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 Tuol Sleng genocide museum, Cambodia: photo by Ambroise Tézenas via the Guardian, 13 November 2014
 
They are, first of all, places of involuntarily remembered suffering. Time has deposited its wastes there, in the form of used-up memories no one will ever wish to have again. Still some things can't be brought to a finish so easily. No one can command time to stop, a fact in tribute to which which the Archives stand as a redundant yet palpable reminder. A smell of mildew; cobwebs that brush one's head, passing in silence from subterranean chamber to subterranean chamber. Echoes and whispers everywhere: a sudden small scurrying sound startles from behind, but nothing's there when one turns to look. We think someone's there. We think they are speaking to us. We think they are saying something to us, in muffled, disinterested, ambiguously connected half-sentences, certain strange words that are virtually indistinguishable from the silence. Yet we must strain to hear, on penalty of awaking. The pain of being a human being has an extended half-life, its date of completion remaining always indeterminate, yet forever, in merciless increments, drawing nearer: this seems to be the message. The past is set on Repeat, here in the Archives; it has been programmed to send the same message over and over.  The vapors and particles it has left behind are here, filling the dark corridors, lining the corroded walls and scuffed floors, deeply imbedded in the suffocating atmosphere of the place; an invisible, insistent tour guide, helpfully provided by management, refuses to let the horror escape from our minds for so much as a moment. The visitor is encouraged to remember that these are religious sites, and behave -- well, not as though at home, exactly, but let us simply say accordingly.



Some of the skeletons uncovered at cemetery below University of Cambridge. One of Britain’s largest medieval cemeteries containing the remains of more than 1,000 people has been unearthed under part of the University of Cambridge. The hospital cemetery, which catered largely for scholars who had fallen on hard times, was found during excavations beneath the Old Divinity School at St John’s College.About 1,300 burials and 400 complete skeletons were discovered there as part of the refurbishment of the Victorian building three years ago, but the details have only now been made public.The bodies, which are mostly from the period between the 13th and 15th centuries, are burials from the Hospital of St John the Evangelist, which stood opposite the graveyard until 1511, and gave St John’s College its name.The vast majority of burials took place without coffins, while many did not even have shrouds, suggesting the cemetery was primarily for the poor. Very few of the bodies belonged to women and children, perhaps because its main purpose was to cater for “poor scholars and other wretched persons” and pregnant women were excluded from this care.
Personal items such as jewellery were found only in a handful of burials.Despite rumours linking it to the Black Death, no evidence of the disease was found on any of the remains and the team did not uncover any signs of large burial groups from that part of the 14th century.In later centuries, plague victims in Cambridge were buried on local grazing land such as Midsummer Common, and it is likely that the same locations were also used in the medieval period. The bodies did not exhibit many serious illnesses and conditions that would have required medical attention. A report by The Archaeological Journal on the find said “this could reflect that the main role of the hospital was spiritual and physical care of the poor and infirm rather than medical treatment of the sick and injured”.: photo by St John's College, University of Cambridge/PA via The Guardian, 1 Aprll 2015


Dwelling there on Midsummer Common, where the devoted bagpiper,forbidden to practise in his rooms, piped mournfully, every afternoon all through the bright chilly springtime, in his quaint kilt, above the unidentified remains of the plague victims buried on what had once been local grazing land, how was the visitor to know succour had lain so close to hand, once, its clayey residue perhaps still persisting there even now, and thence on unto eternity, in the Archives?



The Karostas Cietums military prison in Liepāja, Latvia
: photo by Ambroise Tézenas via the Guardian, 13 November 2014
 

Tbilisi, Georgia. Children look at exhibits at the Soviet Occupation Museum. Georgia marks Soviet Occupation Day to commemorate the Red Army invasion in 1921
: photo by David Mdzinarishvili/Reuters via the Guardian, 25 February 2015


The Rwandan genocide memorial tour: photo by Ambroise Tézenas via The Guardian, 13 November 2014

Fear of Television

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Palestinian protesters are photographed through the frame of a broken television during clashes with Israeli security forces after a demonstration against the expropriation of Palestinian land by Israel in the village of Kfar Qaddum in the occupied West Bank: photo by Jaafar Ashtiyeh/AFP via the Guardian, 28 March 2015

The color of stepped on gum
is the color of our times.
The light of our times is
the light in the 14th St.
subway at 2 a.m. The air
of our times is the air of the
Greyhound depot, Market
& Sixth. It is prime time. A passed
out sailor sits pitched
forward like a sack of laundry
in a plastic bucket seat
his forehead resting on
the movie of the week. The Long Goodbye.


(1973)
Poster for the Robert Altman film The Long Goodbye: image by Noirish, 28 March 2005

Arthur Tress: TV Kids: Defensive / Protective(Television Dreams Only of Itself)



Boy in TV Set, Boston: photo by Arthur Tress (b 1940), 1972, via the Guardian, 26 March 2015

Violence from around the world is brought to us
There’s a feeling of anxiety and tension, which you get in dreams
and environmental pollution -- children, causing them to have anxieties
in terrible conditions in ghettoes, and how
they’re often aggressive, in a defensive, frightened
TV set -- dumped in an abandoned lot



Boy in TV Set, Boston: photo by Arthur Tress (b 1940), 1972, from Dream Collector: 30th Anniversary, 2004 (via ClampArt)


 

Masked Children, 110th Street, New York City: photo by Arthur Tress (b 1940), 1969, from Dream Collector: 30th Anniversary, 2004 (via ClampArt)



Two attendees look at a display of flat screen televisions at the Consumer Electronics Show

Flat-screen TVs now use less energy than the cathode ray television sets they replaced
: photo by Justin Sullivan via The Guardian, 29 July 2011


File:Newman-Who's Afraid of Red, Yellow and  Blue.jpg

Who's Afraid of Red, Yellowand Blue?: Barnett Newman, 1966


People on television
give you their

public self

like people on
elevators



(1970)




16 March: people watch a television broadcasting Japan's Emperor Akihito's televised address to the nation at an electronics retail store in Tokyo; Japanese Emperor Akihito said on Wednesday that problems at Japan's nuclear-power reactors were unpredictable and he was "deeply worried" following an earthquake he described as "unprecedented in scale". It was an extraordinarily rare appearance by the emperor and his first public comments since last week's devastating earthquake and tsunami that killed thousands of people: photo by Issei Kato/Reuters. 16 March 2011


How can you tell if your flatscreen TV is energy efficient?: photo by Marcel Mettelsiefen via The Guardian, 24 April 2014



 

Epic files FTC complaint over Samsung smart TV voice recording accusing the company of breaching privacy laws: photo by Karlis Dambrans via The Guardian, 27 February 2015


 
LG's new 108in 4K UHD curved TV guarded by LG employees after being unveiled at the press day at the consumer electronics show CES in Las Vegas: photo by Michael Nelson/EPA via The Guardian, 10 January 2014 

White Noise

Still from White Noise, dir. Geoffrey Sax 2005

White Noise

Still from White Noise, dir. Geoffrey Sax 2005

White Noise

Still from White Noise, dir. Geoffrey Sax 2005

http://rs16.loc.gov/service/pnp/ds/01300/01317v.jpg

A man and a woman watching television news footage of the Vietnam War in their living room: photo by Warren K. Leffler, 13 February 1968 (U. S. News & World Report Magazine Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)


http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/03100/03117v.jpg


Men gathered  on a street in Amman, Jordan: photo by Thomas A. O'Halloran, July 1958 (U.S. News & World Report Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)

http://lcweb2.loc.gov/service/pnp/ppmsca/03100/03124v.jpg

 An African-American high school girlbeing educated via television during the period in which the Little Rock, Arkansas schools were closed to avoid integration: photo by Thomas A. O'Halloran, September 1958 (U.S. News and World Report Photograph Collection, Library of Congress)


An empty electric chair is shown in the Death House at Sing Sing Prison in Ossining, New York, in 1968. The state no longer implements the death penalty
: photo by AP via The Guardian, 28 March 2015



Untitled
: photo by Joshua Perez (StrangeGoodness), 28 October 2012

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/5/52/Television_dumped.jpg/1024px-Television_dumped.jpg

Dumped TV near Apeldoorn, The Netherlands: photo by Apdency, 1 March 2011
 


RCA Victor. "We got to move these color TVs..." Keeler, California: photo by Jody Miller, 31 March 2014 


Presidential Election America. Overview of the Dutch television studio: photo by Eric Koch / Anefo, 6 November 1968 (Nationaal Archief)

  
In an echo of events last week after the shooting, officers outside the church turn their backs on a video monitor as de Blasio speaks: photo by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters via The Guardian, 27 December 2014



A bleak living room complete with an old television set and armchair, abandoned house, Ohio: photo by Jonny Joo via The Guardian, 17 October 2014


Untitled [woman watching television, Colorado]: photo by Robert Adams from Summer Nights Walking (2009)
 
A Palestinian man is reflected on a damaged television amid the ruins of homes destroyed during the 50-day Israeli assault on Gaza. A total of 30 aid agencies said last week that they were alarmed by the limited progress that had been made to rebuild devastated lives and tackle the root causes of the conflict.
: photo by Said Khatib/AFP via The Guardian, 28 February 2015

True Color


  Posters #7: photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 26 September 2004



  Posters #8: photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 13 May 2005



Vertellerkästen #21: photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 14 January 2006




  Posters #13 (Bochum): photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 4 November 2005


  Posters #15 (Bochum): photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 4 November 2005
 


Posters #14 (Bochum): photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 4 November 2005


Vertellerkästen #26: photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 12 February 2006
 

  Stops #2 (Duisburg): photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 9 August 2007



 Posters #25 (Aachen): photo by Manfred Geyer (beauty of all things), 13 May 2013
Big Boxes


A woman casts her ballot at a polling station during Presidential elections run-off: photo by Jalil Rezayee/EPA via The Guardian, 14 June 2014



Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. An abandoned mansion: photo by Seph Lawless via the Guardian, 30 October 2014



Houston, Texas. A former bed and breakfast where a number of people are said to have been killed: photo by Seph Lawless via the Guardian, 30 October 2014

Trance/Mission


#Television trance THE SHINING #Kubrick: image via Shaun Cole @ShaunCole, 17 March 2015



#Television trance POLTERGEIST Hooper: image via Shaun Cole @ShaunCole, 17 March 2015

 

#Television trance THE STRANGE COLOR OF YOUR BODY'S TEARS [Cattet and Forzani]: image via Shaun Cole @ShaunCole, 17 March 2015

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Debbie Harry was definitely hot in #Videodrome: image via Bradley @BradSabbath, 20 March 2015

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Uno de los personajes de #Videodrome dice: "La televisión es la retina del ojo de la mente".: image via Misifunoski @Misifunoski, 11 February 2015



So #Videodrome finally came to FRUITION...: image via Carolina CHERCREW @jameskwaters, 10 February 2015


...Wheres Deborah Harry? @LarryFlick: image via Carolina CHERCREW @jameskwaters, 10 February 2015

Current_755_059_large

The erupting cancer death of Barry Convex: still from David Cronenerg's Videodrome (1983): image via Tim Lucas: Reflections on Videodrome, The Criterion Collection, 2004

[T]he universal truth of Videodrome's grotesque... story-line, cannot be rationally denied. From the moment we hear Professor O'Blivion's mantra of "Television is reality, and reality is less than television," it is clear that this is a film that is too applicable to every day life not to be taken seriously. No matter how one looks at it, our lives cannot be separated from videographic imagery. As we know no reality -- if that word can still be used -- outside our perceptions, computers, televisions, VCR's, and video games are truly "more real than 'real'". They are hyperreal. Actual interaction with other human beings and the physical world pales in comparison to the intense, visceral experiences we have in the simulacrum that is the televised image.

Videodrome certainly sheds light on the nature of post-modern man's existence in the world of the hyperreal, but the bleak assessment of our culture that it offers is, by no stretch of the imagination, easy to accept without many sleepless nights. When a director like Cronenberg makes a film that tells us that the world we have created has made reality obsolete, the most disillusioned of us recoils in shock at this blatant display of cynicism. However, with the aid of an open mind and a strong stomach, it becomes abundantly clear that what has just been witnessed in Videodrome is a prophecy, and hardly one that we have to wait to examine the truth of... As Cronenberg tells us through Professor O'Blivion, "That which is perceived on the television screen emerges as raw experience for those who watch it." We think nothing of the fact that everything that was once directly lived has become a mere representative image. Truth put to it, we prefer things that way. Real experience is so limited when put beside technology's synthesis of reality. Why not get emotional with a machine? Post-modernity leaves us with televised images for our peers. Why not interact with them? What choice does humanity have when it has been rendered technological, simulatable, and reproducible to the point of infinity?

