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Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Palestine's many Christmases: Faces of diversity in the cradle of Christianity

The old city of Bethlehem houses numerous convents, chapels and monasteries of different Christian communities are present [Qassam Muaddi / TNA]

 As always, please go to the original link to read the story in full, and share it if you can so more people might see and think about it.

Palestine's many Christmases: Faces of diversity in the cradle of Christianity: Christmas celebrations in Palestine culminate on December 25. But inside Bethlehem itself, the diversity of Christian traditions translates into different dates of celebration, for different communities.

Palestinian Christian families visit the Nativity grotto, believed to be the birthplace of Jesus, seeking blessings for their children [Qassam Muaddi / TNA]


 https://english.alaraby.co.uk/features/palestines-many-christmases-faces-christian-diversity

Monday, December 27, 2021

Desmond Tutu on Palestine: "God created ALL of us for Freedom..."

Oh shining star testify: "Often reflecting on ideas of amnesia, erasure, and return within the Palestinian condition, the artists see these artworks as potential tools for the politically oppressed to become unbound from colonial systems."

 As always, please go to the orginal link to read the article in full- and help make it more popular if you can.  Every little bit helps:  https://www.artic.edu/exhibitions/9712/if-only-this-mountain-between-us-could-be-ground-to-dust?fbclid=IwAR38jO9i4PjL91jiPp8GjOelmpoZ9rtcaaeaWu0U_cvscYBip3rJR-KpLfw

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme. Oh shining star testify, 2019

Installation view at Art Institute of Chicago, 2021


If only this mountain between us could be ground to dust

If only this mountain between us could be ground to dust—the first exhibition by Palestinian artists Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme in a major US museum—combines a site-specific installation of the artists’ ongoing multimedia projects with a commissioned work created specifically for the Art Institute of Chicago.

Working in film, installation, performance, sound, and text, Abbas and Abou-Rahme sample self-authored and existing media and materials to reframe and activate narratives that they describe as everyday erasures of Palestinian experience as a means of resisting the illusion of one immutable history. The interconnected works in this installation critically examine how bodies, images, language, memories, and narratives exist within contemporary archives, media, and institutions. Often reflecting on ideas of amnesia, erasure, and return within the Palestinian condition, the artists see these artworks as potential tools for the politically oppressed to become unbound from colonial systems.

Central to the exhibition is an immersive multimedia installation combining new versions of two multi-channel video works. Oh shining star testify (2019–21) focuses on CCTV footage taken from a surveillance camera that circulated online after Yusuf ­Shawamreh, a 14-year-old Palestinian boy, was killed by Israeli forces. The layered footage, sampled from recordings of the event, brings attention to how images that circulate online can offer a testament to historic events, though that testament can be obliterated when the internet becomes oversaturated with imagery. Foregrounding the simultaneous accumulation and disappearance of data and images, the artists make visible how those “uncounted bodies counter their own erasures, appearing on a street, on a link or on a feed.”  

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme. At those terrifying frontiers where the existence and disappearance of people fade into each other, 2019

Installation view at Art Institute of Chicago, 2021

The second video, At those terrifying frontiers where the existence and disappearance of people fade into each other (2019–21), uses fragments of Palestinian postcolonial scholar Edward Said’s poem “After the Last Sky” to interrogate what it means to be constructed as an “illegal” person, body, or entity. The text fragments are interspersed with human avatars created from images of demonstrators in the Great March of Return, a series of protests that began in 2018 and advocated for ending a 12-year blockade and returning Palestinians to their ancestral homeland. The avatars, which are rendered with software that represents missing data as glitches, scars, and incomplete facial features, seem to exist between the past and the future. 

Basel Abbas and Ruanne Abou-Rahme. Once an artist, now just a tool, 2021   



The exhibition also presents for the first time the series of prints Don’t read poetics in these lines (2010–21). Abbas and Abou-Rahme began producing this work in 2010 by screenshotting and archiving tweets that responded and continue to respond to the Arab revolutions. The selectively erased texts distill the rapid-fire reactions that unfolded on social media, thus standing as a testament to our time and offering a physical counterweight to the internet, which the artists consider an “amnesiac archive.”

Extracted from this archive, Once an artist, now just a tool (2021) was commissioned by the Art Institute and critiques how museums perpetuate the legacies of the colonial apparatus. In repositioning these sampled fragments, the artists assert language’s capacity to challenge systems and histories of power, critically pointing to the shifts that occur between events and discourse. 

