19/05/2016

My article from Iraq: Dr Juman's work for displaced women in Nineweh, Kurdistan



19.May

IRAQ: WAHA’S ACTION IN KURDISTAN AND


 NINEVEH


In Iraq, WAHA International is committed to helping displaced people, chased away from their home by the 2014 violence linked to the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. In different locations, WAHA has helped to reopen hospitals, to secure maternal and reproductive care, and to send high-quality medical personnel in IDP camps.



Dr Juman is a busy woman. Only a few years ago, this elegant gynaecologist was living with her husband in Arizona, in the U.S., but she decided to come back to her home country. The urge to feel helpful and to contribute to the needs of her fellow citizens, plagued again by the attacks from the Islamic State, was stronger than her crave for freedom and peace. For a while at least.
Born in Zakho, in the extreme north of the country, in Kurdistan, Juman is the oldest of a Chaldaean family of seven children. From 1915, Christian families like hers were pushed away from an area to another by the different political rulers that followed the end of the Ottoman Empire. Hers temporarily found peace in Zakho.
Though her parents were teachers and most of her siblings followed their path, Juman studied medicine at the University of Mosul, started working as a gynaecologist in 1997 and got married in Iraq. Since 2000, she has been practicing her specialty in remote villages, trying to help women with no access to hospitals. For two years, she was the only doctor responsible for Obstetrics & Gynaecology (OBGY) in Amedia.
But with the war starting in 2003 and the consequences on the society, at some point in 2007 she had to leave the country. “I lived five years in Jordan, I was working with NGOs there to help refugees, receiving up to 50 patients a day, but my husband could not find work. Then we managed to get a visa for the United States where we arrived in 2012”, says Dr Juman. “But I came back to Iraq to do my job, to help my people here. In the U.S., I could work as a general practitioner but they have so many there. I wanted to serve my country”.
After Fear, A New Beginning
Dr Juman met the WAHA International’s team in February this year. WAHA was starting a new programme in northern Iraq to help displaced families and children still in need of better healthcare facilities. WAHA opened its mission in the country after a first exploratory mission. The current situation is still pushing people to flee their home, mainly because of on going fighting between the government forces and the Islamic State (ISIS or Daesh).
WAHA’s activities in Iraq are based in Kurdistan. A team of two doctors is based in Erbil and has recently been completed by a logistical administrator and by a local field coordinator based in Duhok. The staff is working in the main clinic in the IDP camp of Qadiya to help displaced people, mainly from minorities and oppressed communities, including Yazidis.
The camp in Qadiya, which hosts more than 15.000 IDPs in 3.000 residential units, is run by the RWANGA organisation. A Primary Healthcare Unit has been open by the German NGO Malteser, with the help of the German Aid Agency (GiZ). WAHA has a reproductive healthcare unit, including a maternity in their compound. The team of doctors led by Dr Juman is bringing support to local health authorities in the form of healthcare material and personnel.
WAHA also contributed to the reopening of the Snuny Hospital, one of the main health centres in the region, with the help of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) and with the help of ta local charity. They later opened a fixed clinic in the Sinjar Mountains region, in Sardehsti. Most of the displaced people in this region are also Yazidis.
Dr Juman visits the patients and the younger doctors in Qadiya, Snuny and Sardehsti almost daily. In Qadiya, she is helped by another gynaecologist, Dr Drakhshan, and by a radiologist, Dr Mosaab. The medical team gives between 40 to 50 consultations per day, mainly to pregnant Yazidi women. In Snuny, Dr Reem is in charge of obstetrical care, gynaecology and deliveries four days a week. Another team is in charge from Friday to Sunday, with Dr Suzan from Dohuk and Dr Najah from Syria.
In Sardehsti, they are working with Dr Heshkal, from Zakho. The situation in the Sinjar Mountains is the most difficult one. Here, displaced people are forgotten by the state. There are very few infrastructures, and the locations are abandoned by the authorities. Sinjar City has been completely destroyed by ISIS fighters. Even teachers in the camps don’t receive any salary. “There are almost no international organisation here”, says a member of the a local charity, “it’s a precious help that WAHA brought by opening the small clinic”.
People in the region know that more fighting is to come as the international coalition promised to liberate Mosul from ISIS fighters before the end of the year. But in the meantime, displaced people and impoverished families only ask for daily survival.
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En français :


25.Mai

IRAK : L'ACTION DE WAHA AU KURDISTAN ET AU NINIVE

En Irak, WAHA International est déterminée à aider les personnes déplacées, chassées de leur domicile par la violence liée à l'augmentation de l'Etat islamique en Irak et en Syrie depuis 2014. Sur différents sites, WAHA a contribué à rouvrir les hôpitaux, pour garantir des soins maternels et de la reproduction, et d'envoyer du personnel médical de haute qualité dans les camps de déplacés.
Dr Juman est une femme occupée. Il y a quelques années, cette élégante gynécologue vivait avec son mari dans l'Arizona, aux États-Unis, mais elle a décidé de revenir dans son pays d'origine. L'envie de se sentir utile et de contribuer aux besoins de ses concitoyens, en proie aux attaques de l'Etat islamique, a été plus forte que sa soif de liberté et de paix. Pendant un certain temps au moins.
Né à Zakho, dans l'extrême nord du pays, au Kurdistan, Juman est issue d'une famille chaldéenne de sept enfants. Depuis 1915, les familles chrétiennes comme la sienne ont été poussées d'une région à l'autre par les différents dirigeants politiques qui ont suivi la fin de l'Empire ottoman. La sienne trouvé temporairement la paix à Zakho.
Bien que ses parents fussent des enseignants et la plupart de ses frères et sœurs aient suivi leur chemin, Juman a étudié la médecine à l'Université de Mossoul. Elle a commencé à travailler comme un gynécologue en 1997 et s’est mariée en Irak. Depuis 2000, elle pratique sa spécialité dans des villages reculés, en essayant d'aider les femmes sans accès aux hôpitaux. Pendant deux ans, elle a été le seul médecin responsable de l'obstétrique et de gynécologie (OBGY) dans la région de Amenia.
Mais avec la guerre entamée en 2003 et les conséquences des violences sur la société, en 2007, elle a dû quitter le pays. « J'ai vécu cinq ans en Jordanie, je travaillais avec des ONG là-bas pour aider les réfugiés. Nous recevions jusqu'à 50 patients par jour. Mais mon mari ne pouvait pas trouver de travail. Ensuite, nous avons réussi à obtenir un visa pour les États-Unis, où nous sommes arrivés en 2012 », explique le Dr Juman. « Mais je suis revenue en Irak pour faire mon travail, pour aider mon peuple ici. Aux États-Unis, je pourrais travailler comme médecin généraliste, mais ils ont tant de là. Je voulais servir mon pays ».
Après la peur, l’espoir du renouveau
Dr Juman a rencontré l'équipe du WAHA International en février 2016. WAHA commençait un nouveau programme dans le nord de l'Irak pour aider les familles et les enfants déplacés ayant besoin de meilleures installations de soins de santé. WAHA a ouvert sa mission dans le pays après une première mission exploratoire. La situation actuelle pousse encore les gens à fuir leur maison, principalement en raison des combats en cours entre les forces gouvernementales, kurdes et internationales contre l'État islamique (ISIS ou Daech).
Les activités de WAHA en Irak sont basées au Kurdistan. Une équipe de deux médecins est basé à Erbil et a été récemment complétée par un administrateur logistique et par un coordinateur local de terrain basé à Duhok. Le personnel travaille dans la clinique principale du camp de Qadiya pour aider les personnes déplacées, principalement des minorités et des communautés opprimées, dont de nombreux Yézidis.
Le camp de Qadiya, qui accueille plus de 15 000 personnes déplacées dans 3 000 unités résidentielles, est géré par l'organisation RWANGA. Une unité de soins de santé primaires a été ouverte par l'ONG allemande Malteser, avec l'aide de l'Agence de coopération allemande (GIZ). WAHA dispose à côté de ce bâtiment d'une unité de soins de santé en matière de reproduction, comprenant une maternité. L'équipe de médecins dirigée par le Dr Juman apporte un soutien aux autorités sanitaires locales sous la forme de matériel et de personnel de santé.
WAHA a également contribué à la réouverture de l'hôpital Snuny, l'un des principaux centres de santé de la région, avec l'aide du Programme de développement des Nations Unies (le PNUD) et avec l'aide d'une fondation locale. WAHA a ensuite ouvert une clinique fixe dans la région des Monts Sinjar, à Sardehsti. La plupart des personnes déplacées dans cette région sont également yézidis.
Dr Juman rend visite aux patients et aux médecins de Qadiya, Snuny et Sardehsti presque tous les jours. A Qadiya, elle est aidée par une autre gynécologue, le Dr Drakhshan, et par un radiologue, Dr Mosaab. L'équipe médicale donne entre 40 à 50 consultations par jour, principalement à des femmes enceintes yézidis. A Snuny, le Dr Reem est en charge des soins obstétricaux, de la gynécologie et des accouchements, quatre jours par semaine. Une autre équipe est en charge du vendredi au dimanche.
La situation dans les montagnes de Sinjar est la plus difficile. Ici, les personnes déplacées sont oubliées par l'État. Il y a très peu d'infrastructures, et les emplacements sont abandonnés par les autorités. La ville de Sinjar a été complètement détruite par les combattants d’ISIS. Même les enseignants dans les camps ne reçoivent plus leurs salaires. « Il n'y a presque pas d'organisation internationale ici », commente un membre de la Fondation Barzani, « c’est une aide précieuse que WAHA apporte depuis l'ouverture de la petite clinique ».
Les gens de la région savent que de nouveaux combats se préparent car la coalition internationale a promis de libérer Mossoul des combattants d’ISIS avant la fin de l'année. Mais en attendant, les personnes déplacées et les familles pauvres ne demandent que la survie au quotidien.

