Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, December
1997, Pages 79-80
Education
Full Schedule of Fall Conferences Underway
By Betsy Barlow
The Association of Arab-American University Graduates
will hold its 30th annual convention at the Georgetown University
Conference Center in Washington, DC Oct. 31 through Nov. 2. The
theme will be "Arabs, Arab Americans, and the Global Community."
The program starts on Friday with a 5 to7 p.m. roundtable,
"AAUG 30 Years On—A Retrospective: AAUG Past Presidents
Look to the Future." Naseer Aruri, Halim Barakat, Husni Haddad,
Elaine Hagopian, Abdeen Jabara, Jamil Jreisat, Hala Maksoud, Albert
Mokhiber, and Fauzi Najjar will participate. A reception will follow.
On Saturday, Nov. 1, the program begins at 9:00 am
with a plenary session entitled "Globalization and the Arabs:
Seeking Balance in a Turbulent World." Speakers include Mohammed
Sid Ahmed, Saeb Jaroudi, Michael Nojeim, and Abdullah al-Ashtal
(invited), and Mona Serageldin (invited).
From ll:00 a.m. to 12:45 p.m. concurrent panels will
focus on "The Quest for Legitimacy, Democracy and Human Rights,"
with Cherif Bassiouni (invited), David Khairallah, and Mona Makram
Obaid, and also on "The Communications Revolution: Information
at the Expense of Knowledge?" with Issa Batarseh, Mazin Abu
Ghazaleh, Michael Hudson, and Dr. Samer Jabbour.
The luncheon program will feature "The World
Trade Organization: Threats and Promises." From 3:00-4:45 p.m.
two concurrent panels will be offered. Speakers at the first, on
"Social and Economic Transformation: Risks and Benefits,"
will be Rogaia Mustafa Abusharaf, Moez Doraid, Waleed Hazbun, and
Rosina Hassoun. The second panel, organized by ADC, is entitled
"Issues Facing Arab Americans," with Edmund Ghareeb, Sam
Hussseini, Hala Maksoud, and Houeida Saad.
A plenary roundtable on Globalization will take place
at 5 p.m. A banquet will follow at 8 p.m., with Hoda Gamal Abdel
Nasser, the daughter of the late president of Egypt, as speaker.
The concluding session will be brunch on Sunday, Nov,
2, from l0 a.m. to l:30 p.m. with Edward W. Said as the featured
speaker. The convention chair is Dr. Clovis Maksoud, director of
American University's Center for the Global South.
To register for the convention, contact AAUG, 2121
Wisconsin Av. NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20007, telephone (202)
337-7717, fax (202) 337-3302. To reserve accommodations at the conference
hotel, run by the Marriott Corporation, call 1 (800) 228-9290, and
mention the AAUG convention.
MESA Annual Meeting in San Francisco
The Middle East Studies Association (MESA) will hold
its 31st annual meeting Nov. 22-24 in San Francisco. Over 50 panels
and a business meeting will be offered from noon on Saturday through
Monday at 6 p.m. A program of Persian classical music and traditional
Afghan music and dance will be offered on Sunday and Monday evenings
respectively. The 14th annual FilmFest will take place concurrently,
including six cineforums with filmmakers and/or directors. Forty
organizations are holding meetings in conjunction with the MESA
convention. Over 70 exhibitors are expected to show books about,
software on, and textiles of the Middle East. Retiring MESA president
Prof. Leila Fawaz of Tufts University will give her presidential
address Sunday at 6:15 p.m.
To register for the conference, contact MESA (by Nov.
1 for the earlybird special) at 1643 Helen St., University of Arizona,
Tucson, AZ 85721-0410, phone (520) 621-5650, fax (520) 626-9095,
e-mail mesana@u.arizona.edu.
For reservations at the headquarters hotel, the Hyatt Regency, 5
Embarcadero Center, San Franciso, CA 94111, phone the hotel directly
by Oct. 21 at 1 (800) 233-1234, or fax them at (415) 291-6538.
American Academy of Religion Schedules Palestine
Session in San Francisco
The American Academy of Religion is also holding its
annual conference in San Francisco Nov. 21-23. On the program is
a special consultation on "Palestinian Theology and Interreligious
Dialogue," which will take place on Sunday, Nov. 23, from 9:00
to ll:30 a.m. at the Hilton Hotel in San Francisco. Rosemary Ruether,
professor of theology at Garrett-Evangelical Seminary, will preside.
Speakers are Mahmoud Ayyoub, professor of Islamic studies, Temple
University; Marc Ellis, visiting fellow at Harvard; the Rev. Mitri
Raheb, Incarnation Center, Bethlehem; and Don Wagner, director of
the Middle East Center, North Park College, Chicago. Respondents
are Kathy Bergen, national coordinator, Middle East Peace Education,
American Friends Service Committee; and Amina Beverly McCloud, De
Paul University, Chicago. Those wishing to register for the session
or the conference as a whole should call the American Academy of
Religion, (404) 727-2345.
Sabeel Conference in Bethlehem, Jerusalem
Sabeel, an ecumenical Palestinian Liberation
Theology Center in Jerusalem, will hold its third international
conference Feb. 10-15, 1998 in Bethlehem University and Jerusalem.
The theme is: "The Challenge of Jubilee: What Does God Require?"
The program planners tell us that "50 years is an historical
benchmark to remember the past, assess the present and prepare for
the future: in our Biblical heritage, the Jubilee vision calls for
re-establishing God's holy order of justice, compassion, mercy and
forgiveness, good news to the poor, release of the captives, recovery
of the blind, and freedom for the oppressed."
