Monday, February 21, 2011

Meet Salah: The first foray into the people of Nablus

I met Salah early in my time here in Nablus, and he immediately struck me as not only photogenic but a generally gregarious and well-spoken fellow. I quickly got along well with him and started to learn some pretty interesting facets of his personality. He seemed an ideal first ambassador to Nablus. See what you think of him!:



-Salah is a volunteer translator at Project Hope, a computer science student, a Thai Boxing instructor, National Champion of K-1 Kickboxing, a good Muslim, and a Palestinian. He really loves Nablus, and wants you to, too!

Salah's profile is the first of many features to come about Nablus, if you're here and want to hear about someone in particular let us know, or if you're from abroad and want questions about Nablus or Palestine in general addressed in film form drop us a line! Who should we profile next?-

This was a fun project to do and I'm keen to continue it. The intention is to profile a different person or aspect of Nablus every two weeks or so, depending on my schedule. Right now I'm splitting my time between a steady course load of english classes, projects like this, and intensive video workshops. I'd really like to thank Asra for lending me her camera to film with, and Project Hope of course for making my time here possible and allowing me to spend my time on alternative projects. Read More......

Saturday, February 5, 2011

Slow! Barrier Ahead!


Riding a bike through the west bank is a certain confluence of insanity and privilege that is as hard to justify as it is unlikely to occur. But it did occur, so now I'm going to justify it.

Well, actually I'm not. Screw justification. I'm alive and nobody's blown the world up just yet, so I do what I do and try to actively help other folks in the process. But I do think there's a lot to be learned about militarized zones, identity-controlled existences, and the politics of space within the little soap bubble that is me biking from Jerusalem to Nablus. I will also boldly say that it was one of the more pleasurable little adventures I've been on.
First off: Google maps has deigned not to give names to the city streets within the Palestinan Territories. The interesting thing is that we've grown so used to using technology that this is strange. Next time I come I'll probably be like 'what? no street view? Pah.' Being the seat-of-the-pants type I never thought about bringing a map, I just set off in the direction of Ramallah with a list of cities to head for and major roads connecting them. I'd figure I'd ask people along the way. Now, it's Saturday, the Sabbath, and I'm wandering around the rainy, empty-of-cars-streets of Jerusalem thinking of going up to the nearest culturally-complicated (in appearance) Jewish fellow (his felt hat in a trim little raincoat all of its own) and asking "scuse me, do you know the way to the west bank?" There's one problem for you: how to ask for directions when you don't want to tell someone where you're trying to go. Unintentional freeway riding ensues.

Next, there's the troubling little habit of routes sometimes inexplicably dead-ending into walled-off refugee camps that are apocalyptic in appearance. This is officially the only bike tour I've been on where certain routes seem direct until, looking at a satilite image, you notice the shadow being cast by a 20-foot 5 mile concrete barrier, and you have to figure out which side of it you're supposed to be on to continue.



Now, remember how 15 miles from here there are lush gardens where 20-somethings lounge on a hilly paradise tending vegetables, hiking trails and watching the sunset? This is the same country. The people are just as kind to a passing biker, but now when I ask for directions I speak arabic with a beautiful young woman in bright clothes and a hijab who looks as out of place on a trash-strewn sidewalk with military jeeps and broken concrete as Marilyn Manson would look in a preschool. I didn't take many pictures as I crossed into the west bank, mostly because I was incredibly intimidated, but it was pretty damn end-of-the-worldy.


It's still raining at this point, just FYI.

Now comes the fun part where you pass the checkpoint (which was actionless going in, it's going out where they getcha) and start asking directions to the next town. Sometimes it's quite easy: you wave at a cab in traffic to roll down his window, and in very broken arabic ask whether this road leads to say, Jaba. At the time I didn't realize it, but it's a modern miracle everyone understood me, because pretty much every word in the sentence "Does this road go to jaba?" is different one country over in Egypt, where I last studied Arabic. Other times it's more circuitous, such as when, still raining, I passed the green line into the outskirts of Ramallah and was admiring the trash, cats, and other third world conditions (oh and I was lost) when I was waved over to an auto shop by a gaggle of mechanics. I say hi, exchange pleasantries, and then an exchange almost exactly like this goes down (again in arabic):
"So is this the road I should take to Jaba?"
"Do you want to drink tea with us?"
"Oh, thanks, but no, I have a long way to bike"
"Where are you going?"
"Nablus"
"Oh god, by bike?"
"Yeah, crazy huh? Is this the road I should take?"
"Are you married"
"Uh?"
"Do you want to have sex?"
"Um. Jaba?"

So there's that. It's still raining. A couple good cheers from passerby and attempting to help un-stick a high-centered car later I found my way and started into some rolling hills on what I knew was the right highway. The rain cleared up and I got really, really happy. Everything was thrumming along well, it was beautiful and I had some fruit (but no real breakfast (Sabbath in Israel= closed everything)). I started noticing the following things:


Palestine pretty much looks like southern Utah, the crusty unremarkable bits that we all know so well. Beautiful but subdued.
Settlers scratch out signs in Arabic or cover them with stickers. They also put up lots of wheatpastes in Hebrew.
Middle Eastern drivers rock, I've never felt safer on the side of a small freeway.

Though the day was beautiful and I had plenty of water after a few hours I started running out of steam and thinking of lunch. There I encountered another problem unique to the region: How to best ascertain whether I'm approaching and patronizing a nice downtrodden Palestinian village or a bastion of western manifest destiny and exploitation: A notorious settlement (that, for all I knew, only just that week stole the water rights from the surrounding area)?