The exhibition’s visceral and material narratives raise timely and urgent questions about the ways history is constructed and continually obliterated—encouraging viewers to imagine the potential futures that emerge from the immersive sonic and visual environment.

If only this mountain between us could be ground to dust is curated by Maite Borjabad López-Pastor, Neville Bryan Associate Curator, Architecture and Design.

ART INSTITUTE of CHICAGO 

Thursday, December 16, 2021

In Growing Gardens for Palestine: UNESCO » Culture » Intangible Heritage » Lists » The art of embroidery in Palestine, practices, skills, knowledge and rituals

 Growing Gardens for Palestine


The art of embroidery in Palestine, practices, skills, knowledge and rituals

Inscribed in 2021 (16.COM) on the Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity

The art of traditional embroidery is widespread in Palestine. Originally made and worn in rural areas, the practice is now common in all of Palestine and among members of the diaspora. Women’s village clothing usually consists of a long dress, trousers, a jacket, a headdress and a veil. Each of these garments is embroidered with a variety of symbols including birds, trees and flowers. The choice of colours and designs indicates the woman’s regional identity and marital and economic status. On the main garment, the loose-fitting dress called a thob, the chest, sleeves and cuffs are covered with embroidery. Embroidered, vertical panels run down the dress from the waist. The embroidery is sewn with silk thread on wool, linen or cotton. Embroidery is a social and intergenerational practice, as women gather in each other’s homes to practise embroidery and sewing, often with their daughters. Many women embroider as a hobby, and some produce and sell embroidered pieces to supplement their family’s income, either on their own or in collaboration with other women. These groups gather in each other’s homes or in community centres, where they may also market their work. The practice is transmitted from mother to daughter and through formal training courses.









In Growing Gardens for Palestine: 🇵🇸 Another VICTORY 🇵🇸 The minister of culture of UNESCO added Palestinian Embroidery (Tatreez) to its Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list today

Growing Gardens for Palestine


🇵🇸 Another VICTORY 🇵🇸 The minister of culture of UNESCO added Palestinian Embroidery (Tatreez) to its Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list today after thieving 'israel' attempted to promote Tatreez as part of the 'israeli' culture (no such thing) during the Miss Universe pageant this past weekend.


Thursday, December 9, 2021

In Growing Gardens for Palestine- Visualising Return exhibition (& online tour) in London December 2021

Growing Gardens for Palestine

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Visualising Return exhibition in London December 2021

Photos shared by Maher Naji  followed by some photos from the online visual tour by the Palestinian Return Centre


"Maher's artwork is inspired by his family's memories of Palestine before 1948. He relies on his mother's vast details of her memories, for every line and shape in his paintings, his art is a means of preserving Palestinian culture in the midst of Israeli settler colonial siege. The memories he paints, are also the hopeful visualisations of return." RETURN WEEK



A Girl in a Jerusalem Dress

A Girl in a Jerusalem Dress by Maher Naji

Full digital tour can be found here

https://prc.org.uk/en/album/2/digital-gallery




Tuesday, November 30, 2021

Beautifully Powerful Words for Palestine from Mohammed el Kurd in the United Nations, November 2021

Deep thanks to Zahi Damuni of Al-Awda for bringing this video to my attention.

The Palestinian History Tapestry…

These images (on this blog post) are only a small sampling of the embroidered panels & information... Please go to original link to see the tapestry in full  https://www.palestinianhistorytapestry.org/

 

Oud player, Jerusalem, c.1859   [59 x 56 cm]

Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/e468qsx2
Embroidery: Jan Chalmers

This image of an oud player is based on a woodcut published by William McClure Thomson in 1860 (The Land and the Book: Or, Biblical Illustrations Drawn from the Manners and Customs, the Scenes and Scenery, of the Holy Land. Vol II, p. 578).

Instruments of the lute family were known to have existed in Mesopotamia at least as long ago as 3000 BCE.

Postage stamp   [59 x 36 cm]

Source of image: Postage stamp of Palestine
Embroidery: Janet Jameel Hamad, Amman, Jordan [Jerusalem]

The Palestine postage stamp had English, Arabic and Hebrew text.  Hebrew was given equal status to Arabic and English even though the Jewish population was only around 10 per cent. The special treatment of that population was written into the terms of the Mandate with the Balfour Declaration.

Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)

Further reading

 

The Hand of Fatima/Mary/Miriam   [59 x 48 cm]

Source of image: Selected from traditional designs by Riham Khalil
Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon

This image is familiar in three religions. Jews refer to it as the hand of Miriam, to commemorate the sister of Moses and Aaron. Levantine Christians refer to it as the hand of Mary, mother of Jesus.  In Islam, it is known as the hand of Fatima, so named to commemorate Fatima Zahra, Muhammad’s daughter.

Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)

Further reading

Tahriri embroidery   [59 x 33 cm]

Source of image:Traditional design
Embroidery: Amari Women's Group Ramallah, Palestine

An example of tahriri embroidery with traditional cross stitch. The tahriri sample here has been stitched by the Amari Women’s Group in Ramallah. The Women’s Child Care Society in Bet Jala is maintaining the traditional Bethlehem tahriri stitching by training local women to produce embroidered items for the tourist market, providing income for women working from home.  Tahriri stitching is also known as couching, and is used to preserve golden threads used in the decoration of church raiments.

Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)

Further reading

 

Palestinian wedding   [59 x 158 cm]

Source of image:Traditional design
Embroidery: Mothers’ Embroidery Group, Al Deheishe Refugee Camp, Bethlehem, Palestine

This panel displays a typical Palestinian country wedding with its rituals, dabkeh folk dance, the bride on a horse, and traditional music. The dabkeh dance is characteristic of the whole of the Levant, with the music and the dance steps differing slightly from place to place. Palestinian cuisine is the cuisine of the Levant – msakhan, maftoul, kibbeh, hoummous, and mansaf, for example – which have become very widely known and appreciated.

Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)

Further reading


Olive harvest   [59 x 110 cm]

Design: Hamada Atallah [Al Quds] Al Quds, Palestine
Embroidery: Dowlat Abu Shaweesh [Ne’ane], Ramallah, Palestine

Olives and olive oil symbolize Palestinian land, identity and culture. The olive tree is seen by many Palestinians as a symbol of nationality and connection to the land, particularly due to the slow growth and longevity of the tree. The destruction of Palestinian olive trees has become a feature of the Israeli occupation, with regular reports of damage and destruction by Israeli settlers.

Era: British Mandate (1920—1948)

Further reading

Roman Judea   [59 x 35 cm]

Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/76dbbi70
Embroidery: Jan Chalmers UK

Sponsored by: Chalmers Family UK

The Roman conquest of Judea in 63 BCE was solidified when Herod was appointed King of Judea. In 132 CE, the Roman Emperor Hadrian joined Judea and Galilee to form Syria Palaestina, so reviving the ancient name of Philistia, combining it with that of the neighbouring province of Syria.

Era: Roman Period (63 BCE—325 CE)

Further reading

‘The Land of Sad Oranges’   [59 x 36 cm]

Source of image: Inspired by the writings of Ghassan Kanafani
Embroidery: Suheer Abu Rabia, Drejat, Naqab

The title of this image is inspired by a short story by Ghassan Kanafani, a Palestinian writer who was assassinated in 1972 by Mossad, the Israeli secret service. “The Land of the Sad Oranges” describes the influence of deportation on Palestinians when Israeli troops took over their country in 1948. Jaffa oranges were cultivated by Palestinian farmers from the mid-19th century, and take their name from the port city of Jaffa. Mention of Jaffa oranges being exported to Europe first appears in British consular reports in the 1850s.

Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)

Further reading


The Lone Refugee   [59 x 38 cm]

Source of image: Ahmad Canaan. Artist
Design: Ahmad Canaan, Tamra, Palestine
Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh, Lebanon

This embroidery is based on a painting by the distinguished Palestinian artist Ahmad Canaan, born in 1965 in Tamra. He now lives in Jerusalem, and his painting of the lone refugee symbolises the Nakba [Catastrophe].

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

UN Resolution 194, 1948- United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194 [53] on 11th December 1948 declared the right of Palestinians, who had be displaced by Zionist forces, to return to their homes or to receive compensation for their losses.

The Right of Return  

Source of image: Design by Fatma Abu Owda [Hamama], Gaza, Palestine
Embroidery: Hanan Al-Behery [Karatiyya], Gaza

In the hope of returning to their homes, Palestinian refugees retain the keys to the houses from which they were forcefully displaced during the Nakba in 1948. The key symbolizes the inheritance of successive Palestinian generations of the right of return to their homes and their rejection of the policy of resettlement. This embroidery illustrates the right of return by featuring images of over 30 house keys of different shapes and sizes which Palestinian families have retained over the generations.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading


UNRWA founded, 1949   [59 x 85 cm]

Source of image: https://tinyurl.com/3htl75um
Sketch: Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
Embroidery: Karema Nasser [Barbara], Gaza, Palestine

The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) was established in 1949.  The following year, it began providing nutritional, health, and educational services to about 750,000 Palestine refugees displaced as a result of the ethnic cleansing of Palestine.  Today, due to lack of international support, UNRWA struggles, to provide services to over 5 million Palestinian refugees.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading


“Handala”, born 1969
Size: 59 x 41 cm

Embroidered by: Jan Chalmers, UK
Inspired by art created by: Naji al-Ali [Palestine]
Sponsored by: Chalmers children UK

(A reminder from my dear friend, Nancy Harb Almendras: "Al Ali's little refugee boy will always have his backed turned until Palestine is free.")

