Archive for August, 2008

Politics and Prose: Moustafa Bayoumi

Last month I flew to the Midwest from Washington, D.C. to stay at a small cabin in the woods with my parents, brother and the families of my dad’s brothers and sisters. While some days were spent on the water or exploring tourist traps, the evenings were without fail reserved for cocktail hour followed by dinner and a family bonfire. One night the bonfire talk turned to religion spurred on by my dad. He knew what he was getting himself into with his conservative brother and son and his liberal sister and daughter. During the discussion my brother got up at one point to get a copy of the part of the Koran that talks about the importance of killing in Muslim faith. I said, “Go ahead then.” But he couldn’t deliver. My uncle’s wife said, “I don’t ever want to know anything about those people,” referring to Muslims in general I suppose. I talked about how not everyone of the Muslim faith believes in Jihad and my relatives tried to argue that it is part of their religion so everyone must believe in it. I encouraged them to look at Christians and how everyone has their own interpretation of the bible. Okay maybe I yelled, “DO CHRISTIANS?” They argued that killing is different than how to take communion and with that the conversation moved onto safer ground.

This conversation has stuck with me after the week in the woods and I was frustrated about my relatives behavior. After hearing an interview on NPR with Moustafa Bayoumi about his new Book “How Does it Feel to be a Probem?”, a look at the real lives of seven Arab-Americans and how they are discriminated against, I realized he would be speaking later that night at Politics and Prose, a DC staple on the book tour circuit. My intention was to get to the talk early because I figured the place would be packed. I arrived just as Moustafa was being introduced, but was able to easily find a seat among the 15 or so empty out of the 50 total that were set up.

W.E.B. Du Bois and his book The Souls of Black Folk was an inspiration for the book’s title and also many of the sentiments within. He talked about his desire to help expose discrimination toward Arab Americans with his book which retells the real-life stories of seven Arab-Americans living in Brooklyn. The first reading came from the introduction where Moustafa outlines why he chose Brooklyn, which he sees as a diverse borrough that can be used to tell the story of America in general.

After the introduction, Moustafa gave an overview of each of the seven young people and the stories each individual chapter focuses on. There was the Christian Arab-American soldier who was on his way to training camp the eve of September 11th, 2001; Yasmine, a fifteen year old girl, asked to resign from her position as student council secretary because she didn’t want to attend the school dances due to religious reasons; a girl whose boyfriend was detained and eventually deported for being a spy for Saddam Hussein; the boy who landed an internship with Al-Jezeera only to find later that this actually hurt his job search prospects rather than helped them.  After Moustafa had given us a taste of each character and story he read specifically from Yasmine’s the part where she goes to a lawyer about her case which he says he would be happy to take on for a mere $6,000.

Throughout the reading Moustafa was dynamic, knowledgeable and visibly enthusiastic about his subject. People in the audience seemed engaged. The next aisle over there was an older Arab woman with her head down who was crying into a kleenex. I don’t know why she was so sad, but she stayed that way for about half of the presentation.

After 30 minutes of reading, the floor was opened up to Questions and Answers. Most of the questions were relevant, forgiving softballs. Someone asked him to explain why he had chosen youth, another wanted to know about the process of choosing only seven subjects. Nestled in the middle there was a angry, old guy looking to trap the speaker. I don’t know if he was so angry he didn’t judge the audience or maybe he just didn’t care. He asked why Yasmine didn’t participate in the school dance, but as herself. While Moustafa tried to explain that she had proposed an alternative, the man likened the alternative to hiring a typist who can’t type. At this point the crowd all disagreed and someone even told the guy to sit down. He didn’t, though, and went on to his final question of five which was about suicide bombers and how they were bad. As if he was telling us something new. There was an Arab girl to my left and we exchanged “look at this crazy” glances before turning back to the story.

After fielding the last question which asked about the comparison between Arab youth in Europe compared to Arab-American youth, Moustafa talked briefly about the optimism of his book and thus began the signing part of the evening. As I was listening and watching the crowd, I was frustrated for my family that they were not there. Around the bonfire at one point my aunt said, “Oh, what do you have Muslim friends.” “Of course I do,” I replied. The reality that Moustafa is trying to point out happens in my own family; if my family had some personal experience with Muslims outside of the media’s scapegoating, then maybe they would be able to see them as more than just a problem.

What Really Matters — Obama’s Weight

Appearance and the media’s obsession with it is a common topic for feminists and women’s rights activists( Why should models be airbrushed? Why is being waif thin attractive?), but the other day we were presented with a new and very unusual twist. Last week The Wall Street Journal published an article titled “Too Fit to be President?” which address the issue of Obama’s healthy lifestyle and lack of heft sitting uneasily with some voters. With the understanding that commenting on a bad rumor doesn’t make it go away, I want to take a minute to think about this.

After having lived abroad for a number of years, I was shocked to turn on the TV during a recent visit to the Midwest to see public service announcements calling for healthier eating. I learned quickly that schools were hiring nutritional experts, McDonalds was serving salads, and trans-fats were on their way out. I read the Time article about obesity: the epidemic and why it is happening. The message I have been getting is that being overweight is bad and being healthy is good – diabetes, high blood pressure, fatigue bad; high-energy, feeling good about yourself good.

