Thursday, 28 February 2013

A Thousand Farewells


I enjoyed A Thousand Farewells by Nahlah Ayed immensely.

I had heard there would be points in the book that dragged on, but as I read through the last few pages, I realized I never felt like it did.

Maybe because I’m fascinated by the Middle East, bore out of frustration and enchantment with its cities, regimes, and people.

Ayed visited Cairo the year of its uprisings and I visited a year earlier during a vacation with my family in Egypt. I wish I could say when visiting the people working at the pyramids, perfume shops, and museums I could sense an uprising was on the way, but I didn’t.

However, that doesn’t mean I’m not surprised that it happened.

Ayed’s book works because she shows the reader why each upraising occurred. She doesn’t pretend it’s black or white or judge it through a Western perspective. She takes in every facet, whether it’s good, bad, or ugly. Ayed shows us the frustration Middle Eastern men and women who’ve faced under their ruthless dictators and feared regimes.

While reading the book I often became frustrated by the violence, the blinders some people wore, and the way religion was all-encompassing and surpassed the bounds of families as important.

There were a lot of good things about the book, although the one gripe I had was the chronology could be hard to follow. She jumped back and forth quite a bit between time frames, but that isn’t the end of the world, it was just confusing sometimes.

Also a diagram of her family tree would have helped.

However I wasn’t as bothered by this as I thought I would be. I often had to read back and check to make sure I understood whom she was writing about, but I reconciled my frustration by the understanding that these weren’t Canadian names. They were Middle Eastern, so of course I would have difficulty remembering them, which is no fault of Ayeds.

Yet, what I sometimes felt was missing from the book was Ayed. She gave us small bits of her accomplishments and regrets, but she spent so many years between Egypt, Lebanon, and Iraq, that I never got a sense of who she was and her desires outside of reporting.

I felt like a witness to the catastrophe through Ayed’s narration, but sometimes I felt I was reading through a faceless narrator who occasionally suffered from blackouts.

Learning from the book, I can read the journalistic skill of separating her feelings from the Middle East and the decisions and views of the people she interviewed. There was objectivity in her writing and I never felt it was sappy. It was factual. However I enjoyed that she used comparisons. It was interesting to read about the familiarities and differences between Winnipeg and the Middle East.

I think it would be hard to keep the judgment from affecting the book, but she managed to separate herself, even in moments where I would find it hard to, like when the man chose his religion over his kidnapped daughter. That was hard to stomach.

Ayed used people to tell her story and it reminds me of Michael Moore’s documentary Sicko. He used people to tell the story as well, the injustices that faced Americans without health insurance.

And while Moore’s had a bias towards the Bush government in the film, it didn’t cheapen the stories he told about the people who lost a loved one after they were refused treatment because of the wrong health insurance.

The people in the documentary were denied a basic freedom- a necessity in order to live- and even though the people in America and the people in the Middle East are worlds apart, you see these injustices and in that way, it’s comparable.

When Ayed writes, “people are not quotes or clips, used to illustrate stories about war and conflict. People are the story, always.” It’s perfect advice for a journalist’s success, and for the success of a documentary. People want to find an emotional connection- to feel anger, hurt, and joy- in order to engage with what they’re reading or watching.

Even if the topic isn’t new, the stories are. They’re all different. They’re all coming from people who go through and overcome different struggles. They’re the story.

As I said earlier, I enjoyed the book. I never felt that moments dragged or were boring. I found the whole book interesting and captivating.

This year, I have two friends who visited or are visiting the Middle East. It’s particularly disconcerting because once again there is major conflict in areas like Lebanon, Syria, and Palestine. Not that it ever truly ends either.

However, while I’m scared for them, I’m also excited. I want to visit the Middle East too. I want to go to Beirut, where I have friends who originate from there. And I want to explore and experience the culture.

Ayed’s book let me do that through the comfort of my home, and although it wasn’t always pretty, it ignited a sense of hope in me for these people. You don’t often see it through the headlines and the leaders of these countries, but Ayed managed to convey the hope of the people rather than the rhetoric of sensationalism. 

Saturday, 16 February 2013

Queen Padme

Besides my cat being the cutest cat that has ever lived and breathed upon this Earth.

She's also incredibly weird.

But Padme is her own cat. She's a broad in training, as my friend Daria so affectionately puts it. She likes to be where the party is, but don't bother picking her up, she just wants to observe from a far.

She also thinks she owns the washroom.

You literally can't go in there without her knocking open the door and waltzing in as if this isn't an invasion of privacy.

However, Padme has found another idiosyncrasy to display for my family, and this is pawing at the mirror.

She stands on her hind legs and just goes to town- sometimes for minutes, as if this is a new form of exercise. Yet she does this because she wants out of my room.

You'd think she'd paw at the door instead- that would make sense- but she doesn't. She paws at the mirror.

So I've uploaded a video for you all to see. For what I sometimes deal with at 4 in the morning when I'm nice and cozy in my bed.

The best part though, is when she stops and looks at you with this betchy look upon her face saying "I could do this for hours."

Ah, for the love of cats.



Saturday, 9 February 2013

Oh hey, Flo


When I like a song, I get obsessed. 

A lot of people do. It's perfectly normal. We just want to listen to it all the time. And I do. I will keep a song on repeat for the duration of what I'm doing.

Whether it's cleaning my room, driving from Charleswood to the Exchange, or checking my email/Facebook/Twitter/Perez. I listen to that particular song over and over again.

Right now I’m obsessed with Calvin Harris’s Sweet Nothing featuring Florence Welch.

If you follow me on Twitter @rarimuth, I’ve tweeted about dancing with cat in the morning to this song. And for the record (great pun), my cat loved it. It was a bonding experience.

The song is excellent. It’s like We Found Love, the Calvin Harris-Rihanna smash hit from 2011, which of course I was obsessed with as well, but more sobering.

I always enjoy a song that is incredibly upbeat with incredibly sad lyrics. I find that the juxtaposition is a reflection of life for a lot of people my age. We’re not always ready to get drunk and party and then hook up with a whole bunch of people.

No.

I think the relationships we already have can be too exciting- and exhausting. Partying is just an extension of this. Plus we’re students, we’re poor. We won’t be popping Grey Goose and Patron on a G6.

The video for the song is haunting- a mini movie. Florence Welch is striking with her red hair and high cheekbones dressed as a man performing in a strip club. Not to mention that her voice is inspiring, and consistently elicits my jealousy.

Check it out and feel free to tweet me your thoughts: