Arab society and culture
Tears
for Lebanon
Comment Is Free, August 8, 2006
Arab men are not supposed to cry. That is
why Fouad Siniora's tears made such a refreshing change.
A
glimpse behind the screen
Comment Is Free, July 8, 2006
A novel about a gay newspaper editor was a
hit in Egypt - but its movie release has caused a stir.
Call
to censor 'immoral' Egyptian film
The Guardian, July 6, 2006
The Yacoubian Building has broken box office records but
many oppose its portrayal of modern Egypt.
'People
think it's a mental illness'
Guardian, June 13, 2006
In the Middle East, coming out as a homosexual is often unthinkable. Brian
Whitaker talks to young gay and lesbian Arabs about their secret private lives
What's
wrong with being gay and Muslim?
Comment Is Free, May 5, 2006
The
Qur'anic verses usually cited as condemning
homosexuality are by no means as clear or unequivocal
as people imagine.
Arabs
and identity (1)
The
first in a series of interviews with young Arabs in
the diaspora, talking about their sense of identity,
their thoughts on life in the west and feelings
towards their homeland. Originally published in Sharq
magazine, May/April 2006.
Arabs
and identity (2)
Second
in a series of interviews with young Arabs in the
diaspora, talking about their sense of identity, their
thoughts on life in the west and feelings towards
their homeland. Originally published in Sharq
magazine.
Arabs
and identity (3)
Third
in a series of interviews with young Arabs in the
diaspora, talking about their sense of identity, their
thoughts on life in the west and feelings towards
their homeland. Originally published in Sharq
magazine.
Beauty
is only spin deep
Comment Is Free, April 20, 2006
Miss Iraq 2006 sounds like a psyops effort
to persuade Americans that life in Iraq is carrying on as normal.
Sex
and shopping in Israel and Saudi Arabia
Comment Is Free, April 19, 2006
Some interesting light has been cast on
the similarities between Wahhabi Muslims and Haredi Jews.
An
avoidable disaster?
Comment Is Free, March 31, 2006
Accidents are a bigger killer in the
Middle East than terrorism - and many of them are quite easily avoidable.
Those
sexy Arabs
Comment Is Free, March 23 2006
The current portrayals of an "Arab
threat" are increasing the popularity of
"desert sheikh" novels.
Riot
by migrant workers halts construction of Dubai skyscraper
Guardian, Thursday March 23 2006
Construction of what is expected to be the world's tallest building was
halted yesterday after 2,500 workers in Dubai rioted over pay and conditions,
causing damage estimated at £500,000.
Brokeback
desert
Comment Is Free, March 21 2006
It is a pity
Brokeback Mountain isn't showing in the Arab world,
because it resembles current reality there.
Dubai
opens ski resort
The Guardian, December 03 2005
Temperatures never rise above freezing and there is
a fresh sprinkling of snow every day, but step outside
and you will find a sunbaked desert.
'Gay
party' guests face hormone treatment
The Guardian, November 30 2005
More than two dozen men arrested at an allegedly
gay party could face compulsory hormone treatment,
officials in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the United Arab
Emirates, said yesterday.
Cartoons
herald return of cinema to Saudi Arabia
The Guardian, October 19 2005
After an absence of about 20
years, cinema will make a tentative return to Saudi
Arabia next month with a screening of cartoons for an
audience of women and children. A one-hour programme
of foreign cartoons dubbed into Arabic will be shown
at a hotel
How
Homer became Omar
The Guardian, October 17 2005
They're a famously dysfunctional
family from small-town America but suddenly they have
all learned Arabic and started talking like Egyptians.
Fundamental
union
The Guardian,
January 25 2005
Sheikh Yusuf al-Qaradawi is a controversial
Islamic scholar who approves of wife-beating and believes in traditional family
values. The Mormon church, having abandoned polygamy more than a century ago,
believes in traditional families too.
Legally
brutalised
The Guardian,
November 30 2004
Brutal husbands can be a problem anywhere in the
world, but in some countries domestic violence is so common that it's almost an
institution.
Language
barrier
The Guardian,
September 23 2004
If you've got something to say, say it in
English. Other languages really don't count any more.
