Friday, January 16, 2015
Monday, December 29, 2014
Movies Banned
Here’s the dilemma.
Egypt banned the new Exodus movie saying that not only
did it ‘forge historical events’ but it promoted a Zionist point of view.
CNN’s report on this
banning of course noted that the original 1956 Ten Commandments starring Charlton Heston filmed on site in Egypt,
implying that the older regimes [this would be under Nasser] accepted the
movie’s premise, but made it open to all Egyptians. This is true with
limitations. CNN failed to note that similar, very blatant historical
inaccuracies filled the original film as they certainly did, but the new film
makes the same errors with no apologies. This is unfortunate as they’ve had
nearly 60 years to make some changes.
Are the inaccuracies
important or relevant? As a historian, the blatant misuse of history and events
is disturbing. As an educator, I cringe at the tremendous influence movies have
on audiences. Students will recite a list of what they conceive as historical
‘facts’ which they’ve learned from movies and will not change their
perspectives. Movies are right, nothing else really matters. The general absence
of critical thinking skills in students and many general audiences gives
movie-makers the responsibility of making some attempt at accuracy. Granted,
there are times when ‘poetic licence’ is necessary and acceptable. But making
an historical film or drama, especially one with political, social, and
religious significance requires serious judgment on the part of filmmakers.
The political and
religious implications came out with a vengeance. Egypt’s Ministry of Culture
quickly banned the movie with adamant comments regarding the film’s points of
reference. With the Middle East in its current state of turmoil it can be
argued that the filmmakers failed in prudence. Does this lack of thought merely
give radical Islamists another bullet? Perhaps it does, they can now wave this
red flag in the eyes of the many flocking to their cause, however irrational
and violent.
What are some of the
inaccuracies? There are many. If and when Moses lived in Egypt, the best
records put him nearly 300 years before Ramses, so the two were not
contemporaries. Moses and the exodus would have occurred circa 1600 BCE while
Ramses was Pharaoh around 1279 BCE. Moses’ contemporary Pharaoh would be
Akhenaton [Amenhotep IV] father of Tutankhamen and husband to Nefertiti.
Another major problem,
the Israelites were most likely not slaves, certainly not building pyramids.
The last pyramids were completed long before Ramses, about 1000 years earlier
in 2500 BCE. Evidence is fairly clear that most of the building was done in the
off-farming seasons by paid Egyptians rather than slaves. And a majority of
Egyptian slaves came from military conquests – a typical practice in the
ancient world. Conquest provided slaves. And then the Red Sea. I have been
swimming in this very beautiful, idyllic body of water and while it’s true that
at times in mid sea there might be waves and some turbulence, on shore and
close to shore, it’s calm, blue, and very inviting. Mountains as high as those
portrayed do not really line the sea’s shores, there are some sloping desert
hills nearby in some places, but those glaring mountains just don’t come in to
the picture. I realize this makes great Hollywood suspense, but if they wish to
win all audiences, and are attempting to make an historical drama, the
filmmakers could be a bit more on target.
These are only three troubling
errors. The question remains, why produce this movie now with so many other
difficulties facing this part of the world, overlapping to the west and the
rest?
Sunday, December 28, 2014
German author and journalist Juergen Todenhoefer: ISIS is more dangerous than al-Qaeda
German author and journalist Juergen
Todenhoefer spent ten harrowing days with ISIS in Iraq and Syria. He writes his
story for the world to read on 29 December 2014.
Todenhoefer
emphasized throughout his interview with CNN that ISIS is ‘far more dangerous,
organized, intelligent, and dedicated than the West imagines.’ Yet President
Obama stated publicly that ISIS is a mere ‘jayvee’ organization, not equipped
to take on the world, converting all to its fundamental interpretation of
Islam. If the leader of the most powerful nation in the world sees ISIS through
a haze, what hope then for other nations and the world at large? This week and
next Christians celebrate the Christmas holidays, family visits, travels, plans
for rest and relaxation, while ISIS continues its own schemes to bring the
world to its knees.
Is
Todenhoefer’s warning to be taken seriously or shrugged off as another
fear-monger with no substance? Look at what happened prior to World War I.
Nations ignored the rumbles from dissatisfied governments. In 1939 Neville
Chamberlain returned to London from Berlin with Hitler’s promise of ‘peace in
our time’ in his pocket. As he waved the promise to cheering crowds, Hitler
made his next strike and war began in earnest. Ignorance cannot be bliss. We
need to know, to learn, to be prepared with knowledge about what is happening
with ISIS [Da’ish]. Ignorance only leads to another global catastrophe.
According
to an article by Bob Waters in Community Digital News, ‘Western media generally
agree that ISIS is more dangerous than al-Qaeda, the press is not informed
enough about Islam and its goals to establish any means of measuring the
danger.’
