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April 30, 2008

All Palestinian Factions Agree to Ceasefire

From The Hindu News Update Service.

all the Palestinian militant factions have agreed to an Egypt-mediated ceasefire with Israel, "starting in the Gaza strip".

"All the Palestinian factions have agreed to the Egyptian proposal on a truce with Israel," Egyptian state news agency, MENA said citing an unnamed high level Egyptian official.

The Egyptian proposal included a "comprehensive, reciprocal and simultaneous truce, implemented in a graduated framework, starting in the Gaza Strip and then subsequently moving to the West Bank, the official said.

The BBC also gives details.

I find this stuff by checking Google News occasionally.

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.

January 28, 2008

Arab-Jewish Protest at Gaza

Philip Weiss passed on this info about the protest in Gaza Saturday: Mondoweiss.

The universalist impulse in Jewish and Arab life continues to be shut out of our press in favor of the parochial. You wouldn't know it, but on Saturday, over 1000 Israelis--Israeli Jews and Palestinians--led a convoy of cars from Tel Aviv to the wall at Gaza to bring food and supplies to try and relieve the suffering of the Gazans. Across the wall in Gaza, there was a protest by the Arabs there. A spectacular event. Here are pictures of the relief convoy...

Read Weiss' post for a description of the actual protest by an eyewitness.

Weiss asks why we didn't see reports of this in the US press? I knew vaguely about the convoy but was busy throwing a large party for my son on Sunday so I didn't keep up (after blogging myself silly over the death of George Habash). A search now shows that indeed it did not seem to make the AP or even AFP news wire.

Here are some reports I harvested from a quick Google news search: Gush Shalom; Ha'aretz (not U.S. of course); and Eyad Sarraj's opinion piece in the Boston Globe, printed before the protest.

WTF is wrong with our press?

Thanks to the internet we can find out the real news anyway.

January 25, 2008

Never Again...

Warsaw Ghetto - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The Warsaw Ghetto was established by the German Governor-General Hans Frank on October 16, 1940. At this time, the population of the Ghetto was estimated to be 440,000 people, about 37% of the population of Warsaw. However, the size of the Ghetto was about 4.5% of the size of Warsaw. Nazis then closed off the Warsaw Ghetto from the outside world on November 16, 1940, building a wall with armed guards.

During the next year and a half, thousands of the Polish Jews as well as some Romani people from smaller cities and the countryside were brought into the Ghetto, while diseases (especially typhoid) and starvation kept the inhabitants at about the same number. Average food rations in 1941 for Jews in Warsaw were limited to 253 kcal, compared to 2,325 kcal for gentile Poles and 5,613 kcal for German people. The life in the ghetto was chronicled by the Oyneg Shabbos group. In 1942 Polish resistance fighter Jan Karski reported to the Western governments on the situation in the Ghetto and on the extermination camps.

Over 100,000 of the Ghetto's residents died due to rampant disease or starvation, as well as random killings, even before the Nazis began massive deportations of the inhabitants from the Ghetto's Umschlagplatz to the Treblinka extermination camp during Operation Reinhard. Between Tisha B'Av, July 23, 1942, and Yom Kippur, September 21, 1942, about 254,000 Ghetto residents were sent to Treblinka and murdered there.

By the end of 1942, it was clear that the deportations were to their deaths, and many of the remaining Jews decided to fight.

Read for yourself. The Warsaw Ghetto is not Gaza. But Gaza is a walled camp and the Israelis are starving its residents of food, fuel and medicine.

Why build walled ghettos to confine a whole people?

Why would the children of the ghetto survivors build a walled ghetto to confine a whole people? The only humane answer is that victims of trauma act out their abuse on others unless they confront and resolve their own wounds.

The madness must stop.

Gaza Roundup

New sidebar at right with a roundup of latest Gaza comment and analysis. You have to read the bloggers, experts like Juan Cole and Joel Beinin, in order to get the context that our "serious" newspapers can't be bothered to provide.

Juan Cole's reprint of the Beinin letter from Cairo.
Juan Cole on the Geneva Conventions and the blockade of Gaza: he calls the blockade atrocity and war crime.

Rami Zurayk reprints an agricultural report from Gaza describing the food emergency there, and the larger devastation of farmers and croplands.

Hossam el-Hamalawy is an Egyptian journalist and blogger who posts links to sources you won't normally see in the mainstream blogworld. Check the Arabist.net main page as well, but they are a little behind on covering this story. (Political pressure? They are based in Cairo and the Egyptian government is very complicit with Israel's blockade. Egypt is cracking down on opposition as I type. Anything to keep George Bush happy, even collaborating with Israel to starve Palestinians).

Bernard Avishai has been blogging Gaza every day this week.

Update: Haitham Sabbah has also been commenting vigorously on Gaza this week.

Jonathan Edelstein at Just World News with cold-eyed tactical perspectives. Check Just World News - Helena Cobban usually - for roundups and updates.

Richard Silverstein of Tikun Olam is the angry prophet in the desert, preaching against the injustice and hypocrisy of the Israeli position.

Jeff Halper of the Israel Committee Against House Demolitions writes: Power to the (Palestinian) People! Thanks to Dennis Fox for blogging this.

By the way, Hossam el-Hamalawy will be speaking at UC Berkeley in March on Arab bloggers. If you're around you should try to attend. The internet keeps blasting the lid off the mass media control of information and Mr. el-Hamalawy has his finger on the pulse of the Arab blogworld.

January 24, 2008

Vigil Against Gaza Blockade, Alameda, CA

A cousin of my husband has organized the following action in Alameda, CA:

Demonstration in solidarity with the Israeli relief effort for Gaza

Come to a demonstration in Alameda,10:am to 11am, Saturday January 26 at City Hall, located at the corner of Oak and Central Streets!
Bring a sign!

The organizers' focus is the Gush Shalom effort to run supplies into Gaza in protest of the blockade. I am more impressed that Palestinians blew up the wall at Rafah and went to Egypt, and I agree with Joel Beinin's analysis (see previous post) that this shows the power of people to take action.

Still, I urge you to attend the Alameda vigil if you are in the area. There will also be a vigil on Friday January 25 in San Francisco at the Israeli consulate, also organized by groups such as Jewish Voice for Peace.

The Gush Shalom press release:

The policy of force has failed, the prison walls are now broken
End the blockade – completely !

Saturday 1.26.08: A countrywide relief convoy and Israeli demonstration in solidarity on the Gaza border with a parallel Palestinian demonstration in the Strip. We’ll go to the Gaza border, in co-operation with Palestinian partners inside Gaza, to show there’s an alternative to siege and rocket-fire – an alternative of ceasefire, peace and quiet, and the flourishing of Sderot and Gaza alike.

Continue reading "Vigil Against Gaza Blockade, Alameda, CA" »

Joel Beinin on Gaza - From Cairo

This letter about Gaza arrived tonight (via Jewish Voice for Peace) from Joel Beinin in Cairo. It may appear later on the Jewish Voice for Peace site, but it's not there yet, so I reprint it in its entirety. Beinin, formerly of Stanford and now Director of Middle East Studies at the American University in Cairo, lays out the whole picture in Gaza better than the usual cryptic wire reports:

The people of the Gaza Strip have taken their survival into their own hands and have shown that the power of ordinary people is more likely to shape the future than polished diplomatic formulas.

"About 3:00 am on Wednesday morning Jan. 23, well-coordinated explosions demolished the iron wall built by Israel to seal the southern border between the Gaza Strip and Egypt (the Philadelphi axis). Tens of thousands of Palestinians streamed across the border and entered the Egyptian side of the town of Rafah, which had been bisected by the wall, in search of food, gasoline, and other basic commodities which have been in short supply for many months in Gaza. The first wave of Palestinians to cross consisted of hundreds of women who were met with water canons and beatings by Egyptian security forces.

"The wall was the starkest expression of the international boycott of Hamas imposed by the United States, Israel, and the European Union after Hamas won a majority of the seats in the Palestinian Legislative Council elections of January 2006 and formed a government the following March. Hamas has been in sole control of the Gaza Strip after it executed a coup d'état against Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in June 2007. Since then, Israel has tightened the siege of Gaza which had been in effect since June 2006.

"In response, Hamas and Palestinian Jihad militants have fired thousands of Qassam missiles on the town of Sderot and other Israeli population centers near the Gaza Strip. According to the 2007 annual report of B'Tselem, the Israeli human rights organization, Hamas and Jihad killed twenty-four Israeli civilians in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip during 2006 and 2007 and thirteen Israeli military personnel.

"In retaliation, Israel escalated the pace of its targeted assassinations of Hamas and Jihad militants, killing hundreds of civilians in the process. Based on B'Tselem's 2007 annual report, a Ha-Aretz investigation (Jan. 14, 2008) concluded that Israeli forces killed 816 Palestinians in the Gaza Strip during 2006 and 2007; at least 360 of them were civilians not affiliated with any armed organizations; 152 of the casualties were under age 18, and 48 were under the age of 14.

Continue reading "Joel Beinin on Gaza - From Cairo" »

Another View of the Gaza Bust-out

Interesting comment from Jonathan Edelstein at 'Just World News' (Helena Cobban's blog).

Questioning received wisdom: I think we've been wrong all along in describing the siege of Gaza as an Israeli siege. In fact, ever since Israel left the Philadelphi route, it's been an Israeli-Egyptian siege, and Egypt has maintained its end for its own reasons. Hamas correctly perceived Egypt as the military and political weak link, and chose to break the siege at the Egyptian border. I've actually wondered why it took so long; there have been partial breaches of the wall before, and I remember thinking at the time that Hamas would gain an advantage by widening them. Maybe it wasn't yet ready, but I think it's now very clear that they and Israel were never the only players.

The paradigm shift: now that the Egyptian border is open, Gaza can no longer be regarded as Israeli-occupied territory. Some scholars such as Dugard maintain that the occupation continued after the 2005 withdrawal because Israel continued to control the access points. I've argued in the past that international law precedents, such as the ICJ's judgment in the DRC-Uganda case, don't support this interpretation and that the occupation ended once Israel gave up effective control on the ground. At this point, however, the argument is moot: as long as the Egyptian border stays open, Gaza can't seriously be regarded as occupied even under Dugard's interpretation. This would mean that the law of belligerent occupation no longer applies to Gaza, although the humanitarian law of war, including the provisions relating to siege, still do.Israel is no longer legally responsible (note: legal and moral responsibilities aren't necessarily the same) for the general welfare of Gaza, or for supplying its people with goods like electricity or fuel.

I did not understand until yesterday how much Egypt has cooperated with Israel to starve the people of Gaza. Jonathan is an original thinker and always sees trends and possibilities that other analysts miss.

February 05, 2007

Kuwaiti Music Video: Like Jon Stewart Crossed With an Arab Britney Spears

You have to see this music video to believe it. It's a political satire as done by the Britney Spears of the Arab world channelling Jon Stewart while singing and belly dancing: Kuwaiti Singer's Video Satirizes the Bush War. The link is to Helena Cobban, who blogged a great explanation of the video. Read it to help you understand what the heck is going on - but the video itself tells the story, even if you don't understand the Arabic.

"Within the highly wired world of the urban Middle East, the latest and most potent means of political communication are short videos that are disseminated either via YouTube or from cellphone to cellphone.

"I'm writing this from Egypt. Everyone here agrees that the video images of the hanging of Saddam Hussein played a huge role in stirring up anti-US and also anti-Shiite feelings among many of the Sunni Muslims who make up the majority of the Arab world's people.

"Now, a well-known Kuwaiti singer called Shams has come out with a new 5-minute video called Ahlan! Ezayek? ("Hi! How are you"), which is a hard-hitting anti-Bush satire. She energetically sings and performs a well-known Egyptian popular song of romantic repudiation. "Hi! How are you... You think you're so great? I never want to see you again!" while hamming it up with a dizzying array of props representing aspects of Bush's policy in the Middle East. And yes, that includes Washington's "information" policies, too, with repeated visual references to newspaper stories and to round-table type TV talk-shows..." - Helena Cobban

Hurry, hurry and watch it. I am stunned. It's hilarious and biting all at once. By the way, for bonus points, Shams satirizes Arabs who get plastic surgery to look more European.

Juan Cole weighs in.

December 20, 2006

Maps of War

The coolest flash map - portrays the various empires in the Middle East from ancient Egypt to the present day in 90 seconds.

Wow those Persians have been busy. Update: By which I do NOT mean to imply the Iranians are behind everything and therefore the next great threat to civilization as we know it. The folks beating that drum are one part delusional and one part malicious warmonger. I am more on the Juan Cole side of the matter. The next great threat to civilization as we know it is global warming and attendant environmental collapse. I am not too worried about Iranians, Salafi jihadists or even the Chinese (the people American right-wingers were afraid of fifteen years ago -remember that?). If we just left them alone they wouldn't bug us, I am quite certain of that.

No, I just meant to note how often empires in the Middle East have seemed to spread outward from Central Asia - Seljuks, Sasanids, etc. The flash map is invaluable for helping me keep Hittites and Seljuks straight. As many times as I've gone over the timelines and the history between Alexander and Muhammad, I still get the various empires confused. My Western bias runs pretty deep, because I can keep the Greeks and Romans straight, know when Muhammad lived and have a clue about the rise of the Arabs, and can place the Byzantines and the Crusades, but Hittites and Seleucids and Assyrians confuse me.