Streamtime
Freedom: Undefined word -- try again in few years
[Mosul] -- "Hatred, such a strong unhealthy feeling.. but I just can't help but hate it here.. I hate it, I hate it, I HATE IT.. I want to shout it at the top of my lungs so everybody can know that I just can't stand it here.
The curfew that started at 9 PM last Friday was only temporarily stopped at 6 AM today and is going to start again at 6 PM until further notice. Yesterday upon hearing the news I couldn't believe I was going to college again.. but little by little I discovered that none of the female students is going to college and so I reluctantly decided not to go either.
Mom however was going to her college and since she was driving and going alone I wanted to go with her to get some fresh air at least.." /snap/ [link]
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In Beirut a problem every summer
[Baghdad] -- "Wow it seems like a lifetime ago since I wrote anything. In fact, my vacation seems like a lifetime ago too!!! I got back to Baghdad a few days ago, and I wasnt too thrilled to be back. Funny how every vacation it becomes even harder. You need a couple of days to psyche yourself up before you can actually pull your weight and go through the process again. I remember my first R&R and how excited I used to get when Id look out the plane to see Baghdad from the air. Now, it doesnt move me anymore. Seeing the desert plains and the shabby houses from above makes me cringe with sadness. Sadness and disappointment. [..]
After that we headed to Beirut. Yup. We missed the fun by a few days. Beirut was just beautiful. The scenery breath taking. You have the mountains on one end and the beach on the other. Pity we didnt stay much there, but then again, had we delayed our plans, we would have probably been stuck in the airport by now." /snap/ [link]
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اين اختفى شلش العراقي ؟
ظهر شلش العراقي بعد سنوات الظلم والظلام في العراقي وهو وان اختفى وراء اسم مستعار محقاً لاننا في زمن لا نخشى السلطة والحكومة بل نخشى ميليشيات مسلحة تستعير دور الدولة وتهدد وتخذر وتنبه المواطنين من الالتحاق بمؤسسات الدولة او تطالب عوائل المنتسبين بالتعهد في مكاتب هذه الميليشيات لمنع ابنائها من الالتحاق بالحكومة المنتخبة .. من حقه ان يختفي وراء اسم شلش العراقي طبعا والاسم كان قبل مسلسل بيت الطين وشخصية شلش المثيرة للجدل الذي يشخص الواقع بكلمة مازال يرددها العراقيون [link] /snap/ ."يعمن فلان مو حلو يعمن فلان هاهو".ـ
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Something called human rights
[Baghdad] -- "As I started thinking about this post there a severe pain was growing
inside me, it was scratching me from the inside, it was bleeding me.
I'm
going to be open
Since I was a kid and throughout my life till few days
ago I have always heard about something called human rights, I heard
about it a lot but I never felt it existed
I heard about it in the news
and in the movie, but I have never read what are its articles, I knew
that in Iraq human rights violations are something ordinary but to be
honest I never imagined that about all the articles are violated in the
new Iraq!! In the country where "democracy and freedom is being
established to be a model country for the entire region" at least I
never imagined that MY human rights have been violated so many times in
so many forms, I didn't know that until I received an email from Bloggers unite about
the gathering for human rights day, and that's when I thought to my
self "this is a very good topic to write about, human rights in Iraq
are violated in the most violent forms
but if I want to write about
something then I have to know it well, I should search for the human
rights declaration and read what it says, I always wanted to do so and
now is the best time"
I said I'm going to be honest and open and it's
not a shame if some one doesn't know but it's a shame if he doesn't
know and says he knows.
To be honest I laughed when I read the declaration in the UN site
laughed a lot but the more I laugh the more I bleed
" /snap/ [link]
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Daily activities US-backed Iraqi forces
[US] -- "More videos showing the daily activities of the US-backed Iraqi forces
Iraqi army parades dead fighters in basrah (more information here)
prisoners beaten up in karbala." /snap/ [link]
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The Controversial UN
[Baghdad] -- "I always see the work of the United Nations as a controversial one: it
sometimes directly endorses the wars or it does it indirectly by
turning its eyes, closing its ears and mouth while on the other side it
helps the victims of these wars.
In 2003, it couldn't stop the U.S.-led invasion and now it begs to help Iraqis who are affected by this war.
In its recent appeal on 9 May, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) called on international donors for more US $127 million to
help continuing its assistance programs for Iraqi internally displaced
persons (IDPs) and refugees throughout the end of 2008.
The appeal was the second in this year as the first one was in January which was for US$261 million but it has so far received only US$134 million and spend them all.
But Iraqis, like Basil al-Azawi who heads the Iraqi Commission for Civil Society Enterprises, a coalition of over 1,000 Iraqi non-governmental organizations (NGOs), are
skeptical and demand the international body to cooperate with local
NGOs and present detailed documents on their expendtures." /snap/ [link]
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Fear of a Muslim Planet: Hip-hop's Hidden History
[Dhaka/US] -- "Two projects are out, including one from 2 years ago that has finally seen print.