What choice, indeed? David Cronenberg is one of the few individuals who understands that technology has become so entangled with the very core of our being, that a symbiosis between humanity and cybernetics is necessary for post-modern man to survive. The post-modern condition is ... a time of over-stimulation, where we crave stimulation for its own sake. Reality can no longer provide us with experiences that are intense enough to sustain our needs. The hyperreality possible only through concentrated mechanical re-creations and improvements of reality is our one alternative to the gray and lifeless routines that would otherwise be the definition of "living"... After all, virtual reality technology that can perfectly duplicate the sensory perceptions of "real" experience has been a project that NASA completed a while ago. As difficult as it may be to believe, the world that Videodrome's Brian O'Blivion spoke of, where people could use technology to create new lives and identities for themselves that "would cause the Cathode Ray Tube to resonate", is knocking on the door of the here and now -- the computer industry is trying to develop cheap, marketable VR devices at this very moment. In this age, where "the television screen has become the retina of the mind's eye", we find ourselves suddenly walking away from reality and the actual physical world, to find liberation in the limitlessness of technological marvels like televisions, video games, and now virtual reality simulators -- machines that offer the ever-present opportunity to mould and shape one's own private, simulated alternate world, complete with any number of entirely new lives on one's own design. The technology of post-modernity has become the "Santa Claus of the subconscious" that affords humans chance to re-create ourselves again and again, removing the yolk of reality through virtual experiences of what each of us deems the "ideal" existence... The age of the hyperreal is the present. We are truly the realization of Videodrome's "New Flesh" -- bizarrely inhuman beings that are not obliged to bother with "trivial" issues, such as developing the wisdom that is needed to find meaning in the banalities and hardships of life. Why waste one's time? This is the cyber-heaven we always dreamed of. The post-modern condition leaves us well beyond the reach of the Apocalypse, in the utopia of digital immortality, that obliterates the grotesque feelings of distance we have from ourselves with mechanical wonders that sweep away all of life's difficulties in a scintillating wave of intense electrified perfection.

Or so it seems. In the rat race for technologically achieved over-stimulation, something has fallen through the cracks... As we stand in this steel and microchip Eden that our forbears never dreamed could be accomplished, we are faced with the realization that this incandescent would-be utopia still presents us with the same age-old tasks of coming to terms with ourselves and genuinely imbuing our lives with value -- those same duties, repackaged in a cybernetic wrapper of simulation and image. As such, we must adapt to this strange existence and do our best to make machines our partners in discovering and rediscovering what it means to be human.

Cronenberg’s Videodrome and the Post-Modern Condition (excerpts): anonymous, from 123HelpMe, 29 Mar 2015


@malarrassa @NovaJazzCava @SoulSystemdjs la semana de #Videodrome miercoles en el #ateneuCandela y ayer en el SoulPub: image via VideodromeTRS @VideodromeTRS, 13 March 2015

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#DavidCronenberg #videodrome #MoveIHaveSeen100Times #OnePerfectShot: image via Uqbar 4 @uqbar42VideodromeTRS @VideodromeTRS, 7 March 2015

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@malarrassa @NovaJazzCava @SoulSystemdjs la semana de #Videodrome, lo más duro de James Woods después de Padre de familia ->: image via Pelicula, peliculas @elpelicultista, 5 February 2015

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Is #Cronenberg #Videodrome the first great techno #horror film? #TBT: image via Other Halves @OtherHalvesFilm, 5 February 2015


#Television trance #CronenbergVIDEODROME: image via Shaun Cole @ShaunCole, 17 March 2015

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 #VIDEODROME #CRONENBERG: image via Polly Esther @pollyesth, 6 February 2015

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 #videodrome: image via pink boys @kstodayglow, 28 January 2015

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 #videodrome: image via anton funic @funic, 18 January 2015



sana uzanan diller kopsun! #videodrome #audiencerview: image via Jek Lemin @tolbooy, 15 March 2015


sana uzanan diller kopsun! #videodrome #audiencerview
: image via Jek Lemin @tolbooy, 15 March 2015

Television of Tomorrow

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e3/Radio_Listeners_Guide_Fall_1928_Cover.jpg

Radio Listeners' Guide and Call Book, Volume 3, Number 2, November 1928: cover art showing imagined future of television: image by Swtpc, July 2008

NBC TELEVISION NETWORK LIFE 11/13/1944 p. 48

National Broadcasting Company ad for NBC Television Network: Time, 13 November 1944 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

BELMONT TELEVISIONS LIFE 03/12/1945

Belmont Television Corp. ad for Belmont Televisions: Life, 12 March 1945 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

 SPARTON TOWN AND COUNTRY TELEVISION LIFE 04/17/1950 p. 124

Sparks-Whittington Co. ad for Sparton Televisions
: Life, 17 April 1950 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

17 INCH RECTANGULAR TUBE BLACK-DAYLIGHT TELEVISION NEWSWEEK 09/03/1951 p. 2

General Electric ad for 17 Inch Rectangular Tube Black-Daylight Television
: Newsweek, 3 September 1951 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

RCA VICTOR TELEVISION LIFE 06/16/1952 p. 32

Radio Corporation of America ad for RCA Victor Television
: Life, 16 June 1952 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

WESTINGHOUSE TELEVISIONS LIFE 06/16/1952 p. 90

Westinghouse Corp. ad for Westinghouse Televisions: Life, 16 June 1952 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 
RCA VICTOR TELEVISION DELUXE LIFE 10/13/1952 p. 116

Radio Corporation of America ad for RCA Victor Television Deluxe: Life, 13 October 1952 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 
SYLVANIA HALOLIGHT TELEVISION LIFE 10/13/1952 p. 55

Sylvania Electric Products Corp. ad for Sylvania Halolight Television: Life, 13 October 1952 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

SPARTON COSMIC EYE TELEVISIONS LIFE 08/17/1953 p. 85
 
Sparton Radio-Television ad for Sparton Cosmic Eye Televisions: Life, 17 June 1953  (Gallery of Graphic Design)

ADMIRAL TELEVISIONS SATURDAY EVENING POST 09/03/1955

Admiral ad forAdmiral Television: Saturday Evening Post, 3 September 1955  (Gallery of Graphic Design)

RCA VICTOR COLOR TELEVISION LIFE 11/14/1955 p. 154

Radio Corporation of America ad for RCA Victor Color Television: Life, 14 November 1955 (Gallery of Graphic Design)
 
SYLVANIA BIG SCREEN CONSOLE TELEVISIONS LIFE 09/09/1957 p. 92
 
Sylvania Electric Products Inc. ad for Sylvania Big Screen Console Televisions: Life, 9 September 1957 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

PHILCO MISS AMERICA HYPER-POWER TELEVISION LIFE 11/11/1957 p. 1
 
Philco ad for Philco Miss America Hyper-Power Televisions: Life, 11 November 1957 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

ADMIRAL TELEVISIONS WITH SON-R REMOTE CONTROL LIFE 09/15/1958

Admiral ad forAdmiral Televisions with Son-R Remote Control: Life, 15 September 1958 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

RCA VICTOR COLOR TELEVISION SPORTS ILLUSTRATED 05/11/1959

Radio Corporation of America ad for RCA Victor Color Television: Sports Illustrated, 11 May 1959 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

GENERAL ELECTRIC PERFECT COLOR TELEVISION TIME 12/06/1963 p. 8

General Electric ad  for General ElectricPerfect Color Television: Time, 6 December 1963 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

MOTOROLA SUPER-COMPACT COLOR TV LIFE 11/04/1966
 
Motorola ad for Motorola Super-Compact Color TV: Life, 4 November 1966 (Gallery of Graphic Design)

Day After Tomorrow TV: Beware the New Virtuals: They Move Among the Living


Another fun day of blowing minds with #VR at @NL_mn @TheSoapFactory: image via Chuckumentary @Chuckumentary, 28 March 2015 Minneapolis, MN


Another fun day of blowing minds with #VR at @NL_mn @TheSoapFactory: image via Chuckumentary @Chuckumentary, 28 March 2015 Minneapolis, MN


Another fun day of blowing minds with #VR at @NL_mn @TheSoapFactory: image via Chuckumentary @Chuckumentary, 28 March 2015 Minneapolis, MN


Another fun day of blowing minds with #VR at @NL_mn @TheSoapFactory: image via Chuckumentary @Chuckumentary, 28 March 2015 Minneapolis, MN

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Today at the #futurefashion experience with @krissyxkd. The future is exciting and frightening at the same time #vr: image via Antonski @Style Division, 27 March 2015

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"#VRwill matter to you. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow, but someday and for the rest of your life" #f8: image via Dean Johnson @activrightbrain, 26 March 2015

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@MindMazeSA
stands to make the virtual more real with neural sensing #technology #vr: image via PSFK @PSFK, 24 March 2015

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Many thanks to the lovely team @VISUALISE360 for coming to @HK_London today to demo some of their cool #VR work: image via Candace @ CandaceKuss, 24 March 2015

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The @oculus DK2 may be challenging to wear with hats but @dejavuavantguard found a way to make it work!: image via ATLvr @ATL_vr, 24 March 2015

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Oculus/FVB party on Sunset. Half the people have boxes strapped to their heads and are flying over New York. #VR: image via Zillah Watson @zillahwatson, 23 March 2015

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Group selfies explode with #bullettime time capture at #VRLA #VRLASpringExpo #vr: image via LATech Digest@LATech Digest, 22 March 2015

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@ElemenTerraVR at #VRLA #VRLASpringExpo #vr: image via LATech Digest@LATech Digest, 22 March 2015

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Zeiss getting in on the #vr act. Looks stunning but needs some more umphhh. #technology #virtualreality #oculus #VR: image via Sohil Pandya @Sohil, 22 March 2015

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Adventures in #WearableTechnology tests the wearable display as a laptop replacement #VR #AR: image via SFVRCC @SFVRCC, 22 March 2015

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"All I wanted to do was hug her, it really was a performance for one. An incredibly intimate experience." #bjork #vr: image via Andrew Mechior @iFamulus, 22 March 2015 Poplar, London

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 Virtual reality is not the (immediate) future of #film #VR #iD: image via AE @iAudienceE, 22 March 2015 Poplar, London
 

Beijing, China. A model experiencing TotalityVision walks the runway during China fashion week: photo by Feng Li via The Guardian, 26 March 2015

The Ritual Aspect

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Zamora, Spain. Penitents take part in the Procession of Silence during Holy Week: photo by Andres Kudacki/AP via The Guardian, 2 April 2015

Penitents wait inside San Francisco church to take part in "Nuestro Senor Atado a la Columna, Maria Santisima de la Paz y San Juan Evangelista" Holy Week procession in Arcos de la Frontera, Spain.

Penitents wait inside San Francisco church to take part in “Nuestro Senor Atado a la Columna, Maria Santisima de la Paz y San Juan Evangelista” Holy Week procession in Arcos de la Frontera, Spain: photo by Daniel Ochoa de Olza/AP via FT Photo Diary, 1 April 2015

Penitents take part in a Holy Week procession in Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, Monday, March 30, 2015. Hundreds of processions take place throughout Spain during the Easter Holy Week. (AP Photo/Daniel Ochoa de Olza)
        .............,,,,,
       ............................. Penitents take part in a Holy Week procession in Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, Monday. Hundreds of processions take place throughout Spain during the Easter Holy Week.
: photo by Daniel Ochoa de Olza/AP via FT Photo Diary, 31 March 2015

 

..........................................Nepal’s living goddess, the Kumari Devi, is carried by worshippers during a procession on the third day of the Seto Machindranath chariot festival: photo by Prakash Mathema/AFP via The Guardian, 30 March 2015

TOPSHOTS An young Indian Jain devotee dr...TOPSHOTS An young Indian Jain devotee dressed on a horse participates in a religious rally organised on the occasion of Mahavir Jayanti in Kolkata on April 2, 2015. The most important religious holiday in Jainism, Mahavir Jayanti celebrates the birth of Mahavira, the last Tirthankara, which is generally accepted as 599 BCE. AFP PHOTO/ Dibyangshu SARKARDIBYANGSHU SARKAR/AFP/Getty Images

......................................................An Indian Jain devotee on a horse participates in a religious rally organised on the occasion of Mahavir Jayanti in Kolkataa: photo by Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP via FT Photo Diary, 13 March 2015

Artist has his face painted to resemble Hindu god Shasthappan before performing during the Theyyam ritual in Somwarpet...An artist has his face painted to resemble Hindu god Shasthappan before performing during the Theyyam ritual in Somwarpet town in the southern Indian state of Karnataka March 16, 2015. Theyyam is a form of worship and is celebrated mostly in southern parts of the country. Picture taken March 16, 2015. REUTERS/Abhishek N. Chinnappa (INDIA - Tags: ANNIVERSARY RELIGION SOCIETY)

\..............................An artist has his face painted to resemble the Hindu god Shasthappan, before performing during the Theyyam ritual in Somwarpet town in the southern Indian state of Karnataka: photo by Abhishek N. Chinnappa/Reuters via FT Photo Diary, 13 March 2015

A eunuch dances during a rally to mark the congregation of thousands of eunuchs from different parts of India, in Jammu, India,
 ..........,,,,...........,,,,.................................A eunuch dances during a rally to mark the congregation of thousands of eunuchs from different parts of India, in Jammu, India: photo by Channi Anand/AP via FT Photo Diary, 13 March 2015

An Indian Sikh performs fire-breathing

....................................An Indian Sikh performs fire-breathing during a religious procession to mark Hola Mohalla at the Gurudwara Shri Keshgarh Sahib temple at Sri Anandpur Sahib, on Friday: photo by Shammi Mehrashammi/AFP via FT Photo Diary, 6 March 2015

Opposition fighters sit inside a damaged...Opposition fighters sit inside a damaged building in the rebel-held Qastal al-Harami neighborhood, in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo, on March 24, 2015. AFP PHOTO / AMC / ZEIN AL-RIFAIZEIN AL-RIFAI/AFP/Getty Images

.................................................................Opposition fighters sit inside a damaged building in the rebel-held Qastal al-Harami neighbourhood, in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo: photo by Zein Al-Rifaizein/AFP, 24 March 2015

Widows daubed in colours dance as they take part in the Holi, or Festival of Colours, at a widows' ashram at Vrindavan in the northern Indian state of Uttar. Traditionally in Hindu culture, widows are expected to renounce earthly pleasure so they do not celebrate Holi. But women at the shelter for widows, who have been abandoned by their families, celebrate the festival by throwing flowers and coloured powder.