Throughout the year of 1998 the State of Israel will
celebrate 50 years of statehood while the Palestinian people will
remember 50 years of dispossession and tragedy. The Sabeel Center
states that it is timely for faith communities whose roots are in
the jubilee vision to discover anew what God requires.
On Tuesday, Feb. 10, an optional full-day tour will
take participants to the Sea of Galilee, the Mount of the Beatitudes,
destroyed villages, and settlements. Wednesday, Feb. 11, starts
with an optional tour of the Old City of Jerusalem and a keynote
address by Columbia University professor Edward Said.
Thursday through Saturday, Feb. 11-13, sessions will
be held on Palestinian historical accounts, religious fundamentalism,
Christian Zionism, Christian/Muslim relations, human rights, Jewish
reflections on the Jubilee, and international models of peacemaking.
On Sunday, Feb. 15, participants will have the opportunity
to take a full-day trip to Gaza or a half-day trip to Hebron sponsored
by the Christian Peacemaker Team. The program includes audio-visual
presentations, a photo exhibit, and an evening of drama, music,
and Arabic dancing. On Monday, Feb. 16, a special seminar will take
place for invited theologians.
Registration for the conference costs $250 and includes
the conference lectures and events, 3 box lunches, a reception,
the celebration dinner, refreshments during breaks, and land transportation
between Bethelehem hotels and all conference sites. Please register
for the conference with Sabeel, PO Box 1248, Jerusalem via
Israel. Participants can either make their own travel arrangements,
or work through the official conference travel agency, Shepherds
Tours and Travel, which can be reached through the Sabeel office:
phone 011-972-532-7136 or fax 011-972-2-532-7137.
Edward Said and Terry Anderson Are Featured Speakers
Edward Said responded to talks given in his honor
at a two-day conference in Windsor, Ontario Sep. 19-20, which was
very well attended (see August issue of WRMEA for the program).
On Sept. 22 he spoke on "Imperialism and the Clash of Civilizations"
at the University of Michigan, where he was introduced by the new
president of the university, Lee Bollinger. He also met in a private
session with graduate students in the humanities.
Former hostage Terry Anderson spoke on Saturday Oct.
11 at the ninth annual banquet of the Greater Toledo Association
of Arab Americans, which celebrated the 25th anniversary of the
organization's existence. Anderson, former chief AP correspondent
in the Middle East, a prisoner for seven years in Lebanon and author
of Den of Lions, and currently a talk show host, is an advocate
for human rights and grassroots change around the world. He also
gave the Msgr. Michael J. Doyle Lectureship at Lourdes College on
Sunday Oct. 12 at the Franciscan Center, Sylvania, OH.
MEPC Teaching Workshops With Audrey Shabbas
The Middle East Policy Council (MEPC) continues to
offer workshops for K-12 teachers or college educators with Audrey
Shabbas, president of Arab World and Islamic Resources (AWAIR).
The generic title for the programs is "Content and Strategies
for Teaching About the Arab World and Islam," but the program
for the day can be negotiated with the sponsor. The MEPC funds Audrey's
travel, accommodations, meals and honorarium. The local sponsor
arranges publicity, the meeting place, and refreshments.
Programs scheduled in the next month are: Oct. 27-28,
San Bernardino County Office of Education, San Bernardino, CA; Oct.
29-31, National Association of Multicultural Education, Albuquerque,
NM; Nov. 6, University of New Orleans, New Orleans, LA; Nov. 7,
Catholic Archdiocese Schools, New Orleans, LA; Dec. 3, Maryland
Association of Independent Schools, Baltimore, MD; Dec. 6: Dearborn
Public Schools, Dearborn, MI. To attend these workshops, contact
the sponsor. To arrange a workshop in your area, call the MEPC'S
program director, Mary Lee Ball, at (202) 296-6767.
"Religions in the World" Workshop at Ann
Arbor
The University of Michigan's Center for Middle Eastern
and North African Studies presented a workshop for teachers Oct.
4 on "Religions in the World," with the Rev. Dr. Don Wagner,
Northpark College, Chicago, speaking on Christianity in the Middle
East, Dr. Marc Ellis, research fellow at Harvard University, speaking
about Judaism, and Prof. Sherman Jackson, University of Michigan,
speaking about Islam.
Call for Information on Islamic Education in the U.S.
Dr. Nimat Hafez Barazangi, research fellow at Cornell
University, will be the guest editor of a special edition of the
Winter 1998 issue of the scholarly journal Religion and Education.
A call for papers has already been issued. Ms. Barazangi is now
developing a special list of the available educational services
to be included in this special issue. She is seeking information
about organizations that deal with Muslim children and youth education
in the U.S. Please send the goal of the organization, the approximate
number and nature of its constituents, the number and qualifications
of the educators or consultant scholars attached to the organization,
and the full title and circulation of any publications. Information
should be sent by Oct. 30 on letterhead stationery or e-mail with
the full name of the contact person, his or her work and home number,
the exact name, address, phone, fax and email of the organization
to:
Dr. Nimat Hafez Barazangi; Women's Studies Program,
391 Uris Hall; Cornell University; Ithaca, NY 14853; phone: 607
255-2195; fax 607 257-4199; email: nhb2@cornell.edu
Betsy Barlow
is the program coordinator at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor's
Center for Middle East and North African Studies. |