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By Melissa Chemam

18/05/2016

"The New Odyssey": stories of the refugee crisis


Just out:

The New Odyssey



The New Odyssey

Patrick Kingsley
Paperback 

Book of the Moment


The New Odyssey is a work of original, bold reporting written with a perfect mix of compassion and authority by the journalist who knows the subject better than any other.

Europe is facing a wave of migration unmatched since the end of World War II - and no one has reported on this crisis in more depth or breadth than the Guardian's migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley.

‘Tremendously impressive… Vivid, sometimes shocking, always telling… The story of what lies behind the news from the Mediterranean has rarely been told so strongly.’   Philip Pullman


DESCRIPTION

'A brilliant, humane, sweeping account of the European refugee crisis. Kingsley has produced the great piece of reporting this issue so badly needs.'   Alan Rusbridger.

Europe is facing a wave of migration unmatched since the end of World War II - and no one has reported on this crisis in more depth or breadth than the Guardian's migration correspondent, Patrick Kingsley.

Throughout 2015, Kingsley travelled to 17 countries along the migrant trail, meeting hundreds of refugees making epic odysseys across deserts, seas and mountains to reach the holy grail of Europe.

This is Kingsley's unparalleled account of who these voyagers are. It's about why they keep coming, and how they do it. It's about the smugglers who help them on their way, and the coastguards who rescue them at the other end. The volunteers that feed them, the hoteliers that house them, and the border guards trying to keep them out. And the politicians looking the other way.

The New Odyssey is a work of original, bold reporting written with a perfect mix of compassion and authority by the journalist who knows the subject better than any other.


'A must read for our times'   Yanis Varoufakis

This is a unique achievement speeding urgent insight, understanding, and wake up calls for the rest of us who sleep easy in our beds at night.'  Jon Snow

'Kingsley is doing the world an invaluable service by showing that migrants are particular and human, not collective and a group, and that each of them – just like us - has a story of their own.'  David Hare

'A really moving and important publication. It provides a basis of fact and analysis that is truly important at a time of great challenge for humanity. I have no hesitation in recommending it.' Peter Sutherland United Nations Special Representative of the Secretary General for International Migration

'Deeply moving and hugely timely...The New Odyssey reminds us that behind the statistics and headlines lie real lives, driven by desperation and simply wanting a safer future. It should be compulsory reading.'  Caroline Lucas MP


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Bristol and the EU



Anyone could go for me and record?? Wish I could stay longer...