Widows daubed in colours dance as they take part in the Holi, or Festival of Colours, at a widows’ ashram at Vrindavan in the northern Indian state of Uttar. Traditionally in Hindu culture, widows are expected to renounce earthly pleasure so they do not celebrate Holi. But women at the shelter for widows, who have been abandoned by their families, celebrate the festival by throwing flowers and coloured powder: photo by Ahmad Masood/Reuters via FT Photo Diary, 6 March 2015


 Holi, the Hindu festival of colour, is celebrated in the village of Barsana, in Uttar Pradesh, India: photo by Subodh Shetty via The Guardian, 2 April 2015

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Barsane, the village near Mathura that practices male-bashing at #Holi: image via folomojo @folomojo, 22 March 2015

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Thanks to everyone who came along to Holi at King's Cross. You looked AMAZING! #Holi: image via King's Cross @kingscrossN1C, 30 March 2015



#Holi at King's Cross: image via King's Cross @kingscrossN1C, 30 March 2015



 Samburu warriors touch an orphaned rhino called Kilifi for the first time at Lewa wildlife conservancy in Kenya. None of the warriors had seen a rhino before and some had never seen a photo of one. The young warriors had been visiting to learn about conservation practices, as these communities hold the key to saving Africa’s great animals: photo by Ami Vitale via The Guardian, 19 March 2015

Prosecutors, lawyers and judges stand on...Prosecutors, lawyers and judges stand on April 1, 2015 near a statue of Lady Justice during a funeral ceremony for senior Istanbul prosecutor Mehmet Selim Kiraz, killed the day before after being held at his offices by leftist militants in a hostage drama, inside the courthouse where the hostage taking took place in Istanbul. Kiraz had been investigating the politically-sensitive case of a teenager who died of injuries inflicted by police during anti-government protests in 2013. Turkish authorities on April 1 rounded up over 30 suspected members of the radical leftist group behind a bloody hostage standoff that left a top Istanbul prosecutor dead and shocked the country. AFP PHOTO / OZAN KOSEOZAN KOSE/AFP/Getty Images

Prosecutors, lawyers and judges stand near a statue of Lady Justice during a funeral ceremony for senior Istanbul prosecutor Mehmet Selim Kiraz: photo by Osan Kose/AFP via FT Photo Diary, 1 April 2015

Japan Airlines Co. (JAL) group companies' new employees practice before releasing paper planes during an initiation ceremony at the company's hangar near Haneda Airport in Tokyo, Japan

Japan Airlines Co. (JAL) group companies’ new employees practice before releasing paper planes during an initiation ceremony at the company’s hangar near Haneda Airport in Tokyo, Japan: photo by Kiyoshi Ota/Bloomberg via FT Photo Diary, 1 April 2015


An aerial view of a public cemetery ahead of the Qingming Festival, or Tomb Sweeping Day in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. The festival, which falls on April 5 this year, is a day for the Chinese to remember and honour their ancestors: photo by Reuters via FT Photo Diary, 26 March 2015

Luna de Sangre: Hasbara Moon ("And Then We Were Free")

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'BloodMoons' discoverer:"More judgment coming'' #MarkBiltz #Israel #space: image via Space Trends @Spaceolizer, 2 April 2015

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#FourBloodMoons: image via Javier Lopez @irondodger33, 4 April 2015

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#BloodMoons in conjunction with #JewishHolidays. Aaaghh! What does it mean? #LunarCalendar: image via Eva Kowalski @EKowalskiKomedy, 4 April 2015

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INTERESTING "@PJStrikeForce: Pastor Hagee, The Moon Over Fort Worth Listen To Sermons ViaYouTube #FourBloodMoons": image via Laura Carlson @lauracarlsonia, 25 March 2015

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Check out Pastor Mark's teachings on the Blood Moons on our website! #bloodmoons #fourbloodmoons #bloodmoonblitz
: image via ElShaddai Ministries @ElShaddaiMinis, 13 December 2014


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Check out Pastor Marks teachings on the blood moons as well as interviews that he has done!: image via ElShaddai Ministries @ElShaddaiMinis, 13 December 2014

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 Bad Iran deal foretold in '#bloodmoon' celestial signs?: image via e: image via Space Trends @Spaceolizer, 4 April 2015

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Here comes the '#BloodMoon': total lunar eclipse over the US in the early hours of Saturday: image via RT @RT_com, 4 April 2015

Here Comes the Blood Moon -- Are You Up For It?
 

This 8 October 2014 photo shows the ‘blood moon’ during a total lunar eclipse as seen from Monterey Park in California.
The moon will turn dusky red on Saturday, as the shortest total lunar eclipse in a century makes a “blood moon” visible around much of the world. Slightly before dawn, the moon will pass behind the Earth’s shadow while sunlight passing through the planet’s atmosphere and around its rim casts the moon in a dark, brownish red colour. New Yorkers will be able to see the moon change colour over some of its surface, while people west of the Mississippi and throughout Australia will be able to watch the full “blood moon” of a total eclipse. The total eclipse is calculated to last only four minutes and 43 seconds, the shortest in a century, said Nasa astronomer Mitzi Adams, because the moon will not pass through the centre of the Earth’s shadow but rather closer to its edge. “The shadow will be kind of a reddish brown – a dark, bloody red,” Adams said, adding that depending on atmospheric conditions, and as the moon moves, “the shadow will appear to move into the disk of the moon until it’s totally immersed and the entirety of the moon will appear reddish brown”. Adams said the shortest total lunar eclipse on record was in 1529 and lasted one minute and 42 seconds. The eclipse is the third in less than a year – a fourth will occur on 28 September, to end what is called a tetrad series. There are usually two lunar eclipses a year, according to Nasa. Another tetrad is due in 2032, Adams said. For a spectator looking up from the shadowed surface of the moon, the Earth would appear as a black circular silhouette, rimmed with the sun’s intense, bright red light. Astronomers call the straight-line configuration of Earth, moon and sun “syzygy”. The eclipse will be most visible to the naked eye in Australia, New Zealand, eastern Asia and Russia and the western US, where Adams said skywatchers should simply “make sure you have a good view of the western horizon”.: caption text by Alan Yuhas in New York; photo by Nick Ut/AP via The Guardian, 3 April 2015

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Que hermosa luna!! Será la famosa #LunaDeSangre? What a beautiful moon! Will [it be] the famous #BloodMoon?
: image via Carlos San Martin @carlosdanielsm9, 6 March 2015 Chillán, Chile


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April 4, 2015 #BloodMoon (Passover): image via GENIUS IDIOT @Alpaca_Poncho, 4 March 2015

Explaining the Lesson of the Passover Blood Moon: Hasbara 101: And Then We Were Free
 
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@theodoreshoebat: Obama Released Israel’s TOP SECRET NUCLEAR PROGRAM In Unprecedented Move: image via Mike Beacham @Mike_Beacham, 4 April 2015

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To honor her heartfelt tribute to Zion, we have appointed a special welcoming committee for @MsLaurynHill: image via Benjamin Netanyahu @Ask_Netanyahu, 4 April 2015

Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga., sits behind President Barack Obama at a memorial ceremony for the late former Speaker of the House of Representatives Thomas S. Foley at the Statuary Hall on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, Oct. 29, 2013. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

Don't disrespect our president, black lawmakers tell Netanyahu: photo by AP via Politico, 10 February 2015

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#ChagSameach! Passover serves as a reminder that the first born children of our gentile enemies must die: image via Benjamin Netanyahu @Ask_Netanyahu, 4 April 2015

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@netanyahu #AskNetanyahu this reminds me of the Holocaust, instead of rings in #Gaza children shoes. what say you?: image via Abu Bisseh @Ajlouni011, 20 March 2015

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@LibtardLimbaugh As The Only Democracy Ever, Israel builds free Diversity Camps for our Africans. #AskNetanyahu: image via Benjamin Netanyahu @Ask_Netanyahu, 15 March 2015 

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Hey @Beyonce, our soldier invited you over for Passover! Interested?: image via IDF  @IDFSpokesperson, 4 April 2015

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Happy Passover to all our Jewish friends. #ChagSameach: image via House Republicans @HouseGOP, 4 April 2015

Eli Valley Passover cartoon (page 2)

A Passover Lesson: 'And then we were free': comic by Eli Valley via 972 Magazine, 13 April 2014

Little Bibi in Slumberland
 
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A very Happy #Passover to the Speaker of all Jews Prime War Criminal @netanyahu from the USA: image via Thaiwen @Thaiwen, 4 April 2015

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BREAKING: #Iran must commit to #Israel's right to exist as part of nuclear deal – Netanyahu: image via RT @RT_com, 4 April 2015

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MORE: Netanyahu: Final deal could 'increase risks of horrific war’: image via RT @RT_com, 2 April 2015

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Crybibi netanyahu's reaction to  #IranTalks deal reached!: image via Opisrael @Op_Israel, 2 April 2014

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Netanyahu: 'Iran deal endangers 'the peace of the world' / AP Photo: image via Politico @politico, 1 April 2014

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Boehner: Administration's treatment of Bibi "reprehensible."/Getty Image: image via Politico @politico, 29 March 2015

Eli.Valley.Little.Bibi.In.Slumberland
 
Little Bibi in Slumberland: comic by Eli Valley, from EV Comics: Ethnocentric Parochialism for the Whole Family, 11 February 2015

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Statements by PM Netanyahu and US Speaker of the House of Representatives John Boehner: image via PM of Israel @IsraeliPM, 1 April 2015

Everything You Need To Know About the Atavistic Anthropocentric Racist Tribal Blood Ritual Pseudo-'Meaning' of the Blood Moon -- And More! Download Now!!



The moon glows a red hue during a total lunar eclipse Tuesday, April 15, 2014, as seen from the Milwaukee area. That eclipse was the first of four total lunar eclipses to take place between 2014 to 2015: photo by AP/Mike De Sisti/ Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via Washington Post3 April 2015

Everything you need to know about the 'blood moon' apocalypse debate: Abby Ohlheiser, Washington Post, 3 April 2015
 
For a very brief time on Saturday, the moon will turn an orangey-red, depending on conditions, during an Easter weekend lunar eclipse. Although the east coast of the United States will be shut out of this particular “blood moon” in the sky, it’s just the third of four such eclipses spanning a period of a couple years -- an event known as a tetrad.

The phrase “blood moon tetrad” is a wonderful phrase that seems to demand its own apocalyptic mythology, which it, in fact, has.

Although not every full lunar eclipse turns a blood red color earning its colloquial name, the current tetrad has become the focus of speculation in some circles about its relationship to the coming end of the world. Something, the theory goes, simply must be coming with the tetrad.

So, are we two blood moons away from the End Times? Let’s find out!

What does the Bible say about blood moons? 

As Sarah Puliam Bailey has previously noted, there are two major blood moon references in scripture. They are pretty similar, but in different books:

“The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the Lord,” - Joel 2:31

“The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and notable day of the Lord.” – Acts 2:20

So, potentially not a good day for humans.

But the authority on what the blood moon means for those who believe really has more to do with a little cottage industry of blood moon-themed books promoting the theory.

Okay, so what do those blood moon books say about blood moons? 

The books are built on a Dan Brown-esque imposition of coded messages and signs on biblical history and the Bible itself, with titles, such as, “Four Blood Moons: Something Is About to Change,” and “Blood Moons: Decoding the Imminent Heavenly Signs.”

Root Source’s Gidon Ariel has explained why he thinks a tetrad is particularly worth paying attention to: “Not only does God’s name have four letters, but it was on the fourth day of creation that God created the sun and the moon, establishing them as signs to mark sacred times, such as the Festival of Passover.”

