Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, January/February
1999, pages 83-84
Education
NEH-Sponsored Institutes on Middle East, Islam
By Betsy Barlow
The National Endowment for the Humanities is funding,
as part of its summer programs for both college professors and K-12
teachers, several programs related to the Middle East and Islam.
This should be a signficant benefit to educators who are trying
to improve their knowledge of the non-Western world.
John Voll will direct an institute for college professors
June 7 to July 2, 1999 on Islam and the 21st Century: Heritage
and Prospects at Georgetown University in Washington. He will
be assisted by John L. Esposito, Yvonne Y. Haddad, Amira el Azhary
Sonbol, Walter Armbrust, and Sonsyrea Tate.
For further information or application material, contact
Prof. John Voll, Georgetown University, Center for Muslim-Christian
Understanding, Washington, DC 20057; phone: (202) 687-8375; e-mail:
neh-cmcu@gusun.georgetown.edu
In addition, the NEH is also funding for college teachers
a seminar program designed for fewer participants with more class
discussion. Carl W. Ernst, University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, will lead a program June 14 to July 16 on The Literature
of Islamic Mysticism. For further information or the application
packet, contact Professor Ernst at the Department of Religious Studies,
CB#3225, 101 Sauders Hall, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3225; phone: (919)
962-3924; e-mail: cernst@email.unc.edu
The NEH also is funding four programs for K-12 teachers.
Roger Allen, University of Pennsylvania, will lead a seminar July
5 to July 30 on The Arabic Novel in Translation. Contact
him at 840 Williams Hall, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
PA 19104; phone (215) 898-6337; e-mail: rallen@ccat.sas.upenn.edu
Maureen N. Eke, Central Michigan University, will
host a July 5 to Aug. 6 program on Writing Africa: Chinua
Achebe, Joyce Cary, Joseph Conrad, and Wole Soyinka. Contact
her at Central Michigan University, English Department, AN 301 E,
Mt. Pleasant, MI 48859; phone: (517) 774-2662; e-mail: maureen.n.eke@cmich.edu
The University of Michigans Center for Middle
Eastern Studies will hold an institute July 5 to July 30 on The
Arab World and the West: A History of Intellectual Relationships.
Co-directors are Michael Bonner and Anton Shammas, both of the Near
Eastern Studies Department, and Ronald Stockton, a political scientist
from the University of Michigan-Dearborn. For information or to
apply, contact Elizabeth Barlow, CMENAS, University of Michigan,
1080 S. University, Suite 4640, Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1106; phone:
(734) 764-0350; e-mail: cmenas@umich.edu
Islam in West Africa is the topic for
yet another institute, to be directed by Richard A. Corby, University
of Arkansas. Contact him at the School of Social and Behavioral
Sciences, P.O. Box 3619, University of Arkansas at Monticello, Monticello,
AR 71656; phone: (870) 460-1047; e-mail: corby@uamont.edu
All of these institutes and seminars offer a stipend
to participants to cover the cost of their transportation to the
site of the program and their room and board while present. All
programs are expected to help educators improve their knowledge
of the Middle East, Africa and Islam.
Dar al Islam Summer Teachers Institute
A two-week program for secondary school teachers,
Understanding and Teaching About Islam, will be offered
twice at Dar al Islam in Abiquiu, New Mexico. Institute Director
Karima Diane Alavi has announced that the dates for 1999 are July
11-24, with a repeat of the same program on Aug. 1-14.
The daily program comprises three hours of lecture/discussions
in the morning followed by small group study sessions in the early
afternoons. Late afternoons provide time for reading, study, reflection,
use of the library and audio-visual resources and other enrichment
activities. Evening sessions feature films, slide programs, discussions
and demonstrations.
While the academic program is intense, there are,
we are told, opportunities for mountain hikes, swimming, river rafting
and star gazing. The setting is in the beautiful mountains of northern
New Mexico.
Participants pay their travel and incidental expenses.
The Institute provides required books, supplementary materials,
room and board, and a $200 travel allowance.
The application deadline is March 15, 1999 and applicants
will be notified of acceptance by April 20. For information on the
application process, contact Karima Alavi, Director, Dar al Islam
Teachers Institute, P. O. Box 180, Abiquiu, NM 87510; phone:
(505) 685-4515 ext 24.
