RSS

Tag Archives: democracy

Permanent Exhibition: Resistance Against National Socialism , Berlin

 

The permanent exhibition “Resistance Against National Socialism”, opened in 1989, documents with more than 5,000 photos and documents, in 26 areas, about the whole range and diversity of the fight against the national socialistic dictatorship. It informs on the political resistance against National Socialism as well as on the diverse forms of resistance basing on Christian conviction, attempted military coups between 1938 and 1944, the active conspiracy of decisive opponents of the regime at the centre of the power, on the opposition of youth, and the resistance during the daily life during war. All this includes the presentation of different traditions and attitudes as well as the situations and aims which allowed and shaped, between 1933 and 1945, resistance. It intends to show how individuals and groups resisted and used open options against the National Socialist dictatorship between 1933 and 1945.

Opening hours: Mo-Mi 09:00-18:00, Do 09:00-20:00, Fr 09:00-18:00, Sa-So 10:00-18:00

Duration: Tue, 15.05.2012 till Wed, 31.12.2014

 
 

Tags: , , , , ,

Art… culture and political engagment

Dear Readers

tags refresh for whom who was not online

Walk of Causes – For the Freedom of Press (II/14)
Picasso and Modern British Art at Tate Britain

Prosumerzen Editorial Team

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 12, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Walk of Causes – For the Freedom of Press (II/14)






Lost in a thick forest in the mountains of Lebanon, we ran out of water. It was getting late, and we didn’t bring any artificial light with us. So, guided by the moonlight, we were looking for a dry place to put our head. We had put in eight hours of walking that day, probably in circles, and we were deadly tired. We could sleep anywhere.

One of the problems we expected to meet on our way was communication with the local people. We don’t speak arabic, and are pretty novice when it comes to body language. Despite that, we had conversations for hours, joked and made friends. We made friends everywhere.

This episode is dedicated to the freedom of press. According to Reporters Without Borders, 66 journalists have been killed in 2011, and 173 are in jail for telling the truth

For Reporters Without Borders

THIS INTERNET MOVIE IS TO COLLECT FUND TO SUPPORT THE LEBANESE RED CROSS
The movie at : http://www.info4tv.org/?p=957

©2012 all rights reserved Jørgen Ekvoll and Matias Nordahl Carlsen

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 12, 2012 in Art as a matter of life

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Blog: Martyrs and mourning on Mohamed Mahmoud by Abdel Rahman Hussein




I know Mohamed Mahmoud Street quite well, albeit in more tempered times. I used to traipse back and forth down it while a student at the American University in Cairo. This is not meant as an introduction to a piece about Mohamed Mahmoud through the eyes of an AUC-ian, merely to point out that it is a street I am familiar with, by virtue of having attended a university whose two main buildings lined the street.

Admittedly, it was off-putting to see tear gas crack through the glass of what used to be the university library last November during the first of the Mohamed Mahmoud clashes, but the street has become much more than just the path between one classroom and another. It’s become the main locale for a fight, both real and symbolic, over this country, interrupted by concrete walls and shattered shop facades.

Depending on your mood — inspired or despondent — Mohamed Mahmoud is a street of struggle, of great bravery in the face of a heavily armed adversary, of sacrifice, not just of life but also of limbs, of eyes. It is also a street of death, of senseless loss, of blood spilt that is yet to be paid for. The murderers get away time and time again.

The latest stand against the system that this particular street witnessed came last month, in the wake of the Port Said Stadium massacre, in which over 70 football fans were killed. Clashes erupted downtown the following day; again Mohamed Mahmoud became the center point that extended to the intersecting streets of Mansour, Fahmy and Noubar.

This time, while the fighting was ongoing, a group of artists decided to start work on the AUC wall at the beginning of the street. That wall already had much graffiti on it, but this latest batch took it one step further — painting on the existing graffiti, painting new images, and the work hasn’t stopped since.

What has arisen as a result is a loosely connected mural of death and mourning. A commemoration of the many lives lost, their images on the wall resplendent, vibrant with a life they once had. It’s interesting that the many faces of the deceased are portrayed in expressions of downright cheekiness, eyes bursting with life.