Mark Biltz, founder of the Washington State-based El Shaddai Ministries, wrote the latter of those two books mentioned above. He spoke to The Washington Post last year about what he thinks the blood moons are saying:
“I’m just saying there’s a good chance there could be a war with Israel,” Biltz told me in an interview. “I’m also saying there’s a good chance there could be economic calamity. And I’m basing that on the Bible and patterns.”
Biltz has told World Net Daily, where he is a regular interviewee and contributor, that he believes Jewish tradition dictates an interpretive difference between solar and lunar eclipses. A solar eclipse, he said, is a message for the entire world. A lunar eclipse is a message for the Jewish people.

The message of the tetrad, many followers believe, is potentially a bad one for Israel …

Is there anything we can do? 

Let me finish!

The message of the tetrad, some believe, is potentially a bad one for Israel unless American Christians continue to stand with Israel and with Jesus. Both Biltz and fellow blood moon believer (and Root Source co-founder) Bob O'Dell have asked Christians to pray for the duration of Saturday’s eclipse.

Of course, many blood moon believers, including megachurch pastor John Hagee, believe that this particular blood moon closely precedes the Rapture of Christians, Armageddon and the second coming of Christ. 

So there’s more than one person promoting this blood moon theory? 

There is, in fact, a rivalry.

Biltz, quoted above, has recently accused Hagee of ripping off his blood moon theory and claiming too much credit for it, just as Hagee was preparing to release a movie called “Four Blood Moons.”

Biltz characterizes himself as the discoverer of the whole blood moon apocalypse idea, after he noted a connection between NASA’s charts of eclipses and the Jewish holiday calender. According to Biltz, he started putting together his theory in 2008. He’s been a public proponent of the blood moon prophecy ever since, although his book on the topic came out in 2014.

Hagee, meanwhile, published his own popular book about the blood moons in 2013, a year after Biltz says he first talked to Hagee about the theory. Hagee has since become a very popular authority on the prophecy, and says that he discovered the theory independently based off those same NASA eclipse charts.

The feud played out publicly, in part on the pages of World Net Daily in recent weeks.

I read Capital Weather Gang’s great explainer on Saturday’s eclipse and learned that blood moon tetrads happen on the regular, in cycles of boom and bust. What makes this blood moon tetrad different from any other blood moon tetrad? 

Well, while this doesn’t necessarily make the current blood moon tetrad unique for reasons we’ll get to soon enough, those who believe it’s a divine warning of significance have pointed to the alignment of each blood moon with a major Jewish holiday:

April 15, 2014 – Passover
October 8, 2014 – Sukkot
April 4, 2015 – Passover
September 28, 2015 – Sukkot

As you’ll remember, there was also recently a solar eclipse, right in the middle of all those blood moons.

But there have already been two blood moons! The world’s still here. 

In fact, Biltz believes that the blood moon prophecy is already coming true. Again from World Net Daily:
“After the first blood moon, we’ve had the Russian invasion of the Ukraine, we’ve had the advance of ISIS, a two-month war between Israel and Gaza, the Ebola plague, the overthrow of Yemen, upheaval in the Middle East, and economic meltdowns coming. We still have over a year to go. More judgment coming anytime in 2016 as well is what these blood moons are referring to.”
Does the blood moon tetrad have anything to say to President Obama?

Oh, does it ever! Last year, Biltz posited that the blood moons were in no small part meant as divine warnings to the president about his Middle East policy. “The moons are like flashing red warning lights at a heavenly intersection saying to Israel as well as the nations they will be crossing heavenly red lines,” Biltz wrote, “and if they do, they will understand as Pharaoh did on Passover night 3,500 years ago that the Creator backs up what He says.”

How do you explain the alignment of the eclipses with all those Jewish holidays? 

The Jewish calender, unlike our solar-based 12-month calendar, is primarily based on the lunar cycle. Meaning: it makes sense that every once in a while, an unusual but not unheard of phenomenon, such as a tetrad of full moon eclipses would fall on four holidays that correspond to the moon’s cycle — especially when some of them, such as Passover, always begin on a full moon.


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The Blood Moon. #space #moon #bloodmoon: image via SPACE PICTURES @SPACE PICTURES, 8 February 2015

Let's Do a Deal: Channeling the Passover Blood Moon to Ensure Max Profits Across the Board Almost

Blood Moon seen over the Kinneret in Israel. (Photo: Baruch Len)

Blood Moon seen over the Kinneret in Israel: photo by Baruch Len via Breaking Israel News, 31 March 2015

Christian Leaders Call for Passover Blood Moon Prayer for Israel's Safety: Breaking Israel News, 31 March 2015

“God set them in the vault of the sky to give light on the earth, to govern the day and the night, and to separate light from darkness. And God saw that it was good. And there was evening, and there was morning -- the fourth day.” (Genesis 1:17-19)

Christian leaders are hoping to channel the Passover 2015 Blood Moon fever into a time of fervent prayer for Israel.

Pastor Mark Biltz, who first popularized the Blood Moon tetrads, and Bob O'Dell of Root Source, who discovered unique insights connecting the recent solar and lunar eclipses with the modern State of Israel, are calling for Christians everywhere to pray for four minutes and forty four seconds during the upcoming Passover Blood Moon.

blood moon

Cycle of the Blood Moon: photo by Baruch Len via Breaking Israel News, 31 March 2015

“Bob and I were influenced by the rarity of this coming Blood Moon -– the shortest lunar eclipse ever recorded in human history on the night of Passover, and the fourth shortest of all eclipses in the last 4,000 years,” Biltz toldBreaking Israel News.

The imminent total lunar eclipse, known as a Blood Moon, will take place on the fourth day of the fourth month, April 4th, and will last for exactly four minutes and forty four seconds.

“Iran’s impending nuclear threat in the region has Israel very concerned. So we believe it is both important and urgent that Christians everywhere pray for the peace of Jerusalem on 4/4 for just 4 minutes and 44 seconds,” explained Blitz.

The number four has Biblical significance, according to Root Source  co-founder Gidon Ariel. “Not only does God’s name have four letters, but it was on the fourth day of creation that God created the sun and the moon, establishing them as signs to mark sacred times, such as the Festival of Passover. It is incredible to see Christians putting aside centuries of anti-Semitism and coming towards Israel in friendship and prayer this Passover.”

Blood Moons 101: Get Your Free eBook Today

The number four also holds special significance during the Passover seder as there are four cups of wine which correspond to the four expressions describing Israel’s redemption in the Book of Exodus (6:6).
“Therefore, say to the Israelites: ‘I am the LORD, and I will bring you out from under the yoke of the Egyptians. I will free you from being slaves to them, and I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and with mighty acts of judgment.’”
Ariel explained to Breaking Israel News that the Jewish significance of the number four goes further. “The fourth letter of the Hebrew Alphabet is ‘Dalet’ which also means door. It is the door post that has profound significance on Passover, as the Jews spread the blood of the Passover sacrifice on their doorposts causing God to pass over their homes during the Exodus from Egypt.”

Biltz and O’Dell have organized a special prayer event scheduled for 11:58 AM GMT and is a response to a similar call issued two weeks ago by Ariel. 

Ariel, an Orthodox Jew, called on Jews and Christians to pray together on behalf of the entire world, during the two minute long shadow over the North Pole during the recent solar eclipse on March 20.

Gidon Ariel (L), of Root Source, leading a special prayer service coinciding with a solar eclipse, March 20, 2015. (Photo: Daystar Burton/ Root Source)

Gidon Ariel (L), of Root Source, leading a special prayer service coinciding with a solar eclipse, March 20, 2015: photo by Daystar Burton/ Root Source via via Breaking Israel News, 31 March 2015 
 
According to Biltz, “If a Jew from Israel calls for prayer for the entire world during the solar eclipse, then we Christians should return the favor and call for prayer for Israel, and the reading of Psalm 122, during the lunar eclipse.”

Ariel explained the reason for the two calls to prayer.

“In Jewish tradition, the nations of the world are likened to the sun, and the Jewish people are compared to the moon,” he told Breaking Israel News. “The prayer offered during the North Pole solar eclipse was for the benefit of the entire world. It is especially moving that two Christians are now calling for prayers for the peace of Jerusalem during the lunar eclipse.”

The recent outpouring of interest in the Blood Moons has been covered widely by mainstream media such as Fox News and the Washington Post. Pro-Israel Pastor John Hagee released a documentary last week entitled "Four Blood Moons", which sparked another round of interest.
 
“The Blood Moons have erupted a controversy within the Christian community about the nature of eclipses, their meaning, and whether they can signal future events,” O’Dell explained to Breaking Israel News.“For this prayer event, Mark Biltz and I were willing to put our personal views aside and leverage the occasion for a cause we can all agree upon –- to communicate our strong desire to be a blessing to the Nation of Israel.”
 
 
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What will be the #BloodMoon in a few hours rises over Lake Michigan and Chicago: image via Craig Newman @craignewman, 4 April 2015
 

George Herbert: I got me flowers

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Jammu. Kashmir, India. A girl dressed as Hindu Goddess Durga searches for coins in the polluted water of the river Tawi during Navratri, a Hindu festival: photo by Jaipal Singh/EPA via The Guardian, 29 March 2015
 

I got me flowers to straw thy way;
I got me boughs off many a tree:
But thou wast up by break of day,
And brought’st thy sweets along with thee.

The Sunne arising in the East,
Though he give light, & th’ East perfume;
If they should offer to contest
With thy arising, they presume.

Can there be any day but this,
Though many sunnes to shine endeavour?
We count three hundred, but we misse:
There is but one, and that one ever.

 
George Herbert (1593-1533): I got me flowers, from The Temple, 1633



An Indian child searches for coins under the polluted waters of the river Tawi on the last day of Navratri, a Hindu festival in Jammu
: photo by Jaipal Singh/EPA, 28 March 2015 via the Guardian, 5 April 2015


Allahabad, India. On Ashtami, the eighth day of the Hindu festival of Navratri, a young girl takes photos of her relatives on the banks of the river Ganges: photo by Rajesh Kumar Singh/AP via the Guardian 27 March 2015



Manila, Philippines. Children walking beside a river filled with rubbish in the capital: photo by Noel Celis/AFP via The Guardian, 27 January 2015


Cows and smoke. Ground zero in the war on nature –- cattle graze among the burning Amazon jungle in Brazil: photo by Daniel Beltra via The Guardian, 1 April 2015


Greenhouses grow greenhouses. As far as the eye can see, greenhouses cover the landscape in Almeria, Spain: photo by Yann Arthus Bertrand via The Guardian, 1 April 2015


British Columbia clear-cut.Sometimes called the Brazil of the North, Canada has not been kind to its native forests as seen by clear-cut logging on Vancouver Island
: photo by
Garth Lentz via The Guardian, 1 April 2015


Rectangular fields. No room for nature, the entire landscape is devoted to crop production in China: photo by Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe via The Guardian, 1 April 2015

120924_petrochemical-10_p102.jpg

Cypress Swamp, Alligator Bayou, Prairieville, Louisiana: photo by RichardMisrach, 1998
 

Clear-cut. Industrial forestry degrading public lands, Willamette National Forest in Oregon: photo by Daniel Dancer via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
 

Oil wells. Depleting oil fields are yet another symptom of ecological overshoot as seen at the Kern River Oil Field in California: photo by Mark Gamba/Corbis via The Guardian, 1 April 2015
 

Hill-side slum: Slum-dwelling residents of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, face bleak living conditions in the western hemisphere’s poorest country: photo by Google Earth/2014 Digital Globe via The Guardian, 1 April 2015


Buriganga River, Dhaka, Bangladesh. ‘As we celebrate 400 years of Dhaka City, the Buriganga river, which has played a vital role in its growth, is being choked to death. It is used by millions every day to transport goods –- but chemicals, sewage and industrial waste are also dumped in it. Nearly 700 brickfields on the riverside, dockyards and used engine oil from boats and steamers add to this pollution: photo and caption by Rasel Chowdhury via Syngenta / The Guardian 18 November 2014


A forest destroyed by wildfires in the Tete province, central Mozambique. Many hectares of forest are lost each year due to the uncontrolled fires started by local communities with the aim of increasing agricultural fields, poaching and production of charcoal
: photo by Carlos Litulo/Redux/Everydayclimatechange via the Guardian, 20 January 2015


Swamp and Pipeline, Geismar, Louisiana: photo by RichardMisrach, 1998

wraith

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And second, this. KAZUO MIYAGAWA POWER! [cinematographer of Kenji Mizoguchi's 1953 film] #Ugetsu: image via Kenji Fujishima, 3 May 2014

The ghost girl and her co
conspirators, the other
heavy breathing fu
kushima pleasure dolls
 
are all up there gliding
in and out of the real
like the wraith woman
in Ugetsu out to get you
 
thinking death might be ok
after a few nights of this
irradiated tokyo bar dream
the drowned ghost in the pool
 
at the bottom
of the cooling tank glows lan-
ternlike in the fear
wreathed caesium water



