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Sunday, January 31, 2010

Social exclusion in southern Yemen

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They are punished for behaviour that's said to bring shame on their families, and the price can be severe. It could be theft, drugs, sex outside marriage or just marriage without the familys conse...
They are punished for behaviour that's said to bring shame on their families, and the price can be severe.

It could be theft, drugs, sex outside marriage or just marriage without the familys consent, but for some Yemeni women, such issues will remain with them for their whole life.

Al Jazeera's Mohamed Vall travelled to southern Yemen to visit one woman whose determination to help those she sees as victims of injustice is making a real difference. "

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Sunday, January 24, 2010

ICANN approves of Arabic domain names

"The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) has approved Arabic domain names, giving the countries of Russia, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates a chance to begin creating web addresses in their native languages…

"This marks a pivotal moment in the history of Internet domain names," says ICANN CEO and president Rod Beckstrom. "These international names will now allow people to type entire domain names in their own language."
By June, the four approved countries can request that local language addresses be included in domain names root systems that can be accessed by all Internet users.
The ICANN calls the move the biggest in over 40 years for the foundations of the Internet."

read complete article : ICANN approves of Arabic domain names

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Friday, January 08, 2010

Sanafer Open

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sasoki

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Sandy Jonquille - Generique

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Sindebad (Intro)

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Remi opening (arabic)

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Zeina w Nahoul

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grendizer arabic opening

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Jongar opening theme/ جونغر

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Sunday, January 03, 2010

Women are Entitled to Equal Decision-Making Roles | Human Rights Watch

"Women's participation in national politics, at 18 percent of elected national legislatures globally, is pretty dismal. Some countries have made impressive progress, including Sweden and Rwanda, where women constitute more than 40 percent of the national parliaments. The Middle East and North Africa region has the lowest rates in the world though, with less than 10 percent of elected parliamentarians being women. ."
read complete article : Women are Entitled to Equal Decision-Making Roles | Human Rights Watch

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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

YouTube - US congressmen fighting for Gaza - 29 Dec 09

“ A year after Israel's war on Gaza, the territory is still struggling to rebuild.
In the weeks after the offensive, politicians from around the world visited the Strip and made promises to help.
But it appears many of those pledges have not been delivered.
Al Jazeera's Todd Baer caught up with two US Democratic congressmen whose efforts to lift the Israeli blockade on Gaza are being met with stiff resistance.” - Aljazeera

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Saturday, December 26, 2009

ARAB-AMERICAN BILINGUALISM

Attached is a paper I recently completed for a human development course at
the university. I thought it might be interesting to share.

Even though my college concentration is in finance, I was required to choose
any topic in human development for one course. I chose the topic of
bilingualism (speaking dual languages) because as parents, we kept wondering
why our Arab-American children sometimes lag in the ability to speak Arabic
but can perfectly speak English, while other bilingual children, such as
American-Chinese, can perfectly speak both languages, and while some other
Arab-American children are only monolingual and can only speak either Arabic
or English proficiently.

The paper is relatively long but easy to read, and it is not required to be
read in full. Paper is divided into three segments - Breadth, Depth and
Application components. Pages 6 to 28 (Breadth component) discusses general
language acquisition theories by twentieth century classical theorists such
as Chomsky, Piaget, and Skinner. Note: language can be associated with long
running debates between the theories of intellectualism (human intelligence)
and empiricism (behavioral sciences), which has been ongoing throughout the
past centuries (Hume, Locke, Socrates, etc. ), but this falls beyond the
scope of this paper. Pages 30 to 39 can be skipped because it includes short
summaries of recent journal articles synthesized for this paper. You can
begin reading from page 39 (Depth component) since it focuses on the topic
of bilingualism in general. From page 63 (Application component), the paper
focuses on Arab-Americans in the United States, followed by recommending an
academic guide that can be used in school and at home in order to improve
the ability of our children to speak and appreciate the Arabic language.

https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0Bxuacfe6Z-cyYzUwZjBkNTAtOTI5Ni00M2EzLWJjYzktYTExOTdhZjY2Y2Ey&hl=en

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Thursday, December 17, 2009

When Will It Be Our Time? - Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi

December 17, 2009
OP-ED CONTRIBUTOR

"RAMALLAH, WEST BANK — I have lived my entire adult life under occupation, with Israelis holding ultimate control over my movement and daily life.
When young Israeli police officers force me to sit on the cold ground and soldiers beat me during a peaceful protest, I smolder. No human being should be compelled to sit on the ground while exercising rights taken for granted throughout the West.
It is with deepening concern that I recognize the Obama administration is not yet capable of standing up to Israel and the pro-Israel lobby. Our dream of freedom is being crushed under the weight of immovable and constantly expanding Israeli settlements.
Days ago, the State Department spokesman, Ian Kelly, managed only to term such illegal building “dismaying.” The Israeli foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, stands up and walks out on the U.S. envoy, George Mitchell, every time the American envoy mentions East Jerusalem.
And Javier Solana, just prior to completing his stint as European Union foreign policy chief, claimed Palestinian moves toward statehood “have to be done with time, with calm, in an appropriate moment.” He adds: “I don’t think today is the moment to talk about that.”
When, precisely, is a good time for Palestinian freedom? I call on Mr. Solana’s replacement, Catherine Ashton, to take concrete actions to press for Palestinian freedom rather than postpone it.
If Israel insists on hewing to antiquated notions of determining the date of another people’s freedom then it is incumbent on Palestinians to organize ourselves and highlight the moral repugnance of such an outlook.
Through decades of occupation and dispossession, 90 percent of the Palestinian struggle has been nonviolent, with the vast majority of Palestinians supporting this method of struggle. Today, growing numbers of Palestinians are participating in organized nonviolent resistance.
In the face of European and American inaction, it is crucial that we continue to revive our culture of collective activism by vigorously and nonviolently resisting Israel’s domination over us.
These are actions that every man, woman and child can take. The nonviolent movement is being built in the villages of Jayyous, Bilin and Naalin where Israel’s segregation wall threatens to erase productive village life.
President Obama, perhaps unwittingly, encouraged this effort when he called for Palestinian nonviolence in his Cairo speech. “Palestinians,” he said, “must abandon violence. … For centuries, black people in America suffered…the humiliation of segregation. But it was not violence that won full and equal rights. It was a peaceful and determined insistence upon the ideals at the center of America’s founding.”
Yet without public American complaint, the Israeli military has killed and injured many nonviolent Palestinians during Obama’s 10 months in office, most notably Bassem Abu Rahme who was killed in April by an Israeli high-velocity teargas canister. American citizen Tristan Anderson was critically injured by the Israeli Army in March by a similar projectile and remains in a deep coma. Both men were protesting illegal Israeli land seizures and Israel’s wall. Hundreds more are unknown to the outside world.
A new generation of Palestinian leaders is attempting to speak to the world in the language of a nonviolent campaign of boycott, divestment and sanctions, precisely as Martin Luther King Jr. and thousands of African-Americans did with the Montgomery bus boycott in the mid-1950s.
We are equally right to use the tactic to advance our rights. The same world that rejects all use of Palestinian violence, even clear self-defense, surely ought not begrudge us the nonviolence employed by men such as King and Gandhi.
Western lethargy means the clock may run out on the two-state solution. If so, the fault will rest with the failure to halt Israeli settlement activity. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s declaration that settlement construction will continue in East Jerusalem, with government buildings in the West Bank and on thousands of West Bank housing units already under development makes a mockery of the term “freeze.”
We Palestinians are completely accustomed to — and unwilling to accept — such caveats from Mr. Netanyahu.
The demise of the two-state solution will only lead to a new struggle for equal rights, within one state. Israel, which tragically favors supremacy rather than integration with its Palestinian neighbors, will have brought the new struggle on itself by relentlessly pushing the settlement enterprise. No one can say it was not warned.
Eventually, we will be free in our own country, either within the two-state solution or in a new integrated state.
There comes a time when people cannot take injustice any more, and this time has come to Palestine."
Dr. Mustafa Barghouthi is secretary general of the Palestinian National Initiative and a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council.

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Saturday, December 12, 2009

Arab World Great Women

"Here are SOME of the Arab World great women and mothers.
2 pictures each.
1) Princess Lalla Salma (Morocco)
2) Queen Rania (Jordan)
3) Fairouz (Lebanon)
4) Um Kalthoum (Egypt)
5) Sheikha Mozah (Qatar)
6) Queen Noor (Jordan)
Vocals and music by an Arab Moroccan German American: Zachary Cherkaoui.
Lyrics by an Arab Moroccan American: S. C. B. "

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Saturday, November 28, 2009

Photo exhibition: Coal Mine/Gaza, by Eman Mohammed

"Photographer Eman Mohammed focuses her lens on a little-known aspect of life in Gaza - the Al Habbash coal mine in Beit Hanoun, where the salary for a hard day's labor is between $3 and $5, plus a package of cigarettes.

The coal, which is used for nargilehs (traditional water pipes) and barbecuing, has been mined using traditional methods since early 2009, after the IDF destroyed the machinery.


Find more photos like this on elsewhere

read complete article : Photo exhibition: Coal Mine/Gaza, by Eman Mohammed - Theater

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Drying up Palestine: a documentary in two parts - Movies

Drying up Palestine is a 28-minute documentary by Rima Essa and Peter Snowdon about water access issues in the occupied West Bank. The film was produced by Gourna Films for the Palestinian NGO House of Water and Environment. It describes the stresses and strains imposed on Palestinan society by Israel's almost total control over water resources in the occupied territories. The sequences form an arc covering the main episodes in the history of this water grab from 1967 to the present day.

Part I

 

Part II

Drying up Palestine: a documentary in two parts - Movies

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CIA goes hiring in heart of Arab America | U.S. | Reuters

"In dire need of agents fluent in Arabic, the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency has made an unusual public show of its recruiting effort in Dearborn -- a city of 100,000 with the densest Arab population in the United States.

The agency has bought full-page ads in Arabic-language newspapers and it is rolling out TV ads aimed at luring Arab-Americans and Iranian-Americans to spycraft.

But despite a weak economy and high unemployment, the CIA will find it hard to hire here, residents say. Many see U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East as misguided and anger over the perceived mistreatment of Arab-Americans runs deep.