I wrote "Fear of a Muslim Planet" in early 2006, but due to publisher schedules, the anthology from MIT Press in which it appears came out this spring. In the meantime, various new names emerged, including Lupe Fiasco, who was absent from my 2005-2006 research.
The text remains as is, except for the inclusion of Lupe right before it went to press. As for the writing style, an earnest, culture-as-tool permeates the conclusion, legacy of the mode of thought I was in during 2002-2006 (everything was about war-on-terror framed "struggle").
------------------------------------------------
FEAR OF A MUSLIM PLANET - HIP-HOP'S HIDDEN HISTORY
------------------------------------------------
Sound Unbound
Sampling Digital Music and Culture
Edited by Paul D. Miller aka Dj Spooky that Subliminal Kid
MIT Press, 2008
Contributors include Pierre Boulez, Chuck D, Cory Doctorow, Brian Eno, Jonathan Lethem, Moby, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Steve Reich, Saul Williams, and more.
Download "Fear of a Muslim Planet" chapter
http://shobak.org/text/hiphop.shtml
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Americans most favorite questions to interpreters
[Baghdad] -- "Hello all,
I brought a bunch of FAQ that I and other interpreters get from Americans
but I attached my answers only regarding my point of views!
1. How old r u?
2. Where r u from?
3. Whats ur real name?
4. Why did u pick up this nickname?
5. Why do you wear a mask, to cover ur face?
6. Do you have a girlfriend? R you virgin? If not, how many times u've had sex and with whom? Do Iraqis eat the front and the back of the girl?
7. Do u drink alcohol & do u smoke weed?
8. Can u get us a bitch or do u know a whore house here?
9. Why do u work as an interpreter?
10. do u like ur work?
11. do u feel that u r a disloyal like the local national people call u?
12. do u think now is better or Saddam's time was better?
13. Why do Iraqis know only specific words in English such as:-" /snap/ [link]
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Concerned Local Citizens now: Sons of Iraq
[Baghdad] -- "I was in desert base (as I call it) few days ago, the base we belong to, actually we had a meeting over there, Iraqi-American meeting, to be more clear, SOI (Sons Of Iraq) - American meeting, SOI as American call them recently and CLC (Concerned Local Citizens) previously.
If you're tracking with news, the Americans began this new experiment in Ramadi (west of Iraq) when the American leadership decided to support the tribes and people over there in order to quit Al-Qa'eda at that time. I think Americans have succeeded in Ramadi, and the reason was that Al-Qa'eda didn't has deeply relationship with the people in Ramadi [..]
.. so the American understood the game's rules at that time, they provided the tribes members with all weapon's type, they provided them by the money and the power, nowadays... Al-Ramadi is one of the safest place for Americans and Interpreters (lol)," /snap/ [link]
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Lebanon: no evacuation for Iraqis
[Baghdad] -- "As Arab governments and others around the world are either warning
their citizens in Lebanon to be more cautious or helping them to leave
the country or preventing those who want to head there, Iraqi Foreign
Affairs Ministry came up today with this controversial statement:
"Iraqis in Lebanon are in good health and there is no fear on their lives," Foreign Undersecretary Labid Abawi told the US-funded Radio Sawa. "For the time being we don't have such a plan (evacuating Iraqis from Lebanon), there is no necessity for this," Abawi added." /snap/ [link]
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Iraqi fruits [the disappearance of]
[Baghdad] -- "I thought about this post while I was in the market buying fruits and vegetables. While I was walking in the market looking at the merchandise I noticed something that got my attention: most of the vegetables and fruits are imported! Majority are Syrian! That's really weird; the markets in a country that has two rivers and extremely fertile soil is importing food from neighboring countries! My thoughts and memories started to link to each other for a reason or a conclusion.
Neither climate nor agriculture or economics are my fields of specialty but it doesn't need a specialist to notice the changes in the Iraqi climate and the deteriorations in the agricultural fields during those five years that followed the war, I noticed dramatic changes in the climate and the availability of agricultural products in the Iraqi market," /snap/ [link]
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Stop the massacre in Sadr City
-- so says Al-Ghad.
In the weeks following the high profile attack on Basra by the Iraqi army and its high profile failure something of a low-level war has been going on across Iraq much behind the scenes of the mainstream media. Yet now the situation seems to be coming to a head.