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Lista numerada de #Tarkovski sobre sus #peliculas #favoritas #6 Ugetsu monogatari #Mizoguchi la dimensión del espejo: image via TATJJANA SL @TATJJANA SL, 10 March 2015



Two baseball players at Soma Agricultural High School practiced after class. The school decontaminated the ground but the level of radiation is still higher than normal: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012



The seaside in Iwaki City. Fishermen cannot go out since the fish are contaminated: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012



A destroyed observation post at a beach in Iwaki City, Japan, about 40 kilometers south of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear reactors: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012



Inside an abandoned house in Tamura City. Residents and visitors were prohibited from entering the city since the area is located within a 20 kilometer radius of the plant. The government has since changed the perimeter of the no-go zone, and people can now enter the city freely: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012


A poster of the former prime minister, Naoto Kan, which reads “Revival of our healthy Japan” on the 20 kilometer radius of the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012


An abandoned cow farm in Namie. Farmers had to flee their farms; animal corpses remain in various states of decay: photo by Kosuke Okahara from the series Fragments of Fukushima, The Lens, 25 September 2012


"Ugetsu Monogatari" (1953) de Kenji #Mizoguchi, una peli estratosférica: via @Cinema_Esencial: image via José Arévalo @jarevalo, 4 March 2015



Untitled (from the series Cesium 12): photo by Seto Masato, 2012 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)

Cesium - Fukushima

Untitled (from the series Cesium 12): photo by Seto Masato, 2012 (via artist's website)

Cesium - Fukushima

Untitled (from the series Cesium 12): photo by Seto Masato, 2012 (via artist's website)
 
Cesium - Fukushima

Untitled (from the series Cesium 12): photo by Seto Masato, 2012 (via artist's website)

Cesium - Fukushima
 
Untitled (from the series Cesium 12): photo by Seto Masato, 2012 (via artist's website)



site/cloud: photo by Daisuke Yokota, 2013 (via G/P Gallery)
site/cloud
Untitled, from the series site/cloud: photo by Daisuke Yokota, 2012-2013 (via artist's website)
site/cloud
Untitled, from the series site/cloud: photo by Daisuke Yokota, 2012-2013 (via artist's website)

Guillaume Bression's black and white visions of solitude

Fukushima NOGO Zone: photo © by Guillaume Bression, 2013

Guillaume Bression's black and white visions of solitude

 Fukushima NOGO Zone: photo © by Guillaume Bression, 2013 



Fukushima 'No-Go Zone': photo by Pierpaolo Mittica via Private, 29 January 2013


Fukushima 'No-Go Zone': photo by Pierpaolo Mittica via Private, 29 January 2013



Fukushima 'No-Go Zone': photo by Pierpaolo Mittica via Private, 29 January 2013


#Kenji Mizoguchi #Ugetsu (1953) @prtycleverfilms: image via Film Dialogue @filmdialogueone, 3 March 2015


 
Untitled: photo by Cesar Ordoñez from the series Tokyo After Dark, via The Guardian, 17 February 2015

10TakedaShimpei

Trace #16, Lake Hayama (Mano Dam),2012: photo by Shimpei Takeda, 2012 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)



Untitled: photo by Cesar Ordoñez from the series Tokyo After Dark, via The Guardian, 17 February 2015


Life Scan Fukushima: photo by Ishu Han, 2013 (Museum of Fine Ats, Boston)



October 17, 2011, Ōfunato, Miyagi Prefecture: photo by Kitajima Keizō, 2014 (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston)


Decontamination workers wearing protective suits and masks, work on big black plastic bags containing radiated soil, leaves and debris from the decontamination operation in Tomioka town, Fukushima prefecture. This is near Tokyo Electric Power Co's (TEPCO) tsunami-crippled Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant: photo by Toru Hanai/Reuters, 24 February 2015



 Big black plastic bags containing radiated material from the decontamination operation are dumped at a temporary storage site in Tomioka town: photo by Toru Hanai/Reuters, 24 February 2015

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Sigue en @CinetecaMexico el ciclo de #MIZOGUCHI. Dentro d él, la sensacional UGETSU MONOGATARI: image via Darwin-The Movie @Darwin_Movie, 1 October 2014


"Ugetsu Monogatari" (1953) de Kenji #Mizoguchi, una peli estratosférica: via @Cinema_Esencial: image via José Arévalo @jarevalo, 4 March 2015

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Chikamatsu monogatari 1954 Kenji #Mizoguchiamazing stills by @filmcaptures: image via Rifrazioni @rifrazioni_net, 23 December 2013

Forugh Farrokhzad: The Wind Will Take Us / Street Art Iran: Nafir (Scream)

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#StreetArtist #Nafir in #Tehran #Iran for Brave #Women of #Kobani: image via Mariamsabzi @Mariamirani, 11 October 2014

The Wind Will Take Us

In my small night, ah
the wind has a date with the leaves of the trees
in my small night there is agony of destruction
listen
do you hear the darkness blowing?
I look upon this bliss as a stranger
I am addicted to my despair.

listen do you hear the darkness blowing?
something is passing in the night
the moon is restless and red
and over this rooftop
where crumbling is a constant fear
clouds, like a procession of mourners
seem to be waiting for the moment of rain.
a moment
and then nothing
night shudders beyond this window
and the earth winds to a halt
beyond this window
something unknown is watching you and me.

O green from head to foot
place your hands like a burning memory
in my loving hands
give your lips to the caresses
of my loving lips
like the warm perception of being
the wind will take us
the wind will take us.


Forugh Farrokhzad (1935-1967): The Wind Will Take Us, translated by Ahmad Karimi Hakkak inThe Persian Book Review, Vol. III, No. 12


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#StreetArtist #NAFIR #graffiti #IRAN #pregnant #women: image via Saeed Choobani @saeed_choobani, 14 September 2014

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RT @meidaandotcom: #Nafir #Graffiti in #Tehran #Iran for #Kobane: image via jadi  @jadi, 13 October 2014

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#Nafir #Graffiti #STOPACIDATTACKSONWOMEN #StopAcidAttacksIran for #Kobane: image via Sheida Hooshmandi @Sh_Hooshmandijadi, 24 October 2014

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#NAFIR #TEHRAN: image via Hadi @skiey1, 21 November 2014
 
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#street_art #nafir: image via Mohsen @semo1365, 11 December 2014
 
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RT @publicartfound: Tehran - Lavasan #streetart by #nafir #newpublicart: image via semprecontro @semprecontro, 13 December 2014
 
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#NAFIR: image via soheil @SoheilMigrant, 1 January 2015
 
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Bunch of clowns #streetart by #NAFIR: image via StreetArtAvenue  @vidos, 13 January 2015
 
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#Bunch #Of #Clowns #streetart #Nafir: image via Essouflée @Kian_A_, 15 January 2015
 
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 #Iran street artist #Nafir pays tribute to victims of the #planecrash today in #Tehran. #art #StreetArt @GEsfandiari: image via Iran Style @Iran_Style, 10 August 2014

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#NAFIR: image via soheil @SoheilMigrant, 14 August 2014
 
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 #Nafir #graffiti #streetart #Iran: image via Kaveh Ghoreishi @KavehGhoreishi, 8 July 2014
 
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#art #streetart #graffiti #Nafir #iran: image via 1973 @hypatia373, 30 March 2015

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 #Nafir #graffiti #streetart #Iran: image via Kaveh Ghoreishi @KavehGhoreishi, 6 September 2014
 
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Artist #Nafir (Scream) #Teheran #Iran. Fabulous Street Art / Mural. #art #streetart #mural: image via Street Art @GoogleStreetArt, 21 April 2014

Jim Dine: 'When Creeley met Pep' (simply a doll to love)

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Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. An abandoned mansion: photo by Seph Lawless via the Guardian, 30 October 2014

When Creeley met Pep
he couldn't stand her.
She, on the other hand,
had no memory of him.
This was way before her
brain exploded.
Me, I was curious, so I asked her,
after the anti-Pep diatribe
by Bob C., if she knew
who I was talking about.
Aldo, always vigilant about
Bob's foibles, tried to prompt her
about Creeley's empty eye.



Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. An abandoned mansion: photo by Seph Lawless via the Guardian, 30 October 2014
Now --

.......Bob's dead and
.......Pep --
.......well she has
.......the vision of blood clouding . . . . .




... and lava in the backyard. When darkness fell in Sicily on the evening of 26 January 2014, the beautiful lava flow running down Etna's upper southeast flank became fully visible. This view was taken from the town of Zafferana, on the southeast flank of the mountain, with a power pole rising in the foreground. The lava looks close, but in reality is some 8 km away from the power pole. This lava flow is now going on for more than three days, and mild Strombolian activitiy, at times accompanied by minor ash emission, is continuing at the New Southeast Crater: photo by Bruno Behncke, 26 January 2014

What's not to like
about Pep I once asked
Creeley?

He replied that she was
too bossy etc. etc.
Hmmmmm

I believe you were
wrong kid!

Pep has always been
simply
a doll to love

Now --
..in thin air

Jim Dine: 'When Creeley met Pep', from About Her For You: Poems 2003-2013, in Poems To Work On: The Collected Poems of Jim Dine, 2015


Rome, Italy. 82-year-old Gelsomina Squatriti mends broken dolls in her family’s doll hospital: photo by Gary Jones/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 3 April 2015

Pricey: Real wood floors and actual tapestries adorn Fairy Castle's enchanting dining hall. The doll house cost $500,000 to build in the late 1920s and early 1930s -- in today's dollars, that's about $7 million

Colleen Moore 'Fairy Castle'Dollhouse at the Museum of Science and Industry, Chicago. Pricey: Real wood floors and actual tapestries adorn Fairy Castle's enchanting dining hall. The doll house cost $500,000 to build in the late 1920s and early 1930s -- in today's dollars, that's about $7 million: photo by Museum of Science and Industry via Daily Mail, 31 July 2013

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The first known #DollHouse is the Nuremberg House, built in 1611: image via Artesíana Latina @hobby artesiana, 25 February 2015


A Kurdish Syrian woman sweeps away the debris from what is left of a destroyed building in the town of Kobane, recently liberated from Islamic State militants
: photo by Yasin Akgul/AFP via the Guardian, 28 March 2015


15 August 2014.Mousa Sweidan, 50, walks in one of the rooms of his father’s damaged home in the Shejaia neighbourhood of Gaza City. The family of 15 people fled from their home and took shelter in a UN school when Israeli tanks entered the area. Mousa used to work in Israel as a painter until 2005 and is now unemployed
: photo by Heidi Levine/SIPA/Rex via The Guardian, 25 March 2015

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Still, no one finally knows what a poet is supposed either to be or to do. -- #RobertCreeley: image via VerseWrights @VerseWrights, 22 August 2013

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#Creeley: image via shawnacy kiker @arbitraryjane, 29 January 2015


‘I was 12 years old when this was taken, on the train from Victoria back to my boarding school in Sussex.’
:  photo by John Chillingworth via the Guardian, 21 March 2015

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Si l'amour rend aveugle, alors pourquoi acheter de la lingerie à 300 boules? #Weegee: image via Lilas Goldo @LilasGoldo, 7 February 2015


 Girls in movie theatre with doll: photo by Weegee/International Centre of Photography via The Guardian, 9 January 2015


Rome, Italy. 82-year-old Gelsomina Squatriti mends broken dolls in her family’s doll hospital: photo by Gary Jones/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 3 April 2015 

America: Structural: This is how it's going down

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This is how it's going down. This one was just captured on video #WalterScott: image via Ferrari Sheppard @stopbeingfamous, 7 April 2015
 
South Carolina officer radioed in Taser claim six seconds before firing final shot: Analysis of police audio synced with video raises further questions about whether officers performed any CPR on Walter Scott after he was shot eight times: Oliver Laughland, Jon Swaine and Christian Bennett in New York, The Guardian, 8 April 2015

The police officer who shot Walter Scott radioed in to claim that Scott had “grabbed my Taser”, six seconds after firing his final shot, despite video suggesting the unarmed man was not in possession of the stun gun at any point, a Guardian analysis has shown.

Syncing police scanner audio with a shocking video –- the eyewitness footage out of South Carolina which led to officer Michael Slager being charged with murder –- raises further questions about whether either of two officers on the video performed any CPR on Scott as was previously claimed by police.

Analysis of the police radio shows Slager, the officer who shot at Scott eight times, making the radio call announcing the shots and alleging the Taser seizure, sounding frantic and breathless at the same time as he walks slowly towards Scott’s body.

“Shots fired. Subject is down. He grabbed my Taser,” the scanner audio from Slager states.

He reaches the body, handcuffs Scott who has his head down to the floor and walks back to the area where it appears an object was dropped and picks up an item from the ground.

At this point a second officer, now identified as Clarence Habersham, arrives on the scene and radios in. Slager then walks back towards the body and radios in stating: “I need to secure my vehicle”. At this point –- over a minute after the last shot is fired -– neither officer appears to have performed CPR on Scott.

Slager then walks and drops the item, which some have speculated is a Taser, next to Scott’s body.

