Posts Tagged ‘Syrian uprising’
Older Bi-Weekly report on Lebanon: Walid Jumblatt and March 14 alliance
Posted by: adonis49 on: January 28, 2021
Nothing changed: Bi-Weekly report (#28)
Posted on:August 7, 2009
Walid Jumblatt has exited from the March 14 alliance (opposing Hezbollah and those seeking Syria support or March 8 alliance) two days ago: he has 11 deputies in the Lebanese Parliament.
Simple arithmetic shows that the previous majority in the Parliament is now the minority. The designated Saad Hariri PM failed to form a government in over 45 days while he was the leader of the majority.
The President of the Republic should recall all the political blocks to designate another person for the job.
Walid Jumblatt exit is not solely based on political divergences but mainly on his apprehension that the delay in forming the government is encouraging Israel to start another wave of political assassinations to destabilize Lebanon in this extended political vacuum.
Actually, for two months Israel has been escalating its war threats in frequent speeches and in actions along Lebanon’s south borders. After Jumblatt split from his previous alliance, Israel toned down its threats.
Israel never dared launched its frequent offensive wars on any people that is united under unity national governments.
Walid Jumblatt knows that in matter of Lebanon internal security, in the balance, Syria out weight all the world States diplomacy combined.
There was a period of an entire year after the assassination of Rafic Hariri in 2005 where Syria seemed on the defensive and refrained from interfering in Lebanon’s endemic problems. This is when the alliance of March 14 was created to salvage the international court and make sure that Syria withdrew from Lebanon.
For three years, this March 14 alliance went as far as condemning Hezbollah defensive war against Israel in July 12, 2006 and sucking up to Bush Junior and Condalisa.
This period is witnessing a major shift of rapprochement toward Syria. Saudi Kingdom policies are becoming closer to Syria’s policies than Egypt of Mubarak. Mubarak has been keeping the formation of our government hostage to his senile policies.
The fact is Egypt under Mubarak has retreated from the “Arab” States issues, is out of the Arab world and out of Africa too. Moubarak is not even able to get the Palestinian Hamas and Fatah to agree on a few common denominators.
Saad Hariri has lost the confidence of the Lebanese people as the appropriate PM at this junction. Hariri squandered all the good will and patience that the opposition was willing to extend. Hariri opted to wait for external powers to agree among themselves, instead of uniting Lebanon under a unity national government. (Nothing changed in his attitude: he is still waiting for foreign powers to give him the Green Light to form a government in 2021)
I coined a quote: “You want to go into politics in Lebanon? Warnings! Observe Saad Hariri. First you don’t think much, then your mind quickly slides into deep coma.”
Note 1: Lately, with the Syrian uprising in 2011, Walid crossed the Rubicon and sided squarely with the rebels: He hates the Assad family because the late Hafez Assad assassinated Walid father, Kamal Jumblatt. The Druze in Syria didn’t respond to Walid’s calls to join the insurrection…
Note 2: In the current government of Mikati PM (2012), Walid is boasting that he is the power broker between the two majority blocks in the government, but is mostly siding with Mikati and the opposition March 14 alliance of the Mubarak.
ZAATARI Refugee Camp, Jordan: Behind Barbed Wire, Shakespeare Inspires a Cast of Young Syrians
Posted by: adonis49 on: April 2, 2014
Behind Barbed Wire, Shakespeare Inspires a Cast of Young Syrians
On a rocky patch of earth in this sprawling city of tents and prefab trailers, the king, dressed in dirty jeans and a homemade cape, raised his wooden scepter and announced his intention to divide his kingdom.
His elder daughters, wearing paper crowns and plastic jewelry, showered him with false praise, while the youngest spoke truthfully and lost her inheritance.
BEN HUBBARD published this MARCH 31, 2014 in the nyt:

ZAATARI REFUGEE CAMP, Jordan.
So began a recent adaptation here of “King Lear.”
For the 100 children in the cast, it was their first brush with Shakespeare, although they were already deeply acquainted with tragedy.
All were refugees who had fled the civil war in Syria. Some had seen their homes destroyed. Others had lost relatives to violence. Many still had trouble sleeping or jumped at loud noises.
And now home was here, in this isolated, treeless camp, a place of poverty, uncertainty and boredom.
Reflecting the demographics of Syria’s wider refugee crisis, more than half of the 587,000 refugees registered in Jordan are younger than 18, according to the United Nations. About 60,000 of those young people live in the Zaatari camp, where fewer than a quarter regularly attend school.