The work is split into panels that comprise sections of the wall. The central one is entitled “Glory to the martyrs” and has faces of those killed at the ill-fated match and on Mohamed Mahmoud. Surrounding it are a number of Pharaonic depictions of burials and wailing and mourning. Preceding them at the corner of the street with Qasr al-Aini is a huge painting of a split-face Tantawi and Mubarak, which was done by an artist not working on the mural, Omar Fathy, but it inadvertently serves as a great introduction. “Walk on and see our handiwork,” it seems to say.

The murals on the street proper are the work of four artists, Ammar Abu Bakr, Alaa Awad, Hana al-Deghem and Mohamed Khaled. Abu Bakr and Awad are demonstrators at the University of Fine Arts. Abu Bakr is responsible for the martyrs’ panel, while Awad did the Pharaonic scenes.

Abu Bakr is representative of many a revolution supporter in Egypt who seems to have reached the end of his tether by the amount of death that has gone unanswered for.

“Talking has died,” he says.

He seems frustrated, belligerent, angry. I can relate. So he paints, and theorizes when prompted: “We don’t need these generations,” he says of the those in power, “the teenagers and those in their twenties are much smarter than all of those who are sitting on chairs under the dome of Parliament or anywhere else.”

And so the four have continued their work on the wall, despite continued harassment from authorities and passersby. But aside from the politics, there is also an artistic message the group aims to spread. They’re trying to draw a connection between the graffiti that has exploded post-25 January and the traditional Egyptian art of wall painting. “Egyptians have always painted on walls,” Abu Bakr says.

Awad talks me through the Pharaonic funeral that he has painted. The people carrying the coffin are the Egyptian people, the green man symbolizes immortality, the black panther with the red eyes denotes anger, and the black flowers express sorrow and anger at how they died. Despite depicting death, Awad insists that Mohamed Mahmoud is “a street of life and freedom” and that’s the message he feels is coming out from the work to the world.

While the group painted over the existing graffiti and did use stencils in some of the work, specifically the martyrs whose images Abu Bakr pulled off the internet, much of the painting is freehand, such as Awad’s Pharaonic depictions.

Another interesting image is of Sambo, the young man who is still detained after the initial Mohamed Mahmoud clashes of November, for having wrestled a rifle from a policeman, which he never used. The rifle is painted in four different cheerful colors, with three empty and equally colorful speech bubbles around him. He has a rifle in one hand and his other arm is outstretched — it is taken from a famous picture of him. Again it resonates with the rest of the work as it comes before the martyr’s panel. He seems to be saying, “Come and see, my brothers who have fallen.”

While I am there, a woman comes with a painting she has done that she wants to hang up. The painting — a hodgepodge of tiny images — has one of a soldier hand in hand with a citizen. Abu Bakr curtly tells the woman to go find a place to hang the painting in Abbasseya, the area where the pro-SCAF groupies tend to gather. An argument ensues; the woman eventually goes on her way.

And I too go on my way, walking out of Mohamed Mahmoud, a street that to me was where I bought my cigarettes, did my photocopying and walked to and from the metro station, and later became a street in which I choked from tear gas, saw policemen shoot at protesters from close range and saw the military fire strange swirling fireballs that lit up the night. A street I once thought I knew so well

©2012 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Abdel Rahman Hussein

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on March 9, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , , , , , ,

Censorship, Muslim´s Fashion

Dear Readers

Tags refresh for whom who was not online when we publish

Faith, fashion, fusion: Muslim women’s style in Australia
Authorities ban film featuring Muslim-Copt love story, intellectuals say

Prosumerzen Editorial Team

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 28, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Authorities ban film featuring Muslim-Copt love story, intellectuals say

Censorship authorities have banned the screening of a movie that features a love story between a Coptic woman and a Muslim man, a group of intellectuals said in a statement Sunday.

Cross-religion love affairs are frequently cited as the reason for sectarian strife in the country.

Hisham Essawy directed the movie, titled “Al-Khoroug min al-Qahira,” “The Exit from Cairo,” which was first screened in the 2010 Dubai Film Festival. Egyptian actress Marihan plays the Coptic woman and Mohamed Ramadan plays the Muslim man.

The film was scheduled to be screened at the first session of the Luxor African Film Festival but was banned by censorship authorities, the statement said.