At this point Habersham radios in to say he has detected gunshots to Scott’s chest on the right side. He then radios to say he has detected a gunshot wound to the buttocks. He appears to be pulling Scott’s T-shirt up at this point.

At a press conference on Wednesday North Charleston police chief Eddie Driggers said after watching the video he believed an officer had lifted Scott’s T-shirt to perform “some sort of life-saving procedure”.

But analysis of the video and audio suggests Habersham is actually identifying the gunshot wounds rather than performing any such procedure.

At the end of the video, over two minutes after the last shot is fired, Slager stands over Scott’s body and takes a pulse.

The combination of the video and audio footage shows that the encounter between Slager and Scott started about four and a half minutes before the scenes now seen on televisions around the world.

As Slager began stopping Scott at the intersection of Remount Road and Craig Road at about 9.35am, he radioed the dispatcher to say he was “coming up on a grey ... Mercedes”.

Exactly three minutes later, Slager radioed again to announce he was chasing on foot down Craig, giving his dispatcher a basic description of Scott. “Black male, green shirt, blue pants,” he said.

About 25 seconds later a colleague radioed to say he was “en route” to assist. Ten seconds on, there was another message -– possibly from the same officer –- asking Slager (“223”) “What’s your direction of travel there?”

After he received no response, this officer asked Slager again: “Where you at now?” Eight seconds later, however, there was a clue to why Slager may not have been responding. In a burst of confused radio chatter, an officer can be heard shouting “on the ground!”

The dispatcher had asked all officers to ensure radio silence for matters apart from the Slager-Scott chase. Feidin Santana, a bystander who filmed the shooting on his cellphone, told NBC on Wednesday evening that the pair were struggling on the ground before he began recording.

Another 47 seconds pass before the supporting officer radioed again: “I’m at the pawn shop,” he said. “Where you at now?”

Just three seconds later -– at 9.38am, almost five minutes after Slager announced that he was stopping Scott in his car –- Slager was back on the radio. “223, shots fired,” he said. 

“Subject is down. He grabbed my Taser.”


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At what point did this man become "life threatening" ? ?#WalterScott: image via Harbin Da Sharbinar @Anonionaire, 8 April 2015

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WabbitSeason NegroSeason WabbitSeason NegroSeason WabbitSeason NegroSeason NegroSeason NEGROSEASON #WalterScott: image via Nostradeptus @adept2u 7 April 2015

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VIDEO: SC Cop shoots unarmed #WalterScott in the back 8X then plants weapon on him as he dies:#WalterScott: image via Keegan Stephen @KeeganNYC, 7 April 2015

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How many God damn people have to become hashtags before something changes. #WalterScott
: image via Bipartisan Report @Bipartisanism, 8 April 2015

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We cannot let them make this about one cop #WalterScott: image via Hal Dockins @HalDockins, 8 April 2015

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This. RT @BlackGirlsWinni #WalterScott served a country that ended up killing him.
#RIPWalterScott: image via Trill @houstonbred, 8 April 2015

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REMINDER: #WalterScott: image via Bipartisan Report @Bipartisanism, 8 April 2015

RobertCreeley: America: "Give back / what we are..."


 
porchflag (Des Moines, Iowa): photo by greg (It'sGreg), 6 April 2014

America, you ode for reality!
Give back the people you took.

Let the sun shine again
on the four corners of the world

you thought of first but do not
own, or keep like a convenience.

People are your own word, you
invented that locus and term.

Here, you said and say, is
where we are. Give back

what we are, these people you made,
us, and nowhere but you to be.


Robert Creeley (192-2005): America, from Pieces (1969)

http://docs.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/images/photodb/27-0943a.gif
 
Charleston, South Carolina: photographer unknown, US Housing Authority, 1933 (Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library)

File:Church at crossroads Carl Mydan 1936.jpg

Church at crossroads on sealevel highway, south of Charleston, South Carolina: photo by Carl Mydans, November 1936 (Farm Security Administration Collection, Library of Congress)
 

 
Killerblob (Los Angeles): photo by anotherswede ON A BREAK, 7 July 2013


Untitled (Mount Desert, Maine): photo by Patrick Joust, June 2013
America: Death Never Sleeps Alone

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Look who @DefendMichaelS is following on Twitter -- #WalterScott #RWNJ: image via Rob Groce @regroce, 8 April 2015

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And more of who @DefendMichaelS is following on Twitter #WalterScott: image via Rob Groce @regroce, 8 April 2015
 
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More of who @DefendMichaelS is following on Twitter - #WalterScott: image via Rob Groce @regroce, 8 April 2015
 
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More of who @DefendMichaelS is following on Twitter - #WalterScott: image via Rob Groce @regroce, 8 April 2015

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Gee, @DefendMichaelS, is there a bigger #FoxNews fan? U want $ to a guy who shot an unarmed man from the back?: image via Rob Groce @regroce, 8 April 2015

Race Soldier

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 Here is the mug shot of the race soldier #MichaelSlager who was charged with the murder of #WalterScott
image via Tariq Nasheed @tariqnasheed, 7 April 2015

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#KillerCop #MichaelSlager
has been added to my murdering cops file.#WalterScott #BlackLivesMatter: image via LadyGlenChicagoStyle @ladyglenChicago, 7 April 2015

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#MichaelSlager fears for his life as he shoots #WalterScott
: image via Dorian Staten @DorianStaten, 8 April 2015

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NYPD cops and ex-cops spewing racist slurs about #WalterScott and justifying murder even after vid: image via Keegan Stephen @KeeganNYC, 8 April 2015


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Officer #MichaelSlager who murdered #WalterScott had a history of excessive force complaints: image via Shut It Down NYC @ShutItDownNYC, 8 April 2015

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 This is the face of a murderer. He is also a police officer. What if it hadn't been caught on tape? #MichaelSlager: image via Trita Parsi @tparsi, 8 April 2015


Reasons I keep my distance from whites "@scottbpg16: so this is what we’re doing today Twitter? #MichaelSlager": image via Shehu Yahweh @TuckOnTheRise, 8 April 2015

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JUST IN: Councilman: City Should Support "Hard-Working" S.C. Cop #MichaelSlager: image via Shomari Stone @shomaristone, 8 April 2015

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 EXCLUSIVE: #MichaelSlager's Attorney Dumped Him As Soon As He Saw Video #DavidAylor: image via Politolizer @Politolizer, 8 April 2015

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You certainly don't want to turn your back to him. #WalterScott #MichaelSlager: image via Cassandra @CassandraRules 8 April 2015

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Video shows officer #MichaelSlager
shooting
#WalterScott in the back in South Carolina: image via HuffPost BlackVoices @blackvoices. 8 April 2015

How it went down for Thabo: NYPD chokeslam, broken leg, plain sight perpwalk show -- American dream glass half full?

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Atlanta Hawks forward Thabo Sefolosha being led out for perp walk after suffering fractured fibula during arrest by NYPD. Sefolosha will miss the rest of the season: photo by Keystone/AP/Craig Ruttle/AP via 20 Minuten Sport, 9 April 2015

Hawks' Thabo Sefolosha is out for the season with a broken leg following nightcub arrest: Des Bieler, Washington Post, 9 April 2015

Atlanta’s Thabo Sefolosha literally added a major injury to the insult of being photographed doing a “perp walk” following his arrest Wednesday morning. Sometime during a confrontation with police outside of a New York nightclub, the Hawks swingman suffered a broken leg, ending his season.

Sefolosha and teammate Pero Antic were arrested for obstructing a crime scene, after an incident in which the Pacers’ Chris Copeland was stabbed and two other people were wounded. Copeland is in stable condition after surgery on his abdomen and left elbow.

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, a police report indicates that the 30-year-old Sefolosha came at police in an “aggressive manner.” From the AJC:

Police officer Johnpaul Giancona wrote: “When I approached the defendant to place him under arrest for the above described conduct, I observed the defendant flail his arms, twist his body, kick his legs, and struggle against me making it difficult for me to place handcuffs on him and complete the arrest. It took four officers to place the defendant in handcuffs.”
Later on Wednesday, Sefolosha and Antic, who were charged with three misdemeanors altogether, issued this joint statement:

“As members of the Atlanta Hawks, we hold ourselves to a high standard and take our roles as professionals very seriously. We will contest these charges and look forward to communicating the facts of the situation at the appropriate time. We apologize to our respective families, teammates, and the Hawks organization for any negative attention this incident has brought upon them. We are unable to provide further comment as this is an ongoing legal matter.”
Thursday evening, the NBA released a statement saying that Sefolosha had a “fractured fibula and ligament damage that will require surgery” on his right leg. His loss is a blow to the Hawks, as the first-place team eyes a lengthy playoff run.




Atlanta’s Thabo Sefolosha, 30, was limping and had a wrap around his right ankle as he was escorted out of the 10th Precinct of the New York Police Department on Wednesday: photo by Andrew Kelly/Reuters via Washignton Post, 9 April 2015

Atlanta Hawks' Thabo Sefolosha suffered fractured leg during arrest: Will need surgery after incident: Associated Press in Atlanta via the Guardian, 9 April 2015

Atlanta forward Thabo Sefolosha will miss the Hawks’ final four regular-season games and the post-season because of a fractured right fibula and ligament damage suffered when he and teammate Pero Antic were arrested early on Wednesday in New York.

The Hawks confirmed Sefolosha’s injury Thursday and said he will need surgery. The Swiss player was limping following the arrest. TMZ later released cell phone footage of Sefolosha being thrown to the ground during the arrest.

Sefolosha’s attorney, Alex Spiro, said on Wednesday the forward was injured during the arrest, which followed the stabbings of Indiana Pacers forward Chris Copeland, his girlfriend and another woman on the street near a Manhattan nightclub.

Sefolosha and Antic were released without bail after they were charged with obstructing governmental authority and disorderly conduct. Spiro said the two did not commit a crime and he expects the charges to be dismissed.



Thabo Sefolosha will not play again this season due to his injuries: photo by Brandon Dill/AP via The Guardian, 10 April 2015

How it went down for Thabo: 6 Cops Slamming Thabo Sebolosha to Ground & Breaking His Leg (Video): Robert Littal, Black Sports Online, 9 April 2015

The reason Thabo Sefolosha broke his leg is because 6 cops basically chokeslammed him to the ground as you can see in the video.

This appears to be excessive, but looking at the situation glass half full at least he didn’t get shot or choked to death.

Thabo’s teammate Pero Antic was already cuffed on the ground when Thabo who doesn’t seem to be making an aggressive move gets rushed by the 6 cops. One cop puts his hands around his throat while the rest help wrestle him to the ground. Even though the person taking the video is French you can clearly hear people saying it is messed up what the cops are doing. I agree.

Thabo Sefolosha Chokeslam

Thabo Sefolosha arrest and chokeslam by NYPD: screenshot by TMZ via Black Sports Online, 9 April 2015

From South Africa to America for Love: Thabo Sefolosha interviewed by Jorge Sierra, HoopsHype, 2 January 2006

You were born in Switzerland, but your parents are from South Africa. Why did they leave the county?

Thabo Sefolosha: Only my father is from South Africa. He is black and my mother is white. And, you know, it was hard for them to stay together there during the apartheid. So they decided to move to Switzerland for that reason.

Have you ever been to South Africa?
TS: Yes, I've been there. Most of my family still lives there.

Do you like the country?
TS: Yeah, I love it. I love it.

How did you get into basketball? Basketball is not that popular in Switzerland...
TS: There was a neighbor near my house that played basketball. We started playing with him, me and my brother. We tried to play that game, too. We started playing then and we've been playing ever since.

When did you realize you wanted to play basketball for a living?
TS: I fell in love with basketball fast. It was early. That's the thing I like to do the most and wanted to live doing that.
 
Weren't you interested in becoming an artist like your parents?
TS: I was not interested in that. I was more into sports, you know. 


Sefolosha out for season with broken fibula (updated)

Atlanta Hawks’ Thabo Sefolosha (25) reacts to his 3-point basket against the Milwaukee Bucks in the second half of an NBA basketball game Monday, March 30, 2015, in Atlanta. Atlanta won 101-88: photo by Dave Tulis/AP via Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 9 April 2015

Thabo Sefololosha: Coming to America (2006)
 
... last year he opted to place a unique tattoo on one of his arms that simply states, “The game chose me.”

“I don’t believe I really chose to play basketball,” Thabo says philosophically while looking down at his distinctive body art. “I simply ended up playing the game after it chose me.
 
“Neither of my parents played basketball or are very athletic. So I can’t explain how I got my [basketball] talent. I guess I discovered it on my own after I fell in love with the game as a kid.
 
“My mama told me that the most important thing in life is to find something you love, and then give it everything you’ve got. I’ve found that with basketball. So I guess you can say that my parents -- especially my mother -- gave me the passion that I play with.”
 

