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Showing posts with label VOA News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VOA News. Show all posts

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Muslim Artists Perform to Break Stereotypes

Comedy Documentary Showcases Muslim Diversity ....The Muslims are Coming! is available to buy or rent on iTunes. Visit themuslimsarecoming.com for more details
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 [AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine]
VOA NEWS
Elizabeth Lee

Theme song The Muslims Are Coming! - Title track to the motion picture The Muslims Are Coming! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=il3wk1tpt00

Dean Obeidallah 
If you know any Oscar voters (Im serious) please let them know about The Muslims Are Coming - we are one of 150 films that qualified for the Best Documentary Academy Award this year. Voting is open through Nov 22. Here's our Oscar ad running next week in The Hollywood Reporter. Thanks!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

VOANews: Israel Blocks ‘Fly-in’ by Pro-Palestinian Activists


Demonstrators sit as around 100 pro-Palestinian activists stage a protest at Brussels national airport in Zaventem, Israel, early April 15, 2012.
 [AS ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO READ GOOD ARTICLES IN FULL: HELP SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and conversations) THAT EMPOWER DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE & PEACE... and hopefully Palestine] 

 International activists launching a “Welcome to Palestine” campaign have gotten an unfriendly welcome from Israel. 

Israel has blocked a “fly-in” by hundreds of pro-Palestinian activists who planned to arrive at the airport near Tel Aviv, on their way to a solidarity visit in the West Bank.

Airlines in Europe canceled the tickets of more than 100 campaigners after Israel issued a blacklist. Dozens of activists who managed to arrive at the airport were detained by Israeli authorities and will be deported.

Israel, which followed the “Welcome to Palestine” campaign on Facebook, charges that participants were planning disruptions at the airport and protests in the West Bank. 

“It is very unfortunate that we are once again facing the kind of provocation coming from extremists from different countries," said Yuli Edelstein, Israeli Cabinet Minister. "Those who will make it to Israel will not be allowed to create any disorder.”

Palestinian organizer Abdul Fatah abu Suroor says Israel is blocking a peace mission.

“They are coming to Palestine," said Fatah. "They are not coming to make destruction, or explode airports, or attacking Israelis. They are coming to share a bit of humanity and support the Palestinian people despite being under occupation.” 


 Related Articles

Israeli, Gaza Children Face Psychological Fallout From Aerial Strikes

Such confrontations cause high incidences of trauma among children on both sides of the border

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Monday, April 18, 2011

Thousands of Palestinians Leave West Bank for Jordan

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/middle-east/Thousands-of-Palestinians-Leave-West-Bank-for-Jordan--120125659.html








In the last few years, life under the Israeli occupation has prompted thousands of Palestinians to leave their homes in the West Bank and take up residence in neighboring Jordan. They go in search of a normal life, free of army checkpoints and conflicts with Israeli settlers.

Life in a luxurious suburb of Amman is much brighter than what Shahinda El Kilani left behind in her native West Bank town of Hebron.

"There is security. There is stability. There is no fear. My children can go out anytime, without my being worried about them," said Shahinda El Kilani.

El Kilani and her family are building a new house, and a new life in Jordan.

They are among the thousands of wealthy Palestinians holding Jordanian citizenship who have left the West Bank to make their homes in Amman.

Palestinians make up between 50 and 80 per cent of the population in Jordan, and hold government posts.

El Kilani, like other Palestinian residents, says that while she feels comfortable here, this will never be home.

"For sure, this is not our home," she said. "This is a temporary home until we return to our birthplace."

In Israel, some ultranationalists want the transfer of Palestinians to Jordan. An online petition is circulating that calls on King Abdullah to to declare Jordan a Palestinian state. Israel's government has distanced itself from the petition, and Palestinians reject it.

Mahdi Abdel-Hadi is a Palestinian political analyst:

"This is not accepted. This will not be done. Jordan cannot have it, will not have it, will not allow it and the Palestinians are against it all the way. There is no Palestinian under the sun wherever he is, will accept a substitute alternative homeland for Palestine," said Mahdi Abdel-Hadi.

Shahinda El Kilani is disappointed in the peace process and doubts the Palestinian-Israeli conflict will ever end. But for her, hope is not dead.

