July/August 1995, pgs. 67-68
California Chronicle
Tales From Arab Detroit Screened At UCLA
Conference
By Pat McDonnell Twair
For documentary filmmaker Joan Mandell, the culmination of two
decades of involvement with Arab people is her video, "Tales
From Arab Detroit." More than one year of preparation went
into the production centered around the U.S. appearance of storytellers
from the Nile Delta who can recite more than 114 hours of the Abu
Zayd al-Hilali epic. The classic story has been passed through 14
generations of illiterate storytellers from the village of Nakhli
and relates the adventures of Abu Zayd, who was cast out of Arabia
and led his al-Hilali tribe through many challenges to a new and
better life in the Maghreb.
Mandell's video, which was co-produced by her Los Angeles-based
Olive Branch Productions and ACCESS (Arab Community Center for Economic
and Social Services) in Dearborn, MI, was shown in its entirety
at UCLA's May 26-27 Cinema Displacement conference. The two-day
session dealt with films focusing on the lives of Middle Eastern
émigrés and exiles as well as filmmakers dislocated
from their homelands. Featured speakers were two scholars recognized
for their work on films dealing with Middle Eastern identities in
transition. They are: Prof. Hamid Naficy of Rice University and
Prof. Ella Habiba Shofat of City University of New York.
Mandell, who holds a Masters of Fine Arts degree from UCLA and
teaches at the University of California at Irvine, has produced
two earlier videos: "Gaza Ghetto" and "Voices in
Exile: Immigrants and the First Amendment." She told the conference
audience her goal in producing "Tales From Arab Detroit"
was to challenge racist depictions of Arabs in the American mass
media and open the eyes of non-Arab viewers by making them question
negative stereotypes.
This isn't the first documentary made about Arab Americans, but
I will wager it is the most significant. The video is a story within
a story within a story. We hear the storytellers relate Abu Zayd's
adventures while we observe the nostalgia of older Detroit Arabs
again hearing verses they had only heard in their homelands. We
also witness American-born youths' interactions with their parents
who fear their children are losing touch with their cultural roots.
"It didn't take me long to discover the identity problem looms
larger for the parents than for their children," Mandell told
the Washington Report. "The American-born generation
believes it is perpetuating the Arab culture in its own way. It
is. It is creating its own traditions."
Mandell says she received her undergraduate education in Montreal,
where she became friends with Arab students and was shocked at how
poorly their culture and political history have been portrayed in
the West. She traveled to the West Bank, taught English as a Second
Language at Bir Zeit University and learned Arabic. In 1980, she
was one of the organizers of al-Fajr, an English-language
newspaper published for the next 14 years in East Jerusalem.
Although the production process for "Tales From Arab Detroit"
took only a month, more than one year went into preparation for
the film. It could prove to be a classic in terms of examining the
multi-generational Arab-American community. Mandell confesses it
took several debates before a consensus was reached to concentrate
on the response of Arab Americans to the storytellers rather than
on their performance itself.
ACCESS made the decision to bring the storytellers to the United
States in the hope they would appeal to older generations and that
their recitals would bring the emigrant and American-born generations
together. Mandell says ACCESS succeeded because the nightly programs
cut across all divisions in the Arab-American community as they
united to hear the beloved tales of Abu Zayd.
Older Arab-American viewers will readily identify with the segment
entitled "Children of the First Wave," but probably will
reject the segment dealing with Arab youths who dress and look like
Latino gang members or perform hip-hop or sing rap lyrics. But herein
lies the resilience: these are Americanized teens dancing with an
instinctive Arabic rhythm, or rapping from an Arab perspective of
life in Detroit/Dearborn.
"I hope, after viewing it, that viewers will want to meet
the people in the video," Mandell commented. "When the
lights come on, I want them to realize the story's not over, it's
just begun."
She hopes to market the video with universities, libraries and
individual sales. "I wish the Detroit Tourist Bureau would
show this as an incentive for people to come visit Detroit,"
she said earnestly. Readers interested in obtaining the video can
call Olive Branch Productions at (310) 444‚9715.
