Showing posts with label travelogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travelogue. Show all posts

Thursday, May 01, 2008

Photojournal: the Galilee

The hummos not yet appropriated by the white man.



Good Friday in Shefa Amr.


Plaque in Haifa's German Colony: "In the middle of a sparsely populated and largely barren land..."


Jabal Al-Sheikh on a clear day from Haifa. This peak is visible from Lebanon, Syria, and the Galilee. It is impossible for anyone actually from these countries, to see it from all three.


"Martyrs of Racism" poster showing the faces of Palestinian citizens of Israel killed in October 2000 and the Shefa Amr Massacre, among other events.


Road sign for Jenin. The sign was good a few years ago but is now obsolete. All roads lead to the Wall.


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Saturday, April 19, 2008

HKJ Needs Better Publicity Staff



The above is a recreation of the framed image at the Sheikh Hussein/Jordan River Valley Crossing. Jordan has a silly rule that you are not allowed to take pictures of any police anything, even their little huts. So you'll have to do with my approximation.

It was a faded image of police in RIOT GEAR charging towards the viewer, with the words "JUSTICE FOR ALL: Constitution of the National Police."

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Saturday, March 29, 2008

I'm disappointed



To all the Haters...

OK... So I'm in the most interesting place the world, going to clubs, beaches, hotels, restaurants, sitting in LA-like traffic, going to malls that have full on decor that match the themes, (like Persia, China, Egypt, Tunis, etc.)

Dubai...Wow.

I'm disappointed with all the people that told me I would hate it. Why on earth would I hate the most "together" Arab country I've ever seen? The street signs are respected, the roads are well kept (believe it or not they actually have LANDSCAPING on the medians here! did you get that King Abdallah? LANDSCAPING! it makes your country prettier... try it sometime), They don't burn garbage here; they actually have trucks that pick it up, the food is amazing, the service in restaurants is top notch, the nightlife is addictive and to top it all off you can actually get a great cup of coffee in a cafe made of ice! Ice!

Please Haters, shut the fuck up. This place has infrastructure, technology, a real skyline, jobs, nice beaches and clubs with scantily clad...uhhh... And most importantly: hope... And that's a first for me (in the Arab world, at least). Stop hating and book a ticket to Dubai before we find a way to fuck it all up... I'm serious.

In nubile wonderment,

Tarik

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Monday, December 31, 2007

The guy with the gun wants to know...

“What religion are you?” The Israeli guard at Hebron's Tomb of the Patriarchs wanted to know.

In Israel and Occupied Palestine, answering this question correctly can make a world of difference as a tourist. And at the current moment, it meant either entering or not entering the cave where father Abraham, his many sons AND Adam and Eve are allegedly buried.

Yes, that Adam and that Eve.

Okay, so by now I've decided to save time by no longer pondering too much on how people could possibly even know that's actually them in there. This, I think, actually strays from the point. It's more like the idea of them being in there that makes it true.

Speaking of ideas, being in the Holy Land is making me recall (badly) all those stories and maps I had once read somewhere and so genuinely believed. I've kinda become curious to see, in person, what the hype has all been about. But first, I need to get rid of this guard. Do I tell the man with the gun that the answer is that I was raised Christian, but leave out that all sense of religion was lost over the course of a semester after learning the fate of Galileo Galilei in my astronomy class?

Or do I tell him that he might actually like my father, a Guatemalan-evangelical-preacher, who wants to see the Jews build the third temple more badly and quickly than even they want to build it -- but leave out the part about how he’d like to see them all killed afterward?

Or I could play the Jew card instead, explaining that we just learned that my mother’s last name is Sephardic so Mazel Tov, I'm kinda Jewish(?) -- but leave out out the part about how now that I'm a Jew, will my voice matter in this state of affairs, as the Israeli state is commiting atrocities in my name and where do I file a complaint?

I toyed with this last one until I recalled the conversation my friend Clayton and I had while crossing the border with our Syria/Lebanon passport stamps as la migra held us up for 8 hours and made it their business, among other things, to find out our paternal names.

“Damn, why don’t they ask me about my maternal side instead?" I whispered to Clayton. "My mom's supposedly kinda Jewish-ish.”

“Well,” he reminded me, “you take your chances seeing that you’re not Ashkenazi.”

It’s true. I recently read somewhere that in Israel, being a brown kinda Jew means being a wrong kinda Jew. This has been confirmed by an Israeli friend of mine who admitted that without the shared hatred of the Palestinians harmoniously bringing the nation together, Israel would have to deal with its own very serious internal problems instead.