“We reject all forms of restrictions on freedoms and feel sorry that such practices remain after the breakout of a revolution that called for freedom and the establishment of a civil state,” the statement, signed by various actors, writers and cinema critics, said.

Actors Mahmoud Hemedia and Fathi Abdel Wahhab, film director Mohamed Khan and movie critic Tareq al-Shennawy were among those who signed the statement.

Sayed Khattab, the head of the Censorship on Artistic Works authority, told state-run news agency MENA that the film was not given permission for screening at the festival or in cinemas.

The festival administration did not include the film in question in its list of films submitted to censorship authorities for approval, Khattab said.

Several love affairs between partners of different religions, particularly between Muslim men and alleged female Muslim converts, have caused bloody clashes between the families of the partners in recent months, including an instance in the district of Amreyya, where Christian families were asked to relocate following violence.

Correction: An earlier version of this article mistakenly stated that the film discussed a love story between a veiled Muslim woman and a Coptic man. The article has been revised to reflect the actual storyline.

©2012 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED EGYPT INDIPENDENT

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Egyptian film star sentenced for insulting Islam

The Arab world’s most famous comic actor, Adel Imam, has received a three-month jail sentence for insulting Islam in films and plays, a court document showed on Thursday.

Imam, who has frequently poked fun at authorities and politicians of all colors during a 40-year career, has one month to appeal the sentence and will remain out of jail until the appeal process is concluded.

The sentence Wednesday evening came weeks after Islamists swept most seats in parliamentary elections. The case was brought by Asran Mansour, a lawyer with ties to Islamist groups, and had languished in court for months, judicial sources said.

Mansour accused the actor of offending Islam and its symbols, including beards and the Jilbab, a loose-fitting garment worn by some Muslims, the Egyptian news portal Ahram Online reported.

Among films and plays targeted by the lawyer were the movie “Morgan Ahmed Morgan” and the play “Al-Zaeem” (“The Leader”), the report said.

Imam was also handed a fine of LE1,000 in absentia, the court document showed. He could not immediately be reached for comment.

Court cases against directors, actors, artists and intellectuals for failing to respect religious authority are common in Egypt. But the case against Imam is likely to draw attention due to his high profile and the timing of the verdict.

Egypt’s most successful movie star, Imam has been a box-office sell-out for much of his career. His more serious films have dealt with the rise the Islamist militancy and taken aim at incompetent government officials.

“I think the lawyer who filed the case against Imam is taking advantage of the current circumstances with Islamists gaining power in Egypt,” said Nabil Abdel Fattah, an analyst and researcher at Al-Ahram Centre for Political and Strategic Studies in Cairo.

He said the sentence had likely been handed down because Imam had failed to appear in court, and expected it to be overturned on appeal.

Egyptian telecom tycoon and political liberal Naguib Sawiris also faces trial on a charge of showing contempt for religion in a case brought by another Islamist lawyer. Sawiris, a prominent figure in Egypt’s Coptic Christian community, was accused of showing contempt by tweeting a cartoon seen as insulting to Islam.

©2012 Reuters / Egypt Indipendent

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on February 6, 2012 in Art as a matter of life

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

‘Songs for Tahrir’: Music for and from liberation

Most times that Palestinian artist and musician Reem Kelani was in Tahrir Square, she took her tape recorder along. She weaves some of these recordings into her radio piece “Songs for Tahrir.”

The focus is on song and music, and alongside the new musical sounds of a young generation — music such as the collective compositions of the Choir Project and Ramy Essam’s music drawn from people’s slogans — she hears the sounds of old pioneers: Sayyed Darwish, Sheikh Imam and Abdel Halim Hafez, among others. She was particularly excited to find the music of Darwish, a man whose music she has been researching for the past eight years, at the heart of mass protests in 2011. She describes Darwish as a “composer, revolutionary, man of the people.”

The narrative that Kelani creates is both unobtrusive and essential. She gives a sense of the revolution as ongoing, a sense of music as integral to protest. She captures the creativity, spontaneity and potency of protest not just during the 18 days in January, 2011 that led to former President Mubarak’s fall, but also in November when the security and military forces attacked protesters in Tahrir Square.