Arab-American Author at UCLA
One of the zaniest novels ever written is Diana Abu-Jaber's Arabian
Jazz, about a dysfunctional Arab-American family. In it, we
meet emigrant widower Matussem, his half-Arab daughters, Melvina
and Jemorah, and his sister Fatima, who is obsessed with finding
husbands for her nieces. There's much more, including Matussem's
jazz band, the Ramoudettes, with Jesse, Owen and Fergyl on organ,
bass and maracas backing Matussem on drums, and an Amazon truckdriver
named Train who seduces Matussem. The book won the Oregon Literary
Arts Book Award for Abu-Jaber, an assistant professor at the University
of Oregon who specializes in modern American and Canadian fiction,
and feminist, minority and Third World literature. Her class on
Middle Eastern literature and culture has been termed an overflow
course at the University of Oregon where, Abu-Jaber says, most students
have never tasted hummos nor seen a keffiyeh except
in photos of Yasser Arafat.
"I want the students to get a broad view of the Arab culture,"
says Abu-Jaber. "In addition to reading novels by Etel Adnan,
Nawal El Saadawi and Abdelrahman Munif, they hear speakers who can
discuss the religions of the Middle EastSunni and Shi'i Islam,
Maronite and Orthodox Christianity, the Copts and the Druzepolitical
ideologies, and musicians or dancers." Abu-Jaber even has introduced
her students to Lebanese cuisine at a small restaurant in Eugene,
Ore.
"The result has been very positive," Abu-Jaber reports.
The students are eager to study a culture they knew little about
and, by the end of the course, most say they are more sympathetic
toward the Arabs. They feel as if they've had a political awakening."
Abu-Jaber just completed a stint as visiting professor at the University
of California at Los Angeles where she invited local experts from
the Arab-American community to talk to her class. Radio personality
Casey Kasem was a guest speaker, as well as Palestinian filmmaker
Hana Elias, and Aisha Ali, who performed dances of several Arab
countries. Other speakers included a political activist, a poet
and a specialist on Middle Eastern religions. Her multidisciplinary
approach requires students to make presentations, discuss Arab writers,
and produce a project.
"I want to present students with a full, multidimensional
experience of the Arab culture which is difficult to do without
visiting the Middle East," she said. "Many of my students
at UCLA were of Arab heritage, but many of them don't speak Arabic
and have never been to the Middle East. This is a way of connecting
them with their heritage."
Now she and her husband, law and literature professor Michael Clark,
are en route to Jordan, where she will be a Fulbright professor
during the coming academic year. Her Jordanian students are in for
an American-style learning experience with Abu-Jaber, who also is
the author of the novel Memories of Birth, and who was nominated
for The Pushcart Prize for her 1992 fictional piece "Desert"
and her 1994 "Loving You." Her book Arabian Jazz
is available through the AET
Book Club.
LLCS Aids Students
Since 1985, a band of dedicated Lebanese-American women in the
greater Los Angeles area have worked diligently to promote their
culture and provide scholarships to disadvantaged children in Lebanon.
Despite their faintly antiquated title, members of the Lebanese
Ladies Cultural Society (LLCS) have performed a high-tech job of
extending scholarships to more than 2,100 needy children since 1987.
These provide an average of $200 per student from kindergarten through
grade 12.
Scholarship Chairman Denise Kafrouni has allocated one room of
her spacious La Cañada home as a scholarship office where
files keep track of the progress of student recipients. Mrs. Kafrouni
proudly points out that children of all religions and from every
region of Lebanon are considered equally on the basis of grades
and financial need. To ensure that each student receives the money
alloted to him or her, a photo and birth certificate of the recipient
is on file and the student's family is notified that money is being
sent to the school in the child's name. LLCS members in Lebanon
deliver the scholarships and visit the recipients.
L.A. Welcomes New Lebanese Consul
The Greater Los Angeles Lebanese community is welcoming Gebran
Soufan, who assumed duties this spring as consul general of Lebanon.
A community‚wide committee honored the new envoy with a reception
in the Beverly Hilton Hotel and the youthful diplomat has been welcomed
at a series of private gatherings in his Southern California district.
The new consul general is an attorney with a master's degree in
law from St. Joseph's University in Beirut and worked in the firm
of Fouad Boutros and Bahige Tabbarah. He launched his diplomatic
career in 1978 with an assignment to the International Organizations
Department in Beirut and then served as a consul in New York from
1979 to 1984. His credits also include service in Washington as
Lebanese Embassy liaison officer with the State Department and the
National Security Council from August 1990 to January 1995. He is
the author of an essay entitled "Antagonisms and Controversies
Related to Nuclear Free Zones."
Pat McDonnell Twair is a free-lance writer based in Los Angeles. |