I can't even pull a section to quote. Read the whole thing.
Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palestine. Show all posts
Thursday, February 09, 2012
Saturday, August 06, 2011
Vivan Sundaram on the artists' call for boycott
Each one of us will respond to a greater or lesser degree to a historical moment, a place, a movement, to express our solidarity. But one does not need to recount at every point all the ills that beset the world's nation-states and thus cancel every political call on that basis.Vivan Sundaram, in the Hindu, 6 August 2011.
For context, see Girish Shahane's posts on N. Pushpamala's call for a boycott of a show in Israel. (Shahane, of course, clearly doesn't support cultural boycotts of any kind.)
I <3 Vivan Sundaram.
Wednesday, February 02, 2011
'more believable stories'
Mohammed Hanif in Dawn:
Trying to get my own Cairo update, I watched with concern as a barber shaved his customer while both watched Al Jazeera. A tour guide taking an American couple on Jesus Christ`s last walk on Via Dolorosa abandoned them for a bit and went into a shop to find out if Mubarak had left the country or not.
In Ramallah, the working capital of the very dysfunctional Palestinian Authority, I saw similar scenes. Cafe Lavie, one of the swish joints in town, was hosting a Spanish night. As the young kids danced the night away and middle-aged businessmen ogled them, they had one thing in common: they all insisted that Al Jazeera stay on so that they could watch the cool Cairo protesters flashing their `V` signs.
In Palestine Coffee Shop, an establishment so old and so set in its ways that it serves only coffee and nothing else, a place where old Arab men start playing cards at eight in the morning and are found taking naps before midday, customers wanted Al Jazeera on full volume.
Nobody becomes an expert on anything, let alone a political movement, by hanging out in mosques and coffee shops. I asked university students in Berziet and Nablus about why Palestinians were so interested in what was going on in Cairo. Their favourite word about the Cairo situation was `exhilarating`. They were all interested in what would happen next. They had all stayed up late to watch Mubarak speak, who, like all aging dictators, had indulged in a bit of self-pity.
Could something like this happen here, in Palestine? It was the obvious tourist question. But they were generous, as they had been asking the same question of each other.
Labels:
Egypt,
mohammed hanif,
Palestine,
politics,
protest
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