It won't be easy to win hearts and minds here, they say."

read complete article : CIA goes hiring in heart of Arab America | U.S. | Reuters

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Saturday, November 14, 2009

Palestinians denied access to water - 14 Nov 09

Aljazeera: "Israel dubs Palestinian farmers trying in vain to irrigate their lands "water pirates".

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Sunday, September 13, 2009

memorial Arabic song

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Monday, September 07, 2009

Google News in Arabic

Google News launched four new Arabic editions of Google News for Egypt, Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates last week.

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Palestinians, Lebanese Shi'ites forced to leave UAE | Reuters

"GAZA, Sept 4 (Reuters) - A number of Palestinians and Lebanese Shi'ites have been forced to leave the United Arab Emirates in recent months, Palestinian and Lebanese officials said on Friday

...

Hussam Ahmed, head of the Refugee Affairs Department in the Gaza Strip, which is controlled by the Islamist group Hamas, said hundreds of Palestinians had been dismissed from their jobs in the UAE for security reasons.

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In Beirut, a senior Lebanese political source said 45 Lebanese Shi'ites living in the UAE had either not been granted re-entry or had been asked to leave. No reason was given for the decisions.
"Some of them had been living in the country for 20 years. They were doctors and business owners," the source told Reuters."

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"An Interior Ministry spokesman in Abu Dhabi said he was not aware of the matter."

read complete article : Palestinians, Lebanese Shi'ites forced to leave UAE | Reuters

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Haifa Wehbe most dangerous Arabic celebrity online | LebSpy.com

image"Lebanese singer Haifa Wehbe is the most dangerous Arabic celebrity in cyberspace, according to research from McAfee. The security company found that Wehbe was the Arabic celebrity whose name was used most often to draw web surfers to websites with unsafe and malicious content.

Singer Wael Kfoury was the second most commonly used celebrity name for unsafe sites in the Middle East, with Paris Hilton ranking as number one worldwide." read complete article : Haifa Wehbe most dangerous Arabic celebrity online | LebSpy.com

(2007 news but worth to remind society on the dangers of clicking on celebrity-related links on some of the websites.

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Saturday, September 05, 2009

Egyptian farmers forced to irrigate with sewage water - Aljazeera

"For thousands of years Egyptians have relied on irrigation from the Nile to cultivate vegetables and fruit. Now the system that has sustained their farms since ancient times could be in danger. Water shortages are forcing farmers to use contaminated water with deadly results.
Al Jazeera's Mohammed Vall reports from the banks of the river Nile."

read complete article : YouTube - Egyptian farmers forced to irrigate with sewage water - 5 Sep 09

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Thursday, September 03, 2009

BBC NEWS | Saudis 'must offer Shia equality'

"A report by the Human Rights Watch pressure group has detailed what it says is systematic discrimination in Saudi Arabia against Shia Muslims… Unfavorable treatment of minority Shia extends from education and employment to the justice system, leading to a big increase in sectarian tension, it says. They comprise 10 to 15% of the Saudi population, and have long complained of being treated as second-class citizens. "
read complete article : BBC NEWS | Middle East | Saudis 'must offer Shia equality'

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Al Jazeera - Education gap divides Jerusalem

"A recent report by an Israeli non-governmental organization says 5,000 Palestinian children in East Jerusalem will not be able to attend classes this year because there are not enough classrooms…The widening gap in education between the Arab East and the predominantly Jewish West Jerusalem is all too obvious." - Al Jazeera English - Middle East - Education gap divides Jerusalem

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Sunday, August 30, 2009

Memo from Cairo - Hints of Pluralism in Egyptian Religious Debates - NYTimes.com

"CAIRO — Writing in his weekly newspaper column, Gamal al-Banna said recently that God had created humans as fallible and therefore destined to sin. So even a scantily clad belly dancer, or for that matter a nude dancer, should not automatically be condemned as immoral, but should be judged by weighing that person’s sins against her good deeds."
read complete article : Memo from Cairo - Hints of Pluralism in Egyptian Religious Debates - NYTimes.com

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Sunday, August 23, 2009

More Photos of Bab Al Hara Season 4 (Popular Arabic show)

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image more photos on
http://www.waleg.com/photos/index.php?cat=80

 Bab-Al-Hara is a Syrian drama phenomenon that is watched by millions of Arabs.

 

 image "The Syrian actress Laila Al Atrash, who plays “Lutfiyah h” in the famous Syrian drama series “Bab Al Harah” (The Neighborhood Gate) said that she is the fruit of the drama series." (Al-Bawaba http://albawaba.com/en/entertainment,%20music/251803)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Baba-Al-Hara movie game..

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Monday, August 17, 2009

Haifa Wehbe : then and now

As an iconic figure from Lebanon, Haifa Wehbe captured the imaginations of many if not all Arab generations.

Haifa Fashion blog

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Haifa Official Fan Club

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Haifa today

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Haifa before

lovem-6d71a446d4 171964 dd5c36ed69

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Cosmetic surgery booms in Saudi Arabia; clerics consider the intersection of beauty and religion

"Saudi Arabia is witnessing a boom in demand for cosmetic surgeries and procedures by the country’s women, according to the Associated Press.

