Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, August/September
1997, pg. 119
Bulletin Board
Compiled by Janet McMahon
Convenings
Hundreds of children from schools, churches, mosques
and day-care centers in New York will lead a July 1 march on the
United Nations to present petitions prepared in 100 cities worldwide
urging an end to the sanctions against Iraq. The demonstration is
being supported by the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee
(ADC), the Arab Women's Solidarity Association and other national
organizations. For further information, contact the International
Action Center, tel. (212) 633-6646, fax (212) 633-2889.
Partners for Peace will hold a Round Table Strategy
Session, for which there is no charge, to map out a model public
relations program, with the assistance of Syracuse, NY public relations
consultant Peter Wirth. Guests from the media will discuss what
they look for in press releases and other media contacts. On July
26, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Partners for Peace also will hold a Media
Training Program for activists in peace and justice issues, led
by Peter Wirth. The $20 fee covers lunch and workshop materials,
including the San Francisco Media Alliance's Media How-to Guidebook.
For registration for both events at the New York Ave. Presbyterian
Church, Room 511, 1313 New York Ave. NW, in Washington, DC, phone
Jerri Bird at (202) 628-6962 or fax her at (202) 628-6958.
AWAIR and the Middle East Policy Council will conduct
a week-long seminar on "Understanding Islam" Aug. 11-18
at the Presbyterian Conference Center, Ghost Ranch, in Abiquiu,
NM. For information about registration and accommodations, contact
Ghost Ranch at (505) 685-4333; for information about course content
contact AWAIR, 1865 Euclid Ave., Suite 4, Berkeley, CA 94709, (510)
704-0517. Space is limited.
Exhibitions
In honor of India's 50 years of independence from
British colonial rule, the Smithsonian Institution's Arthur M. Sackler
Gallery presents an exhibition of 44 paintings and 2 illuminations
from the illustrated manuscript Padshahnama, or Chronicle of the
King of the World, assembled by Emperor Shah Jahan, builder of the
Taj Mahal. The works, which are normally housed at Windsor Castle's
Royal Library and have been lent by Queen Elizabeth, will remain
on view through Oct. 13.
"Magic Carpets: A Special Installation of Islamic
Rugs" is on view through fall 1998 at The Brooklyn Museum,
200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY, (718) 638-5000.
Deaths
Fadhel al-Jamali, a former Iraqi prime minister, died
May 24 in exile in Tunisia of heart ailments at the age of 94. Born
the son of a sheikh and Shi'i leader in the religious center of
Kadhimain outside Baghdad, he graduated from the American University
of Beirut and received his master's and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia
University. He served in Iraq's Ministry of Education, developing
the country's first modern school system, until joining the Foreign
Ministry in 1942. As foreign minister in 1945, he was Iraq's representative
for the founding of the Arab League and the signing of the United
Nations Charter. Under the monarchy of King Faisal II, he served
two terms as prime minister. Following the 1958 military coup, he
was sentenced to death on charges of collaborating with the West,
but his life was spared when Morocco intervened on his behalf. He
subsequently moved to Tunisia, where he became an adviser to President
Habib Bourguiba and was granted Tunisian citizenship. Jamali was
a lifelong critic of Zionism, accusing the U.N. of causing the displacement
of a milliion people from their homes with its Palestine partition
plan, and advising the U.S. to admit European Jews rather than "merely
shed tears" while passing the problem on to the Middle East. |