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 #Basket #NBA #Sefolosha [r.] fermo Caviglia ko nell'arresto.
NEW YORK – Oltre al danno, la beffa. Thabo Sefolosha, arrestato martedì notte per intralcio alla giustizia in un locale di New York, si è rotto la caviglia nel corso del fermo da parte della polizia. Lo svizzero ex Biella rischia così di aver finito in anticipo la stagione con gli Atlanta Hawks leader ad est, una stagione in cui la squadra di Budenholzer -– grazie anche all'apporto difensivo di Sefolosha -- è una candidata al titolo: image via Tuttosport @tuttosport, 10 April 2015

Thabo has one other tattoo that says, “God guides my steps,” which he also got last season. “Those are two things that are very important in my life: basketball and God,” he adds.
 
Whether it was a case of destiny, fate or simply good fortune, Thabo Sefolosha understands that he’s about to begin living his dream.
 
“Coming from a place like Switzerland, you really can’t imagine yourself ever being here,” he says. “As a kid, you play [the game] outside with your friends, and you might say ‘I’m Michael Jordan,’ but you never really believe that someday you’re going to actually be a part of something like this... But, now that I’m here on this court,” he says, looking up at the six Bulls Championship banners hanging from the Berto Center walls, “it’s special, something really special.”

Thabo Sefololosha: from Coming to America, via Chicago Bulls, 2006


Thabo Sefolosha guards LeBron James: photo by EDrost88, 15 November 2014

Yarmouk: 'I Am Not a Statistic'

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Never has the hour been more desperate in #Yarmouk: image via Raquel Marti @raquel_unrwace, 7 April 2015

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In regard to what's happening in #Yarmouk, I think this photo is very relevant right now. We stand together.: image via MohaNNad Rachid @TheMoeDee, 5 April 2015
 
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A scar on humanity. #Yarmouk: image via F. @Palestinianism, 6 April 2015
 
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Palestinian kids died of hunger. Did they not deserve humanity? Crisis In #Yarmouk: image via Said Shoaib @saidshouib, 5 April 2015
 

 #Yarmouk camp is dying 18,000 Palestine refugees are trapped No #Light & food or warmth @GazaReports @Palaestina: image via Hacker Brigade @HackerBrigades, 5 April 2015
 

 #Yarmouk camp is dying 18,000 Palestine refugees are trapped No #Light & food or warmth @GazaReports @Palaestina: image via Hacker Brigade @HackerBrigades, 5 April 2015


The desperate situation in #Yarmouk refugee camp is a scar on humanity. The world must act to end this tragedy: image via Jack Moore @JXFM, 5 April 2014


 What happened to the world!! Did they forget that there are humans in #Yarmouk!!  What are they busy with?? #Syria [photo by Rami El-Sayed for AFP]: image via Hacker Brigade @HackerBrigades, 5 April 2015
 

The desperate situation in #Yarmouk refugee camp is a scar on humanity. The world must act to end this tragedy: image via Jack Moore @JXFM, 5 April 2014

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UNSG urges ‘concerted action to save lives, restore measure of humanity’ in besieged #Yarmouk: image via UN News Centre @UN_ News_Centre, 9 April 2015

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Must be said, these are guardians of #Yarmouk. The volunteers and workers in the Palestinian Red Crescent. V. Jafra.: image via Dima S.  @YasminWaQahwa, 5 April 2015
 
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Coalition what are you doing for #Yarmouk? @BarackObama @fhollande @DavidCameron @UN: image via la skala  @fantasia195, 5 April 2015

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How much more can #Palestinians suffer? #Yarmouk Refugee Camp attacked by ISIS Inhumane: UN: image via Angi Mansi @WorkPsychol, 6 April 2015

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Assad dropping bombs from the air while ISIS slaughters on the ground #Yarmouk: image via Global Revolution TV @GlobalRevLive, 5 April 2015
 

 What happened to the world!! Did they forget that there are humans in #Yarmouk!!  What are they busy with?? #Syria: image via Hacker Brigade @HackerBrigades, 5 April 2015
 
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Good morning from #Yarmouk Camp [photo by AFP]: image via Leith Al-Halabi @leithfadel, 9 April 2015

‘I Am Not a Statistic’

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‘The Three Kings’: three brothers waiting their turn to leave the besieged Yarmouk Palestine refugee camp near Damascus in order to receive medical treatment: photo by Niraz Saied via UNRWA, 29 November 2014

Yarmouk youth wins 2014 UNRWA/EU photography competition: UNRWA, Gaza, 26 November 2014

A timeless photograph capturing the anguish of children affected by the ongoing conflict in Syria has won first prize in the European Union-supported 2014 UNRWA youth photography competition.

The theme for the 2014 competition, ‘I Am Not a Statistic’, called on participants to capture the stories and emotions of the people behind news headlines, making personal the lists of Palestinians killed, wounded and displaced by conflicts throughout the region. 

The annual competition is open to all Palestine refugees aged 16-29.

The winning photograph was captured by Niraz Saied, age 23, in Yarmouk Palestine refugee camp, near Damascus in Syria. Titled ‘The Three Kings’, the image shows three brothers waiting their turn to leave the besieged refugee camp in order to receive medical treatment.

Speaking about his photography, Mr. Saied said: “You can’t find a complete family in the refugee camp. I used to feel that in every portrait of a Palestinian family you could see the shadow of a person missing, and that is why my photos are dimly lit. 

“But there is always hope. Difficult times have fallen on Yarmouk camp before and they have always passed. The Palestinians continue to struggle to live. The Palestinian people appreciate life and deserve life. Despite all that they live through, they hope that tomorrow will be a better day.”

'the children of Yarmouk were created as heroes'
 

The desperate situation in #Yarmouk refugee camp is a scar on humanity. The world must act to end this tragedy [photo by Niraz Saied]: image via Jack Moore @JXFM, 5 April 2014

Palestinian youth brave Yarmouk siege with humour; Young Palestinians, at risk of being overrun by Islamic State and under government siege since 2012, give 'weight-loss' advice in new video: Mamoon Alabassi, Middle East Eye, 7 April 2015

A video reportedly from inside the Yarmouk refugee camp in Damascus shows Palestinian youths trying to brave the miserable conditions caused by a prolonged government siege and a recent infiltration by Islamic State (IS) militants, who are now controlling much of the camp.

The recording, which is not independently verified, appears to be recent, with the participants mentioning the militants' entrance into the camp.  

IS militants took control of 90 percent of the camp -- which was established in the 1950s to house Palestinian refugees -- last week, although they have since lost some ground. 

The area had previously been under siege by the government of embattled Syrian President Bashar al-Assad since December 2012, and was said to be "on the brink of starvation" because of a blockade preventing food and goods from entering.

The video begins with two young men talking to the camera, with one of them saying: "I hope you won't think this video will be showing people and children [starving to death], as is shown on [the Gaza-based] al-Quds satellite TV channel."

"No, we are in the Yarmouk camp, the camp of plentifulness," he added. "Take a look at the floor," said the man as the camera shows water in the street. "This is not water. This is an excess of cooking [flooding the streets]."

The youth then moved on to mockingly give his viewers advice on how to lose weight.
"Would you like to lose weight? Green tea won't work, nor will ginger … just come to Yarmouk camp for five months, in each month you'll lose 9kg," he said, adding the Arabic proverb: "Ask someone with experience instead of asking a doctor." 

The youth passed by a damaged mosque, which one of them pointed to saying: "Here's Palestine Mosque … hope you don't think that it was ever shelled. No, never."

One of the youth then said, apparently quoting someone: "All the children of the world were created as children, except the children of Yarmouk were created as heroes."

"God damn the person who came up with that quote ... why did we have to become heroes and stay in the camp?" one asked. The second replied: "We should have migrated  ... to areas that have food … but they told us that the rent was high."



Men walk past destroyed buildings in the Yarmouk Palestinian refugee camp in the Syrian capital Damascus on 6 April: photo by AFP via Middle East Eye, 7 April 2015

On the rising food prices, one noted that the price of "rice outside (Yarmouk camp) is 120 [Syrian Dinars], while here it is 10,000 [Syrian Dinars]. But we are happy here … look at the peaceful people … singing and dancing."

The two men then passed by a shop, and directed the camera to its owner.   

"The guy's prices were high even before the crisis," one said, before approaching the smiling shop owner to say hello.

Despite the cheerful mood that they are trying to put up, it is clear from the footage how dire their surroundings are. They pointed to a cyclist, saying that his bike actually works on petrol.

"We ask the troublesome channels that claim Yarmouk camp is under siege to stop reporting that. It is 'absolutely' [said in English] not true," one said.

"It's true that my grandmother died of hunger but not because the camp was under siege but because my grandfather was so stingy - he never allowed her near the fridge," he added.  

The two, with a number of others, were heading towards the flat of someone named Mr Ayham, where they are all invited for lunch.

"We are invited to Mr Ayham's place. He has linked his satellite dish to the bin downstairs so that he can view dirty channels," one of the youths in the video said.  

Then they gather in a room and sing together joyfully, as one holds the guitar. After a short while a small tray is shown holding tiny portions of food, to which they sing: "This is the reward of the steadfast people who have sacrificed their lives."

Then at end of the video, one of the youth told a timely joke. "A cardboard box went to meet another cardboard box; it discovered that it was empty."


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By now, the people trapped in #Yarmouk will have no food #SaveYarmouk: image via UNRWA @UNRWA, 8 April 2015

"a culmination of the story of almost each and every Palestinian"

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The United Nations Relief and Works Agency distributes food aid to Palestinians in Yarmouk refugee camp near Damascus, Syria. Yarmouk camp is home to thousands of Palestinian refugees who are barred by Israel from returning to their lands: photo by UNRWA vis Middle East Eye, 9 April 2015

Yarmouk: Horrificimpasse or momentous turning point?: Ghaada Ageel, Middle East Eye, 9 April 2015

The story of the tens of thousands starving and under attack today in the Yarmouk refugee camp near Damascus is a culmination of the story of almost each and every Palestinian. It is the story of my 90-year-old grandmother who continues to live the misery of Khan Younis refugee camp in the Gaza Strip. It is the story of my cousins in Yemen caught in the current attack. It is the story of my sister in Syria forced to flee for her life three years ago with her children and it is the story of my aunts and uncles in Saudi Arabia and United Arab Emirates whose lives and futures hang in the balance awaiting a piece of official paper. It is the story of my neighbours, relocated to Libya who now live in limbo with no place to go. Yarmouk camp is the culmination to the story of successive generations of Palestinian people born into lives of exile with suspended presents and futures.

This story, then, is not “simply” one of the profound suffering of a group of defenceless civilians trapped in a war zone. It extends far beyond the de-contextualised renderings of mainstream media, spotlighting refugees in dire circumstances, facing death and starvation. It includes but also considerably predates reports of “residents including infants and children … subsisting for long periods on diets of stale vegetables, herbs, powdered tomato paste, animal feed and cooking spices dissolved in water”.

The story of Yarmouk began almost seven decades ago when some three-quarters-of-a-million Palestinians were forcibly displaced from Mandatory Palestine in 1948, then subjected to continuing, multiple displacements both across and beyond the Middle East. Among too many instances to list here, these include: 400,000 Palestinians (many of them refugees from 1948) displaced by Israel in 1967, over 300,000 fleeing Kuwait in the early nineties during and after the first Gulf war, tens of thousands expelled by the Libyan regime and housed in makeshift camps at the Egyptian Libyan borders in 1995 and 22,000 fleeing Iraq during and after the American led invasion in 2003.

Founded in 1957 just south of Damascus, the Yarmouk camp became home to many thousands of refugees, most of whom originated in the northern part of Mandatory Palestine, in Safad, Haifa, and Jaffa. Expelled from their homes in 1948, these Palestinian refugees have been barred ever since from returning to their lands.

Prior to the 2011 outbreak of the Syrian civil uprising the population of Palestinian refugees in Yarmouk numbered over 150,000. With the uprising now turned, through imperialist intervention, into several larger proxy wars, continued warfare has already displaced ninety percent of the camp residents, who fled elsewhere in Syria or to the neighbouring countries of Jordan, Turkey and Lebanon. For those who have been unable to flee, including some 3,500 children, the current situation is appalling. Since fighting intensified early this month, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) has been unable to deliver much needed necessities. UNRWA spokesman Christopher Gunness has said: “That means that there is no food, there is no water and there is very little medicine… The situation in the camp is beyond inhumane.”

Yarmouk, the individual and the collective story, is about millions of Palestinian refugees currently scattered across the Arab world, struggling to make lives and livelihoods and repeatedly forced to move into the unknown. It is, no less, about the Palestinians living under Israel’s control in the occupied territories, inside Israel and all over the globe, with and without relatives in the Syrian camp, who are forced to look on helplessly at the unbearable spectacle of slow starvation playing out upon their families, friends and people.

Yarmouk is the story of an entire nation consistently denied access to its most basic human rights. It is about generation after generation of Palestinians whose lives of uncertainty, humiliation and poverty result directly from a consistent UN failure to fulfill the obligation it undertook in resolution number 194, that is, that Palestinian “refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date”. This failure has persisted for 67 years now, despite the fact that Israel’s very admissibility into the United Nations was linked with the measure for allowing Palestinian refugees to return to their lands.

