6/25/2007

Fishawi, Jeddah


Harat Al-Madhloum, The Quarter of "the Unfortunate" one of the most beautiful quarters for old houses with balconies in Jeddah. It is quite near our coffee shop, Fishawi. Two afternoons ago there was an accidental fire in one of those old houses with the beautiful wooden window-balconies and people jumped to escape from the smoke.
Headline in The Arab News:
Woman Jumps Off Burning Building

Samir Al-Saadi, Arab News
JEDDAH, 24 June 2007 — A Somali woman died yesterday afternoon after jumping off the top of a blazing four-story building in the Harrat Al-Madhloum area of downtown Jeddah.

6/24/2007

McNamara Ground Ops Lunchroom Coffee Machine




Foreign and domestic news

U.S. warplanes bomb palm fields in Baghdad June 17 as a Humvee blocks the highway. The next day, 10,000 U.S. troops launched a major offensive in nearby Baquba.

All accounts of gallantry, pleasure, and entertainment, shall be under the article of
Café Flore, Paris; poetry, under that of Fishawi, Jeddah or Cairo; learning under the title of the Shati Tea-and-Falafel-shop, Gaza; foreign and domestic news, you will have from
McNamara Ground Ops Lunchroom, Detroit; and what else I shall on any other subject offer, shall be dated from my own apartment.

Les avions Air France commencent a partir plein d'etudiants americains allant en Europe pour leurs tournés. Ils devraient aller a Atlanta pour le "US Social Forum" du 27 juin au 1ier juillet.

How we were duped by the Bush_Olmert press conference! With Olmert's tears about the split between Hamas and Fatah, and his interest in "renewing the aid"--something I'm sure, just as Abbas is sure, he will never do--WE WERE DUPED INTO OVERLOOKING THE LARGEST TROOP ATTACK IN IRAQ SINCE THE 2003 INVASION.


Agence France Press photo of Troops in Baquba which I found on Al-Jazeera English on line.

6/19/2007

" 'Jailhouse Rock' " Coffee Shop, Ashkelon Prison courtyard at your limited exercise times

" 'Jailhouse Rock' coffee shop," Ashkelon Prison courtyard at your limited exercise times

For years after being literally entrapped by a pretty Mosad agent in Rome, Mordekhai Vanunu was in a private cell in Ashkelon prison, the first holding prison for Palestinian kid stone-throwers who are then taken to prisons, like Ramla prison, from which they are lost to the world. Unlike Vanunu, the Israeli whistle blower, who blew the whistle on Israel's nuclear program, the Palestinian prisoners at Ashkelon are allowed occasional exercise time in the courtyard.

So the courtyard is our coffee shop today, the second day after Hamas kicked out the Palestine Authority from Gaza.

We were not really surprised that the US consul in Jerusalem was ready to make a statement even before Condoleeza Rice or the President, because the US Consul in Jerusalem has been "aiding" Gaza with CIA-aid-and-advice-to-the-PA(this seems to be the only aid the US ever gave--military aid--strange as it seems) to help with "security" for Israel since at least 1996, when Israel began the provocations at the Haram al-Sharif in order to be able to intervene brutally against the young palestinian kids, the stone throwers, who were giving Israel a bad image, and thus were "causing the situation to deteriorate" as the Israeli foreign ministry would put it.

Hamas' kicking out of the Palestine Authority from Gaza was the end result of a kind of mini civil war that began when Israel, the US, and the European Union cut off all commercial and charitable bank-liquidity-flow to Gaza and the West Bank. This was more than "a cut-off of aid." It was a kind of "economic blocade" of the type Roosevelt used against Japan at the beginning of World War II, but, in this case against a peaceful civilian population without an army or air force that could strike back. Hamas struck back as well as they could, with occasional bombs launched against the computer chip manufacturing plants north of Gaza, and Israel spent lots of jet fuel, normal Humvee-and-Caterpillar fuel, and bombs to protect its share of Intel Duo chip production,which is so cherished in the computer world now, in the industrial zones north of Gaza--Siderot, I think we came to hear its name in the news.

So, how can we explain what happened? Here in the prisons, we try to educate ourselves as best we can. Like the farmers in the Prussian prisons, all we have is the Holy Quran--the way the German farmers of young Marx's time, had only the Holy Bible.

Like Kautsky said of the New Testament, the prophet, Jesus,seems to have led a kind of anti-imperialist struggle(see Kautsky, Foundations of Christianity). The equivalent reading of the Holy Quran, I will leave to the reader. If you have defended any Palestinians in prisons in the US or Israel, for example Farouk Abdul Muhti, who died shortly after being brutalized in Pennsylvania prisons for being a radio talk show pro-Palestinian New Yorker--you will know what stories of the Prophet Mohammad and his followers are similar to Jesus' fight against the Roman occupiers of Palestine described by Kautsky.

So, we are here in Ashkelon, home of Ibn Hajar al-Ashkalani, the famous Islamic scholar of the 9th century, who, paradoxically, is called Ibn Hajar, son of the stone!! Even then, the great method of civil disobedience that symbolized the first intifada, was presaged in the mere name of Ibn Hajar, in a sense.

