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About Ramblings of a Hopeless Khowaga

Welcome to my Web site. My name is Chris, and I’ll be your host. I\'m an opinionated, snarky, gay academic with a predilection for the history, the Arab world, languages, photography, food, and music. I live in Austin, Texas. You can read more about me, learn 100 random things about me, and if you’re wondering what the heck a khowaga is, click here. Feel free to browse, read, and leave comments!

Tag: ‘israel’



Random RoundUp

Wednesday, August 6th, 2008

It’s been so long since I’ve done one of these.  Let’s get right into it, shall we?

A coup in the north African country of Mauritania has effectively managed to bring democracy in the Arab world to an end. President Sidi Ould Cheikh Abdallahi, who was elected in free and fair elections two years ago, was arguably the only democratically elected leader in the entire Arab world, of which Mauritania was only considered part so that it could be said that there was at least one Arab democracy.  Now that he’s been overthrown, it’s likely that honor will go back to  … well, no one.

So much for democracy being on the march in the Middle East.  It’s gone back to goose-stepping.

A three-year-old girl was found wandering the duty free shop at Tel Aviv’s Ben Gurion International Airport on Monday after her parents boarded their flight to Paris with her four siblings, but apparently forgot her. While one would think that the empty seat would have been a tip-off, apparently the parents were so distracted/clueless that they didn’t realize that they’d forgotten their daughter until the pilot informed them after take-off.

Similarly, El Al Israel Airlines is apparently trying to determine how it was that the family of six managed to board the plane while handing over seven boarding passes without the gate agent noticing that someone was missing, either.

The good news is that the daughter probably got all the Toblerone she could stomach and will now have the ultimate guilt trip to lay on her Orthodox Jewish parents: “You left me in an airport when I was three and flew to France without me.”  It’s got to be worth at least a car.

A California woman sold her house to finance the cloning of her late dog, which has successfully resulted in the birth of five puppies, all genetic clones of the original. This would be unremarkable if not for this little tidbit: the dog’s name was Booger.

Seriously.  If you were going to go through all that trouble, wouldn’t you make up a more dignified sounding name?  I mean, if I had the wherewithall to clone my dog when she passes, I’d consider it.  I’d also consider renaming her if her name was, say, Poopy.  I’m just saying.

“I miss my dog!  He’s named for dried snot!”

Archaeologists are doing DNA tests on two mummified fetuses found in King Tut’s tomb to determine if they were his offspring.  As far as I know, no paternity suit against Tut has been filed on behalf of his wife, Ankhesenamun, for three thousand years worth of child support, raising the question: and this is important because … ?  Also, don’t the inscriptions on their coffins tell us who they are?  I mean, the ancient Egyptians could read and write.  They’re kind of known for it, actually.

Calvin Klein weighs in: it is apparently now necessary for CK underwear models to actually be wearing CK underwear in their ad campaigns.  The below photo of model Garrett Neff was rejected as being too hot, too racy, and … well, he’s technically not actually wearing the underwear, he’s just holding it in place.

I think this is an issue that requires further study. :mrgreen:

Next time: we’ll raise the following question for debate: Is John McCain smarter than Paris Hilton?  Are either of them smarter than a fifth grader?

Good News, Bad News, Red News, Blue News

Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

Where to begin?

So, a bit of good news to start off the day. Since before Christmas, we’ve all been pre-occupied with the black cloud hanging over our office: namely, that one of our junior professors was denied tenure. There’s been a lot of back-and-forthing, furtive meetings, behind the scenes negotiations, falling on various swords, and today the president’s tenure committee met and unanimously agreed to reverse the decision and grant him tenure. The “this never happens” quotient is extremely high — I’ve known lots of cases where people didn’t get tenure, but I’ve never actually heard of one where a reconsideration was actually made successfully.

The meeting must have taken no time at all because we had word by 10 this morning. It was quite a nice start to the day. Which segued right into nearly immediate frustration.

