborates on the subtext I noticed - the Communist, nationalist, Socialist history of the Kamel family and of Egypt. He's not happy with the film's perspective. Read his comment - and still see the film.

March 16, 2008

Denied Entry

Earth activist and spiritual leader Starhawk has been denied entry to Israel - she was invited to teach permaculture techniques to several Israeli groups, but she had worked with the International Solidarity Movement in Palestine five years ago, and wrote about that experience. So although she is a Jew, Israel denied her entry.

She sent around this letter today, which I reproduce in part. Update 3/20/08: link to full text here.

Denied Entry By Starhawk

Today is March 16. Five years ago, I was in a small village in the Occupied Territories of the West Bank of Palestine with a group of volunteers from the International Solidarity Movement, which supports nonviolent resistance against the Occupation. We had gone because the villagers were being menaced by tanks from the Israeli military, and wanted witnesses, but by the time we arrived, the tanks had gone. Instead we wandered through the olive groves, studded with pink cyclamen and blood-red anemones, and ate barbecued lamb in the courtyard of an ancient stone house with domed ceilings and arched portals. It was a strangely
idyllic day—until on our way back to Nablus we got a call. Down in Rafah, in the Gaza strip, a young volunteer named Rachel Corrie had been crushed to death by a an Israeli military bulldozer as she attempted to prevent the demolition of a Palestinian family’s house.

Today I sit in a room in Washington D.C. overcome by grief as in the next room my new friend Laurie writes out card after card with the names of the dead—American soldiers and Iraqi civilians, pile after pile of them. I’m grieving for all the dead, and a bit for myself, because I meant to be back in Palestine, or at least in Israel, now. But I have been denied entry and sent home, because of my past work with the ISM. I have been denied entry, even though my intentions this time were strictly to work with permaculture and ecology groups, including the three Israeli groups that have sent me formal invitations, and even though Israel claims to be a refuge of last resort for everyone born Jewish, as I am. The fact that I’m here, not there, is a measure of how much the Israeli authorities fear a movement of nonviolent resistance in general, and the ISM in particular.

Why is nonviolence so threatening? Violence attacks the body, but nonviolence threatens something deeper and more tenuous—the self-perceptions and rationalizations that let basically good people act in cruel and heartless ways. The Israel/Palestine conflict enacts on a mass scale some of the same dynamics as family abuse. Israel is like the abused child who grows up to be an abuser. Abusers generally feel like victims—and truly the Jewish people have been victimized, again and again in history, culminating in the still unhealed wounds of the Holocaust. Every rocket attack, every shooting spree in a Yeshivah, every suicide bomb in a bus reinforces that sense of fear and persecution that seems to cry out for violence in return.

Read the rest of Starhawk's article at her website, linked above.

March 15, 2008

High wheat prices

Four_loaves
To fix this: High wheat prices raise grocery costs

You might want to try this:

Simple Whole Wheat Bread Recipe

From the Yahoo article: "Meanwhile, some consumers are taking the opposite path — baking more. King Arthur's Bittel said that while store-bought bread is running between $3 and $5, a home baked loaf will cost about 60 cents.

"That's up from 40 cents from a year ago, but Bittel said his company nevertheless has seen growing sales of bread-making machines."


Don't bother buying a bread machine until you make bread a few times with equipment you have on hand. Mark Bittman tells you how to make bread dough in two minutes in the food processor (How to Cook Everything) and if there's interest, I will post his recipe. You're not saving money on buying bread if you buy a new machine at $100-200 a pop. And if you don't have a food processor or heavy-duty stand mixer, you can always just knead it by hand. Or make the famous no-knead yeast bread.

More on surging food prices, with details, at the New York Times. Be sure to click on my Frugal Food category for tips and links on dealing with food price rises.

Photo by Tom Burke, from Wikipedia.

March 12, 2008

Arab Bloggers: Lecture at Cal

Egyptian journalist Hossam El Hamalawy will speak in Berkeley at noon today on Arab bloggers.

Blogging in the Arab World

Lecture: Noontime Lecture Series

March 12, 12 p.m. Stephens Hall, Sultan Room, 340

Mr. Hossam El Hamalawy, International Visiting Scholar, Graduate School of Journalism, University of California at Berkeley

Center for Middle Eastern Studies

I should have posted this yesterday, sorry. I am going to try to make it.