Wednesday, March 28, 2007

The Emerald Queen

I revisted Ultraviolenceland, a series of paintings by Camille Rose Garcia. All the paintings in this series intend to describe recreational violence. The castles are a symbol of empire. The vampires are armies that feed on violence and destruction. The dark forest symbolizes subconscious fear while inside the city symbolizes unhappiness with the "pristine but ultraviolent world."

This particular painting screamed to me the ills of the empire. The depressed princess toys with her gems in oblivion of fear. No castle can hide violence. Regardless of beauty and peace in the empire, when built by blood, fear and violence will lurk in the subconscious. The dutiful worker extracting dead souls from life reminds me of a soldiers work: the violence an army must enact to maintain an empire.To me, it also raises the question of the rationalization of violence. Violence is rationalized to protect an empire. Those who live outside the empire live outside of the care of the empire, and therefore suffer. However, all, inside and outside the empire suffer from violence. The categorization of within and outside an empire becomes arbitrary. This painting leaves me questioning. What is a nation? What is a state? Why do we substantiate violence for this arbitrary, imaginary concept?

Non-violent struggle takes many shapes and many forms. Vampires in forests, ghouls sucking souls, and princesses in castles slitting wrists and downing pills are all images of violence that Garcia painted with the intention to evoke thoughts on the use and need of violence in this world. Most people don’t look at a painting and see non-violent struggle, but it is there. Took view more of Garcia's work visit her online gallery.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

Sewage Floods Village in Gaza

Five killed after sewage floods village in Gaza

A couple thoughts on this article: First off, I find it interesting that the author wrote, "Hamas gunmen, along with rescue crews, rushed to the search for residents." Maybe the representatives of Hamas carried guns to the scene, maybe not. Regardless I think using the term "gunmen" exacerbates the already warped US perception of Hamas as a solely right-wing militant terrorist organization.

Yes, Hamas calls for a one-state solution. And yes, after the Oslo Accords failed, Hamas claimed responsibility for suicide attacks during the second intifada. However, since the second intifada, Hamas ceased using the deplorable tactic.

Hamas funds social programs such as education (and no these are not terrorist brainwashing madrasas), welfare programs, orphanages, and healthcare clinics. To the Palestinians, Hamas is a political party fighting to end the occupation and protect the Palestinians.

Overall this article really brings to light how neglected the human rights, and deplorable living conditions are for people living in the occupied Palestinian territories. It seems like the media, finally, has the guts to reveal at least bits of truth regarding the brutal and illegal Israeli occupation.

For more information on the occupation check out:
End the Occupation
Electronic Intifada
Jewish Voice For Peace

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Hebron is Hell

I'm posting this article for those who either do not know much about the occupied Palestinian territories and especially to those who claim to have gone to Hebron and returned with smiles and postcards.

I'm saying this because I have quite a few friends who traveled to Israel through Birthright. They think they are getting a real experience of the country but what they get is far from it. Many of them have no idea that the routes they take detour around Palestinian inhabited areas, sometimes up to a 7 hour detour, just so they never see what the IDF is doing there. When they visit Hebron, IDF locks in the Palestinians in their homes by MILITARY force, while the young Americans enjoy their time in the suburban paradise.

A representative from Women in Black, and Israeli peace organization, spoke to a small group of us on campus last year. She described the violent acts of settlers against the Palestinians. The most horrific that stains my mind still was her description of settler women throwing rocks at Palestinian CHILDREN. A photographer friend of mine who has also spent time in Hebron described settler men urinating on Palestinians. The Women in Black, when under attack from the settlers for protecting the Palestinian children, were subject to threats such as, "We killed Jesus, we'll kill you too."

Hebron is hell. Occupation is hell. Read this article if you don't believe me.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/6470375.stm

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Billboarding the Iraqi Disaster

"Why is it that we are counting and thinking about the Sudanese dead as part of a high-profile, celebrity-driven campaign to "Save Darfur," yet Iraqi deaths still go effectively uncounted, and rarely seem to provoke moral outrage, let alone public campaigns to end the killing? And why are the numbers of killed in Darfur cited without any question, while the numbers of Iraqi dead, unless pitifully low-ball figures, are instantly challenged -- or dismissed?"

In New York City giant billboard display the number dead in Darfur. Save Darfur campaigns flood universities, corporations etc. What about the Iraqi's? Why has Darfur recieved the media attention it has regarding casualities, living conditions, horror stories, while Iraq has not? Arnove makes a keen argument regarding the Iraqi Disaster.