I have a colleague in another department who is very sweet except when she’s not, and today was one of those second days. She can be a bit flighty, and she’s always overworked and not terribly well organized, and she’s developed some interesting mechanisms to cope with it. The baseline is that nothing is ever her fault, even when it clearly is. In this case, she wanted to make changes to a project that’s ready to go to press because she felt that her contribution wasn’t good enough after reviewing the other contributions. It wouldn’t have been such a big deal if she hadn’t felt the need to justify this by implying that the specs for her part were stupid and restrictive, and stating openly that maybe we shouldn’t rush things to press (which we’re not). The irritating thing was that was clear (to everyone else) that she hadn’t followed the instructions properly, but it would, of course, be completely pointless to try to explain this.

Not that I wasn’t one of those being targeted, but I also had to spend a considerable amount of time talking through it with another colleague who was a little more directly in the line of fire. She was clearly upset, and rightly so — as was I. I did have to restrain myself from sending a snippy response to our mutual colleague, because the accusations were not only misguided but completely unnecessary. The situation we found ourselves could have been a very minor one and dealt with quickly, but the way she chose to deal with it turned it into a long, painful affair, and she made sure that we knew that blame had been assigned and that it lay elsewhere. (No, Will, you don’t know who this is.)

This is becoming a recurring situation with this particular colleague, and we’re a little tired of it.

I’ve also had really bizarre interactions with random people recently. I’ve been drafted to represent our department tomorrow evening at an event at which the Palestinian Prime Minister is the guest of honor. This has come up a few times in conversation, and the number of times that people have had to go out of their way to point out that Palestine isn’t a real country is obnoxious. (In a couple of cases, it was more like, “Palestine has a Prime Minister? They’re not a real country, are they?”)

Well, to be perfectly honest, no they’re not. But I’ve never said they were: the speaker is billed as the Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority. I never said otherwise. Technically, he’s the Prime Minster in a government that occasionally attempts to wield control of a semi-autonomous region of the West Bank that’s under Israeli military control, but that’s a little long to fit on a business card.

The bottom line is, those people will have to forgive me if I choose not to inform Mr. Fayyad if and when I meet him that he doesn’t represent a real country. I somehow think he knows the situation a little better than I do.

And finally … well, I did finally figure out who I’m going to vote for in the primary on March 4. You’ll forgive me if I elect not to disclose who that’s going to be. We don’t caucus here in Texas, and my vote’s still private. So there.

And on that note, I think I’m done here. Happy Wednesday to everyone!

Here’s some stuff you don’t see every day

Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

It’s the last week before the winter holiday, which means there’s no one around and it’s time for me to stop making excuses and finally clean up my office like I keep saying I’m going to.

There are some interesting things found on the shelves here.

Here’s a “Guide Map of the Imperial Government of Iran.” It has no copyright anywhere on it, but the little Iran Air route map shows Los Angeles — a planned, but never implemented, extension of the New York route — which probably dates it to 1978.

Map of Iran, 1978

Then I found a map of the world in English and Arabic that I purchased one evening wandering about the Talaat Harb neighborhood in downtown Cairo with Kamran and Samer. It’s a little unusual — it actually labels Israel as such. I have another one, solely in Arabic, that doesn’t, but then I realized that it’s technically a map of the Arab League countries, and Israel definitely isn’t a part of the League of Arab States.

Arabic map of the Middle East

The office cleaning shall continue all week. Let’s see what else I can find!

A wish for peace that works

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

Well, it’s December. It’s that time of year when we all get together and make nice-nice and celebrate the [symbolic] birth of our Lord and Savior (if you’re Christian), the prophet ‘Issa bin Maryam (if you’re Muslim), that dude everyone uses to justify being nasty to people (if you’re just about anyone else) and wish people peace and love by shooting them in malls in Nebraska, blowing up car bombs in Algiers and Beirut, and talking about maybe eventually thinking about the possibility of beginning negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians.

And it seems that His Imperial Eminence the Pope has announced that gay marriage is an obstacle to world peace. According to the Vatican, and I quote:

“Presenting the nuclear family as the ‘first and indispensable teacher of peace’ and the ‘primary agency of peace,’ the 15-page document links sexual and medical ethics to international relations. ‘Everything that serves to weaken the family based on the marriage of a man and woman, everything that directly or indirectly stands in the way of its openness to the responsible acceptance of new life … constitutes an objective obstacle on the road to peace,’ Benedict writes.”

