Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, June
1999, pages 68-69
Northern California Chronicle
Arab Cultural Center of San Francisco Hosts
Iraqi Cultural Evening
By Elaine Pasquini
The Arab Cultural Center of San Francisco hosted an Iraqi Cultural
Evening at the center facility in San Francisco on March 26, 1999.
After a dinner of Middle Eastern cuisine prepared by members of
the ACC, the guests were shown Let Iraq Live, the video
made by Bay Area filmmaker and activist Gloria La Riva that documents
the May 1998 trip to Iraq by Iraq Sanctions Challenge.
This group, organized by Ramsey Clarks International Action
Center, delivered $4 million of medicine to Iraq in defiance of
the U.N. sanctions imposed on Iraq after the Gulf war. The audience
watched in horror scenes of infants and children devastated by illness
and malnutrition as a result of the sanctions that limit all items
sent to Iraq. Drug supplies which are considered by the committee
controlling the imports adequate to last the entire country three
months in actuality last 10 days, La Riva said.
After the video presentation, ACC member Emmanuel Ashoo spoke of
his trip to Iraq with his wife last year, his second since the end
of the Gulf war. Ashoo, 68, born and educated in Iraq, who is eager
to inform the general public of the terrible conditions in Iraq,
hopes Americans will not have to look back regretfully and think,
Where was I when the children of Iraq were dying?
He saw firsthand the devastation and destruction caused by sanctions,
saying, Simple illnesses are death sentences.
One major cause of illness is that chlorine and spare parts needed
for water purification plants are not allowed into the country,
as the U.N. Sanctions Committee considers them dual-use
items having potential military use. This is the reason water-borne
diseases are killing the children.
Ashoo also described the lack of discipline and motivation in the
schools because there are no job prospects upon graduation. There
is a lack of desks, chairs, and even pencils in schools. Pencils
also are controlled by sanctions and are considered a dual-use
item because they contain graphite. Ashoo pointed out that some
families are selling all of their possessions to make up for lack
of income and because of the horrific devaluation of the dinar.
Prior to the Gulf war a single Iraqi dinar was worth $3. Today,
2,000 dinars equal $1.
One result of this currency devaluation has been the elimination
of the middle class in Iraq. Approximately 10 percent of the professionals
have left the country. Professionals who remain, if employed at
all, have menial jobs.
Another distressful result of sanctions is the loss of dignity
and breakdown of the traditional Iraqi family. The divorce rate
and school dropout rate have increased dramatically, as has corruption
in every aspect of daily living.
Ashoo urged members of the audience to contact President Clinton
and their representatives in Congress to voice their opposition
to the inhumane sanctions, which he called a weapon of mass
destruction.
The Arab Cultural Center, founded in 1973 by concerned Bay Area
Arab Americans, provides educational and cultural services for the
local Arab community, as well as seeking to facilitate a positive
change in attitude of the general community toward Arabs and their
culture.
The Cultural Center provides the opportunity for individuals and
families to meet, study, share and communicate ideas and generally
strengthen their ties with their rich heritage. The Center offers
childrens classes in Arabic on Saturdays and has frequent
programs with diverse speakers and artists from around the world.
Thousands attended the Centers Fourth Annual Cultural Festival
held in San Franciscos Golden Gate Park last October, commemorating
the Centers 25th Anniversary. The Arab Cultural Center enjoys
the support of the San Francisco Mayors office and the Board
of Supervisors. Through the hard work and dedication of the ACC
members, on Nov. 4, 1998, San Franciscos Affirmative Action
Ordinance, which grants Arab Americans the rights and benefits of
other minorities, became law.
Jews, Judaism and Islam Lecture by San Francisco
Professor
Jews, Judaism and Islam was the topic of a March 21
lecture by San Francisco State University professor Dr. Fred Astren
in San Francisco. Dr. Astren, acting director of the Jewish Studies
program, is a specialist in the Jews of Islamic countries and a
scholar of the Quran, as well as the Torah. Speaking to a
small group at Congregation Ner Tamid, Astren spoke of the similarities
and differences between Judaism and Islam. Jews and Muslims
share the same God, but different Prophets, he stated. He
also pointed out that Lebanese Christian Maronite bishops use the
term Allah, the Arabic word for God, in their sermons.
In addition to discussing the similarities and differences between
Judaism and Islam, Astren traced Islam from its beginning almost
14 centuries ago to the present, when it has more than a billion
followers and has become the fastest growing religion in the world.
He described the vast area of Islamic influence from Spain to China.
He debunked as myth the idea that Jews were forcibly converted to
Islam. Although Jews and Christians were taxed differently from
Muslims in Islamic countries, because of their belief in monotheism
they were allowed to practice their religions unmolested.
Astren concluded his lecture on a contemporary note by recounting
his recent trip to Jordan. He related fascinating conversations
he had with Jordanians, both Bedouin and Palestinian, regarding
their Israeli neighbors. The responses he received varied widely.
Some said they cried when Yitzhak Rabin was assassinated. Some believed
the Israelis were more successful than the Jordanians because they
were more religious. (This is an extraordinary observation since
many Israelis, such as Rabin and Shimon Peres, are not religious.)
Others expressed the opinion that since they had waited out
the Crusaders, they could wait out the Israelis.
Astren noted there had been no peace dividend for the
average Jordanian as was hoped would occur after the peace treaty
between the two countries was signed in 1994.
San Francisco State Universitys Jewish Studies program is
only three years old, but is quite successful, offering 10 or 12
classes every semester. Not all of the 300 students enrolled are
Jewish. The Hebrew classes are particularly popular among a number
of Palestinian students.
Red Sea Photo Exhibit at City College of San Francisco
Kamel Ayoub, honorary consul of Jordan, and director Mohammed Agami
of the Egyptian consulates press and information bureau, were
among guests viewing the photo exhibit Beneath the Red Sea
at City College of San Francisco, April 7, 1999. The underwater
photographs of Phil Pasquini, City College of San Francisco sculpture
instructor who is also a free-lance photographer, were taken on
Pasquinis visits to Egypt, Israel, and Jordan over the past
two years. The photographs showed the beautiful array of underwater
life in the Gulf of Aqaba from the shores of Aqaba and Taba to the
Straits of Tiran.
Pasquini described his love of diving and underwater photography
as a natural extension of my lifelong fascination with the
ocean. With specific reference to diving in the Red Sea, he
noted: When diving adjacent to the Sinai Peninsula and the
deserts of Egypt, Israel, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia, one is immediately
overwhelmed upon entering the water by the diversity of color and
life that eludes the observer in the desert landscape that surrounds
this great body of water.
He explained his love of this area of the Middle East stating:
For me, personally, this part of the world has everything:
wonderful people, history, desert, palm trees, camels, high mountains,
incredible sunsets, expansive beaches, and beautiful azure waters.
The diverse student body of City College includes students from
around the globe. Many students from the Middle East were thrilled
to view the photos of the spectacular forms and colors of the creatures
living in this unique underwater aquarium. Pasquini has students
from Israel, Egypt, and Jordan, but most of them have not had the
opportunity to dive and see the beautiful underwater life firsthand.
Elaine Pasquini is a free-lance journalist based in Ignacio,
CA. |