link: http://www.obv.org.uk/news-blogs/bristol-debates-eu-referendum



Bristol debates EU Referendum


The newly elected Mayor Marvin Rees has agreed to give a few opening remarks at the EU, in-out debate, in Bristol next week. Three racial equality organisations are teaming up to put on a European Referendum debate in Bristol on the 26th of May.
Voice4Change England, Operation Black Vote and the Black South West Network are holding this crucial debate from 6:00 -8:30 in the evening at M Shed in Bristol, to encourage and promote voter registration ahead of next month’s referendum.
The issues that are to be discussed around ‘Brexit’ will affect every person in Bristol that’s why we are encouraging a lively debate for the remain or leave arguments around the EU.
Our organisations are also very keen for young people and all Black and minority ethnic groups to register to vote. Young people and those BME communities are often less likely to be registered to vote than other groups.
In this critical debate all our differing opinions are valid in a healthy democracy, and events like these encourage more engagement from the diverse back grounds in Bristol.
The debate is also supported by Up Our Street, BabassaInc, Hope Not Hate and the Somali Forum.

You can book your ticket here: http://blacksouthwestnetwork.eventwax.com
And to register to vote: https://goo.gl/2UN5Su
Time: 6pm -8.30pm
Date: Thursday 26th May 2016
Venue: M Shed, Prince Wharf, Wapping Road, Bristol BS1 4RN


Reporting on the 'Brexit' referendum


I'll be in the UK the coming days and mid-June to report on the Brexit's campaign and its effects on voters and citizens.

Today, as a starter, I've been following this debate in Paris:


Melissa Chemam checked in to Sciences Po.
3 hrsParis
« The UK Referendum and the Future of the European Union »
Une discussion avec :

Hugo Dixon, rédacteur en chef de InFacts et auteur de The In/Out Question
Toby Young, rédacteur adjoint de The Spectator et chroniqueur pour The Telegraph
Ana Palacio, ancienne Ministre des Affaires Etrangères d’Espagne
Hubert Védrine, ancien Ministre des Affaires Etrangères de France

More details here:




Full room to hear ,,Toby Young, +Hubert Vedrine speak on


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Apart from Mr Toby Young, all guest were in favour of the UK remaining in the EU for political and economic reasons.

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Britons, I want to hear your views! On the EU, on politics, on our future. Express yourself.

I'll be editing a radio package first, then probably writing.

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Let's start with  a point of view:


EU is far from being a superstate

WHY BRITAIN SHOULD STAY IN

THE EU


EU is far from being a superstate

by David Hannay | 17.05.2016


The Leave campaign’s standard operating procedure is to exaggerate the EU’s actual powers, to allege creep in their exercise and to cast doubt on the British government’s ability to block any extension of those powers. Hence, frequent references to the “Brussels octopus”. Hence, too, the reiterated citing of non-legislative documents (their current favourite being the Five Presidents’ report ) whose recommendations have not been accepted by the member states and are unlikely ever to be so.
Let us look first at those policy areas where decisions can only be taken if the British government agrees to them. These are all highly significant matters – treaty change, enlargement negotiations (which would give Britain a veto on Turkey joining the EU), common foreign and security policy, European defence policy, and any lifting of the EU’s revenue ceiling or changes in the UK’s budget rebate
Moreover any proposal to shift the boundaries between provisions requiring unanimity and those that can be decided by Qualified Majority voting would need treaty change and would, in all likelihood, trigger the requirement for a new referendum in the UK, as provided for in the 2011 European Referendum Act – the “double lock” to which the government often refers. How likely is it that any British government in the years ahead would set out down that course; or that any group of EU member states would try to persuade them to do so?
This argument over how much of our legislation is actually based on EU decisions is muddied by a dispute over figures – the House of Commons Library says 13%, the Leave campaign somewhere north of 60%. Quite a big gap. How can that be explained? Well the Leavers throw in a large number of EU decisions which have no practical application in this country at all, such as provisions relating to the production of olive oil, or tobacco, or cotton or competition policy decisions relating to state aid in another member state.
But in any case what matters is not just quantity but quality. And so, when you look at policy areas that British people really mind about a lot – the NHS, our military deployments, our social security system, the education system, the future of the BBC, our use of intelligence material, our controls over immigration from third countries outside the EU, the devolution of powers to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland – you find that the key decisions remain in our own hands and under the control of parliament.
Our role as a Permanent Member of the UN Security Council is explicitly protected in the treaty and we are only constrained by EU policy there when we ourselves have given our prior agreement to that policy. On the exchange of intelligence, we often cooperate with other member states because it is in our national interest to do so; but we cannot be compelled to do so against our will.
We also have opted out of the EU’s two problem areas – the single currency and the border-free Schengen Area. The only policy area which voters really care about that parliament doesn’t control is free movement of people from the rest of the EU. Not only is this the quid pro quo for access to the single market, which is responsible for half our trade; it is also economically beneficial.
The failure to say any of this constitutes part of the Leave campaign’s own Project Fear.