 

Land Day inaugurated, 30 March 1976   [59 x 131 cm]

Embroidery: Haneeyeh Abu Saleh, Galilee, Palestine

Land Day, March 30, is an annual day of commemoration. In 1976, in response to the Israeli government’s announcement of a plan to expropriate thousands of dunams of land for state purposes, a general strike and marches were organized in Arab towns, from the Galilee to the Negev. In the ensuing confrontations with the Israeli army and police, six unarmed Palestinian citizens of Israel were killed, about one hundred were wounded, and hundreds of others arrested. This was the first time since 1948 that Palestinian Arabs in Israel had organized a response to Israeli policies as a Palestinian national collective. Land Day is marked not only by Palestinian citizens of Israel, but also by Palestinians all over the world.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading

Home schooling, 1987—1992   [59 x 86 cm]

Source of image: Design by Shaymaa Abu-Hasanain [Gaza], Gaza, Palestine
Embroidery: Khawala Dahrouj [Bir Seb’a] Gaza, Palestine

This panel shows school children being taught at home in Gaza after the Israeli occupation forces had cut electricity supplies and closed schools in response to the first Palestinian Intifada [uprising]. The Intifada, which began in 1987, was a protest against Israeli “beatings, shootings, killings, house demolitions, uprooting of trees, deportations, extended imprisonments, and detentions without trial”. It involved civil disobedience consisting of general strikes, boycotts, of Israeli institutions, an economic boycott and widespread throwing of stones and Molotov cocktails at the Israeli army.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading

Gaza under siege, 2007-   [59 x 35 cm]

Source of image: PHT design
Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK

Sponsored by: Chalmers Family, UK.

“Greetings to the one who shares with me an attention to the drunkenness of light, the light of the butterfly, in the blackness of this tunnel.” Mahmoud Darwish, Palestinian poet.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading

Palestine becomes UN Non-Member Observer State 2012   [59 x 85]

Source of image: PHT design
Embroidery: Jan Chalmers, UK

On 29 November 2012, the General Assembly of the United Nations accorded Palestine non-Member Observer State status by an overwhelming majority — 138 in favour to 9 against (Canada, Czech Republic, Israel, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Nauru, Panama, Palau, United States), with 41 abstentions.

The meaning of the Pan-Arab colours of the Palestinian flag come from the poem ‘al-Fakhr Hillis’ (Boast) by Safi Al-Din Al-Hilli (1278-1349).  Safi was a famous 13th century poet born in Hillah, in modern day Iraq.

“Red are our swords, Green are our fields, Black are our battles, White are our deeds”

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading

The Great March of Return, 2018-   [59 x 81 cm]

Source of image: Inspired from video, (see link below)
Design: Ibrahim Al Muhtadi [Al Quds], Gaza, Palestine
Embroidery: Karema Nassar [Barbara], Gaza, Palestine

The Great March of Return, a series of protests at points near the fence between Gaza and Israel, began on 30 March 2018. The protests were initiated by Palestinian activists independently from Palestinian political factions. The protesters demand that Palestinian refugees and their descendants be allowed to return to the land from which they were displaced in 1948. Many non-violent protesters, including children, medics and journalists, were killed and maimed by Israeli snipers using live ammunition, creating life-long disabilities.  The theft of militarily occupied Palestinian land for the use of Jewish Israeli settlers is still ongoing and continuous despite being in violation of international law.


The dove   [59 x 42 cm]

Source of image: Mary Knoll Office for Global Concerns
Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ein al-Hilweh, Lebanon

The dove has been a symbol of peace for thousands of years in many different cultures, including Palestinian culture.  It was Pablo Picasso who made the dove a modern symbol of peace when he used it on a poster for the World Peace Congress in 1949.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Olive branch   [59 x 40 cm]

Source of image: PHT design
Embroidery: Iman Shehaby [Tabariyeh], Ein el Hilweh, Lebanon

The olive branch,  a symbol of peace.