"We do not expect anything. At the same time, I still hope that something will come because there is the dream that something good will happen and we can return," she said.

In the meantime, she tries to leave behind the suffering and move toward building a better future for her children on this side of the Jordan River.

Friday, April 15, 2011

Mohamed Elshinnawi: US Mulls New Diplomacy in Troubled Middle East

The plenary session of the US- Islamic World Forum discusses Geo-Strategic Issues in the Middle East and focuses on the Arab-Israeli conflict

"...."The largest segment of Americans think that the demonstrations in the Arab world are not, in the first place, about Islamists," said Telhami. "They are about ordinary people seeking freedom and democracy. And that belief leads them to be somewhat optimistic and somewhat supportive of Arab democracy, and so when you ask them should the U.S. support the emerging democracies even if their governments are less friendly to the U.S., you have a majority say yes."

As Telhami and the other Middle East experts emphasized, if Washington can align itself with the people of the region instead of repressive governments, it can strengthen the resistance to radicalism and terrorism."
A strong report about U.S. policy at a crossroads from VOA's Mohamed Elshinnawi. What is America doing right in the region and what is it doing wrong?

Saturday, February 5, 2011

What Influence Does Washington Have in the Arab World?

Photo: AP... Anti-government protesters react in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, February 4, 2011

"Many analysts, such as Fawaz Gerges with the London School of Economics, said in the long term, irrespective of U.S. influence or lack thereof, people in Arab countries in the Middle East will determine their own fate - as is the case in Egypt.

"The future of Egypt will be determined by Egyptians," said Gerges. "There is a new reality in politics in the Middle East. The new reality is people are becoming empowered, they realize that the oppressive status quo has done a great deal of damage to their society, to their reputation, to their economy. The United States has limited options, even though the United States can be a force for stability by trying to convince and nudge its allies - that is they must respect the new reality of politics in the Middle East."

Gerges said the new reality is all about pluralism. "It's about institution building. It's about bread and butter. It's about freedom. In the long term, I would say that America's strategic interests are served, will be served, by the new reality, in particular if the new awakening is consolidated in institutional building and pluralistic government."

In the final analysis, Aaron David Miller said let's not overstate American influence in the Arab world.

"Look, we have to get a grip and understand one thing - we don't manage history," said Miller. "Reinhold Niebuhr [American theologian] said you can't control and manage history. And we have to get used to that fact."

Describing the Middle East, Miller says "you have a broken, dysfunctional region that is going to take years to repair - and it cannot be repaired from the outside.""

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/middle-east/-What-Influence-Does-Washington-Have-in-the-Arab-World-115324079.html?c=y&pollSubmitted=y#pollAnchor&mr=1&oid=4&pid=114857954&cid=8500664

Friday, January 21, 2011

James Zogby's 'Arab Voices' examines major US false perceptions about the Middle East

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/usa/arts/New-Book-Busts-Arab-Myths-114273089.html

James Zogby's new book points out the diversity of Arabs across the Middle East and North Africa, but finds many are united on key issues such as Palestine.Arts & Culture

New Book Busts Myths about Arabs

'Arab Voices' examines major US false perceptions about the Middle East

The United States has committed more money, troops and resources to the Middle East than to any other part of the world since the Vietnam conflict of the 1960s. Yet Americans know very little about the Arab world, and much of what they know is wrong, according to James Zogby, author of the new book, Arab Voices.

Zogby, founder and president of the Arab American Institute - a non-profit advocacy group based in Washington, D.C. - challenges what he sees as five super myths which distort Americans’ perception of Arabs.

James Zogby with a copy of his new book, 'Arab Voices. VOA - M. Elshinnawi
The first myth is that Arabs are all the same, while the second holds that there is no "Arab world." His brother John’s polling organization, Zogby International, conducted surveys in six Arab countries from Morocco in the west to the United Arab Emirates in the east. The results reveal a rich and varied landscape, with diverse sub-cultures. However, James Zogby notes, they also show a sense of belonging to a greater Arab world.

