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"Colors from Palestine" Calendars and Cards
an article by Mohammad Said
The 2008 "Colors from Palestine" calendar is to mark the 60th year of the 1948 Palestinian Nakba (The catastrophe).
We dedicate the "Colors from Palestine" 2008 to the memory of our
fallen hero Naji Al-Ali (1938-1987), a cartoonist assassinated as a
refugee, noted for the sharp political criticism in his work, who has
since become an icon of Palestinian defiance. On July 22, 1987 he was
shot in the face, at point blank range, as he left the London office of
the Al Qabbas newspaper where he worked. He died after laying in a coma
for 5 weeks.
In a simple and forceful way, Naji cuts though all lies and
disguises and brings the truth to the people. Naji is perhaps best
known as the creator of the character Handala, who is depicted as a
ten-year old refugee boy.
View all the art work and the information about the 2008 Colors from Palestine calendar.
View Colors from Palestine Cards.
To buy the calendar, cards and other material go to our products page.
We
offer special discount rate for bulk orders, email us for rates. We are
looking for possible retailers in different cities to help in
distributing the calendar: if you know of any bookshop or an
organization that might be interesting in this project, please let us
know.
Your help is greatly appreciated , Please forward this email
to your friends and contacts. You may contact me at
mohammad@resistanceart.com .
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DISCUSSION
Question(s) related to this article:
How can a culture of peace be established in the Middle East?
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MIDEAST PEACE
LATEST READER COMMENT:
The
following commentary was first published in Newsday magazine on July 1,
2007. The original is available on the Internet at Newsday.
---------------------------------------------- Israelis, Palestinians must promote peace culture ----------------------------------------------
BY MOHAMMED ABU-NIMER
With
shame, hopelessness and helplessness, many Palestinians see their dream
for an independent state being dismantled by their own so-called
national leaders.
This evolving reality is hard to comprehend,
and it has caused the majority of Palestinians, according to a recent
survey from the Ramallah-based Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey
Research, to blame both Hamas and Fatah leaders for what has happened
to them under the Israeli occupation.
Hamas claims to have
"liberated Gaza," and in response Fatah leaders declared they are
"managers" of the West Bank. As a result, there is no discussion of
two-state solution of Israel and Palestine. Instead, Hamas and Fatah
seem to support a two-mini-cantons solution in which each leadership
can continue to protect its narrow self-interest in cooperation with
its patrons (Israel, the United States, Syria, Iran).
Again, the
Palestinian leadership has failed its people. The competition between
Hamas and Fatah, with each taking control of a portion of the bread
crumbs that the Israeli government left when it pulled out of Gaza and
agreed to elections in the West Bank, entails disastrous results for
anyone interested in securing a free and democratic Middle East.
The Palestinians have been set back several decades, to the time when they were fighting over who should represent them.. . ...more.
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This report was posted on July 16, 2007. The moderator is CPNN Administrator.
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