Saturday, February 25, 2012

An Exciting New Adventure

         On Wednesday, February 29, 2012 I will be talking with John Byk on his radio blog 2012writersALIVE.  I have never done anything like this before, and I am very excited about it.

John’s radio blog features interviews with authors whose books deal with social problems, and I was fortunate enough to interest him in my books about Palestinian refugees (Born a Refugee and Refugee Without Refuge).  We will be discussing the humanitarian aspects of living in the refugee camps and the problems the refugees encounter as a result of living under occupation, with a particular emphasis of education.  John Byk is an educator and has traveled widely, giving him a unique perspective on the problems.

The blog is an audio broadcast (hence the name radio blog) and can be heard live by anyone who goes to his website http://2012writersalive.blogspot.com/.  I expect him to call me at 1:30 PM Eastern Standard Time on Wednesday, and I assume the interview will go live shortly thereafter.  If you miss it, he archives his blog posts and you can listen to them anytime.

Social injustices are pack animals--they seldom exist in isolation, and they have no respect for international borders.  Poverty, overcrowding, lack of preventive health care, and limited access to education are all examples of injustices that exist in the refugee camps and in other areas throughout the world.

Some of his previous blogs have focused on topics such as domestic violence, victims’ rights, bullying, civil rights, and post traumatic stress disorder.  Our discussion will probably cover some of these same topics since unfortunately, these problems exist throughout the world.



In addition to having an interesting blog, John is also a talented writer.  He writes under the pen name Conrad Jonson.  I am currently reading his book Till the Moon Falls.  It is a thriller that will keep you turning pages and keep your light on far past your bedtime.  I am thoroughly enjoying it.  The hero, John Oxman, is very likeable, and I hope there are more of his adventures.

 
    To my delight, Till the Moon Falls is part of a series.  The second book is Xenophobia, and the third one is Detroit Daze.  I can't wait to read them all.


 
                        


 

Saturday, February 18, 2012

Better to Light a Candle...


Naji al-Ali, creator of the character Hanthala, has truly lit a candle to lighten the darkness of the Palestinian refugees.  Hanthala has stolen the hearts of Palestinians everywhere.  Al-Ali says that Hanthala “represented the honest Palestinian who will always be on people’s mind.”  Joe Sacco wrote the introduction and describes Hanthala as epitomizing the “poorest, most powerless Palestinian.”  His hands are behind his back, and his back is always to the reader.  He is only an observer, but he observes everything—Israeli oppression, Arab leaders, the U.S., and even his neighbors.

   A Child in Palestine was published in 2009, twenty-two years after al-Ali’s assassination, yet sadly, Hanthala’s observations are as relevant today as they were when they were first published in newspapers throughout the Arab world. 

   The English captions and introductions to each section give the Western reader a greater understanding of the plight of the Palestinians than they could ever get from Western publications.  Al-Ali presents a view of the Palestine problem as seen from the inside. 

   The simple cartoons are heavy with irony.  Like Hanthala, the cartoons observe the absurd whenever it exists.

   A Child in Palestine, published by Verso, is available from Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/Child-Palestine-Cartoons-Naji-al-Ali/dp/1844673650

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Things that make me feel proud

In today’s world there are many things that make me upset, embarrassed, even ashamed to be a member of the human race. Fortunately, every now and then a person steps forward and sparkles like a gem to make the rest of us breathe a huge sigh of relief that the human race just might be worthy of the name after all. It’s even better when you have a personal connection to that person, as though a bit of the sparkle rubs off.

One such person is Lisa Suhair Majaj, the author of Geographies of Light. I first met Lisa when she was a bright smiling student in my fifth grade math class in the American Community School in Amman, Jordan—way back when.

In the years that followed, Lisa and I were linked by more than long division and fractions. We both developed a political conscience that would not be denied. Palestine and the injustices perpetrated on the Palestinians that go apparently unnoticed by the world became a centerpiece of our writing.

I write novels in an attempt to show the Palestinian refugees as I know them—loving, caring, hard-working, and long-suffering.  Lisa’s poetry is more direct. It speaks from her heart to the heart of the reader. 

No one who reads Lisa's poetry can help being touched by her words and the poignant emotions behind them.  Her award-winning book Geographies of Light is a collection of poetry that expresses the Palestinian experience in a profoundly personal way yet mirrors the emotions felt by an entire nation.

Lest you think that poetry about the loss of one's homeland is dark, dank, and dreary, I have asked Lisa's permission to quote the first two stanzas of "I've Been Searching."