Al-Ghad issued a statement giving an urgent warning that an imminent massacre of the people of Sadr City is being planned:
Wafaa' Al-Natheema condemned the attacks against hospitals in Baghdad:
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New Blog: Baghdad's Kassakhoon
[Jordan] -- "A newly-discovered blog by Baghdad Kassakhoon [Storyteller], who is a journalist in Baghdad, has a post about the suffering of the Iraqi staff of the Associated Press." -- [link]
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Madeeha Hasan Odhaib defies the norm
[US] -- "... my landlords copy of Time magazine drew my attention. The issue was a special edition that presented the worlds 100 most influential figures. As I was leafing through the magazine, I saw that an Iraqi woman was considered one of those influential figures. Seeing this made my day. It left me with a sense of optimism that despite all the horror Iraqis are going through under occupation and terrorism, there are people like this woman whose efforts are like bricks rebuilding what was destroyed."
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Just a student's ID
[Baghdad] -- "How far will corruption and therefore distrust take us? Has the issue of a student's campus ID card become a national security risk because of corruption?
Several weeks ago I took my daughter's student ID, issued by her college, to follow up a documentation process in officialdom. I hate handing over original papers because they have a way of disappearing. And it did. Who to ask who is responsible who can I vent my anger on no one. No one is accountable.
In despair, I let it go.
Now the final exams are coming on. We've been told that no student will be allowed to sit the exams without their ID clearly displayed on their desks. And this time for real.
A rush to issue a new one." /snap/ [link]
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Iraqi Facebookers
[US] -- "Not a scientific article, by any means, but I find it increasingly interesting how fast the Facebook phenomenon is spreading worldwide. My (egyptian) cousins in Egypt are avid Facebookers, adding every application and friend they can find. And for me, that was the best thing I've gotten out of joining Facebook, keeping in touch on a 'regular' basis with my kid cousins.
And now, I've noticed that Iraqis are increasingly joining the world of Facebook! It's not as widespread in Iraq as it is in the rest of the Arab world, but it is slowly gaining in popularity. From my husband's account, I see a good number of his colleagues and former co-workers adding him as Facebook friends. And one of my buddies from Iraq added me recently.
What I've noticed is that a number of Iraqi Facebookers are now ex-patriots or 'refugees' to a degree," /snap/ [link]
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Arabs First Created... Commercial Jingles!!!
[Jordan] -- "The hero of this story is a poet called Miskin al-Darmi, who is an Umayyad-era Poet, who died in 90 AH.
SCENE: Medina.
al-Darmi in his house, with an Iraqi friend named Sulayman al-Baghdadi.
Darmi: Good going, dude, we managed to stay the whole night worshiping in the mosque.
Baghdadi: You know man, I wasn't worshiping in sincerity, but I had nothing else to do.
Darmi: What, you sold all your stock?
Baghdadi: Well, yes, except for the black burqaas, which constitute 4/5 of my goods.
Darmi: Why did you buy so much of these?
Baghdadi: Well because women in Iraq have taken it in fashion these days, so I thought it would be fashionable for the women of Medina.
Darmi: So what are you going to do now?
Baghdadi: Man,
I'm in such a bad streak, ever since I stopped getting drunk at parties
I've never seen anything good come to me. I've put all my money in
these veils and now all I got to do is go back to Iraq and declare
bankruptcy.
Darmi: Wait, I've got just the thing for you." /snap/ [link]
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Erbilium, Hewler: 'the place of the sun'
Skies [was: Colors of Mind]
[Erbil] -- "One of the oldest cities in the world. It had been mentioned in Sumerian writings as Erbilium. Now it is the capital of the Iraqi Kurdistan.
I never visited Kurdistan before. Till this April when suddenly I got an unbelievable opportunity to visit it. I was so happy to see all these Kurdish people with their characteristic costumes, music and accent in speech. I even knew some Kurdish psychiatrist and one psychotherapist. Their names werent that easy for me to remember at the first time, but after few days I found it so easy and so beautiful. Their names got some musical tone that is really characteristic.
Erbil is called by Kurdish people as Hewler. Hewler means the place of the sun as I can remember somebody told me. When I knew its meaning I remembered that this city got a rich heritage full of civilizations and religions. Some old religions in the area worship the sun, or regard it as something holy. From those old believes, I think, came the name." /snap/ [link]
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The same story being told over and over by me
[Baghdad] -- "We were getting back from my wife's relative house who invited us over lunch with other relatives (the few ones that are still in Baghdad)
we had a wonderful time and a very delicious food
it was great to be with the distant relatives that we weren't able to meet because of the terrible conditions.
It was just great and we were really happy but as it was getting darker it was time to get back home
we got back in two cars, me and my wife in one and the rest in another car. Everything was good until we reached an Iraqi army checkpoint, there were two soldiers, a tall one and a short one, I almost stopped near them and both of them gestured for me by their hand to go
so I did like I do in the countless checkpoints, as soon as I passed them one of them shouted, I didn't understand what did he say but I was almost sure it wasn't for me; he just gestured for me to go! But my wife shouted "STOP, he is shouting on us" he shouted again and this time I heard him saying "STOP NOW" so I immediately stopped" /snap/ [link]
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