Parents and aid workers fear that Syria’s war threatens to create a lost generation of children who are scarred by violence and miss vital years of education, and that those experiences and disadvantages will follow them into adulthood.
The “King Lear” performance, the conclusion of a project than spanned months, was one attempt to fight that threat.
“The show is to bring back laughter, joy and humanity,” said its director, Nawar Bulbul, a 40-year-old Syrian actor known at home for his role in “Bab al-Hara,” an enormously popular historical drama that was broadcast throughout the Arab world.
The play owed its production largely to Mr. Bulbul. Smoking hand-rolled cigarettes and speaking with the animated face of a stage actor who never stops performing, Mr. Bulbul described his journey from television star to children’s director.
When the Syrian uprising broke out in 2011, he joined with gusto, appearing at antigovernment protests, leading chants and drawing the ire of the security services. A play he produced was banned, and a fellow actor who supported the government informed him that he could either appear on television to rectify his stance or expect to be arrested.
“I told him I would think about it, and a week later I was out of the country,” Mr. Bulbul said.
Last year, he and his French wife moved to Jordan, where friends invited him to help distribute aid in Zaatari. The visit exposed him to what he called “the big lie” of international politics that had failed to stop the war.
“There are people who want to go home, and they are the victims while the great powers fight above them,” he said.
Children he met in the camp made him promise to return, and he did — with a plan to show the world that the least fortunate Syrian refugees could produce the loftiest theater.
The sun blazed on the day of the performance, staged on a rocky rectangle of land surrounded by a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire. The 12 main actors stood in the middle, while the rest of the cast stood behind them, a chorus that provided commentary and dramatic sound effects. The audience sat on the ground.
When each of Lear’s first two daughters tricked him with false flattery in elegant, formal Arabic, the chorus members yelled “Liar! Hypocrite!” until the sisters told them to shut up.
And when the third sister refused to follow suit, the chorus members yelled “Truthful! Just!” until the king told them to shut up.

Refugees fleeing fighting in Syria in May, 2013, relocated to the Zaatari refugee camp in northern Jordan where they face dusty days and cold nights in an uncertain existence with no end in sight.
In later scenes, the king was heckled by the Fool, who wore a rainbow-colored wig, and 8 boys performed a choreographed sword fight with lengths of plastic tubing.
A few scenes from “Hamlet” were spliced in, making the story hard to follow. And at one point, a tanker truck carrying water roared by, drowning out the actors and coating the audience in a cloud of dust.
But the mere fact that the play was performed was enough for the few hundred spectators. Families living in nearby tents brought their children, hoisting them on their shoulders so they could see.
After Lear’s descent into madness and death, the cast surrounded the audience, triumphantly chanting “To be or not to be!” in English and Arabic. The crowd burst into applause, and a number of the leading girls broke into tears. Mr. Bulbul said they were overwhelmed because it was the first time anyone had clapped for them.
After the show, as journalists interviewed the cast, the parents boasted of their children’s talent.
“I am the mother of King Lear,” declared Intisar al-Baradan when asked if she had seen the play. She had brought about 20 relatives to the performance, she said, adding that her son was also a great singer.
Other parents described the project as a rare point of light in a bleak camp existence.
Hatem Azzam, whose daughter Rowan, 12, played one of Lear’s daughters, said the family fled Damascus after government forces set his carpentry shop on fire.
“We were a rebellious neighborhood, so they burned every shop on the street,” Mr. Azzam said.
He arrived in Zaatari a year ago with 5 other family members, but one of his brothers got sick and died soon afterward, and his elderly mother never adjusted to the desert climate and died, too, he said.
He hesitated to send his children to school, fearing that they would get sick in the crowded classrooms, and he kept them from roaming the camp because he did not want them to start smoking or pick up other bad habits. But the theater project was close to home, and his daughter was so excited about it that he let her go.
“People get opportunities in life, and you have to take advantage of them,” Mr. Azzam said. “She got a chance to act when she was young, so that could make it easier for her in the future.”
The mother of Bushra al-Homeyid, 13, who played another of Lear’s daughters, said the family had fled Syria after government shelling killed her niece and nephew.
“The camp is an incomplete life, a temporary life,” she said. “We hope that our time here will be limited.”
But after a year here, she worried that her eldest daughter, who was in high school, would not be ready to go to college.
Bushra, grinning widely and still wearing her yellow paper crown, said she had never acted before but wanted to continue.
“I like that I can change my personality and be someone else,” she said.