In a country where lifestyle is largely dictated by religion, Saudi Arabia has seen a growing interest in the past few years in cosmetic procedures – once thought of as indulgences of the Western world. "

read complete article : Cosmetic surgery booms in Saudi Arabia; clerics consider the intersection of beauty and religion

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Sunday, August 02, 2009

Reuters: Man scandalizes with TV sex confession (Middle East)

“JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (Reuters) - A divorced Saudi man with four children has shocked Saudi Arabia, one of the most conservative countries in the world, with details of his sexual exploits on an Arabic television show.” Read article here

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Friday, July 24, 2009

UNDP: Arab Human Development Report 2009

“The AHDR 2009 argues that the trend in the region has focused more on the security of the state than on the security of the people. It shows that human security is a prerequisite for development, and that the widespread absence of human security in Arab countries undermines people’s options. Based on these arguments, this report analyzes many issues related to occupation and military interventions, authority of the State and its security measures, volatile economy, damage of the environment, impact of climate changes, insecurity of vulnerable groups, poverty, hunger and providing health care.” (read press release)

 

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“Human Security” offers new way to understand development challenges in the Arab region

In Arab countries, a widespread lack of human security undermines human development, according to the Arab Human Development Report 2009: Challenges to Human Security in the Arab Countries. This report is prepared by independent scholars drawn from the region.

Download

Full Report Summary

The Report In Numbers

Statement of the Regional Director

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The Economist: The Arab World – Waking From its Sleep

“A quiet revolution has begun in the Arab world; it will be complete only when the last failed dictatorship is voted out”

 

“WHAT ails the Arabs? The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) this week published the fifth in a series of hard-hitting reports on the state of the Arab world. It makes depressing reading. The Arabs are a dynamic and inventive people whose long and proud history includes fabulous contributions to art, culture, science and, of course, religion. The score of modern Arab states, on the other hand, have been impressive mainly for their consistent record of failure.”

read full text here

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Tuesday, July 07, 2009

albawaba.com ::Assad - Most popular Arab leader

albawaba.com middle east news information::Assad - Most popular Arab leader writes:
"An American public opinion poll held in six Arab states indicated that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is the most popular Arab leader. The poll, conducted by Maryland University in cooperation with Al-Zughbi International Foundation for Polls, showed that al-Assad has got most votes among Arab leaders. The poll included a sample taken in six Arab countries, namely Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi, Sheikh Mohammed bin Zaid Al Nhayan came second, and Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah, Secretary General of Lebanon's Hizbullah came third. As for international figures, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez came first, and President Bashar al-Assad came second, SANA reported."

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Friday, July 03, 2009

Phone application instantly translates Arabic into English

Phone application instantly translates Arabic into English writes:

"The secret to translating complex Arabic into English can now fit in the palm of your hand. New state-of-the-art translation software was announced earlier this week, coinciding with the merger of two high-tech companies in the Middle East and the United States.

Sakhr Software, a company that specializes in Arabic speech and language solutions, acquired San Fransisco-based mobile and voice-entry technology company Dial Directions on Tuesday."

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Thursday, June 04, 2009

“Prevalence of daily breakfast intake, iron deficiency anaemia and awareness of being anaemic among Saudi school students”(Bahaa Abalkhail & Sherine Shawky) – 2002 study

ABSTRACT

Iron deficiency anaemia is one of most prevalent nutritional disorders worldwide. It is known to affect the health and cognitive ability of children and adolescents.
Studies in Saudi Arabia concentrate only on the population of young children and pregnant females or girls. Studies on the whole school student population is lacking.
The objectives of this study were to identify the nutritional habits and the prevalence of anaemia among school students in Jeddah, as well as to recognize the students’ awareness of their anaemic nutritional status. Data were collected from a sample of Saudi school children in Jeddah City from 42 boys’ and 42 girls’ schools during the month of April 2000. Data collection was done by an in-person interview to collect socio-demographic factors, nutritional habits, weight and height. Haemoglobin was measured in a sample of 800 students selected at random from both genders and different age groups. Anaemia was defined according to the new WHO cut-off levels
for haemoglobin as: blood haemoglobin <11.5 g/dl for the 5–11 years boys and girls; <12.0 g/dl for 12–14 years boys and girls; <12.0 g/dl for 15+ girls and <13.0 g/dl for 15+ years boys. Proportion and 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated and significance was considered when the 95% CI did not overlap. Anaemia was reported among 20.5% of school students. Anaemia was more prevalent among students of at least 12 years as compared to the younger age group. Also, anaemia was more marked among governmental school attendees and those born to loweducated mothers. Menstruating girls were at around double the risk of being anaemic than non-menstruating girls. Anaemia was associated with negative impact on school performance and was more marked among those who failed their exams as compared to students with excellent results. Skipping breakfast was reported by 14.9% of students and this habit did not differ by age, sex, body mass index or social class. Skipping breakfast was more marked among students with poor school performance as compared to those with very good or excellent results. Only 34.1% of anaemic school students were aware of being anaemic. Awareness was nearly equal in all age groups and social classes but girls were more aware of their anaemic
status than boys. Iron deficiency anaemia appears to be prevalent among school students. At age 12 years and over, low social class and menstruating girls constitute the high-risk groups. Screening is recommended for high-risk groups and school health programs are crucial to improve students’ nutritional habits, knowledge and awareness.

