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Al
Miskin
Happy
Anniversary!
On
the occasion of Israel's 50th anniversary, a Bar-Ilan University
poll found that kibbutzniks, were considered to be the most Zionist
by respondents asked to pick among 11 different categories. Myths
of the heroic pioneers live on, despite the fact that kibbutzniks
have not done their own work in years. Tightened restrictions on
Palestinian labor from the occupied territories in the wake of the
intifada mean that kibbutz work today is likely to be done by Romanians,
Thais or Filipinos. According to official estimates there are now
200,000 foreign workers in Israel, about half of them working illegally,
but other estimates put the total at 300,000.
A remarkable event
marking the 50th commemoration of the Palestinian Nakba (national
catastrophe) was held in Beirut from April through June. Organized
by the Theatre de Beyrouth, it has included lectures, poetry readings,
theatrical performances and film screenings. One of its most audacious
events was to have been a round table discussion on April 24 of
'Testimonials from Arab Jews," including Salim Nassib (Lebanon),
Edmond Malih and Abraham Sarafati (Morocco) and Ammiel Alcalay of
Queen's College, New York. But after the screening of a video with
Israeli writer Simon Ballas, a group of intellectuals, mostly affiliated
with the Syrian National Party and backed by Syrian intelligence
agencies, launched an attack on the organizers, accusing them of
collaborating with Israel. The real reason: the panelists would
discuss the expulsion of Jews from the Arab world and critique not
just Zionism but repressive Arab regimes as well. Jewish participants
were forced to cancel their trips to Beirut, and their papers were
read by session organizers Lebanese American University professor
Fawaz Traboulsi and journalist and literary critic Elias Khoury.
Conflict
Resolution
A dialogue of another
sort appears to be taking place with the active support of people
in the US State Department and members of the beltway "Conflict
Resolution" (CR) industry--between religious settlers in the occupied
territories and Hamas! Joseph Montville, a retired diplomat, and
Rabbi Mark Gopin, both scholars at the Center for Strategic and
International Studies, a DC public policy research institution,
have been promoting this dialogue at various fora in the capital.
This sort of dialogue is what anthropologist Laura Nader has dubbed
"coercive harmony,a trend in CR that is "against the contentious
in anything, that says if you disagree, you should really keep your
mouth shut."
Meanwhile, another
US government-supported body, the Fulbright Commission, recently
fired an employee for speaking out against UN sanctions and US military
threats against Iraq. Dr. Aida Dabbas, an employee of the Binational
Fulbright Commission in Jordan, was fired in March by the director
of the Fulbright Commission's Amman office for her activity in opposition
to US war threats. Ironically, Senator William Fulbright argued,
when setting up the academic exchange program that bears his name
that it was intended to build alternatives to armed conflict.
Red Shaykh
In March, Egyptian
authorities banned issue no. 28 of the Cairo Times, a biweekly
news magazine, after the publisher refused to cut three pages from
the issue, two of which consisted of an interview with Khalil Abdul
Karim, known as the Red Shaykh. Abdul Karim, a former member of
the Muslim Brotherhood, and an activist in Egypt's leftist Tagammu’
Party, is a devout Muslim who is attempting to promote a liberal
interpretation of Islam. A lawyer by profession, he directed the
defense of Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd when he was charged with apostasy.
His two most recent books, which deal with social issues of early
Islam, were condemned by the Islamic Research Academy of al-Azhar
University, and as a result, the books were banned and copies seized
in January raids by State Security officers. (For the fall text
of the interview, see
http://www.chrla.org/caitimes/ctbanl.htm).
Man of
the Year
On a more positive
note, congratulations to King Fahd bin Abd al-Aziz of Saudi Arabia
who was selected to receive the "Man of the Year 1997" award by
the Ansar Burney Welfare Trust International, a Pakistani-based
human rights organization. Fahd was selected for his role in "promoting
peace in the Arab World" and in "releasing national and foreign
prisoners." According to a March 1998 Human Rights Watch report,
Saudi Arabia has carried out 630 executions since 1990, over half
of them foreigners. For more on His Majesty's human rights contributions,
including torture, floggings and detentions without trial, see Amnesty
Intemational's 1997 report (http://www.amnesty.org/ailib/aireport/ar97/MDE23.htm).
Multinational
Crush
Syrian Defense Minister
Mustafa Tlass says that in 1983 he saved Italian troops stationed
in Beirut from attack because of his crush on Italian actress Gina
Lollabrigida. "I gathered the Lebanese resistance leaders together
and told them," asserted Tlass, "do what ever you want with the
US, British and other forces, but I do not want a single Italian
soldier to be hurt." A fan of Lollabrigida’s since he was a teenager,
Tlass sent letters to her for years. Finally, in 1984, Lollabrigida
visited Tlass in his home, urged on by a businessman from Italy's
Augusta helicopter company, which was told it could secure a "juicy"
contract with Syria if Lollabrigida accompanied them.
Diva!
Congratulations to
our favorite transsexual Arab Jewish singer Danna International,
victor in the 1998 Eurovision song contest (see Yael Ben-zvi in
Middle East Report 206 and Al Miskin in Middle East Report
201) for her song "Diva." Danna will host next year's Eurovision
in Jerusalem. Haim Miller, the city's ultra-Orthodox deputy mayor,
has vowed to do everything in his power to stop the contest from
taking place there.

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