Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Culture. Show all posts

Thursday, May 12, 2016

Cheat-sheet: All of the possible book options for Pal Lit quiz (and where to find them)

First of all, if you haven't taken the Which Palestinian Novel Should I Read? quiz, take it here!

If you want to take a gander at all of the possible outcomes, scan below and click the links to the publishers to order your very own bit of Palestinian literature. 



Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Saturday, March 26, 2016

Tiles of the 20s make Palestinian comeback

 Jalal Aslan Tiles is the only place in Palestine that makes --by hand-- these beauties:


Popular for the fancy classes from the turn of the century right up into the 40s and 50s, the cement tiles had a good long time to develop a whole Palestine-wide fashion landscape, with different styles becoming popular in different cities, with everything from colour preference to motif becoming characteristic of a region, a family, or a home. This one, with its yellow, red, and green, round formations and flower edges, is typical of the Nablus area.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

Active List(ening)

I've been complaining about not being able to find some sort of magical aggregator for all of the interesting audio tidbits that are popping up on the internet. Things that aren't podcasts, or youtube channels, or any of those other standard and locatable platforms.

Since I never have time to listen to things when I find them, and then spend hours looking for where I stashed the link, I'm just going to aggregate them all here on the new mainpage gadget, mostly so I can find them when I look.

** update!!** mainpage gadget hugely annoying to maintain, so, its been replaced by a tumbler feed.... stay tuned for updates!

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Change, in images...

So, in Egypt, they say there is a revolution going on. 

Sitting in a West Bank newsroom watching the start of that revolution, I don't know about anyone else, but when Mubarak stepped down, I was as much excited for Egypt as I was frustrated for Palestinians. I mean, its not like everyone in Palestine hasn't already taken to the streets en masse to demand their own change. Did Egypt have some secret? Some magic formula? Would they send it on over?

A year and a half after, at least from news reports, the Egyptian revolution started to take on a more familiar tone. It would be a long process of change, with nothing easy, and a tough road ahead where a lot of people would have to make a lot of decisions about what they wanted their community to look like.

So, heading on down to Cairo from Jerusalem, I was curious to see what it all looked like, felt like, smelled like. The one thing that was obvious, was that compared to the grim West Bank where rising cost of living, anger over feeling hamstrung between an occupation, an impotent government, and world system looking the other way was like an anvil being carried around by the sky, there was a certain exuberance in Egypt. (The soundtrack of the car ride down was just the beginning)

The best, best part, was the art. The walls on Muhammad Mahmoud street, had turned into a political forum. So I'll save the words and let the images do the talking. 

Day two: Police presence still strong post protests near the American Embassy, and at some point the night before the walls that had been covered with murals and graffiti were whitewashed. 


Even with the police around, some intrepid painters had already gotten at the fresh canvas.... and dared the police to paint over the walls again.