International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition (2002) 53, 519–528

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Sunday, April 26, 2009

Saudi Arabia mulls allowing women to vote: report | Special Coverage | Reuters

Saudi Arabia mulls allowing women to vote: report | Special Coverage | Reuters writes:
"RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia is considering allowing women to vote in municipal elections this year but they would still be barred from running for office, a senior government official was quoted as saying on Sunday."

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Fares Karam- 3al 3een molayeteen (Lebanon)

from YouTube: Tatilebogirl writes
"song by fares karam which i never knew he made coz it wasn't on any of his albums but i found it on limewire so i thought i'd post it on youtube with some pictures of the worlds most beautiful country Lebanon, Lubnan, liban...and yeh those r the only languages i know it in lol =D enjoy the vid...as im sure all of you will..i hope :P
btw...to all those ppl who don't know much about music history....fares karam didn't originally make this song...it's an old song that was made by... i have no idea who but anyway it's for the traditional lebanese dance..the dabke!!!"

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Saturday, April 25, 2009

See what Arab women are up to...Queen Rania YouTube

from YouTube: "What are Arab women up to? Well, every day they're making bold choices. Their participation in the workforce is increasing, and the fields that they are going into are sometimes even groundbreaking."

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Monday, February 23, 2009

» The Washington Institute in Arabic Middle East Strategy at Harvard

» The Washington Institute in Arabic Middle East Strategy at Harvard writes:
"From David Schenker

As everyone who follows the Middle East knows, in recent years there’s been a veritable explosion of Arabic language news sources on the region. The proliferation of satellite news channels, blogs, and websites offers Middle Easterners and outside scholars a lot of choices.

Traditionally, The Washington Institute for Near East Policy has been focused on providing timely information and analysis for U.S. policymakers. Recognizing the importance of the Middle East audience, however, in early January, the Institute rolled out its new Arabic language website, here.

The site features translations of the analysis of Institute scholars, including articles from its Policywatch series and op-eds from U.S. newspapers. Translations of archived materiel will be added over time."

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Sunday, February 22, 2009

FOXNews.com - Beheading of Wife Poses Another Test for U.S. Muslims - News

FOXNews.com - Beheading of Wife Poses Another Test for U.S. Muslims - Local News | News Articles | National News | US News writes:
"The crime was so brutal, shocking and rife with the worst possible stereotypes about their faith that some U.S. Muslims thought the initial reports were a hoax.

The harsh reality of what happened in an affluent suburb of Buffalo, New York — the beheading of 37-year-old Aasiya Hassan and arrest of her estranged husband in the killing — is another crucible for American Muslims."

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Friday, February 20, 2009

Middle East Online: Economic Truth and Airport Parking Lots

Middle East Online: Economic Truth and Airport Parking Lots – writes:

"The current economic recession is a moment that cries out for an Arab leader who can speak truthfully to his people on the issues of the day that really matter - including how many abandoned cars may be parked at the airport, says Rami G. Khouri."

…In a land of superlatives and seemingly endless hyper-growth, the scale of the stories circulating about the number of abandoned cars at the airport is equally gigantic. In the past few weeks in Beirut, Abu Dhabi and Dubai, I have heard friends and acquaintances report authoritatively that, variously, 15,000 or 10,000 or 6,000 cars have been parked and abandoned at the airport by their foreign owners. These people lost their jobs, did not have enough money to complete their car payments, and found the easiest way out was to park their car at the airport and leave town for good…

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Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Arab-American women need supplement to boost dangerously low vitamin D levels

Arab-American women need supplement to boost dangerously low vitamin D levels writes:

"Arab-American women living in southeast Detroit whose conservative dress limits their exposure to sun should be taking a vitamin D supplement to boost their dangerously low serum levels, according to a study published by Henry Ford Hospital researchers."

..

“Researchers found that all 87 women involved in a small study showed vitamin D levels averaging 8.5 ng/mL (nanograms per milliliter) for those who wore western dress to 4 ng/mL for those who wore the hijab, modest dress with a headscarf. A healthy vitamin D level is 30 ng/mL or higher.”

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Friday, February 13, 2009

Gulfnews: Arab joblessness is key challenge

Gulfnews: Arab joblessness is key challenge writes:
"And what gives urgency to the Mena region is the fact that in 2008 the region recorded the highest unemployment rate worldwide, according to the recently released ILO report.

"Last year, North Africa and the Middle East still had the highest unemployment rates at 10.3 and 9.4 per cent respectively followed by Central and South Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America," the ILO stated.

Unemployment "is the main economic, social and political" challenge for the Arab region in 2009, Ahmad Al Najar, an economic expert at the Cairo-based Al Ahram Strategic Studies Centre said. It disrupts other production elements, he added."

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Wednesday, February 11, 2009

The Daily Star - Business Articles - ArabAd names Mustapha Assad man of year

The Daily Star - Business Articles - ArabAd names Mustapha Assad man of year writes:

ArabAd names Mustapha Assad man of year

BEIRUT: ArabAd magazine named Mustapha Assad, CEO of Publicis, as the 2009 man of the year for his distinguished advertising career since 1967. "ArabAd's choice of Mustapha Assad as man of the year 2009 is the tradition of honoring those personalities who have cemented the foundation of the communications industry and whose recognition is, but a token of their contribution that will always shine and light the way for future generations," the publisher of ArabAd's publication Walid Azzi said in its lead editorial."