As someone who works in Middle Eastern Studies, I must admit to being torn here. I’m so used to reading about how Muslims are out to destroy the universe that I keep forgetting that it’s really the gays who are hell bent on bringing Western civilization to an end. Thank heaven Mike Huckabee is there to remind me.

And if you’re gay and Muslim: RUN!!!!!!

I’ve read a lot of poppycock in my day on both topics (no, Virginia, Muslims are not hiding under your bed and waiting for you to fall asleep so that they can staple a hijab on your head. Really), but I would like to respond to the pope’s message with the following well-reasoned and eloquent answer:

Are you fucking kidding me with this shit?

Seriously. India and Pakistan got nukes pointed at each other. The Taliban keep coming back in Afghanistan, despite the best attempts of spin doctors between here and Kabul to convince us that we’re “winning.” Iran might be after nuclear weapons, or they might not — it’s pretty obvious we don’t actually know. Lebanon is on the verge of disintegrating (again). Iraq has disintegrated, and we’re trying to put it back together. Al-Qaeda is blowing up office buildings in Algeria. AIDS is still going to kill a third of Africa. The ice caps are melting faster than we originally thought, and yet we’re still having a debate about whether or not global warming is real or imagined. There’s a world financial crisis triggered by something called the “sub-prime mortgage market” that I don’t actually understand, I just know that I spent a ridiculous amount of money in Canada because apparently the American dollar isn’t worth the cloth it’s printed on (and yes, American dollars are printed on cloth, not paper. Look it up.)

But, no, clearly what’s causing all of this — even all that stuff going on in countries where they don’t like gays (which are just about all the ones I’ve mentioned, ‘cept Canada)–is that gay people can’t get married. Thanks so much for the clarification.

This, for the record, is one of the many, many reasons why I lost my respect for organized religion a long time ago. If it sounds like groupthink and it quacks like groupthink, it’s groupthink. If you ask me, organized religion is the biggest threat to world peace we have. If God is a formless being who lives on another dimension — why’s the pope so rich, exactly?

It’s too bad we can’t just get along because we’re all human and embrace our differences rather than reviling each other over them. Once we take the fear out of the “other,” we understand ourselves better.

So, that’s what I want for Christmas: a peace that works. Who’s with me?

On The Road, or, Learning the Art of Travel

Thursday, July 5th, 2007

Note: A piece on NPR that I heard while driving home caused me to remember an incident I haven’t thought about in a long time. The piece was about the 50th anniversary of Jack Kerouac’s On The Road, one of the definitive travel memoirs, and it got me thinking about the difference between being somewhere and actually experiencing it.

It wasn’t that I didn’t see the young man, it was that I really wasn’t paying attention to him until he blended out of the crowd of similarly attired young men milling about and started speaking to me. I was on my way nowhere in particular, but I was moving quickly and with purpose because I wasn’t at ease, neither with being where I was, nor in my own skin. But that’s another story.

It was a typical August afternoon in Amman: hot, dry, sunny and clear. It was the end of the workday and traffic was beginning to snarl throughout the Jordanian capital, which is spread out across miles over hills that offer unexpected vistas of low, white, limestone block housing and the occasional radio and television transmission tower.

I was new at this — at all of this. I was twenty years old and beginning to appreciate the fact that I was completely out of my element. I had landed in Cairo barely a week earlier and left the chaos of Egypt behind to see as much of the world as possible before I had to be back for the beginning of the semester. Amman was my second stop, and a welcome relief from the sweltering heat in Aqaba, the port city where I’d arrived by boat a few days earlier. Even by Jordan-in-the-summer standards, Aqaba was suffering from a heat wave, with the temperature refusing to dip below 100 degrees even after midnight.

Amman, in the hills, was cooler – in the 80s – and a pleasant enough town to walk around. And walk I did, whenever I finished my sightseeing for the day and got bored of the hotel room that was barely large enough for the bed. I walked here and there, up and down hills, seeing but not really seeing anything — something I’ve come to appreciate over the years.