Nothing symbolizes Palestinian land, identity and culture as olives and olive oil do. Olive trees are the hallmarks of national pride and the veritable heart of Palestine’s agricultural economy

Palestinian olive oil production contributes millions annually to some of the poorest, most disadvantaged families and communities in the occupied West Bank. It is a primary source of revenue for the economy and nearly half of all agricultural land use is devoted to olive trees. As one of the territory’s major exports, the extent to which olives and olive oil contribute to employment opportunities and income for 100,000 Palestinian farming families cannot be overstated.

Yet, the Israeli government deliberately prevents access to land where olive farms are located.

Physical barriers such as checkpoints and road blocks have restricted the free movement of people and goods within the West Bank and obstructed access for Palestinian agricultural produce, including olives and olive oil, to internal, Israeli and international market.

Settler attacks and harassment against Palestinian olive farmers are common.

The Israeli government overlooks settler violence against the groves and their owners, which includes stealing their fruits, torching or uprooting tens of thousands of trees, and attacking farmers to intimidate them, and prevent them from harvesting their olive crops.

It’s a tragedy that the olive branch – a symbol of peace – has become a casualty of settler violence.

Era: Sumud - Steadfastness (1948 onwards)

Further reading


The key for return   [59 x 37 cm]

Source of image: PHT design
Embroidery: Hejar Abu Saleem [Ajjur, district of Hebron], Amman Jordan

When 700,000 Palestinians fled from or were thrown out of their homes during the Nakba in 1948, they took their house keys with them, convinced that they would come back after a week or two and re-open their front doors. The keys have been passed on from generation to generation as a reminder of their lost homes and as lasting symbols of their ‘right of return’. The Palestinian right of return or compensation was internationally recognised by the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194, adopted on 11 December 1948.

The Palestinian History Tapestry…

This is a charitable, not-for-profit project in support of Palestinian women: women who live an oppressed existence, who are poor, whose land has been taken from them; many whose families have lived for over half a century in refugee camps throughout the Middle East; women who, like any wife or mother, desperately want to take care of their families but face a daily struggle for survival.

The History Tapestry Project is empowering Palestinian women, enabling them to engage in income generation, whilst telling the story of the villages and towns, the life and heritage of their forebears, the indigenous people of Palestine, through beautiful, skilled embroidery in the Palestinian History Tapestry Project.

 https://www.palestinianhistorytapestry.org/

 

Thobe embroidery   [59 x 37 cm]

Source of image:Traditional design
Embroidery: Nawal Ibrahim Al-Ahmad [Tabariyeh], Ain al-Hilweh Lebanon

Palestinian embroidery has a rich history going back at least 200 years. Traditional Palestinian women’s dresses, or thobes, took different forms in different regions of the country. The various stitches, designs and colours of the embroidery indicate the regional origins and in some cases, women’s status. Beyond the beauty of this intricate work, and particularly in the aftermath of the 1948 Nakba, embroidery has played an important role in preserving Palestinian identity, becoming a symbol of heritage and endurance.

Era: Ottoman Period (1516—1917)

Further reading

The award winning Palestinian History Tapestry uses the embroidery skills of Palestinian women to illustrate aspects of the land and peoples of Palestine – from Neolithic times to the present.
Read on →

Monday, November 29, 2021

I Support Palestine Because I Believe in Basic Human Rights & The Rule of Fair and Just Laws... International Day of Solidarity with #Palestine November 29, 2021

1920 Good old days.. Coffee shop #Palestine

1930 Women embroidering a dress, Ramallah, Palestine - every village had its own patterns & designs.

1940s Sheep sellers at the Damascus Gate - Jerusalem, #Palestine.

2021 Arrested development and poverty take a $57 billion economic toll in #Palestine due to Israeli policies & Israeli violence








FULLY Understanding & Respecting the Right of Return is the Key for Building a Just and Lasting Peace in the Holy Land... For Everyone's Sake.

The key for return

Embroidery by Hejar Abu Saleem [Ajjur, district of Hebron], Amman Jordan

When 700,000 Palestinians fled from or were thrown out of their homes during the Nakba in 1948, they took their house keys with them, convinced that they would come back after a week or two and re-open their front doors. The keys have been passed on from generation to generation as a reminder of their lost homes and as lasting symbols of their ‘right of return’. The Palestinian right of return or compensation was internationally recognized by the United Nations General Assembly Resolution 194, adopted on 11 December 1948.