Foto Friday – Down at the Dead Sea with Shmuel Browns

February 13, 2009 - 5:36 PM by Rachel Neiman

Canadian-Israeli Shmuel Browns is a licensed tour-guide and artist who uses photography to share his love of nature. A recent exhibit, From the Lowest Place on Earth presented images of the Dead Sea, a miraculous body of salt water whose name belies its true nature.

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The region – 420 meters below sea level – possesses unique geographical, biological and historical characteristics, and the sea itself is rich in minerals that, coupled with its stark beauty, have made it a center for spa tourism.

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So much for the good news. The bad news is that the Dead Sea is dying or, more accurately put, being killed off. It is shrinking at a rate of 1 meter per year as both Israel and Jordan divert the waters flowing into it, leaving huge mud flats with hundreds of sinkholes that lie in the sun like open wounds crusted with salt.

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In his artist’s statement, Browns writes: “Even as the world is rapidly changing, as humanity encroaches, these photographs capture nature in a serene moment. The exhibit explores contrast–between wet and dry, water and desert; the contrast between rock and vegetation, and between the broad horizontal expanse of the Dead Sea and the cliffs and mountains that rise vertically above it; the contrast between nature and human industry.”

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This surreal moonscape is Dead Sea Works, a subsidiary of Israel Chemicals, a multibillion dollar industry and part of the lifeblood of Israel’s economy. Shutting it down isn’t an option for the immediate future but a comprehensive integrated development plan for the entire region has been proposed by Friends of the Earth Middle East (FoEME).

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Last summer, Browns had the opportunity to show these images of the lowest place on earth in a Katmandu gallery, in the shadow of the highest mountains on earth. The exhibit can be found online on his Facebook page.

Comments

3 Comments on Foto Friday – Down at the Dead Sea with Shmuel Browns

  1. Michael Parkin on Sun, Feb 15th 2009 5:33 PM
  2. Wonderful photo essay. Oddly enough we can find a visual beauty in even the most horrendous situations.

  3. David-Joe on Sun, Feb 15th 2009 7:59 PM
  4. To claim that the Dead Sea is bing “killed off” is philosophically irrational. It is not human and therefore possesses no rights.

    Utilizing such language accepts the lunacy of the enviro whackos that place Man as an evil force destroying the Earth.

    It is proper for Man to act rationally in mining any resource to the end that self-interest makes looking after and using not abusing the resource makes sense.

  5. Jan Zaremba on Sun, Feb 15th 2009 8:55 PM
  6. David-Joe has just labeled a view he doesn’t like as”philosophical irrational”, and the holders of such views a “enviro whackos” spouting “lunacy”.
    Can anyone think of a more efficient way of making communication and dialogue impossible? Congratulation, Joe, you win the prize.

    Is Joe at all conscious of the fact that his existence depends on the cooperation of millions of sentient organisms (who have no rights)?

    Does he know that his fragile life depends on the functioning of complicated interconnected natural systems?

    No. Joe doesn’t know this.
    What he does know is “self interest”, a universal concept which is understood by termites (who don’t have any rights—but then they don’t have brains, either).

    But, there’s hope. “Not abusing the resources” is the line that he draws in the sand.
    Good.
    Do we dare ask Joe where, exactly, that line is??

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