The culmination of my traveling-without-seeing experience came not the first day in Amman, nor the second. I was out for one of my afternoon walks through the part of town where I was staying, the cushy Sheisani district. I had found myself pulled by mere curiosity toward the Housing Bank Centre, a cross between a modernist interpretation of a ziggurat and the Hanging Gardens of Bablylon — in other words, a stepped skyscraper with lots of plants hanging over its various balconies.

The Housing Bank Centre complex was what we call a multi-use space, an office building with a shopping mall at its base. I wandered through the area and discovered that the complex was far more interesting from the outside than it was on the inside, and I quickly bored of being there and headed for the door.

It was outside that the young man stopped me and asked me the oddest question. “Can you get me inside?”

Over the duration of the first week that I had spent in the Middle East, I had quickly discovered that the two years of Arabic that I had taken at my university in Washington, DC, had not prepared me in the slightest for communicating with anyone in the Arab world, so our communication was awkward at best.

“Um, you can go inside right there,” I said, pointing to the door I had just come out of, while trying at the same time to determine if the guy seemed a little out of it.

“No, I need to go there,” he said, pointing to a different door. “They won’t let me in.”

I followed his finger to the other side of the building, and realized that he was pointing to the Forte Grande Amman, which was in the same complex.

“You want to go in the hotel?” I asked, still confused.

“Yes,” he said.

“Why … why can’t you just go in the hotel?”

“I want to go to Israel,” he said simply.

I looked back at the hotel, and then back at the young man. He was about my own age, I guessed, and he was looking at me with a level of expectancy that made me completely uncomfortable.

It’s also worth pointing out that this was 1995. Jordan and Israel had signed a peace treaty barely ten months earlier, and the respective embassies in both countries were still looking for permanent housing. The Israeli diplomatic corps in Jordan had rented out a floor of the Forte Grande Hotel in Amman and was using it as a makeshift embassy while searching for more permanent accommodations. They weren’t having much luck — at the time, sixty per cent of Jordan’s population was of Palestinian origin and no one wanted to lease space to the Israelis.

I understood. “Do you have to go to the Embassy? I mean, with the treaty, you can just go across to Israel, can’t you?”

“No,” he said simply. “I’m from Iraq.”

“And you want to go to Israel?” I asked. This guy was crazy — Iraq was still technically in a state of war with Israel. They’d never let him in — he didn’t have a chance in hell.

“Yes,” he said.

Why?” I asked.

He shrugged. “To work.”

I backed away slowly. “I’m sorry,” I said, “I’m not staying at this hotel, and they probably won’t let me in either.” As I spoke, I backed away even further and, having finished my utterly weak excuse, I turned and walked away. Down by the corner, I glanced back to see the young man, hands still in pockets, shoulders slumped, waiting for some other Western-looking person to walk by so that he could try to gain entry to the Israeli embassy.

In my mind I had convinced myself that the young man was up to no good, that he was going to go try to attack the embassy, or that he was going to go to Israel for the purpose of joining the Palestinian resistance. I had no idea at the time that Israel is one of the top destinations for human trafficking, and that this young man was probably one of hundreds — thousands — of migrant workers hoping to gain employment in Israel’s construction sector, which was booming after the influx of nearly a million Russian Jews. After five years of sanctions, he had probably fled his country so that he could find some sort of gainful employment and send money home to support his family.

I guess all of this, of course, because I don’t know any of this for sure. I don’t know this because I turned and walked away. Even within the following year, I would find myself feeling ashamed and regretting my decision to turn around and leave him standing there on the street. I should have talked to him, found out his story. And then I should have tried to get him into the hotel. It wouldn’t have worked, but I should have tried.

I wonder whatever happened to him. I wonder if he ever made it to Israel, or if he became one of the millions of Iraqi refugees living in Jordan, barely scraping by. I’ll never find out. But every so often, I remember that interaction, and I remember how bad I felt about it afterwards. I’ve been lots of places, and I’ve seen lots of things, but that young man taught me something. I’ve learned to listen to people when they talk to me, because those are the experiences that I remember the most.

And I’ll never get the chance to tell him that.

 

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