Category Archives: News

Why Tunis, Why Cairo?

‘Egypt is not Tunisia,’ the pundits repeatedly said on television after Zine Abedine Ben-Ali fled Tunis for Saudi Arabia. They pointed to the differences between the two countries: one small, well-educated, largely middle-class; the other the largest in terms of population in the Arab world, with a high rate of illiteracy and ever widening inequality. Tunisia was a repressive police state in which information was tightly controlled and most people never dared to criticise the leadership out loud. Egypt was a military dictatorship that allowed a fair amount of freedom of expression, as long as it had no political consequences: you could criticise the president, but not launch a campaign to unseat him. In Tunisia, a rapacious first family indulged in widespread racketeering, alienating every social class. In Egypt, most of the elite benefited from the stability the regime maintained, and while corruption was endemic, it was not generally identified with a single clan.

But there were also important similarities. In recent years, the legitimacy of both regimes had begun to wane; in each case the ruler had been in place so long that half the population had no memory of his predecessor – more than 23 years in the case of Ben-Ali, nearly 30 in the case of Hosni Mubarak. People were uncertain about the future. Both regimes had effectively emptied formal politics of meaning by banning any party that had real popular appeal and restricting others to the status of a loyal opposition, thus depriving itself of intermediaries between the state and its citizens who could have negotiated an end to the crisis. Both countries’ supposed stability was dependent on a strategic relationship with the West. Tunisia enjoyed a warm and privileged relationship with Paris: it was reassuring for the French, angst-ridden about the growing visibility of their Muslim minority, to be able to look approvingly on a Muslim country that peddled its own commitment to laïcité as a signal that although it might be a dictatorship, it was an enlightened and progressive one. As for Egypt, Anthony Eden may have described Nasser as ‘that Hitler on the Nile’, but after the 1978 Camp David Accords the country became a pillar of American interests in the Middle East and – by its withdrawal from the Arab-Israeli conflict – an unwitting enabler of the expansionism of the Zionist state.

Above all, Tunisia and Egypt were the last places in which most people – whether experts or ordinary citizens – would have expected to see uprisings anything like those of recent weeks. On the evening of 27 January, I sat in a hotel room in Tunis, eyes glued to Twitter for news of what was happening in Egypt. I had come the previous week to report on the Tunisian revolution, which on 14 January had forced Ben-Ali to flee. The mood in Tunis was exhilarating, the situation seemed pregnant with possibility. I didn’t recognise the country I knew: a people I had thought cowed by years of subtle psychological terror as practised by one of the Arab world’s most sophisticated police regimes, had changed overnight. On my last visit to Tunis, in 2003, people had seemed to be on the edge of a nervous breakdown, and in some way – cruel though it may be to say this – complicit in their own predicament. Now Tunisians were high on the freedom not only to express themselves, but to imagine the future shape their country might take. …

via LRB · Issandr El Amrani · Why Tunis, Why Cairo?.

Cinema weathers the storm in Venice

Venice is an old-world European festival that is increasingly giving the impression it is under siege. Its lovely old buildings are crumbling. The rickety infrastructure on the Lido – the stripling of an island where the Festival has been held since its launch in the early 1930s – is becoming ever more stretched. The trade press reported that the new Palace of Cinema, which the Festival has been trying to build for years, had been delayed again because toxic asbestos panels had been found \\”improperly buried under the site\\”.

via Cinema weathers the storm in Venice – Features, Films – The Independent.

Plácido Domingo – Granada

La Roja: Campeones Mundial 2010

Wimbledon 2010: Roger Federer sees his Wimbledon aura drained by Tomas Berdych

Federer had been getting away with it during this fortnight. Not this time, though. Federer’s game was dismantled by his opponent’s unlovely, ungodly power.

Shockingly, Federer’s timing on Centre Court was more Timex than Rolex. That was not the only reason that Federer lost his Wimbledon title, and so will not appear in the Wimbledon final for the first time since 2002.
Federer lost because he was roughed-up on the lawn, because he could not deal with the weight of shot that was coming from the other side of the net.

Short of gripping Federer by the throat and pushing him up against the backstop beneath the Royal Box, Tomas Berdych could not have done more to unsettle the Swiss.

By the time Berdych was done, most of the felt would have come off the tennis balls, and Federer was out of Wimbledon with his earliest defeat for eight years.