We are trying to discuss what causes the civil wars, like the little tiff between Hamas and Fatah?
Imperialism? Imperialism, which, in the twentiety century "opened an epoch of recurring crises, of imperialist wars, of civil wars, of wars for colonial domination, of struggles for national liberation, and of proletarian revolutions."

6/16/2007

Shati' Tea and Falafal Shop, Gaza



[This picture of the main intersection in Downtown Gaza city was taken by a New York Times photographer and published in the June 20, 2007 New York Times on line. The Mediterranean sea can be seen in the background. To get to Shati' Tea and Falafal Shop, go straight down toward the sea and turn right on Khaled ibn Al-Walid street or at the fairgrounds where the international book fairs are held in the park on the sea front.]

This is definately the best falafel in the world. I wonder if Taghrid, who files from Gaza to the New York Times knows about it.
C'est le meilleur falafel du monde dans ce café près de la mer à Gaza, et pres du marché ou les hommes achetent des poivrons très piquantes pour ne pas sentir la peine que leur font Israel depuis 1948 quand les Palestiniens etaient chassé de leur terres au nord, et les Anglais les recevaient en petits bateaux pour les rendre d'Ashkelon à Gaza.

Nous avons, aujourd'hui le resultat du refus d'Israel, les Etats Unis, et meme les banques arabes(par peur des Etats Unis) de laisser passer de l'argent commercial dans les territoires occupes depuis l'election du president Haniyeh.

Tout ces paroles de l'influence de l'Iran sur Hamas est la paranoia des propagandistes israeliens. Comment l'Iran pourrait envoyer du materiel militaire a Gaza? Personne ne peux sortir ni entrer!! Et le Hisbolla du Liban, va voyager a travers la Jordanie pour entrer en "tunnels" par le Sinai et le sud de Gaza? C'est tres peu probable, a mon avis.

6/14/2007

Fishawi, Jeddah

Science, or 'ilm, which gives us the English word Alumni/ae

Unfortunately I listened to NPR(National Public Radio)'s "Fresh Air"(it should be called "Smog") interviewing a British photographer for the New York Times in Iraq talking about the US torturing people to find out houses where bombs had been made that killed US soldiers, and then an interview with a Professor at Boston University about Lebanon. I looked up this professor because he was so wrong on Lebanon and found that he has endorsed the MESA(Middle East Studies Association) letter writing campaign to free some Iranian Americans academics being held in Iran prisons.

I think that will be enough NPR and MESA to last me a good 5 years. Then I went to Juan Cole's Blog and found that he just cut and pasted some goverment translations of jihadist websites, because he is "interested in religions," as he says on his web site, I guess. That will be enough Juan Cole to last me a good 5 years, too. And, of course Arianna Huffington or whoever her tweedle dumb rival on the "right" may be, are totally out of the question, and always will be.

The US seems to be totally
locked
into the outlook of the Democratic and Republican parties, the twin parties of war.
The US
media just sees everything in the light of this war on terrorism and in the interests
of the
war on terrorism.

There are no jihadists anywhere in the Middle East. We are just people living our
lives.
There are no "madrassas" teaching people to be jihadists or
"wahabists" There are just
schools, like anywhere else!!! Muslims are just like Christians...they go to mosque, pray, make the pilgrimage, but
they
are just ordinary people.

And while I'm on the topic of Madrassas, maybe indeed the very crusades were against
scholarship. Yes, people have forgotton that Averroes was too much for the Bishop of
Paris and St. Thomas Acquinas. Arabic numerals were too much for the popes. The
beginning of learning, which the Arabs brought to Bologna, Sorbonne, Oxford was so
popular and free-thinking(Aristotle, Dialectics, Materialism) that the feudal church
had to
put a stop to it. So they organized the crusades, to drive back Europe to the pre-
Avicennian ages. The crusades backfired, though, because the christian soldiers
found a
land where christians and jews were tolerated, and learning was tolerated, too. The soldeirs came back with a
renewed thirst for LEARNING. AT WHICH POINT FERDINAND AND ISABELLA STARTED THE
SPANISH INQUISITION TO STOP THAT. And America is the brainchild of Ferdinand and
Isabella, as we all learn in kindergarden--and don't learn much else after that.
We're lucky
if we get to the pilgrims in sixth grade.

So, in other words, yes, the Americans are against madrassas--they are against
schools
just as the pope and the crusades were. They don't want people to go deep into
Aristotle,
Dialectics, or anything deep, because that might lead to more people being literate
and
politically literate. The war on terrorism is plain and clear cut: it is against
the people of
Iran having electricity in the remote villages so that they can read and learn at
night. it is
against the people of Iraq being able to defend themselves against Israeli attacks on
their
efforts to produce electricity to the extent that the US is going in to set up a
police state
like downtown Chicago, LA, or Detroit, in Iraq. It is against Saudi Arabia doing
anything on the world political arena
but sell oil to Japan through Exxon Mobil(All this talk in the US about
"independance from
Saudi Arabia" is "talk under censorship" as I see it, because none of
the gas in the US
comes from Saudi Arabia. I have seen the way the Israelis treat educators. The
Americans
are no different. They hate to see other people getting any education, unless it be
an
education that will regurgitate the Americana of NPR(National Public Radio) and MESA(Middle East Studies Association).

Sorry for the rant
13Jun2007 27 Jumadi Awal 1428 last day of school