So what was I to answer to this security guard? Do I kinda lie or tell the truth? There's a fine line between the two. I don’t really believe in God. But then, I don’t really believe that I don’t believe in God. I can’t say I’m an Atheist because to have to constantly prove that there is no God is really just another form of fundamentalism, and as a friend of mine points out, “Is too much work.”

“No religion,” I replied.

“That the best kind,” he smiles.

Whoa. I glanced up at the heavens expecting to find a P.O.ed baby Jesus, and couldn't help wondering if we were about to be turned into a whale or swallowed by a pillar of salt.

“Where are you from?” he asked.

“Los Angeles.”

“Go ahead inside,” he winked, and led me to the Jewish section of the Tomb.

“But I’m not Jewish.”

“That’s okay,” he said. “You’re special.”

I figured if a guy with the gun says it, it must be true to somebody. I reached a metal detector where I was asked to show the contents of my bag. Seven seconds later, a soldier gasped. “A keffiyeh!” he exclaimed, piquing the interest of his soldier friends. I couldn’t tell if they were horrified because they thought the scarf would slither out and snap at them like a serpent, or if they’d never been confronted with a situation where anyone seeking to visit the Jewish section of the Tomb could even own such a garment. They briefly congregated away from me and one of them returned, letting me know that I was allowed to enter but needed to hide the scarf in my purse and not let anyone inside see it. I agreed, recalling the story of that Israeli settler who shot and killed 29 Muslims praying in the very Tomb I was about to enter. I nodded to the guard, and pulled my left sleeve down to cover the Palestine bracelet a store-owner in the Old Souq had given to me only minutes before.

I entered the Tomb and witnessed several Jewish men and women praying in segregated, gendered areas. I realized that this is the first time I had seen Jewish civilians on this trip. Many children were there, speaking English with American accents while holding their parents’ hands. They laughed, smiled, and walked throughout in sheer awe. They are people. The brutal occupation is comprised of people. The ethnic cleansing exists on behalf of, and through the might and complicity of, a group of... people. Just people. It's perhaps, when there is no gun to your face, that these sentiments become much more easily realized. (Also more easily realized: many might want to concentrate on their own religion’s “gender issues” before launching into attacks of others.)

So right then, like back home when speaking to some of my progressive Jewish friends who I can no longer have a conversation about Israel because whenever their unconditional support for it shines through it breaks my heart into a million little pieces, I was reminded of the late Jewish philosopher Hannah Arendt, who described evil as “banal”. In her 1968 book “Eichmann in Jerusalem: A report on the banality of evil” Arendt sought to highlight that often, those who carry out unspeakable crimes are ordinary individuals who rationalize these acts in very unremarkable ways. Such people are not always crazy lunatics but rather, those who simply accept that which is routine and normative. Never problematic. Never immoral. And like Eichmann, they'd probably say they're just doing their jobs.

We’ve become, I think, so good at vilifying certain people who commit atrocities into ways that reduce them down to the status of animals or fanatics. This is not useful and is actually proving to be quite harmful. To think that evil can only come from those who are not like us takes us on a dangerous trajectory where it becomes impossible to accept that we and our loved ones are also quite capable of harming others, no matter how well-intentioned we may be. We can say this about the general Israeli population on Palestine, and we can say this about the general American population on Palestine, Iraq, Afghanistan, Latin America, Africa... ad nauseum. Our complacency renders us complicit.

I walked to the back of the Tomb and was greeted by a soldier guarding the door separating the Jewish and Muslim sections. He assured me that he was there for my protection as I didn’t want to be accidentally wandering into that dangerous place.

“Really?” My eyes widened incredulously, trying to peek in. “What will happen to me?”

His face fell into grave seriousness, “They steal.”

I flashed a quick smile and waved good bye, hurriedly making my way out. "They steal?!" I muttered under my breath. I walked away wondering how this soldier, who seemed genuinely nice (minus the automatic weapon), came to “know” what he knew. Knowledge has serious consequences in real peoples' lives. Perhaps in my personal interest to save time by not allowing myself to ponder too much on how people could possibly even know what they "know", I might also be chosing to ignore those things about us which, in reality, are proving to be quite harmful.

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Photo diary: Hebron (al-Khalil)

Hebron is the only Palestinian city in the West Bank with an Israeli settlement encroaching from within. Israeli-installed barbed wire, fencing, gates, and concrete serve to segregate Palestinians and Israelis, further encouraging and legitimizing illegal settlements. [Click on photographs to enlarge]


Hebron's Old City souq. Tarps serve as make-shift protection for Palestinian shoppers, store-owners and their property from bricks and trash Israeli settlers drop down from above.


A fenced-roof protects pedestrians from the garbage and bricks thrown down from Israelis above. This section of the souq was ordered closed by Israel, and prohibits Palestinian pedestrian traffic except to local residents as a project to "Judaize" the area.