Centuries
in the House of Wisdom
The Guardian, September 23 2004
For most of the last 5,000 years, Iraq was a key
centre of scientific knowledge. Mathematics, developed initially for keeping
accounts, gradually spread into far more ambitious areas such as predictive
astronomy, making use of data painstakingly collected
Reading
between the lines
The Guardian,
September 13 2004
The most eye-catching exhibit at the Beirut book
fair a few years ago was a mock gravestone adorned with a vase of shrivelled
flowers and labelled: The Arab Reader. The practice of reading, writing and
publishing books in Arab countries may not actually
Saudi
textbooks 'demonise west'
The Guardian,
July 14 2004
Saudi schoolchildren are being taught to
disparage Christianity and Judaism in a textbook issued by the education
ministry, a report said yesterday.
Highway to hell
The Guardian,
June 02 2003
There's no accounting for taste, but if you want
to wear a black t-shirt and listen to heavy metal music, is it the government's
business to stop you? If you get a piercing or a tattoo, or dance like Michael
Jackson, is the fabric of society going to be ...
Government disorientation
The Guardian,
April 29 2003
The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is
probably the most important document ever issued by the United Nations. It
spells out in clear and uncompromising language "the equal and inalienable
rights of all members of the human family".
Lost in translation
The Guardian,
June 10 2002
Searching the BBC's vast website for articles
about Colonel Gadafy recently, I found just three mentions of his name.
These foolish things
The Guardian,
April 01 2002
1. Did you know that one of Colonel Gadafy's sons
is studying nuclear engineering in Liverpool? ...
Virgin's videos too hot for Beirut
The Guardian,
January 08 2002
Some Like it Hot - but not in Lebanon, thank you.
Homosexuality on trial in Egypt
The Guardian,
November 19 2001
In 1800, a European traveller to Egypt wrote: "The inconceivable inclination
which has dishonoured the Greeks and Persians of antiquity constitutes the
delight, or, more properly speaking the infamy of the Egyptians ... the
contagion has seized the poor as well as the rich."
An
Arab aesthetic
The Guardian,
November 13 2001
A photo in a Brazilian fashion magazine shows a Muslim woman's face veiled in
black with only her eyes visible. It's an advertisement for lipstick, and the
slogan says: "You who can show it, take advantage of it." Meanwhile, the
chequered keffiyeh - an ordinary, everyday head covering for millions of Arab
men - has become the hottest fashion accessory in Japan.
Green
gold
The Guardian,
June 11 2001
High in the Bekaa valley, relaxing under a fig
tree's shade, farmer Ali pours glasses of tea. This year, God willing - and the
Lebanese army permitting - his harvest will be good. The spring rains have been
generous and now even the gravel at the roadside is flecked with green.
Where
the qat is out of the bag
The Guardian,
May 28 2001
Stroll along Edgware Road in London and you'll
find a mystifying array of signs in the shop windows, written in Arabic.
Muslims' kinder way of eating meat
The Guardian,
March 05 2001
Today in the Middle East, several million sheep
will be slaughtered. No, this is not another outbreak of foot and mouth disease,
it's 'Id al-Adha - the Feast of the Sacrifice.
Losing the Saudi cyberwar
The Guardian,
February 26 2001
The authorities in Saudi Arabia, who recently
boasted that they had found a way to censor the internet, are now licking their
wounds in a cyberwar against an opposition group based in London.
Saudis open a can of words
The Guardian,
February 14 2001
Many people in Dubai were shocked this week by
news that the Gulf emirate's head of customs had been arrested on corruption
charges, along with two of his most senior aides.
Infrastructure of corruption
The Guardian,
January 26 2001
Our bus was full when it left Tangiers, but it's
even fuller now. Along the way we've picked up a dozen extra passengers and
they're standing, crammed in the aisle, for a six-hour journey.
Middle East to West End
The Guardian,
January 05 2001
The oasis begins at Marble Arch. Here, and for
half a mile around Hyde Park are the streets frequented by the elite of London's
Arab community.
Making sure the young can marry
September 08 2000
Arab weddings are splendid occasions, often
spread over several days. They are also horrendously expensive.
Saudis claim victory in war for control of web
May 11 2000
There are now many internet cafes - constructed
to keep male and female surfers apart - and around 30 commercial internet
service providers, but the apparent range of choice belies the fact that all
traffic passes through the King Abdulaziz City of Science and Technology in
Riyadh, which is the country's only link to the web.
Martyrs, never victims
October 13 2000
The British have never had much of a taste for
martyrdom. Perhaps it's because we have never had to fight off a foreign
occupation, or perhaps because in our colonial past we were more in the business
of making martyrs than becoming martyrs ourselves.
What's in a word?
August 25 2000
A surprising number of English words are derived from Arabic including
algebra - a branch of mathematics developed by the Arabs whose contribution to
our civilisation is often overlooked.
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