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Thursday, February 05, 2009

University In the Student Eyes Movie Competition (Arab world) - corrected

{Sorry for the mistake in the date of the conference. It should be 4-6 May 2009.Please find attached the corrected announcement. }

Dear Colleagues

The attached is an announcement about a competition among students and awarding the 10 best short films on university.  I need your help in disseminating this announcement to your students as well as to all relevant addresses (e.g. students’ organizations).

Thanks a lot.

Adnan ElAmine

Adnan El Amine,

Coordinator,

Arab Regional Conference on Higher Education (ARCHE + 10)"

 

click here for the document

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Monday, February 02, 2009

Tarek Hoteit | Walden University | Papers

Tarek Hoteit | Walden University | Papers writes:
Arab American Bilingualism

The paper is the results of a knowledge research module at the university on human development and consists of three components :the "breadth component" that compares the classical language-acquisition theories of Piaget, Chomsky and Skinner, the "depth component" that synthesize recent researches on bilingualism and its impact to the cognitive development of children as well adults, and the "application component" that details Arab-American bilingualism in the United States followed by a set of suggestions for improved bilingual development in such society.

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Monday, January 19, 2009

Nancy Ajram - Yawad Ya TeEel

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Elissa 1992 - studio el-fan

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Saturday, January 17, 2009

The Middle East Blog - TIME.com A Blog from Gaza’s Wild Side «

The Middle East Blog - TIME.com » Blog Archive A Blog from Gaza’s Wild Side « : "On Thursday night Jawad Harb, a CARE aid worker, cranked up the his generator to get on the Internet to describe to his friends the terrifying Israeli air raids on his neighborhood along Gaza's border with Egypt. His personal chronicles from the Gaza, with their raw eloquence, are now gaining wider circulation in the West Bank and the Arab world.” Jawad's story on this link

..After the attack started, there was an uncontrollable panic, everybody was trying to escape the chaos. People were running downstairs with whatever they managed to grab from their houses. More than 90 children of all ages were running toward the north, to nowhere, and their parents were running after them.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

World’s First Word Resource Created to Enhance Spelling of Arabic Speaking Students :: MENAFN:

World’s First Word Resource Created to Enhance Spelling of Arabic Speaking Students :: MENAFN - Middle East North Africa . Financial Network

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

Witness - Young Freud in Gaza - 20 Nov 08

"Young Freud in Gaza is about a young Palestinian psychotherapist named Ayed who runs a clinic in Gaza for people traumatised by violence."



part I



part II

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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

BBC NEWS | Americas | Payout for Arabic shirt passenger

BBC NEWS | Americas | Payout for Arabic shirt passenger: "An air passenger forced to cover his T-shirt because it displayed Arabic script has been awarded a payout of $240,000 (£163,000), his lawyers say.

Two Transportation Security Authority officials and JetBlue Airways will be forced to make the payout.

Raed Jarrar, a US resident, had accused them of illegally discriminating against him based on his ethnicity and the Arabic writing on his T-shirt."

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Sunday, January 04, 2009

The Associated Press: Gaza civilians left exposed in Israeli invasion

The Associated Press: Gaza civilians left exposed in Israeli invasion: "With booms from artillery and airstrikes keeping them awake, the 10 members of Lubna Karam's family spent the night huddled in the hallway of their Gaza City home.

Earlier strikes shattered the living room windows, letting cold air pour in. The Karams haven't had electricity for a week and have run out of cooking gas. The family, including three small children younger than four, eats cold, canned beans.

'It's war food,' said Karam, 28. 'What else can we do?'"

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Holy Land Foundation case puts burden on Muslim charities | Dallas Morning News

Holy Land Foundation case puts burden on Muslim charities | News for Dallas, Texas | Dallas Morning News | Breaking News for Dallas-Fort Worth | Dallas Morning News: "American Muslims are finding it more difficult to donate money to help Palestinian refugees and other Middle Eastern causes because of court decisions showing that some charities were using the money for terrorism."

In the past, Muslim groups did not publish annual reports, conduct audits or engage in the same kind of oversight that is commonplace among other charitable institutions. This was a result of inexperience as opposed to any devious intentions," the report states.

"Now, there is a growing awareness of basic expectations, not only to protect an organization from attack by law enforcement, but mainly to provide assurances to donors that their money is being spent according to their wishes."

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Thursday, January 01, 2009

Arabs respond to war in Gaza | Worldfocus

Arabs respond to war in Gaza | Worldfocus: "Worldfocus talks with Marymount Manhattan College professor and Palestinian-American Ghassan Shabaneh about the failing popularity of the U.S.’s Middle Eastern allies."

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Monday, December 29, 2008

C-SPAN Video Player - American Muslim Task Force News Conference

C-SPAN Video Player - American Muslim Task Force News Conference: "The American Muslim Task Force on Civil Rights and Elections, an umbrella organization representing several groups, holds a press conference directed towards the Obama Administration. AMT speakers give a list actions they would like to see Pres. Obama's Administration make in the future"

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C-SPAN Video Player - Kareem Shora, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Cmte., Executive Director

C-SPAN Video Player - Kareem Shora, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Cmte., Executive Director: "Kareem Shora, American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Cmte., Executive Director

Kareem Shora goes over the AADC’s recently released report on Hate Crimes and Discrimination against Arab-Americans. The report shows a decrease since the 2001 September 11th attacks."

