Come Meet the “Other” at TEDxJaffa Today – Streaming Live!

tedxjaffa TED

Watch the stream live today from Jaffa starting at 9 am EST.

It’s really easy to sit at your kitchen table in Brooklyn, Toronto, Vancouver, or Berkley and shoot off comments about the Middle East conflict. It’s harder when you live in it. It’s hard when you have to think twice about taking the bus, plane, or train because it might blow up, and it’s hard knowing that every person who shares your society with you are paying the majority of their taxes to a staggering defense budget.

I live in Israel. I live in Jaffa, Israel — a city next to Tel Aviv populated by Muslims, Christians and Jews. Some of us are atheists, some traditional and others defiantly religious. I chose to live here and it’s a crazy place. It’s not crazy because people here care about their religion, enough to fight over it or talk about it incessantly. It’s crazy because of its improbability.

In Jaffa, some Muslims call themselves Palestinians. Some Christians call themselves Israeli Palestinian Christian Arabs. The Jews are just Israelis of course, unless they come from Arab countries and they are Sephardic or those from Europe say they are Ashkenazi. You can find escaped donkeys galloping down the streets at midnight. You can find the best European chocolate cake beside a working man’s morning hummous joint. My husband says he wouldn’t be surprised to wake up one morning and find a dead body on our front porch: there is also a lot of crime in Jaffa.

But Jaffa has its charm. Its own rhythm is marked by the five calls to prayer, with the one at sunset telling my baby daughter (who is Jewish) it’s time to go to sleep. It’s got a roughness, and sharp corners, and just when you think it’s too hard to handle, you’ll catch a new smell reminding you of some other time from our collective memory when civilization began, somewhere around here.

But more than people know, Jaffa — the city of the Bible where Jonah disembarks from before getting swallowed by the whale and spat out on shore near Nineveh — is a lens through which the world can understand cultural diversity, and cultural freedom in Israel.

Today at my home the East West House we will help host TEDxJaffa under the theme the Desire to Know the Other. There is a strong line-up of people from Jaffa, like my musician husband Yisrael Borochov, but also people from Israel and the Palestinian Authority who will tell their personal and professional stories on working to know the other. One speaker survived a terror attack and was afraid to look in the mirror to see how much of her face was left; one speaker will be a successful Palestinian policeman turned businessman; and if you log on to our simulcast today (or see the videos later) you’ll meet Haya Samir, an Israeli Muslim whose family came to Israel as political refugees from Egypt. Raised as a Jew, she found out as a young woman that she was in fact a Muslim.

Haya is an Israeli diva. And we are so glad to know her. Today she will sing songs of the pioneering days in Israel – Debka Fantasia – before 1948 when young Jews met Bedouin and Arab shepherds. These pioneers longed for a culture that combined, not defined, the Middle East with European values. I think this is what the people in the Arab uprisings are coming to terms with.

Would you like to get off your chair and dance to a little music with us LIVE? Maybe meet someone whose views might change your worldview about the Middle East conflict?

The simulcast starts at at 9 am EST time today Wednesday if you are in New York City. Log on at the TEDxJaffa site to see it. Officially in Israel the event starts at 3.

Alli Meets Aladdin

The idea for TEDx in Jaffa started with my friend Alli Magidsohn, who is producing and curating the event. The fellow Jaffinian, who is from LA, was inspired to fulfill this dream after an encounter with a man (a genie?) in Sinai named Aladdin.

Her words: “We felt lucky to have the opportunity to meet and form a new friendship in an overall context that might have otherwise limited us as enemies and spoke about the area’s conflicts, spirituality, Love, and many other things together. His perspectives broadened my mind and this encounter made me realize that as an American Jew living in Israel, even opposite an Muslim Egyptian man, there is still so much more that we have in common than there is that separates us.

“Other encounters in Sinai, Israel and Palestine led to further ‘broadening’, deeper respect and more curiosity, and TEDxJaffa is the manifestation of this process of personal expansion. ‘The Desire to know The Other’, for me – not necessarily for the event’s speakers – isn’t about explicit things like politics or peace or coexistence, it’s really about that desire to look from the inside, outwards, and to try to take in, understand, or somehow be enriched by exposing oneself to another person’s experience.

Log in folks at 9 am if you are New York or Toronto. All other cities: the event’s at 3 PM + 7 hours EST. Link from here.

Hebrewman

May 24, 2010 - 1:56 PM by · 1 Comment
Filed under: Art, coexistence, General, History and Culture, Israeliness, Music, Pop Culture 

Marwa Abdel Karim sings a song by Sarit Haddad (photo: AFP)


There are nearly no Jews left in Iraq, but modern Hebrew is still being taught at Baghdad University to some 150 students, according to a recent AFP story. Never mind that learning the language was banned from the 1930s, there is a Hebraic department in the university, and in addition to learning the language, they recently held a festival of Hebrew songs and poetry.

The AFP reporter who wrote the story told of Marwa Abdel Karim singing “Filled With Love” (or Ahava Betochi), a Sarit Hadad song, to her fellow students. She found the song online, and is also somewhat bemused by her choice of language. But despite her friends’ ridicule and parents’ disappointment, she plans on continuing her studies in Amman and then wants to teach at her alma mater.

At one time, Hebrew-speaking Iraqis could get a job with former president Saddam Hussein’s intelligence services. But now that terrorism is the country’s major security concern, those jobs are much harder to find. Ahmed Saadun, another student of Hebrew, said he would check out the foreign affairs ministry and newspapers when he graduates. Still, he told the AFP reporter, he’s aware of the ironies in his situation.