One of various Israeli lookout towers peppering Hebron's Old City. A soldier patrolling from the roof pauses near a staked Israeli flag.


Settler graffiti.


Throughout the day, soldiers wander the city seeking to legitimize their armed existence through harassment of Palestinian residents. Here, a driver is stopped by Israeli soldiers who request identification; twenty yards later they'll find a home to raid.


Palestinian children in late-afternoon play.


Palestinian children in late-afternoon play, zig-zagging a soccer ball through Hebron's old souq.


A checkpoint greets visitors to the Tomb of the Patriarchs entering from the souq (casbah).


In the males-only side of the Jewish section of the Tomb of the Patriarchs, an Israeli slings his M16 aside over his shoulder to pray.


At the Tomb of the Patriarchs, a soldier requests his photograph be taken. He warns not to enter the "dangerous" Islamic section of the tomb because Muslims "steal".


A sign at the Jewish entrance at the Tomb of the Patriarchs near another checkpoint. The IDF would like you to know that the Tzomet Institute and Chief Rabbinate of Kiryat Arba of Hebron said it was okay.


This little girl would like you to know she wants peace. Or victory. Peace, victory - not mutually exclusive concepts.


[Tarboush tip: my Canon 10D]

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Monday, December 24, 2007

Don't you wish your Eid Kharoof was *hott* like me

Eid flag in lahme, babaghanoush, koosa, and ketchup :)


Road to Jenin after the rain


Emily and QuiQui's sahlab (that Foofy isn't drinking any of!), Ramallah


Knafe (knuff said!)


Merry Christmas from Occupied Palestine

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Saturday, December 15, 2007

This is why I don't use a quantitative methodology...

Now that it's winter break and I took an incomplete (in my philosophy class cuz I'm not done philosophizing, bitches!), I get to read fun books.

Some reading material I'll be taking with me on my Palestine/Egypt winter travels are (1) Poop Culture: how America is shaped by its grossest national product and (2) A Blogger's Manifesto: free speech and censorship in a digital world.

Because I know you're intrigued by BOTH, I'll promise to provide you with reviews. For now, the latter has provided me with at least one more reason to keep blogging:

Out of the millions of blogs out there, only around 10% get more than 100 daily hits.

But this blog? KABOBfest gets 400 daily hits (one THOUSAND when Israel slips into boredom and decides to kill people in Lebanon instead). So if it's true that only about 10% of the millions of blogs out there receive more than 100 daily hits a day and if we get 400 that must mean that we're like FOUR times better than… something.

And this is why I don't major in math or use a quantitative methodology. But it is why I blog. :)

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Friday, October 05, 2007

Travels and photography from Burma

In June of 2005, I was given the opportunity to visit Burma while at academic conference in southern China. During the pre-trip meeting, while my group of Chinese, American and European scholars were getting ready to head out to the Golden Triangle, we were advised that first of all, while China, Thailand, and Laos were all okay for us visit, all of the westerners coming along on this trek were not officially welcome in Burma. The ruling military junta had eventually been "influenced" and went ahead and granted us visas somehow. I asked no questions although everyone knew it had to have been the Chinese government's ability to coax its little b**** into doing it.

The second thing we were told about this field trip was that we were in for a fun surprise as far as Burma’s toilets were concerned. The only clue we’d been given was that they were “unique”. (Spoiler alert: The tile is nicely laid around the hole in the ground.)

Oh, and uh, one last thing: the original Burmese itinerary had been slightly modified due to a recent “land mine incident” with a tourist last week. Nothing to worry over, though.

My knowledge about Burma had, until recently, been limited to only a few tidbits all acquired from my days as a graphic artist for a small, family-owned outdoor Burmese teak furniture wholesaler (whose owners turned out to be Jewish Zionists as I found out after September 11, 2001. It made things... a little uncomfortable, to say the least). It was at this job where I had been too nice to tell the VP, her boyfriend, her Russian mother, both receptionists, and even the guys in the back that, "No, I was not okay with their chain smoking in the office, kitchen, warehouse and especially near my cubicle," after which I should have cited California’s labor code 6404.5 which strictly prohibits any known smoke from entering my enclosed area of employment.

But nope, I never said a word. Mainly because, like I said, I used to be nice. Also, I was hard up for cash.

Anyway, it was with the furniture company where I learned that Burmese teak (which is what they used) was superior to Indonesian teak (which is what the competition used). It was important to the small, family owned firm that I included catch phrases like, “environmentally friendly” and “reforested teak” on the catalogs. I guess they were trying to draw attention away from Senator Dianne Feinstein’s then-proposed bill to ban all Burmese imports into the U.S. Of this, I was informed that if anyone called asking about I should take a message because I knew nothing and should just carry on with my graphic design and second-hand smoke inhaling duties. Curious, however, I called a friend of mine working in Congress to have the bill’s text faxed over. I showed it to the boss, and he muttered something about “human rights violations” and “it’s just a political football, nothing to worry about”.