17/05/2016

Massive Attack meets Bristol again



What a fantastic news! Perfect start of the day. Music and politics, in Bristol, with the greatest artists and musicians of the UK... Who could dream of a better idea?

Massive's message this morning:


"We are curating what we hope will become an annual event something made in Bristol with a truly colonial reach. We will also use the project to engage with the important social and political issues of the day".

Tickets available from 9am Friday 20th May at tickets.massiveattackbristol.co.uk





In the news:


Massive Attack To Perform On The Downs

Tuesday, May 17th, 2016 7:00am
TheBreeze.com


The Bristol band are putting on an outdoor concert on 3rd September on The Downs, with Primal Scream and Skepta also on the bill.

This will be the first time The Downs has been used for a major music event for over 15 years. It will be an all-day event with more acts to be added to the line up.

Massive Attack band member 3D said: "We are curating what we hope will become an annual event something made in Bristol with an international reach.  We will also use the project to engage with the important social and political issues of the day".

The show has been curated in partnership with Team Love (promoters of Love Saves the Day) and Crosstown Concerts.

Tom Paine, Co-founder of Team Love explains; "We've been talking with the band now for many years now about trying to put a show of this scale on together - and it finally feels like the moment is right."

Tickets, priced at £37.50 plus booking fee will go on sale on Friday 20th May at 9am via http://tickets.massiveattackbristol.co.uk, Songkick.com, Seetickets.com, Gigantic.com and Bristolticketshop.co.uk. 

Tickets will go on sale at 8am Friday 20th May from Idle Hands record shop on Cheltenham Road and Bristol Ticket Shop, to personal callers only.

There will be a limited number of reduced price tickets at £25 available to anyone unemployed or on income support. These tickets are only available in person from Bristol Ticket Shop, and supporting documentation and ID will be required. Children under 5 are free (though must be wearing adequate hearing protection) and a limited number of tickets for children aged 5- 12 years will be available at all outlets for £10 per ticket. All under 16's need accompanying by an adult.

Tickets are restricted to six tickets per person/per billing address. Please note that in order to protect our audience from ticket touts we are putting in measures to help eliminate them. The lead booker will need to attend the event (or nominate a 3rd party at the point of purchase) with their guests and will need to show photo ID in order to enter the concert arena.



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On BBC Bristol:


It's Tuesday, it's sort of sunny and this is BBC Local Live.
And to kick off, we have some good news this morning. Good news for music fans anyway.
Massive Attack has announced an outdoor concert in September on the Downs in Bristol.
It'll apparently be the first time the Downs has been used for a major music event for more than 15 years.

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Well, obviously organiser Tom Paine's very enthusiastic about the planned outdoor concert on the Downs, but it would seem that others are less keen.

In fact, some living in the area "feel as though it's a massive attack on the Downs", according to Conservative councillor Peter Abraham, who is on the Downs Committee.
He said there would be objections to the licence which have to be heard before a final decision is made on whether the event can go ahead.
"Let's challenge the council - have they totally agreed to this?" he said.
"If they have, they've ignored any proper consultation and that is quite disgraceful. Whatever your views of the concert, surely we've got to go through the democratic system."