Being nervous about betraying my politics I passed a number of lunch spots (as it seems to be the style around here to keep the highway far from the towns with long exits into them) in search of a definitely arab one. I was flagging, but resorted to a pretty fantastic emergency measure: After resting and drinking water I spied a double-long semi pulling out of a by-road. I did a little wave to the driver then sprinted, catching up in a marvelously well-timed maneuver and grabbing onto a sinch-strap on the back of the truck. Thus I skitched a truck along around 8 kilometers of rural highway, weaving in-and out of the rumble strips to the side of the road. I had a car of young men pass me and my host vehicle cheering me on like it was pretty much the coolest thing they'd ever seen, and I admit I felt good about the situation myself. I hung on until my arm gave out and then resumed my overloaded mountain bike progress.

I had lunch at a town called Turmisseyh, where I stopped at a hardware shop and asked about lunch opportunities. There I met a nice guy named Mustafa, who said, "Oh, you're an American? We're all Americans!"
"Uh-huh," I said, appreciating the gesture of acceptance.
"No really" He said, and pulled out an American passport.
"Oh. Wow. You're serious!"
Apparently the village consists of about 8000 people, 6000 of whom live in America. Makes your head spin, coming to a place known to restrict movement more than almost anywhere else on earth right now and make small talk about the details of say, the Chicago rail system.


After yummies a long religious lecture "All the other religions were created by man! Who can believe the word of man? Islam is the word of god!" and the discovery of Kaki (we call 'em persimmons and they're delicious) I headed out again.

Being back in Arab country, especially roads less traveled, I'm reminded of the fever pitch of hospitality and curiosity about foreigners. In smaller towns every single person wishes to talk to you and befriend you, you'll literally turn down 3 invitations to lunch as you pedal by. As I got closer to Nablus this started to fade slightly, but even still you could make fast friends with ANYONE on the street. Nablus, it turns out, is a big deal. It's said to be the biggest city in Palestine, though I would have thought that distinction belongs to Ramallah. Certainly the first traffic lights I saw since Jerusalem popped up well inside the city itself. But first there's the infamous checkpoint. Because Nablus is a bit of a west-bank problem child. Due to the two biggest refugee camps bordering the city and the ancient heart of the city itself, Nablus but up the strongest fight during the second intifada in 2002. It was here, in Balata camp, that Israel employed the 'through walls' technique which I believe American troops used in Iraq. The camp was so close knit and tight that IDF troops simply went in one house and blew their way through all the rest of them, stunning and killing as they went and never exposing themselves to outside enemy fire. Lovely lovely. Anyway, as a result of this stubbornness Nablus has had a blockade around it since that point, which in 2009 was relaxed into a checkpoint.


But still I rolled up to some rather incredulous IDF kids (no, really, they're kids. I'm talking copious pimples).
"Shalom, Hi!"
"What are you doing here?"
"Um, biking. I biked here from Jerusalem."
"Today!?!"
"Cool huh?"
"Why?"
"No idea. It's just kind of what I do."
"But why here? You know it's very dangerous, right?"
"Oh sure, I'm aware, but I'm willing to take that risk. Ya see, I speak a bit of arabic and I wanted to practice it."

This conversation ended with them informing me that nobody was allowed through on foot. I decided not to enter into the rather interesting philosophical debate about the exact set of parameters that makes a vehicle a vehicle and instead said "oh well, can I go hop in a truck?" They assured me that'd be fine, but after my passport was seen to be "in order" (which is funny, as I don't have an entry stamp to Israel in it) they waved me through. And muddy, tired, happy, and unscathed I made it into Nablus, which exceeded my initial expectations and continues to make me happy and blow my mind. But that's another story.


Read More......

Friday, February 4, 2011

Break from Palestine for: REALLY SERIOUS SURFING

Surfing's certainly a reason for living for some, but this little flick REALLY AIMS TO ELEVATE SURFING. Apocalyptic Irish brogue describing a relationship to waves. A desperately dark film about a leisure activity and art. Beautiful, justifies itself in the beauty. Some would say pretentious, I'd say finding the dance in the action.

DARK SIDE OF THE LENS from Astray Films on Vimeo.


Tanks to uncle john for the link. Man's got good taste. Read More......

Calm before the storm? Art Therapy.

I haven't caught up yet, so this post is totally out of sequence and UTTERLY RUINS the rather nice cliffhanger I set you up with contrasting the rides in Israel and Palestine but, whatev. This post has cute kids in it. So all's forgiven, right? Teaching this class began with "hey Davey, you like spontaneity, don't you?" Like any full-blooded art hipster I was obliged to reply "Yes," to which the volunteer coordinator said "Oh good, you can teach this class in 15 minutes." Ah. Ok. This was shortly after I discovered that due to need I would be teaching a LOT of English classes and maybe 1 or 2 film classes. Argh. But I feel pretty good about it and my ability to sneak in my own designs, more on that soon. The result of that ad-hoc teaching position was this 27 second video:


Cute little buggers, ent they? These kids were extremely well mannered and met in a nicely stocked center while they were on winter break after exams (Children in Palestine seem to be perpetually studying for exams, taking exams, or having a break after exams, which usually excuses them from English class as well). Over the next couple days we did art with an English twist, including collages. Check them out below!









Read More......

Bye