I quit a few months later citing emphysema, a collapsed right lung, yellowing teeth and nails, a nicotine addiction, and the inability to play well with Zionists. I was asked not to return the next day. Can I just say now that being nice enough to give your two weeks notice is highly overrated? I checked their Web site about a year ago and saw that they were now a defunct outdoor teak furniture wholesaler, which I realize now, may have been due to the passage of the Senator’s law after all: the Burmese Freedom and Democracy Act of 2003 banning imports on Burmese products into the U.S.

For the U.S. government to take time out of its busy Middle East oil pillaging schedule to pass a law like that, frankly, raises an eyebrow with me because since when did the U.S. really, and I mean really care about human rights abuses and democracy? It’s killing me that I can’t figure this one out.

So this is why we Americans (and Europeans with similar policies) have a hard time obtaining Burmese visas when going on overnight excursions. It was a surprise to many of us that we were even going to visit Burma on this fieldtrip. Tourism to Burma is boycotted by many human rights groups — something supported by the country’s own 1991 Nobel Peace Prize recipient, Aung San Suu Kyi, who would have been the country’s prime minister as she was elected in 1990 by a landslide, except that the ruling military regime decided to place her under house arrest instead.

Visiting Burma is controversial because country’s tourism dollars mainly go to prop up the tyrants running the country. The Lonely Planet guidebook to this country even begins with a “should we have even bothered to publish this book?” soliloquy, outlining the pros and cons for which to visit or not to visit; to spend money, or not to spend money. Their first sentence had me convinced that I should definitely be there. It was one of those you sometimes run across that you wish you would have thought of first but now you have to put quotations around because it was someone else who said it, dammit:

“At Lonely Planet we believe that travel is one of the most powerful forces for tolerance, understanding and democracy the world has.”

Thus, because many people are not able to travel there, I share my photography as an extension of this effort.

[A NOTE ON THE CHOICE OF THE NAME "BURMA": The United Nations’ Web site lists the country as Myanmar, but refers to it as Burma in many documents. The military junta changed the name to to “Myanmar” -- but it can’t really get anyone else to take it seriously. The country’s democratic opposition maintains use of the name “Burma”, and to call it as such shows support for Suu Kyi.]


































[This post is dedicated to a friend.]


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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Top Pleasant and Unpleasant experiences in Damascus

I recently returned to the states after spending a couple of weeks during the summer break in Syria. The reason for the trip was to study Arabic and to learn how to become a better devoted worshipper of Bashar al-Asad. This is the first in a series of observations I have about Damascus:

PLEASANT:

ASHTA




Ahhh-the creamy but crunchy magical-ness that is ASHTA!!!


UNPLEASANT:

WANTON ASS-GRABBING



This is a picture I tried to snap of the Sal al-Din statue outside of Souk al-Hamidiyeh. However, a "slight interference" startled me, and, as such, this is the image I took when displaced from balance by the almost daily run-by ass-grabbing:

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Day 6: On Assignment From Damascus

Getting sick sucks, but getting sick in a foreign country with no water at night, intermittent electricity (which means no AC in 107 degree weather), a foreign country experiencing it's hottest summer on record and no dependable Internet connection is a death sentence. Ok, perhaps I'm being a little Paris Hilton bougie-esque about this

From the limited view of my bedside view I'd like to ask, why is it that every Damascene seems to have premium satellite television, flat-screen TVs, high-end cellphones, badays!, and yet considers it normal that there is no water at night, that it takes 10 minutes to open up one page (that is if you are stricken with a virus to shut down all your operations in the quarter of your ten minutes of loading), and that the electricity goes off on and on whimsically.

To be fair, as aforementioned, this is the hottest summer on record for Syria. With temperatures 107 and 108 consistently hit for the past week, Damascus is experiencing hotter temperatures than Abu Dhabi! Who knew that was possible! As such, the Minister of Electricity has warned, that because of the unexpected heatwave, water shutdowns and electricity cut-offs will increase in the month of August and will continue through September 15!

Wow, didn't I pick a perfect time to visit Damascus for the first time in my life!

As stated, I have been horribly ill for the past 4 days (out of the 6 I have been here). Today marking the first day I had solid food and didn't vomit water, and today also marking the last day to register for classes for Arabic language training. As such, my plans for Syria have been significantly altered. That will be discussed in a future post (assuming that my next location will have Internet access!).

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