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Showing posts with label folk traditions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label folk traditions. Show all posts

Friday, January 4, 2019

Palestinian traditional costumes infographic map #America #TweetYourThobe #Heritage #Beauty #Palestine #History

"The women who created these dresses probably did not consider their embroidered “script” to be anything more than village tradition. How proud they would be to know that theirs is the language by  which  Palestinian and Arab culture is being defined to the public and to our children. Each time one sees the glimmer of pride in a Palestinian child’s eyes, or feel the excitement of an American audience upon viewing and discussing this little-known aspect of art history, we know that we are one step further on a long and arduous, but immensely rewarding road." 

Palestinian Heritage Foundation: Hanan Karaman Munayyer and Farah Joseph  Munayyer of West Caldwell, New Jersey, are Palestinian American scientists, who immigrated to the United States in 1970 from Haifa and Lydda, Palestine.   
http://www.palestineheritage.org


Please click attached link below to read article entitled  Embroidery as a Source of Palestinian Identity By Hanan Karaman Munayyer


Monday, December 20, 2010

Al Hanouneh - protecting the collective Palestinian memory

http://www.jordantimes.com/?news=32768
Al Hanouneh - protecting the collective Palestinian memory Al Hanouneh troupe members dance in traditional Palestinian outfits in Amman on Saturday evening (Reuters photo by Muhammad Hamed)

By Mohammad Ben Hussein

AMMAN - Arab nationalism and Palestinian folk traditions were set to live music in a performance in the capital on Saturday evening.

In a concert held to express solidarity with the Palestinians, Al Hanouneh folk troupe took to the stage at the Royal Cultural Centre and danced to popular tunes such as “Youya” “Alee Narak”.

Band leader Musa Saleh said the performance titled, "Guardians of the Memory", is part of the group’s mission to preserve the recent and historical memory of Palestine and the greater Arab world.

“We have a duty as a band to protect the collective Palestinian memory. Our memory is part of our identity and Israel is doing its best to tarnish that memory to destroy our identity,” Saleh told The Jordan Times after the concert, which marked the anniversary of the partition of Palestine by the UN General Assembly in 1947.

“We see Israel as trying to rob everything from us, not only the land. They dress air hostesses on their planes with Palestinian attire and claim to have invented falafel among other things. We should not allow them steal our tradition and culture,” he added.

This year’s event featured prominent bands and poets from across the region, including Tawfiq Al Halabi, Rayek Kheir, Shadi Mousa, Najeeb Yuakbi, Ahmad Fahmawi, Flayeh Al Jubour, Sana Mousa, Talal Haidar and Ahmad Fahmawi, among others.

Al Hanouneh was established in 1993 in Amman with the goal of protecting and safeguarding the culture and folklore of the area through the selection and classification of Palestinian folklore.

The group comprises over 80 dancers, musicians and singers.

20 December 2010