I’ve Been Searching

for years without success.
I’ve checked in all the obvious places:
police station, courthouse, town hall,
legislature, White House.
I’ve looked under the judge’s desk,
behind legal tomes in the law library,
in between the stitches on the flag.
More than once I’ve hunted through history,
scouring the cascade of centuries
for some shred of evidence.
But each plunge into the past
reconfirms my suspicion:
if justice is somewhere to be found,
it’s hidden well.
Once, tiring of the unending saga,
I did what any self-respecting American
would do: placed an ad in the personals.
Of course, I focused on specifics:
if you flounder in generalities
no one will pay the slightest attention:
“40-something Palestinian woman,
curly brown hair, olive skin, hazel eyes,
loves music, nature, good stories
with happy endings, deprived
of a homeland for half a century,
seeks partner (tall-dark-handsome optional)
for peace-making, nation-building,
a little activist world-shaking.
Must be equitable, funny, kind;
committed to human rights;
willing to follow international law.
Fondness for garlic and dancing (all kinds)
a plus. No photo necessary.”

Lisa’s description of the partner she seeks in “I’ve Been Searching” affected me personally.  She wrote an amazing description of the man I married long before she began her search, and long before I even knew that those characteristics were the ones I would treasure for many decades as we took our life-long journey together. 

Thank you, Lisa, for saying it so well.
*     *     *     *


The full text of the poem can be found at http://web.mac.com/renkat/Autumn_08/Lisa_Suhair_Majaj.html along with another of her poems entitled “Night Sky.






Saturday, February 4, 2012

The Dust Bowl and the Palestine Problem

Remember the idea that anyone in the world is approximately six steps away from any other person on Earth?  (Facebook says it is now down to less than five.)  The same seems to be true for ideas that interest me. 

Last night I was watching a documentary about the Dust Bowl and the most famous Black Sunday in this country.  As I often do when I see something I find fascinating, I did a little walk through Google and Wikipedia to learn more. 

Black Sunday –April 14, 1935—twenty of the worst “Black Blizzards” occurred throughout the Dust Bowl.  The dust cloud blew on the easterly winds over a thousand miles and darkened the sky all the way to Washington DC.  It was not until that event that the politicians began to take the problem seriously and work toward establishing principles of soil conservation.  Over 100,000,000 acres or 400,000 km2 of land were affected.

I was taken aback by the number of hits for Black Sunday that had nothing to do with the Dust Bowl.  There were TWO Black Sundays in Australia, one in the mid-1920s and one in 1955—both caused by massive bush fires.  It took a fraction of a second to find a 1977 movie about a terrorist plot at the Super Bowl (not encouraging on the eve of another Super Bowl), another movie (1960) about witches and the undead, a novel, an album, and three songs of the same name.  There was more, but I was suddenly curious about the other days we describe as “Black.”

I went on to Black Monday and found a surprising number of those as well.  Of course I’d heard of Black Monday in October, 1929 when Wall Street crashed, ushering in the Great Depression, but not about Black Monday in 1209 in Dublin.  Black Monday didn’t have any movies, albums, or books I could find, but a surprising number of Black Mondays involved huge downward movements on Wall Street, and most of them were in October.  Any theories on that?  There were Black Mondays in England, Australia, Malta—and Palestine! 

The Al Aqsa Massacre took place on Black Monday, 8 October 1990.  This was an incident that took place “at the Al Haram al Shareef and other Holy Places of Jerusalem resulting in over twenty Palestinian deaths and in the injury of more than one hundred and fifty people, including Palestinian civilians and innocent worshippers,”  according to the United Nations Resolution 672.  The resolution, which “expressed alarm at the violence,” was rejected by Israel.  Nothing new there—Israel has been rejecting statements that express even a tiny bit of disapproval.

The Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 242 after the 1967 war in which Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza.  The resolution refers to the "inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war and the need to work for a just and lasting peace in the Middle East in which every State in the area can live in security."  This year will mark the 45th anniversary of that resolution—and the West Bank and Gaza are still under a violent and oppressive military occupation. 

There it was—four degrees of separation between the Dust Bowl and Palestine.

As a postscript, I continued my Black Days walk through the paths of Google trying to find Black Days that were NOT about catastrophes, natural or man-made.  My first find—a beer produced by The Bruery, a small craft brewery located in Orange County, California.  The dark beer was released on a Tuesday in October of 2010.  I wonder if October has more black days than other months and if so, why?

That brought me to my favorite black day—Black Friday.  The most surprising thing I learned doing this?  My husband did not recognize the phrase “Black Friday!”   For the uninformed (probably all male), Black Friday is the day after Thanksgiving.  Stores open at ridiculous hours—serious shoppers don’t even bother to sleep.  Sales are everywhere for the diligent shoppers. 

Thanksgiving is the official opening of the Christmas shopping season, although in recent years the merchants are pushing it back a lot farther.  Supposedly Black Friday got its name because any retail store that is operating at a loss (signified by red ink) will make it into the profit territory (signified by black ink) on this day.  It’s even more fun than a keg party!  It may be months away, but I just started the countdown.