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Monday, December 22, 2008

AP Mobile News story - Arabs lavish jewels on Secretary of State Rice

Headlines:
http://m.apnews.com/ap/db_8559/contentdetail.htm?contentguid=d30RyC8q

Get news on the go with the Mobile News Network. Visit http://www.apnews.com to learn how to get it for your phone.

Regards,
Tarek Hoteit
http://tarek.hoteit.org

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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

FAHD BALLAN WITH HUDA SULTAN+SAYED MEKAWI

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Sunday, December 14, 2008

Egyptian Vocal Music

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Ahmed The Terrorist

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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

عبد الحليم حافظ ـ جانا الهوى

Abdel Halim Gana ElHawa filmed in Lebanon

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السنباطي يغني الاطلال

Riad AlSunbati, a legendary Arab musician, sings Al-Atlal.

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مقابلة قديمة مع تحية كاريوكا و سامية جمال

thanks to Egyptian Chronicles blog for reporting this YouTube video post: old interviews with Tahia Carioca and Samia El-Gamal.

http://egyptianchronicles.blogspot.com/2008/12/two-ladies-from-old-good-time.html

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Sunday, December 07, 2008

مقاطع لزياد الرحباني منوعة من مسرحية سهرية

one of the best sketches by Ziad

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فيروز والرحابنة وديع الصافي في تسجيل نادر وبروفات (You Tube )

Rare recording by Fairuz, Wadi3 ElSafi and the Rahbani brothers in the 70s.

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Abdel Halim Hafez singing Walaw - Old Lebanese Folklore song

Abdel Halim Hafez - Singing "Walaw" Old Lebanese Folklore (((DIGITALLY REMASTERED AUDIO))) [RARE] موال "ولو" عبد الحليم حافظ

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It's not easy to be Lebanese (LBC, YouTube)

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Sunday, November 16, 2008

"Bluetooth" in Kuwait....

While still reading Allegra Stratton's book, "Muhajababes" (2008, First Melville House Printing), and this time on the author's visit to Kuwait, an interesting situation is described:

[.... homosexuals parked in cars next to one another in one are......]

" 'What happens next? Nothing - without Bluetooth,' Elton replied. 'Bluetooth changed my life. Without it, all this would be pointless.' Bluetooth enabled a mobile-phone user to contact another one within a ten-meter radius without needing to know their phone number. In a country where it is rude to be seen to be approaching strangers, and in one so wedded to its cars, it was a very useful tool.
{......}
but the thing Bluetooth doesn't help you discern is the class of the receiver. 'If a high-class boy makes an advance on someone slightly more lowly than them and the lower-class boy says no then he's in trouble.'
(page 206)

Regards,
Tarek Hoteit
http://tarek.hoteit.org

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Sunday, November 09, 2008

Why Arabs Lose Wars (Atkine, 2000)

Why Arabs Lose Wars: "The author argues that the reasons for Arab armies’ perpetual ineffectiveness are rooted in Arab culture. Social factors that prohibit success include: secrecy and paranoia, pride, class structure, a lack of coordination on all levels, and little individual freedom or initiative."

Arabic-speaking armies have been generally ineffective in the modern era. Egyptian regular forces did poorly against Yemeni irregulars in the 1960s. (1) Syrians could only impose their will in Lebanon during the mid-1970s by the use of overwhelming weaponry and numbers. (2) Iraqis showed ineptness against an Iranian military ripped apart by revolutionary turmoil in the 1980s and could not win a three-decades-long war against the Kurds. (3) The Arab military performance on both sides of the 1990 Kuwait war was mediocre. (3) And the Arabs have done poorly in nearly all the military confrontations with Israel. Why this unimpressive record? There are many factors--economic, ideological, technical--but perhaps the most important has to do with culture and certain societal attributes which inhibit Arabs from producing an effective military force.


read the complete journal article here.

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Saturday, November 08, 2008

Op-Ed Contributors - Arab Bloggers Size Up Obama - NYTimes.com

Op-Ed Contributors - Arab Bloggers Size Up Obama - NYTimes.com: "Barack Obama’s election in the United States has fired imaginations around the globe, perhaps nowhere more than in the Middle East, where people wonder how the future president’s approach to the Arab world will differ from that of his predecessor."

check the list of comments from Middle Eastern bloggers here.

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Sunday, September 07, 2008

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Friday, August 01, 2008

Arab unemployment (article)

Very useful article on the status of unemployment in the Arab world is published by two economics professors at VOX site. Dr Noland and Dr Pack writes

More than one out of four young people are unemployed—roughly double the world average. Unemployment is particularly acute among the educated: joblessness among college graduates is ten times that of people with primary educations in Egypt, five times as high in Syria, and three times as high in Algeria. And as the locus of employment has shifted from the public to the private sector, female graduates appear to have had a particularly difficult time gaining a toehold in the job market.