Okay society now I am a little confused, should I be waif thin and sexy or does that put me at fault for any sexual harassment that comes my way? Should I thin and healthy like the public service announcements or should I dive into the grease and sweets to be able to relate to those around me which is basically the message Obama received from CHOZICK of the Wall Street Journal? In fact recent follow up articles in other papers have reported on Obama back steeping  his way right into pies and greasy hamburgers.

Regardless of how anyone feels about Obama as a candidate, we need to be savvy enough to realize this is just another ploy to focus the attention somewhere that it really shouldn’t be.  To get the real statistics on Obama’s—or any house or party member – check out AAUWs congressional report at http://capwiz.com/aauw/dbq/officials. Perhaps rather than thinking about who goes to McDonalds after what three-mile run, people should start thinking about how their candidates are voting about the issues that matter.

And as for me I hope that there will be less focus on how thin and waif-like I can be or how healthy or how like most Americans and more about my accomplishments. With all these mixed messages I am ready to go back to Brazil where working out is part of the lifestyle and most people eat well because the food is generally healthy.  Forget this too skinny too fat business I need to go running to clear my head and who knows where I might stop off for a bite afterward. And who cares?

World Affairs Council – Ambassador of Zimbabwe

I arrived at the ambassador of Zimbabwe’s speech hosted by World Affairs Council 30 minutes early. I figured by the time he arrived it would be standing room only and I didn’t want to be that guy. I was also worried that I would have to fight my way in, I’m a student! I’m an American! I’m interested! I was prepared to argue. However I walked right into the ordinary business center, down to the basement conference room and signed right in. Since there were only 3 people already in the room with chairs enough for 90 I decided to get a coffee.

Returning at 9:20 I was easily able to take a seat in one of the first few rows noticing that there were still about 50 empty chairs which only half filled before the ambassador was introduced at 6:40. Probably about 40-50% of the crowd was students (for us it was free and for others between $15-$25).

The introduction began with a few highlights of the Zimbabwe of the past and then moved a barrage of the current tragedies: AIDS, inflation, decreased life expectancy, tyranny, the list went on and on.

The ambassador began his speech with a not so brief history lesson about colonialism which he basically used to explain away the current situation. He spoke in a slow, consistently deliberate manner with a deep gravelly voice and a slight British accent. The only slight emotion was punctuated at times with a widening of his eyes. He told of Rhodesia’s position as “white man’s country” along with S. Africa, new Zealand, Canada and Australia. It was here that he revealed two policies of the “WMC” one which pushed to move natives onto native reserves where M. was born.

Rhodesia fought a war for independence that began in 1966 and ended the year I was born in 1979. In 1980 the first democratic elections were held. The room began to murmur as he discussed the March 29th election results stating that although the opposition opponent tried to withdraw from the run off race citing violence it was not a valid withdraw due to legal time constraints. This meant that Mugabe was allowed to run anyway against a no longer existing opposite.

The ambassador then went on to talk about the African Union summit in Egypt on July 1st, 2008 in which Africa seemed to, for the most part, be supporting Zimbabwe. While the US and EU “unilaterally decided to impose more sanctions.” He went on to ask why the Nigerian election which was also rife with violence did not invoke US and EU sanctions.

Before the floor was opened to questions he admitted that the economy in Zimbabwe was in “unprecedented turmoil,” but he was quick to add that there had been some steps toward progress that were being taken.

The question and answer series was basically a study in dodging and composure. The first question was asked about the inflation rate to which the ambassador responded that we would all have to wait for a statement which was to be made the next day, today. The next person to stand up had less of a question than a long winded diatribe which he began by saying, “Thank you ambassador for your misinformed presentation.” The room began to look around at each other. Did we hear him right? He went on in a really difficult to understand accent until one of the moderators asked him to get to the question. In answer to the question about the current state of politics the ambassador readdressed the colonialism argument and restated the rules of the electoral process.

One question was about the recent lack of support from S. Africa to which the ambassador admitted was true. And as a follow up someone asked about Mugabe’s claims that foreign investors were ruining the Zimbabwean economy to which he listed some numbers about how many European companies are currently in Zimbabwe. The last question was a struggle between a young suited guy and an older woman. Age won over beauty and the woman stood to ask about the current state of the farm land that was taken from land owners and given to landless natives. Everyone knew the answer to this question and chuckled as she asked. “Not so good,” was the response. He expanded on the statement to say you need to have farmland in order to learn to be farmers. This response concluded the presentation.

Before leaving the room, I stood in line with the other business-card wielding guests to speak to the ambassador. A man directly in front of me, clapped the ambassador on the shoulder and asked permission to speak to him at a later date about a private matter. I, in contrast, shook the man’s hand, said thanks for coming and walked off.

Damn Passwords

So indicative of everything else in my life I wasn’t planning ahead properly and my other wordpress acct is connect to an email that I no longer have access to. So since I haven’t used the wordpress acct. in decades and basically forgot my password, I can’t get a new one because the email attached to the account is no longer valid. With no better solution I decided to start a new blog and connect it somehow with the old blog. So here we go…this will be my own blog part II.

Linking to my Former Blog “Is That All There Is?”

As explained in my first post this is actually the continuation of a blog that I started about a year and half ago when I was living in Brazil. The blog was dormant for a long time, but there are so many interesting things to write about here in DC and I have been inspired in my new job where I am writing many blogs that I decided to start again. To look at my profile or past work please go to “Is That All There Is?” Most of the writing I did when I first started were attempts at political satires in hopes of getting discovered by The Onion. Don’t worry, there’s still time!