New Films Available
Films are often more effective in teaching about cultures
or historical events than simple classroom discussions. So it is
good news that Arab Film Distribution has recently added to its
collection for sale and rental eight Tunisian and six Egyptian films
of recent vintage or historical importance.
The Egyptian collection includes the Alexandria trilogy
directed by Youssef Chahine (Alexandria, Why?; An
Egyptian Story; and Alexandria Again and Forever)
and The Sparrow, produced in 1973 and set in Upper Egypt
before and during the June 1967 War.
Another film of the 1967 war, Little Dreams,
written and directed by Khaled El Hagar, tells the story of a 13-year-old
boy who lives with his mother in Suez.
A 1998 film, Date Wine, directed by Radwan
el-Kashef, should be popular with American audiences. It received
a Silver Prize at the 1998 Carthage Film Festival. The village men
migrate in search of jobs and wealth, leaving behind young Ahmed.
In their absence, he finds the role of the leader of the village
thrust upon him. After initial resistance, he gradually accepts
this responsibility. When the migrant men return, life in the village
becomes very interesting!
The new Tunisian films include The Gulf War,
What Next? This is a compilation of five leading Arab film
directors, and includes Borhane Alaouis Black Night
Eclipse, about a Lebanese filmmaker in Paris grappling with
making a film about the war; Nouri Bouzids It is Sheherazade
Theyre Killing (a Tunisian family in Ramadan, torn apart
by dissension over heroes and victims of the war); Mustapha Darkaouis
the Silence (a theater group wants to revisit Iraq);
Nejia Ben Mabrouks Research of Shaima, where a
filmmaker travels to Baghdad in search of a girl seen on television;
and Elia Suleimans Homage by Assassination, in
which a Palestinian screenwriter attempts to finish a script in
New York, while becoming increasingly distraught over news of the
war.
Crossing Over, directed by Mahmoud Ben
Mahmoud, tells the story of a Polish worker and an Arab intellectual
who travel the English Channel together as officals on both sides
of the Channel deny them entry. The Pole is fleeing the crackdown
on Solidarity, the Arab is simply fleeing. Condemned to shuttle
meaninglessly back and forth across the channel, the indignity and
absurdity of their experience becomes a powerful metaphor of exile
and alienation in the modern nation-state.
Bent Familia, a 1997 film directed by
Nouri Bouzid, received Honorable Mention at the Venice Film Festival
in 1997. It focuses on gender relationships in modern Tunisia.
The Doves Lost Necklace, a 1990
film directed by Nacer Khemir, received the Special Prize of the
Jury at the Locarno International Film Festival. It is set in Andalusia
during the eleventh century, and deals with themes of love, poetry,
and a quest. For further information, contact Arab Film Distribution
at (206) 322-0882.
Moroccan Women on Film
Another film of interest to classes in womens
studies, anthropology or Islamic studies is Still Ready: Three
Women From the Moroccan Resistance, a video directed by Hakim
Belabbes and produced by Alison Baker. This video addresses the
questions, Who were the women of the resistance? What
did they do? Where are they now?
For purchase ($200) or rental ($75), contact the producer,
Alison Baker, 22-D Hollywood Avenue, Ho Ho Kus, NJ 07423, phone:
(800) 343-5540. The stories of the women of the Moroccan resistance
are also told in a book by Alison Baker, Voices of Resistance:
Oral Histories of Moroccan Women, published by SUNY press.
Great Decisions Series
The Foreign Policy Association has announced the topics
for its 1999 Great Decisions integrated resource program
including videos, updates, teachers guide, and public and
private Web discussion areas. Despite the omission of several obvious
crises in the Middle East, the topics may nonetheless be of interest
to Middle Eastern specialists. One is Central Asia Pressure
Cooker: The Caspian Basin and Iran; a second is Foreign
Policy in the Information Age; a third is U.S. Role
in the United Nations: A Changing Dynamic?; and another is
International Financial Crisis: The IMF and Its Critics.
There is a special rate for teachers and school systems.
For information about ordering, contact Paul Mucha at phone: (216)
781-3730 or e-mail: pmucha@ccwa.org
Betsy
Barlow is the program coordinator at the University of Michigan-Ann
Arbors Center for Middle East and North African Studies. |