Songs old and new, powerful chants and slogans and ambulance sirens against the backdrop of chants of “freedom, freedom” come together to create a full and rich soundscape of resistance. And as Salam Yousry of the Choir Project says, some of the best music of the revolution came from people who we don’t even know. The Choir Project’s work involves collective composition, incorporating the perspectives and experiences of many. In a stirring clip from their concert just days after Mubarak’s fall, we hear, “Might, strong will and faith, Egypt’s revolution is everywhere.”

Kelani does not promise an objective or comprehensive account of the music of the revolution — which would, of course, be impossible. Rather, she delivers a sensitive, subjective and insightful exploration of music and protest in today’s Egypt, an optimistic one that observes the present and is informed by the history of subversive music in Egypt. Having participated in the initial 18-day uprising, she returned in November — coincidentally on the day that five days of street fights between protesters and security forces began — and interviewed several of the activists, poets and musicians she had met in Tahrir Square earlier in the year. She unabashedly focuses on Darwish, a man whose music the regime either ignored or exploited and whose songs found a rightful home on the streets of Egypt in 2011.

Darwish lived and worked in working-class neighborhoods. The sounds and intonations he heard around him, Kelani explains, went into his songs, many of which were written for the oppressed and marginalized. And in this way, his music was both from and for the people. Kelani takes her tape recorder with her away from Tahrir Square, and records the kinds of sounds that Darwish would have heard and incorporated into his music. From the sound of market-sellers calling out their produce to the ubiquitous and nasal tones of “bikya, bikya” of those who buy and sell on the street, Kelani offers a soundscape of Cairo that complements and informs the soundscape of revolution.

She tells us about one of Darwish’s songs — on the surface about dates, but actually in praise of the nationalist anti-colonial leader Saad Zaghloul. She sings the opening lines, and in a beautiful moment, the date seller she is talking to takes up the song. The music of Darwish was rooted in the struggle against colonialism, and Khaled Abol Naga, the lead actor in “Microphone,” a film about the alternative music and art scene in Alexandria, says that if we compare the attitude the regime held toward the people with that of colonial powers, you can see why his lyrics resonate again.

The music of Darwish that was sung in Tahrir Square encompassed political and love songs, and also a song of love for the homeland, the Egyptian national anthem, “Biladi, biladi” (Oh, my Country), the words of which come from a speech by anti-colonial leader Mostafa Kamel — a speech that inspired the teenage Darwish to write it. After signing peace with Israel, the regime did not want to continue using a national anthem glorifying military struggle, and so it went back to the iconic anthem of 1919. In this way, a regime subservient to Western interests neutralized the anti-establishment and anti-colonial ethos of Darwish and the national anthem itself. Sung by thousands and millions in 2011 facing the security forces of that same regime, the song’s potency was renewed and reinvigorated.

Samia Jaheen, from the band Eskendrella, talks about performing a Darwish song before the revolution. The band has been working together for years, composing their own music, as well as songs from old greats such as Darwish, Sheikh Emam and poems by Saleh Jaheen and Fouad Haddad. They are activists, and throughout 2011 have performed at protest after protest. Samia says that when the band performed Darwish’s “Remember Egypt is still beautiful” before the revolution, they were accused of chauvinism. Many responded by saying, “We Egyptians have so many problems…We are dirty, rude, poor, and uncivilized.” But, Jaheen argues, “We need to unite to believe in ourselves, and that’s how we will become better. We will not become the best we can be by insulting each other.”

Kelani’s stands out for putting art and music into a context that includes all kinds of resistance and political discussion. It collapses artificial distinctions between art and politics, as she describes the way singing sustained protest. Interweaving the sounds of Cairo’s streets with chants and song, she gives music a privileged place not apart from the ordinary, but emerging from and returning to the daily sounds that make up our lives. While recognizing the novelty and creativity of much of the music, she simultaneously ties it to music from the past that also emerged from a collective rage. And as one slogan chanted on the country’s streets proclaims, “The rage of Egyptians is a dangerous thing” — for those in power, of course.

©2012 Al-Masry Al-Youm

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on January 27, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

May a Star by Haidji

May a Star Haidji ©2011 Quarta-feira, 26 de Janeiro de 2011

The idea of “May a Star” was born observing a Summit Conference,
where many leaders of many countries were together
speaking about more or less common problems.