Acquire
knowledge and information about the Middle East, what is happening now, what
are the goals of ISIS, why now and not earlier? Step into the historical shoes
of the Middle East; find out how things have escalated so quickly. Has this
situation been boiling under the surface for years and are they isolated to a
few terrorists [jihadists]? Waters suggests that the ideals of ISIS [Da’ish]
are those of millions of Muslims around the world, and they flock to Iraq and
Syria to become part of a new global conquest, a ‘paradise’, a promised hope.
Todenhoefer
too unmistakably pointed out ISIS members actually want to die in this quest of
world conquest. We cannot remain in ignorance. It neither worked in 1914 nor in
1939. As prevention against the same disasters, we must make the year 2015 one
of perception and enlightenment.
**Read
more by Bob Waters at http://www.commdiginews.com/world-news/german-writer-spends-10-days-imbedded-with-isis-32347/#RhVGvoOh2DPu4mJS.99
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Hanna Hartmann Hosni: Egypt’s Unsung Hero
This morning I learned that Hanna Hartmann Hosni, German
married to an Egyptian, the woman I call Egypt’s Unsung Hero, is to receive the
highest civilian award from the German government. The Bundesverdienstorden
will be present to her by the German President Joachim Gauck. Hanna
earned every bit of this award through her many years of service to the
impoverished and largely ignored street girls of Egypt. Devoting over 25 years
of her life to making even a small dent in their lives, Hanna spends so much of
her time and energy raising funds, organizing fund-raisers, conscripting
students from the DEO [Deutsch Evangelical Ober Schule], forming
committees of parents and teachers, and fighting the governmental powers who
have so often resisted her demands for change.
Hanna and some of the Islahaya girls
Hanna’s efforts in just one Islahaya, located in the Cairo suburb
of Agouza, have finally reached the attention of some in power who recognize
what she is about. Nothing done by her is for personal gain or glory, she feels
so much for these girls, and if she had it in her power, she’d most likely try
to do the same for all homeless street girls. At one time, she did the same for
the boys in a Cairo Islahaya, but the boys are not in the same dire straits in
which the girls find themselves.
Hanna does not limit her tireless energy to street girls; she also
expends much effort on the Syrian refugees now pouring into Egypt, in addition
to aiding the Caritas charity with the lepers of Abou Zhabel, an area outside
Cairo.
A few words must be said about her husband, another unsung
Egyptian hero. For the past 25 years he has supported his wife in every way
possible. Without his help in dealing with Egyptian authorities, his company’s
services in building a decent kitchen, making necessary repairs to the Agouza
Islahaya, Hanna’s work load would be more difficult to bear. Souhail Hosni
deserves to be as proud of his wife and also of his own selflessness in being
her chief supporter.
Without the work of these two people these street girls captured
in their Islahaya [meaning in Arabic a place ‘to fix’] would indeed be in the
devil’s own dead end in their lives. Hanna along with all who support and work
with her provides that small beacon of light. It’s time the Egyptian government
jumped on board and quit annihilating these girls Il Binait Dol, to the refuse heap of untouchables and give them
back lives which through no fault of their own, have been stolen from them.
Thursday, December 18, 2014
Terrorist Death Toll Rises
In quick succession,
fanatical terrorists struck the hearts of too many with their violent attacks
on innocent civilians. In Pakistan 132 children were gunned down by members of
one particular Taliban group. Outside the Peshawar province, these killers of children
attacked a government school. Nominally connected as a military training public
school, the Taliban wreaked its vengeance in retaliation against the Pakistani
government. Many reasons have been put forward, among the most significant is
the following statement taken from an MSN news report.
A spokesperson for the Pakistani Taliban,
which goes by the name Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, or TTP, claimed that the
operation was carried out as revenge for army operations that had targeted the
families of Taliban fighters. "Because the government is targeting our
families and females," he said, "we want them to feel the pain."
(http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/).
Other opinions are that this group wants to
let the world know it’s still a viable force in the world of terror, while
another is revenge for killing Taliban women and children. Regardless, any
group that points a gun at a child’s head and pulls the trigger without
compunction has no right to compassion, sympathy, or any other consideration.
What they did was pure and simple murder, murder of innocent children who had
no place in their war. And their plan backfired. Public support inside and
outside of Pakistan has turned against this Taliban group.
In Sydney Australia, a country well-known
for its relative atmosphere of non-violence, it suffered a heinous scene of
murder right in the middle of Sydney’s lovely Martin Square. I’ve spent time
there. During summer months, entertainment is provided at lunchtime; great
shops line the pedestrian square and add a lovely atmosphere to the square.
What occurred at the hands of Man Haron Monis was plain and simple murder of
the young coffee shop manager and a young female attorney, mother of three
children under age 10.
The two vile acts, although not connected
geographically or in any way other than a loose interpretation of Islam,
created havoc and brought about world anger and hatred. The Taliban may believe
vengeance is theirs for the death of their families, but nowhere in the Qu’ran
is the untoward murder of defenceless individuals condoned. This is not the
Islam which my former students believe in, nor the many Muslims throughout the
world. A worldwide shudder quakes terra firma, no one escapes the ensuing drama
effected by these obliterating
acts.
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