Tom Paine, who's organising the outdoor Massive Attack concert on the Downs in Bristol - announced this morning - has been on BBC Radio Bristol talking about it.
He said: "We've been speaking to the council and the Downs committees for quite a few years now, and talking with the band for quite a few years about trying to put on a concert of this size for them in Bristol, and it seems like it's finally all come together this year."

link: http://www.bbc.com/news/live/uk-england-bristol-36305284?ns_mchannel=social&ns_source=twitter&ns_campaign=bbc_live&ns_linkname=573ad7f7e4b02b8f874b3603%26A%20'massive%20attack'%20on%20the%20Downs%3F%26&ns_fee=0#post_573ad7f7e4b02b8f874b3603



16/05/2016

Fuocoammare - Fire at Sea: Greetings from Lampedusa



"Fuocoammare" al 25° Innsbruck International Film Festival
"Fuocoammare" di Gianfranco Rosi è stato selezionato alla venticinquesima edizione dell'Innsbruck International Film Festival, che si terrà dal 24 al 29 maggio 2016 nella città austriaca.

Gianfranco Rosi è andato a Lampedusa, nell’epicentro del clamore mediatico, per cercare, laddove sembrerebbe non esserci più, l’invisibile e le sue storie. Seguendo il suo metodo di totale immersione, Rosi si è trasferito per più di un anno sull’isola facendo esperienza di cosa vuol dire vivere sul confine più simbolico d’Europa raccontando i diversi destini di chi sull’isola ci abita da sempre, i lampedusani, e chi ci arriva per andare altrove, i migranti. 
Da questa immersione è nato "Fuocoammare". Racconta di Samuele che ha 12 anni, va a scuola, ama tirare con la fionda e andare a caccia. Gli piacciono i giochi di terra, anche se tutto intorno a lui parla del mare e di uomini, donne e bambini che cercano di attraversarlo per raggiungere la sua isola. Ma non è un’isola come le altre, è Lampedusa, approdo negli ultimi 20 anni di migliaia di migranti in cerca di libertà. Samuele e i lampedusani sono i testimoni a volte inconsapevoli, a volte muti, a volte partecipi, di una tra le più grandi tragedie umane dei nostri tempi. (15/05/2016, 11:38)









Fire at Sea (Fuocoammare) 2016 Film Trailer


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f8Kc5wy0Rxg


The documentary captures life on the Italian island of Lampedusa, a frontline in the European migrant crisis. Situated some 200km off Italy’s southern coast, Lampedusa has hit world headlines in recent years as the first port of call for hundreds of thousands of African and Middle Eastern migrants hoping to make a new life in Europe. Rosi spent months living on the Mediterranean island, capturing its history, culture and the current everyday reality of its 6,000-strong local population as hundreds of migrants land on its shores on a weekly basis. The resulting documentary focuses on 12-year-old Samuele, a local boy who loves to hunt with his slingshot and spend time on land even though he hails from a culture steeped in the sea.

Release Date: 18 Feb 2016 (Italy) - 28 Sept 2016 (France)
Countries: Italy, France
Language: English
Genre: Documentary
Director: Gianfranco Rosi

15/05/2016

James Baldwin on freedom


I love this quote, of course:

"The importance of a writer is continuous… His importance, I think, is that he is here to describe things which other people are too busy to describe"...

Again, thanks to Branpickings.org. Such a great website for writers!

https://www.brainpickings.org/2016/05/09/james-baldwin-freedom/?mc_cid=fa52e3d295&mc_eid=cd5a6845cc


James Baldwin on Freedom and How We Imprison Ourselves

“We made the world we’re living in and we have to make it over.”

James Baldwin on Freedom and How We Imprison Ourselves
“Everything can be taken from a man,” Viktor Frankl wrote in his timeless treatise on the human search for meaning“but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” And yet, as Adrienne Rich observed in her sublime meditation on writing, capitalism, and freedom, “in the vocabulary kidnapped from liberatory politics, no word has been so pimped as freedom.” How, then, are we to choose our own way amid a capitalist society that continually commodifies our liberty? 
The peculiar manner in which personal and political freedom magnetize each other is what James Baldwin (August 2, 1924–December 1, 1987) explores in a piece titled “Notes for a Hypothetical Novel,” originally delivered as an address at the 1960 Esquire symposium on the writer’s role in society and later included in his altogether spectacular essay collection Nobody Knows My Name (public library).

