Showing posts with label Susan Abulhawa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Susan Abulhawa. Show all posts

Sunday, September 1, 2013

ART - Telling the Story



What is art? Despite the fact that the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/art-definition/) says the definition of art is controversial, and that it has even been debated if art can be defined, few of us have any doubt that art exists—with or without a definition. We even know that it has existed almost as long as mankind has existed, and that it involves creativity.

What is the purpose of art? Again, there are differences of opinion. Some say that art needs no purpose, that beauty itself is sufficient. Others say that artists create the art as an act of expression. They are telling the world something through their art.

Palestinian artists, more than any other group, feel compelled to include their story in their art. Even Palestinians who were born in the diaspora and Palestinian-in-laws find ways to express their feelings through their work. Or perhaps I have it the wrong way around—perhaps it is the Palestinian condition that generates the immense emotional pressures that, for some, can only be relieved through art.

The connection between intense emotion and art has been used for decades by those treating pediatric victims of trauma. The results are poignant and heart breaking. (Click this link or view below)


Whether it is a Palestinian artist who lived through the Nakba and was forever scarred by the experience, like Ismail Shammout (http://ismail-shammout.com), often called the father of Palestinian painters, or a young vibrant artist like John Halaka (http://www.johnhalaka.com/artwork.html) whose work often moves into new territory, they have one thing in common: empathy for the oppressed. They also have to fight for the right to show their work. John Halaka has said that “American curators are cowards when it comes to political art.” http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/sarah-irving/american-curators-are-cowards-when-it-comes-political-art-says-palestinian-artist

Art does not always express itself in paint. There are also amazing literary artists, like Lisa Majaj, whose wonderful poetry in her book, Geographies of Light, evoke more than a sense of loss, the call upon an entire culture which she uses as a foundation for her own identity. To hear her poem, “Guidelines” read and later discussed by another Palestinian American poet of note, Naomi Shihab Nye, go to  http://www.loc.gov/poetry/poetry-of-america/american-identity/naomishihabnye-lisasuhairmajaj.html 
Her book is available through Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/dp/1934832081  
Novelist abound in the world of Palestinian art. Sahar Khalifeh, Susan Abulhawa, Raja Shehadeh, are just a few of the names I can pull from my limited personal experience. There are many more.

Even my own novel has earned some modest recognition.






Friday, May 11, 2012

Hunger Strike for Dignity


More than 1600 Palestinian prisoners are on a hunger strike in Israeli jails.  They are protesting against solitary confinement, detention without charge, and restrictions on family visits, education and other aspects of their treatment.  Two of the prisoners, Bilal Diab and Thaer Halahla, are on the brink of starvation, having been an incredible 74 days without food.  
These men have now refused food longer than Kieran Doherty, the longest surviving of the 10 Irish militants who died in a hunger strike in 1981.  Bobby Sands, the best known of the 10, died after 66 days.  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/middleeast/israel/9258264/Israel-facing-major-West-Bank-uprising-over-Palestinian-hunger-strike.html

On May 8, 2012 The International Committee of the Red Cross asked that six prisoners be transferred to hospital and allowed visits from their families.  All six of these men are being held without trial as administrative detainees, which can be renewed six months at a time.  They are in jail because Israel suspects they may be guilty of security offences. (The Chicago Tribune from Reuters  http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-05-08/news/sns-rt-us-palestinians-redcrossbre8470ub-20120508_1_hunger-strike-detainees-palestinians)  These men are “at imminent risk of dying.” 

The bravery and dignity of these prisoners has captured the hearts and minds of people throughout the world, but the Palestinians living under occupation have taken up their cause with particular fervor.  Protests in many cities of the West Bank and Gaza in support of the prisoners show tremendous and wide-spread support.  The feeling of solidarity with the prisoners is so high that the death of one or more of these brave men could easily trigger another Intifada or uprising.

And where is the United States while people are dying in protest of imprisonment without trial and harsh treatment?  There is talk that Israel is negotiating in an effort to end the strike, and Robert Naiman writes in an article in Huffington Post, that it is possible that a word of support from the US could turn the tide. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-naiman/palestine-hunger-strike_b_1506279.html

The article by Ali Abunimah in the Electronic Intifada tells of the current state of Thaer Halahleh’s deteriorating health and the lack of adequate medical care for the prisoners.  http://electronicintifada.net/blogs/ali-abunimah/thaer-halahleh-told-he-could-die-any-moment-hunger-strikers-condition

What can we do?  At the very least, we can sign a petition.  There is one from Just Foreign Policy, and Jewish Voice for Peace has a petition in solidarity with the Hunger Strike for Dignity.  The US Campaign to End the Occupation has joined with the Arab-American Anti-Discrimination Committee to sponsor a petition going to the State Department on Monday. 
This is a matter of extreme urgency. 

To all of the brave souls who are enduring unimaginable pain and loss to bring their plight to the attention of the world, I quote the words of Susan Abulhawa, author of the international bestselling novel Mornings in Jenin:

Take heart and do not despair. We have not reached the end of history. There is still blood in our veins, air in our lungs and brilliant souls in our wombs. They have but the cold steel of death machines and the moral void of lies, which cannot and will not prevail against naked hearts and empty stomachs taking up the good fight for freedom.  
 Susan Abulhawa  (from http://electronicintifada.net/content/united-methodist-churchs-shameful-failure-divest-injustice/11249 )