Leaders from diferent countries, at the same place at the same time
also when everyone have their own country and own problems.

Based also on my view that, for me

“Art isn’t politicaly left or right
but politicaly human”

I decided to start the project…”May a Star”

Actulaly, if I’m not wrong,
we have more than 200 countries in the world
considering West Sahara independent from Marrocco,
Palestine and Israel as independent places,
Taiwan independent from China,
and Vatican as something a part…a country?in a way…

The project start with the realization of artworks, oil on canvas,30 x 30cm
with a star (diferent for every country, but always a star)
and a verse in the backside with a message to every political leader :

“May a star protect yor dreams while you’re sleeping
and show you the way while you’re awake”

with the canvas, a letter and a cd explainning the project.

(that can be interpretate in 2 ways…some persons sleep while they’re awake and others are really awake)
The paintings are to be send to every political leader from every country in the world.
independent from political views, culture, religion, ecc
is possible for every leader to do good things for people on his own country, other countries , enviroment and Earth self.
Stars are in diferent religions, cultures and costumes as sign to show the way for the humanity
have the same essence and is the same symbol.

Also 5 paintings , in large dimensions are planned to be made about
the 5 continents
and photos/videos about the paintings and the projectand photos and videos of the paintings
when all paintings are in all countries,
a exhibition will be made at the same time that every country have a star.
the paintings are not the be exposed before they are sent, the sense is more that they are in every country of the world at the same time that an probably exhibition about with the largest painting and videos/photos are showing the project and where they are and who are the actual world leaders that received the paintings

The first painting is already made and sent with a letter about the project.
others are on the way …
The project is for 2011-2012

Haidji ©2011

More about Haidji also in our internet stream TV at : http://www.info4tv.org/?p=738

 
6 Comments

Posted by on January 10, 2012 in Art as a matter of life, Haidji

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Germany , ( Culture as a matter of soft power in the G8)

1) for the world star Nana Mouskouri Greece has been living under a blanket of liars since 30 years
2) Chinese skepticism toward Europe

This is only a part of the section dedicated to Germany as G8, (I). About the German soft power we advice to read also :

about politics ,geopolitics and economy at Prosumerzen : http://prosumerzen.net/2011/12/12/germany-g8-by-prof-phileas-frogg-the-tour-of-the-world-in-80-clicks/
about Life Style and soft power at www.spiriteiral.com at 16.30 GMT

1) for the world star Nana Mouskouri Greece has been living under a blanket of liars since 30 years

In an interview to the Welt Online Nana Mouskouri (that has sold more than 250 millions copies worlwide), denounced a 30 years long blanket of liars that engulfed her people.

2) Chinese skepticism toward Europe

To talk with the world-class architect Rem Koolhaas about East Asian building traditions gives the chance for a conversation on strong states, western democracy and avant-garde.The author of the CCTV Towers in Peking.Asia toke the initiative within civilization. And the Metabolists were the first avant-garde architecture, which did not come from the West. At the same time that was the last time that architects could work together as a collective, without resetting their individuality and their talent.This can be translated in the work of an architect that cannot work alone.With the 1973 oil crisis ended, the Japanese economic miracle the Japanese master plans of Metabolists. Arati Isozaki said in an interview, avant-garde architecture is only possible in a strong state. For Koolhaashe did that really thoughtful. It may sound shocking, but it is indeed true. Architecture can not exist alone, they must be financed. If the state is not one supported, individual patrons may remain, but there’s always a kind of private interest, the state has not necessarily. About the future of the democracy What opportunities do you see in the future for the Western model of democracy?
For Koolhaas:” I see so many conflicting forces at work: on the one hand, the Arab spring, which is perhaps not a direct call for democracy, but at least an incredible revolt against stupidity and bad governments. In many places in Asia are experiencing the same thing, an impatience with incompetence and corruption. As a European politician I would make me really worried about corruption in Europe. There are a lot of corruption, without us talking about it. I think if we want to promote democracy, we should try that it works better here”.

Note :

Note :

I)the G8 Countries are Germany, Italy,France,Japan,the UK,the USA,Russia

We cover all inside : http://prosumerzen.net/2011/12/08/g8-3g-bricscivetsn11e7-a-new-world-monitor-by-prosumerzen/

 
 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 279 other followers