The article discuss challenges and ongoing events in the Arab world in trying to improve the employment situation for its people citizens. Unfortunately, the improvement efforts are not spanning all countries, but nevertheless, it is a good start. The authors conclude:

If the region’s daunting employment challenge can be successfully addressed, the Arab world could reap a demographic dividend as the new generation enters its most productive working years – a phenomenon that has contributed to outstanding performance in East Asia. Growing prosperity, confidence, and optimism about the future could underpin movement toward greater political openness and social tolerance. The region’s young demographic could then turn from a potential liability to a bonus.

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Saturday, April 05, 2008

Beirut To Bosnia : Muslims and the West (Robert Fisk)

3 part documentary by Robert Fisk of the Independent that focuses on Lebanon, Palestine, Egypt and Bosnia. It tries to shed the light on why so many Muslims had come to hate the West. Check it out.

Episode 1: The Martyr's Smile




Episode 2: The Road to Palestine




Episode 3: To The Ends of the Earth

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The sick Egyptians (Egyptian chronicles blog)

Zeinobia posts the following health-related statistics for Egyptian people on her Egyptian Chronicles blog:

* 90% of the street children are threatened to carry HIV due to the homosexual practices and drug abuse
* There are 8 Million Egyptians suffering from Hepatitis mainly HCV and HBV "concentrated in Upper Egypt especially Qena"
* There are 6 Million Egyptians suffering from diabetes "I think that this number is smaller than the actual real number"
* There are 10 Million Egyptians suffering from asthma and allergy "Say hello to pollution and black cloud"
* There are 600,000 Egyptians suffering from tuberculosis "Thanks to Shisha"

She states that she collected the numbers from journals and newspapers.

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Saturday, March 29, 2008

How Muslims are Treated in the USA (Sabbah blog)

Haitham in his Sabbah's blog posts a YouTube/ABC video on how Arabs are treated in the United States.

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Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Handala - Arab Icon of Suffering & Hope

With the ongoing suffering of many Arab people due to injustice and aggression of the more powerful, I remembered the works of the late Naji Al-Ali, the late Palestinian cartoonist and the creator of the icon Handala. Naji Al-Ali was shot by unknown persons in London on 22 July 1987 and died five weeks later. However, his 40,000 cartoons where many included an icon of a boy, Handala, with his face against the viewer as a symbol of rejection and disappointment after the forced migration of the Palestinian people from their land, remain to this day as a reminder to us Arabs that we should be ashamed of ourselves. The wealth of our oil, smartness of our political minds, and the innovations from our intellectual thinking can't get our own people back to their homeland and develop as a whole unified nation.

Many works of Naji Al-Ali is available at Hanaa Ramly's site, dedicated to Naji Al-Ali. I took permission from the producer Hana Ramly to post her video on Handala here. Check it out or view it below:

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

Marjorie in Qatar - Violence against women in Qatar

Marjorie in Qatar blogs about the violence against women in Qatar. She summarizes a recent study by Dr Kulthum Al-Ghanem, titled "Violence against Women in the Qatari Society", where 2,778 female students (84% Qataris) at Qatar University, aged between 17 and 25 were surveyed. The findings of the research were shocking. 63% of those surveyed where victims of beating by male relatives (husband, brother, father, with 120 cases of sexually harassment and 52 cases of "strong violence" like rape. Speaking to Gulf Times about the findings of the survey, Dr Al-Ghanem observed that most of the violence against females is by male members of their family, usually brother, uncle, and father. Many victims are afraid to speak up, and some actual think that they deserve to be beaten. Marjorie in Qatar adds: "42% (of those surveyed) allegedly said that they deserved to be beaten. And, in a recent study of 703 Arab female QU students, 37% said that men should 'discipline' women and 63% said more generally that women needed 'someone' to 'discipline' them".
The survey was presented by Qatar's Supreme Council for Family Affairs (SCFA) on November 25th, coinciding with the International Day for Eliminating Violence against Women. The SCFA, through the support of HH Sheikha Mozah Nasser al-Misnad, is currently pushing for a special law that protects women and children from domestic violence in Qatar.


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Thursday, December 20, 2007

La Revue Gauche: Ibn Khaldun, 14th Century Arab Libertarian

Eugene Plawiuk blogs on Ibn Khaldun, the 14th century Arab sociologist, economist and liberal thinker, whose work is known to have predated similar works of Adam Smith, Ricardo, Marx and many other modern day thinkers. Plawiuk lists the key ideas of Ibn Khaldun, notably the socio-economic theories that are also explained in greater length in Ibn Khaldun: Discourse of the Method and Concepts of Economic Sociology".

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Saturday, October 13, 2007

Bab-Al-Hara captivating the Arab world

Associated Press writer, Dallas Nammari, writes about the Syrian Opera, "Bab Al-Hara", and how such television series captivated Arab people's imagination during the Holy Month of Ramadan. The writer also reports that the show has also stirred a controversial debate on gender roles in the Arab world, but never the less the producers of the show vow a sequel for next year.


An MBR interview with Samer El Masri & Abbas El Nouri is posted on YouTube:



A DJ remix of Bab-Alhar's music is posted on YouTube:

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Sunday, December 31, 2006

Life Style of Richest People of the Middle East

Discovery Channel documentary (Sep 2006) on the life style of the richest people of the Middle East is played below:


Maybe if oil money is spend on Arab education instead will improve the lives and skills of the whole Arab world to make them competitive against the ambitious & rather more focused emerging countries in the world.

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