Wednesday, July 27, 2011
Aya
Aya is a 22-year old Palestinian university grad who took advantage of an entrepreneurship opportunity offered at Tomorrow's Youth Organization in Nablus in the West Bank. Her organic sheep farm is considered to be a great success and example for the program, called FWEN (Fostering Women's Entrepreneurship), founded by both TYO and Cherie Blair's international women's org.
Labels:
aya,
cherie blair,
entrepreneurship,
farm,
fwen,
nablus,
sheep,
sheep farm,
west bank,
women
Sunday, July 24, 2011
The "Truth" About the West Bank
So I've been offline for a bit, but this really got me fired up today:
Sunday, July 3, 2011
I Have No Profound Words
I have no profound words. Just sadness. Sadness that I'm leaving this place before the work (in my mind, at least) is finished. But we could stay here another year and still be finding new stories to tell every day; I'm still learning new things every minute; I still don't understand the culture here--why the people are so generous and welcoming and why everything is so different from what I know.
So many of the people we've met would give you the shirt off their backs--even if you were already wearing one--even if it was the only thing they owned. And this is different from American culture, as much as we'd like to deny it. But that's not to say I've enjoyed everything about the culture here--there's still definitely a very patriarchal slant (almost machismo-like) that is very frustrating for someone with feminist leanings such as myself. But for other things, like generosity towards strangers and the value of a very close-knit family, I admire these viewpoints and wish I had more time to explore them.
It has been so interesting and so enriching to interact with people whose view of the world so differs from my own. It's important, as a student of the world, I think, to see and hear out as many view points as you can; if we didn't all see the world from so many different viewpoints--so many different angles--the world wouldn't be round, it'd be flat.
So I'm taking in views of the world as I can get them, one at a time, and saving the profound words for someone who's seen far more viewpoints than I.
Nablus After Curfew
Leaving tomorrow has us all nostalgic-like, thinking back to our first few days in Nablus. Remember when that crazy thing happened? No? Oh, yeah, that's right, you weren't there. Allow me--er, Andrea (and her guest, Amy)--to clue you in.
Friday, July 1, 2011
Music in Balata
A simple video I took yesterday when our translator, Kate and I took a trip to Balata camp--the largest camp in the city of Nablus, home to both the largest number of people (20,000 in one square kilometer) and the worst conditions. We met up with a friend of our translator's who helped show us around the camp. We met an art instructor from the local university and he offered to play us some traditional Arabic music. Our translator told us his friend was a very good singer and we begged him to sing along. He obliged and the result, I think, is quite magical ;)
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