"Culture in Morocco is different than culture in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia is different than Egypt," he says. "We get a tremendous diversity of opinion about daily life and about uniqueness of one’s own country but at the same time there are these common threads that go throughout the region that are born of a common language and a common sensibility. Arabs can be as diverse as any people on earth but when Iraq was invaded they came together, when Palestine is hurting, they come together and they speak in one language and they feel and they resonate together with certain words that mean something powerful to them."

Zogby blames the American news media for the third myth, which is the false perception that Arabs despise the United States, its values and way of life.

"The notion we have is that they go to bed at night hating America, wake up in the morning hating Israel and during the day, they watch TV news fueling the hatred," he says. "In fact what we find in our polling that their number one concerns are their children, health care and education. They go to bed at night thinking about their jobs like everybody else all over the world and wake up in the morning thinking about their families. And during the day, they are watching TV to be sure, but the number-one rated shows are movies and soap operas and dramas."

Zogby also discounts the fourth myth - the idea that most Arabs are driven by religious fanaticism. According to public opinion surveys conducted across the Middle East over the past decade, mosque attendance rates are around the same as church attendance rates in the U.S. The author suggests this misperception is due to Hollywood’s portrayal of Arabs as either terrorists or corrupt oil millionaires.

"Is it fair to have an Arab who is a terrorist? Of course, there are Arab terrorists. There are Arab oil Sheiks who do awful things with their money," he says. "What we are questioning is, if the only black person on TV were a street criminal or the only Jewish person were some shyster businessman, if the only characters in other words were these stereotypes, then that is the image that sticks. The problem is there needs to be at least as many characters or types of characters as there are real images in the Arab world to balance those negatives, so that people go away with the sense that they are really not all that way."

According to public opinion surveys conducted across the Middle East over the past decade, mosque attendance rates are around the same as church attendance rates in the U.S.

The fifth super myth challenged in Arab Voices is a fundamental one: that Arabs reject reform and will never change unless the West pushes them. Zogby uses polling data to show that people across the Arab world want social and political change, but resent having it imposed on them. They aspire to their own kind of reforms. Zogby recommends that American politicians learn from Americans doing business in the Arab world.

"Businessmen are open to making a deal. They listen to the other side, in order to understand what the other side wants. They know they can’t sell unless they know the market they are selling into," he notes. "If we did our politics the way we do our business we will succeed in making peace and having good friends all over the world. I think our best public diplomats are our businessmen in the region because they are selling America everyday and they actually doing a great job of it because people want a little piece of America. They love our values, they love our culture, they love our products. They like our way of life, they just want to be a part of us, but we keep pushing them politically."

These misperceptions seem poised to impact the next generation of Americans as well. Zogby points out that the U.S. education system teaches little about Arabs and the Middle East. He argues that this knowledge gap must be overcome - and false U.S. perceptions debunked - before the United States can truly hope to win the hearts and minds of the Arab people.

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Tuesday, November 23, 2010

Palestinians Criticize Israeli Land Bill: Ending the occupation of Palestinian land "is not and cannot be dependent on any sort of referendum."

http://www.voanews.com/english/news/Palestinians-Criticize-Israeli-Land-Bill-110141894.html
23 November 2010
VOA News

Palestinians are criticizing a new bill passed by Israel's parliament that would make it difficult for Israel to withdraw from the captured territories of East Jerusalem or the Golan Heights.

The legislation, approved Monday, requires a two-thirds vote of parliament to approve any withdrawal from those areas, considered crucial to peace negotiations with the Palestinians and Syrians.

If parliamentary approval is not given, withdrawal from either territory would become subject to a national referendum.

Chief Palestinian negotiator Saeb Erekat denounced the measure as "a mockery of international law."

In comments Tuesday, he said under international law, Israel has a "clear and absolute obligation" to withdraw from areas it has occupied since the 1967 Mideast war.

Erekat also said ending the occupation of Palestinian land "is not and cannot be dependent on any sort of referendum."

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said a referendum on a future peace deal would prevent an irresponsible agreement and provide strong public support for an accord that will answer Israel's national security interests.

The law would not affect territorial concessions within the West Bank or the Gaza Strip, areas that Israel has not annexed.

On Sunday, Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas said he will not return to peace talks with Israel unless it stops building settlements on all land the Palestinians want for a state, including occupied East Jerusalem.

Some information for this report was provided by AP and AFP.

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