Here’s the real thing, by Sarit Hadad:
YouTube Preview Image

The past and the present come together in Jerusalem

December 27, 2009 - 9:28 AM by · 2 Comments
Filed under: A New Reality, coexistence, General, History and Culture, Life, Politics 

Sir Martin Gilbert

Sir Martin Gilbert

Who says Jerusalem isn’t a hopping place? Last night, if you were in the capital, you could take your pick of two riveting lectures by two brilliant 21st Century Jews – Professor Irwin Cotler and Sir Martin Gilbert.

Cotler, one of the world’s foremost international human rights lawyers and a tireless advocate for Israel, spoke at The Jerusalem Great Synagogue on ‘Facing the Challenge of Ahmadinejad’s Iran – Can the Free World Ensure the Security of Israel and Global Human Rights?’

Only a couple miles away in East Talpiot, at the Masorti Movement’s flagship synagogue, Moreshet Avraham, I chose to hear Gilbert, arguably the leading historian of the modern world, give a fascinating talk about his upcoming book ‘Jews Under Muslim Rule’ (alright, I also introduced him to the packed audience of 500).

The official biographer of Winston Churchill, Gilbert is the author of over 70 books including the comprehensive History of Israel, The Holocaust: The Jewish Tragedy, and his three-volume work, A History of the Twentieth Century.

In his hour-long talk, Gilbert mesmerized the audience with his anecdote-filled overview of the Jewish experience living under Muslim authorities from the time of Mohammed up until the present day. He recounted the ordeals of Jews in Arab countries in the years following the creation of Israel, pointing out guests of his in the audience who had provided their personal experiences of being persecuted and expelled from their native countries because they were Jews – and by association – Zionists.

Of special relevancy, he tied in the current debate about refugee status and restitution for Palestinians displaced by the creation of Israel with the 800,000 Jews from Arab lands who were thrown out of forced to flee, leaving their property and possessions behind.

One member of the audience who left Yemen with his family as a 10-month-old baby, who also served as a source for the book, spoke during the question and answer period about a movement which is gaining force to attempt to gain restitution for the lost Jewish property.

Gilbert astutely pointed out that the obstacle facing such a campaign was the tit for tat effort by Palestinians who are claiming restitution for their homes which were once in Talbieh in Jerusalem or in Jaffa.

It was one of those moments when you realize that it’s almost impossible to hold an historical talk in Jerusalem without current events becoming interminably entwined – which is probably why most of us live here.

Foto Friday – Sukkot in Jerusalem

October 2, 2009 - 12:04 AM by · 5 Comments
Filed under: Art, coexistence, Foto Friday, General, Holidays, Religion, Travel 

The awe-ful part of the Days of Awe are behind us and now it’s time to party! Sukkot, the Feast of Tabernacles, is the holiday when Jerusalem gets itself all decked out…

© RomKri

…and small wooden sukkot, or tabernacles, spring up overnight…

© monti_clif

…dotting the urban landscape.

© Pes & Lev

The Municipality of Jerusalem gets into the act too, with a large public sukka – the perfect opener to this month’s Autumn Nights Festival

© RomKri

…as well as the annual Jerusalem March, attended by walkers from all over the country…

© monti_clif

…and from all over the world!

© monti_clif

Another event taking place at this time: the International Christian Embassy’s Feast of Tabernacles festival, this year celebrating its 30th anniversary. The festivities begin today with a worship concert at Ein Gedi, continue with a week of prayer and Bible teachings, and conclude with the Jerusalem March on October 6th.

Below is a montage of photos from last year’s Feast of Tabernacles. The photos above are courtesy of the wonderful Jerusalem Shots website – always worth a visit. And here’s wishing a Chag Sameach (happy holiday) to us all!

Feast of Tabernacles 2008 Photo Montage from ICEJ on Vimeo.

Jews and Arabs in point blank range

June 23, 2009 - 7:32 PM by · Leave a Comment
Filed under: A New Reality, coexistence, General, Music 

pointThere are plenty efforts to attempt and bridge the wide social and cultural gap between Jewish and Arab teenagers in Israel, but there aren’t many that speak to the kids in their own language – music and video.

Windows for Peace, a non-profit, Tel Aviv-based organization that attempts to promote understanding between Israeli and Palestinian youth through media-related educational programs, is in the midst of running a two-week workshop for 15 teenagers, aged 15-17, from Tel Aviv, Jaffa and Bethlehem. By the end of the two weeks, the goal is to write and record a song, and make a video for it.

They’ve invited music professionals from London-based music college Point Blank to conduct the workshop, Jaffa and Bethlehem. Point Blank usually works with underpriveleged British teens, but according to its director, Rob Cowan, the same principles apply to the Jewish and Arab teens enrolled in Israel.

“Our group members are usually disaffected kids in danger of getting in trouble with the police, or just falling by the wayside of society. We’re just applying the same model as we do at home for Israelis and Palestinian kids, not because they’re marginalized, but because in music, there’s a channel to bring them together,” said Cowan.

The group of Israeli and Palestinian teens will record an original track and make an accompanying music video to explore issues relevant to their lives and experiences. The resulting music video will be disseminated via TV and the Internet, with the hopes of showing young people in the region that communication with the ‘other side’ is not only possible, but desirable and fruitful, according to the organizers.

According to Windows for Peace director Ruti Atsmon, the teens in the project have been working together through Windows for Peace for between one and three years. And though, like most teens, they’re tuned into music and video, they don’t necessarily possess any special musical or visual skills.

“We see the project as another tool to develop communication between them and as a start for them to create more in the future,” said Atsmon.

That may be quite lofty – it would be nice if they just got a good song and video out of it.

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