Baldwin writes:
Freedom is not something that anybody can be given; freedom is something people take and people are as free as they want to be. One hasn’t got to have an enormous military machine in order to be un-free when it’s simpler to be asleep, when it’s simpler to be apathetic, when it’s simpler, in fact, not to want to be free, to think that something else is more important.
In a sentiment that calls to mind Nobel laureate Nadine Gordimer’s piercing words on the writer’s responsibility as a bastion of freedom, Baldwin adds:
The importance of a writer is continuous… His importance, I think, is that he is here to describe things which other people are too busy to describe.
Perhaps the most vital things for the writer to describe, Baldwin argues, are the habitual ways in which we imprison ourselves and relinquish our own freedom. Exactly half a century after Lebanese poet and philosopher Kahlil Gibran’s stirring reflections on the seeming self vs. the appearing self and shortly before Hannah Arendt formulated her enduring ideas on being vs. appearing and our impulse for self-display, Baldwin writes:
There is an illusion about America, a myth about America to which we are clinging which has nothing to do with the lives we lead and I don’t believe that anybody in this country who has really thought about it or really almost anybody who has been brought up against it — and almost all of us have one way or another — this collision between one’s image of oneself and what one actually is is always very painful and there are two things you can do about it, you can meet the collision head-on and try and become what you really are or you can retreat and try to remain what you thought you were, which is a fantasy, in which you will certainly perish.
Two years before he came to converse with Margaret Mead about reimagining democracy for a post-consumerist world, Baldwin observes:
We have some idea about reality which is not quite true. Without having anything whatever against Cadillacs, refrigerators or all the paraphernalia of American life, I yet suspect that there is something much more important and much more real which produces the Cadillac, refrigerator, atom bomb, and what produces it, after all, is something which we don’t seem to want to look at, and that is the person.
Echoing Eleanor Roosevelt’s clarion call for our individual role in democracy and social change, Baldwin adds:
A country is only as good… only as strong as the people who make it up and the country turns into what the people want it to become… I don’t believe any longer that we can afford to say that it is entirely out of our hands. We made the world we’re living in and we have to make it over.
Complement this particular fragment of the wholly invigorating Nobody Knows My Name with Susan Sontag on literature and freedom and the great Zen teacher D.T. Suzuki on what freedom really means, then revisit Baldwin on the artist’s struggle for integritythe revelation that taught him to see, his forgotten conversations with Margaret Mead about identity, race, power, and forgiveness and with Nikki Giovanni about what it means to be truly empowered, and his advice to aspiring writers.

'Where do you draw the line?' Documentary



'Where do you draw the line?'

Documentary film exploring the complex issues surrounding an indigenous community in the Ecuadorian
Amazon fighting enforced oil extraction on their land.
WordSmith ProductionsFounded in 2013 in by Mike & Joseph, following the production
of Where Do You Draw The Line? in the Ecuadorian Amazon.


Extended Trailer




More about the film:


'Where do you draw the line?' is a documentary telling the story of a small indigenous community fighting enforced oil extraction in the Ecuadorian Amazon. 

Narrated by Daddy G of Massive Attack and filmed in Sani Isla and Ecuador’s capital city, Quito, this feature-length self-funded documentary film tells the story of the indigenous Kichwa community living in Sani Isla along the Napo River, bordering the Yasuni national park.

It features:
Academics who explain the governments push for oil in order to fund development;
Leading researchers who demonstrate the unique species and rich biodiversity existing within the region;
Community members explaining their long history in the area, and their plans for a sustainable future based on eco-tourism for future generations;
And a government minister who was part of a now cancelled initiative which could have saved the region entirely.

Repeatedly threatened with enforced oil extraction by both the government and military on their ancestral land, the people of Sani Isla have thus-far remained strong in the face of Petro-dollar$, resolving instead to maintain their traditional way of life.

Breaking their bond with a forest that has sustained their people for generations would be the death of their culture and community.

In a globalised world of mass consumption run on fossil fuels, could it be that we all play in a part in the destruction of this pristine rainforest? If so, 'Where do you draw the line?'


Production notes:
This is a first-time documentary planned, filmed, produced and edited by a self funded team of university graduates on an almost non-existant budget. This documentary is a labour of love released with the intention of giving the people of Sani Isla a platform on which to tell their story...


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