Federer came here hoping to win a seventh Wimbledon title; and yet he ended up with a four-set defeat to the world No 13. In truth, Federer has not been himself since he beat Andy Murray in the final of January’s Australian Open to win his sixteenth grand slam title.

USA 1 Ghana 2 (aet )

Africa’s time is not yet up. For all the dismay and despair at the performance of the host continent in the tournament in which the gap between football’s first and third world was supposed to close forever, Africa’s involvement will last into a third week. At least Ghana’s Black Stars are still shining.

Thanks to wonderful goals from Kevin-Prince Boateng and Asamoah Gyan, Milovan Rajevac’s side edged past a dogged, determined United States to set up a quarter-final clash with Uruguay, equalling the best-ever performance at a World Cup by an African side.

Interview with José Saramago

Nobel-winning author Jose Saramago dies at 87

There is a revealing moment when José Saramago, Portugal’s austere Nobel laureate, relaxes into laughter, and it comes as he is talking of his own death. Frail and unflaggingly upright in posture, he is in an armchair in his compact, postwar house in Lisbon, sheltering from the city’s Atlantic drizzle beside a smoking log fire. Rushed to hospital last winter with a respiratory illness, he recalls: “They were reluctant to take me because I was in such a serious condition.” Chuckling, he adds: “they didn’t want to be the hospital where José Saramago died.”

His amusement may stem from a mischievous sense of thwarting expectations, as much as delight at his reprieve. “I don’t see it as a miracle,” he makes clear (he is an atheist), “but my chances of recovering were very slim.” Yet it also suggests an ironic stance towards his late fame. He first worked as a car mechanic and metal-worker before eventually devoting himself to fiction in his 50s. He was 60 when his breakthrough fourth novel, Memorial of the Convent (1982), was published. A baroque tale set during the Inquisition in 18th-century Lisbon, it tells of the love between a maimed soldier and a young clairvoyant, and of a renegade priest’s heretical dream of flight. The novel’s translation in 1988 as Baltasar and Blimunda, by the late Giovanni Pontiero, brought Saramago to the English-speaking world, and it was turned into an opera in 1990. Its success accelerated his output of some 15 novels, plus short stories, poetry, plays, memoir, and the travelogue Journey to Portugal (1990). In 1998 the Nobel committee praised his “parables sustained by imagination, compassion and irony”, and his “modern scepticism” about official truths.

Hungarian writer Gyorgy Dalos honored with Leipzig award

Hungarian-born Gyorgy Dalos is the recipient of this year’s Leipzig Book Award for European Understanding, coinciding with the start of the Leipzig Book Fair. The prize is endowed with 15,000 euros ($20,600).

Journalist Lerke von Saalfeld, who presented Dalos with the award at a ceremony on Wednesday, described Dalos, as reported by dpa, as a “Central European who best embodies the history of the European spirit.”

Gyorgy Dalos lives in Berlin, but in his books he regularly returns to his homeland, Hungary. He was born in Budapest in 1943. World politics have had a long-lasting effect on Dalos. As a Jew, he experienced as a child what it means to be excluded. He also had to deal with loss at a young age, as his father died in a labor camp in 1945.

The experiences of these early years, the pressure to conform and the quest for self-determination were all later integrated into Dalos’ novels – rich, atmospheric descriptions combined with a light tone and saturated with humor.

His novel “The Circumcision,” which first appeared in German in 1997, is about a boy named Robi and his experiences with growing up. Robi’s biggest problem is the fact that he missed out on the Jewish ritual of circumcision, which is normally performed on boys when they are eight days old. It never happened because there was no time for it, since Robi was born in an air-raid shelter in Budapest during a period of regular bombings.

Dalos studied German history in Moscow from 1962 to 1967. He began writing during his studies, and his first volume of poetry appeared in 1964. In the same year, Dalos became a member of the Hungarian Socialist Workers’ Party, but his membership only lasted four years because in 1968 – while employed at Budapest’s modern history museum – he was accused of being an enemy of the state.

He was then sentenced to seven months in prison, excluded from the party and issued with a 19-year working and publishing ban.

With the Warsaw Pact armies’ occupation of Czechoslovakia in 1968, Dalos lost his faith in Marxism and co-founded the opposition movement in Hungary. He made a living as a freelance translator of Russian and German works. His first notable success abroad was his novel “1985″ – a sequel to George Orwell’s somber dystopian novel “Nineteen Eighty-Four” – in which Dalos examines the role of intellectuals in totalitarian societies.

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