Israel too, then, bears a direct and distinct responsibility for the fact that Palestinian refugees are dying today in Syria. The refugees living, and now dying, in Yarmouk camp and all those living, and often subsisting, in 59 other camps in Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza are where they are because Israel has, for all these years, consistently blocked their return. The state of Israel continues to defy UN resolutions, international law and conventional norms of human rights, all of which would allow Palestinians to exercise their right of return. 

This being the case, Yarmouk is clearly also a story of an immoral world leadership that allowed millions of people to be exiled from world memory and to drop off its radar screens, allowing time and powerlessness to eradicate their rights and dreams. It is, as well, the story of a supposedly “developed” world  that is utterly impotent, ineffective, helpless and indifferent, which, yet again, stands by -- watching, knowing, yet doing nothing, offering no options to Yarmouk; whether to its predominantly Palestinian residents or to the many indigenous Syrians trapped there as well.

There is no doubt that the Islamic State, the Assad government, as well as additional armed groups currently fighting for control in Yarmouk, are part of the complex picture of today’s Syria. Each and all of them bear direct responsibility for the misery forced upon the people of Yarmouk. It would be foolish to ignore this. But the broader, highly pertinent context seems to be totally absent from most media reports.

The Palestinian refugees of Yarmouk, and many more elsewhere are subject to whatever they are facing because Israel has denied their inalienable rights while the UN and the international community have allowed and enabled Israel’s denial. A genuine will and a just world public could save the Palestinians of Yarmouk, recognising and enacting the right of return of these refugees. This single act could prove deeply transformational, bringing hope and unaccustomed, careful trust to the region.

Yarmouk, then, is poised to become either the story of a prolonged, familiar impasse, exacting an horrific price in human lives, or the story of a momentous turning point.

Ghada Ageel is a visiting professor at the University of Alberta Political Science Department (Edmonton, Canada), an independent scholar, and active in the Faculty4Palestine-Alberta. Her new book “Apartheid in Palestine: Hard Laws and harder experiences” is forthcoming with the University of Alberta Press - Canada 

My missing family

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UN renews call for end to fighting in #Yarmouk, urges opening of humanitarian corridor.: image via UN News Centre @UNNewsCentre, 5 April 2015

My missing family in Syria: Naming and shaming in Yarmouk: Ramzy Baroud, Middle East Eye, 10 April 2015
 
We must remember that there are still 18,000 people trapped in Yarmouk, and even if it is untimely, we must do something -- anything

Members of my family in Syria’s Yarmouk went missing many months ago. We haven’t an idea who is dead and who is alive. Unlike my other uncle and his children in Libya, who fled the NATO war and turned up alive but hiding in some desert a few months later, my uncle’s family in Syria disappeared completely as if ingested by a black hole, to a whole different dimension.

I chose the “black hole” analogy, as opposed to the one used by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon -- "the deepest circle of hell" -- which he recently uttered in reference to the plight of Palestinians in Yarmouk following the advances made by the notorious Islamic State (IS) militias in early April. If there is any justice in the hereafter, no Palestinian refugee -- even those who failed to pray five times a day or go to church every Sunday -- deserves to be in any “circle of hell”, deep or shallow. The suffering they have endured in this world since the founding of Israel atop their towns and villages in Palestine some 66 years ago is enough to redeem their collective sins, past and present.

For now, however, justice remains elusive. The refugees of Yarmouk -- whose population once exceeded 250,000, dwindling throughout the Syrian civil war to 18,000 -- is a microcosm of the story of a whole nation, whose perpetual pain shames us all, none excluded.

Palestinian refugees (some displaced several times) who escaped the Syrian war to Lebanon, Jordan or are displaced in Syria itself, are experiencing the cruel reality under the harsh and inhospitable terrains of war and Arab regimes. Many of those who remained in Yarmouk were torn to shreds by the barrel bombs of the Syrian army, or victimised –- and now beheaded -- by the malicious, violent groupings that control the camp, including the al-Nusra Front, and as of late, IS.

Those who have somehow managed to escape bodily injury are starving. The starvation in Yarmouk is also the responsibility of all parties involved, and the “inhumane conditions” under which they subsist – especially since December 2012 – is a badge of shame on the forehead of the international community in general, and the Arab League in particular.
These are some of the culprits in the suffering of Yarmouk:

Israel

Israel bears direct responsibility in the plight of the refugees in Yarmouk, as they do the five million other refugees across the Middle East. The refugees of Yarmouk are mostly the descendants of Palestinian refugees from historic Palestine, especially the northern towns, including Safad, which is now inside Israel. The camp was established in 1957, nearly a decade after the Nakba –- the “Catastrophe” of 1948, which saw the expulsion of nearly a million refugees from Palestine. It was meant to be a temporary shelter, but it became a permanent home. Its residents never abandoned their right of return to Palestine, a right enshrined in UN resolution 194.

Israel knows that the memory of the refugees is its greatest enemy, so when the Palestinian leadership requested that Israel allow the Yarmouk refugees to move to the West Bank, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had a condition: that they renounce their right of return. Palestinians refused. The refugees would have refused. History has shown that Palestinians would endure untold suffering and not abandon their rights in Palestine. The fact that Netanyahu would place such a condition is not just a testimony to Israel’s fear of Palestinian memory, but the political opportunism and sheer ruthlessness of the Israeli government.


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2000 Yarmouk residents have been evacuated from the camp since Friday #Syria #Yarmouk: image via Middle East Eye @MiddleEastEye, 5 April 2015

The Palestinian Authority (PA)

The PA was established in 1994 based on a clear charter where a small group of Palestinians “returned” to the occupied territories, set up a few institutions and siphoned billions of dollars in international aid, in exchange for abandoning the right or return for Palestinian refugees, and ceding any claim on real Palestinian sovereignty and nationhood. The Palestinian nation became whatever Palestine's political elite wished it to be. The new “Palestine” had no definable boundaries, excluded the diaspora community and millions of refugees, saw Palestinians in Israel as an internal Israeli matter, split the West Bank and Gaza, and had no patience for any democratic endeavor.

Not only had it completely abandoned the refugees, save of few passing references, the PA left Lebanon's half-million to fend for themselves, locked in refugee camps that were not allowed to grow or develop, with no voice or political representation.

When the civil war in Syria began to quickly engulf the refugees, and although such a reality was to be expected, President Mahmoud Abbas’s authority did so little as if the matter was of no importance or had no bearing on the Palestinian people as a whole. 
True, Abbas made a few statements calling on Syrians to spare the refugees what was essentially a Syrian struggle, but not much more. When IS took over the camp, Abbas dispatched his labour minister, Ahmad Majdalani to Syria. The latter made a statement that the factions and the Syrian regime would unite against IS -- which, if true, is likely to ensure the demise of hundreds more.

If Abbas had invested 10 percent of the energy he spent in his “government’s” media battle against Hamas or a tiny share of his investment in the frivolous “peace process”, he could have at least garnered the needed international attention and backing to treat the plight of Palestinian refugees in Syria’s Yarmouk with a degree of urgency. Instead, they were left to die alone, as the PA remained safe in its Ramallah bubble, unhindered by the cries of orphans, widows and bleeding men.

The Syrian regime

When rebels seized Yarmouk in December 2012, President Bashar al-Assad's forces shelled the camp without mercy while Syrian media never ceased to speak about liberating Jerusalem. The contradictions between words and deeds when it comes to Palestine is an Arab syndrome that has afflicted every single Arab government and ruler since Palestine became the “Palestine question” and the Palestinians became the “refugee problem”.

Syria is no exception, but Assad, like his father Hafez before him, is particularly savvy in utilising Palestine as a rallying cry aimed solely at legitimising his regime while posing as if a revolutionary force fighting colonialism and imperialism. Palestinians will never forget the siege and massacre of Tel al-Zaatar (where Palestinian refugees in Lebanon were besieged, butchered but also starved as a result of a siege and massacre carried out by right-wing Lebanese militias and the Syrian army in 1976), as they will not forget or forgive what is taking place in Yarmouk today.

The Syrian army imposed a siege on Yarmouk over two years ago to strangle the rebels. Many of the camp’s homes were turned to rubble because of Assad’s barrel bombs, shells and airstrikes. Trapped within a hermetic siege and infighting militias, suffering from the lack of food, having no access to electricity or running water or medical supplies, the refugees perished slowly and painfully. Meanwhile, Syrian television is still hatching plans to liberate Palestine.



Many of Yarmouk's homes were turned to rubble because of Assad’s barrel bombs, shells and airstrikes
: photo via Middle East Eye, 10 April 2015

The rebels

The so-called Free Syria Army (FSA) should have never entered Yarmouk, no matter how desperate they were for an advantage in their war against Assad. It was criminally irresponsible considering the fact that, unlike Syrian refugees, Palestinians had nowhere to go and no one to turn to. The FSA invited the wrath of the regime, and couldn’t even control the camp, which fell into the hands of various militias that are plotting and bargaining amongst each other to defeat their enemies, who could possibly become their allies in their next pathetic street battles for control over the camp.

The access that IS gained in Yarmouk was reportedly facilitated by the al-Nusra Front which is an enemy of IS in all places but Yarmouk. Nusra is hoping to use IS to defeat the mostly local resistance in the camp, arranged by Aknaf Beit al-Maqdis, before handing the reins of the besieged camp back to the al-Qaeda affiliated group. And while criminal gangs are politicking and bartering, Palestinian refugees are dying in droves.

The UN and Arab League

Cries for help have been echoing from Yarmouk for years, and yet none have been heeded. Recently, the UN Security Council decided to hold a meeting and discuss the situation there as if the matter was not a top priority years ago. Grandstanding and concerned press statements aside, the UN has largely abandoned the refugees. The budget for UNRWA, which looks after the nearly 60 Palestinian refugee camps across Palestine and the Middle East, has shrunk so significantly, the agency often finds itself on the verge of bankruptcy.

The UN refugee agency, better funded and equipped to deal with crises, does little for the Palestinian refugees in Syria. Promises of funds for UNRWA, which frankly could have done much better to raise awareness and confront the international community over their disregard for the refugees, are rarely met.

The Arab League are even more responsible. The League was largely established to unite Arab efforts to respond to the crisis in Palestine, and was supposed to be a stalwart defender of Palestinians and their rights. But the Arabs too have disowned Palestinians as they are intently focused on conflicts of more strategic interests -- setting up an Arab army with clear sectarian intentions and aimed largely at settling scores.

Many of us

The Syrian conflict has introduced great polarisation within a community that once seemed united for Palestinian rights. Those who took the side of the Syrian regime wouldn’t concede for a moment, and the Syrian government could have done more to lessen the suffering in the camp. Those who are anti-Assad insist that the entire evil deed is the doing of him and his allies.

Not only does such polarisation lead to irrational conclusions as it selects particular pieces of evidence and ignores others. It is also counterproductive. This useless fight reflects a disappointing fact that many who consider themselves “pro-Palestinians” are driven by groupthink and slogans, not human rights; self-serving ideologies, not the well-being of the refugees; stubborn politics, not justice in its purest forms.

Those people, too, are responsible for wasting time, confusing the discussion and wasting energies that could have been used to create a well-organised international campaign to raise awareness, funds and practical mechanisms of support to help Yarmouk in particular, and Palestinians refugees in Syria in general.

It behoves us all to take a moment to hang our heads in silence, but also shame, over what has befallen Yarmouk, as we stood, watching, bickering and doing nothing.

But we ought to remember that there are still 18,000 trapped in Yarmouk and organise on their behalf so that, even if it is untimely, we need do something. Anything.

Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently completing his PhD studies at the University of Exeter. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London)

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UN Chief: #Syria's #YarmoukBeginning to Resemble 'Death Camp': image via Samzyxx @semzyxx, 9 April 2015

watching a massacre unfold

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Trapped civilians ‘more desperate than ever’ amid fighting in #Yarmouk, warns @UNRWA chiefBeginning to Resemble 'Death Camp': image via UN News Centre @UN_ News_Centre, 6 April 2015

While the PLO refuses to be drawn into the army drive to regain Yarmouk from militants, the United Nations continues to express concern for the safety and protection of Syrians and Palestinians in the camp: Reuters via SBS, 10 April 2015
 
The PLO said on Thursday it refused to be drawn into supporting any military offensive in the war-battered Yarmouk camp on the outskirts of Damascus, backing away from earlier comments by one of its members that lent support to Syrian army action against insurgents there.

The radical Islamist group Islamic State, which rules swathes of Syria and Iraq, seized almost all of Yarmouk in recent days, brushing aside local militia opposed to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

"We refuse to be drawn into any armed campaign, whatever its nature or cover, and we call for resorting to other means to spare the blood of our people and prevent more destruction and displacement for our people of the camp," the Palestine Liberation Organisation said in a statement issued from Ramallah.

Earlier, Ahmad Majdalani, a member of its executive committee who was sent by the PLO leadership to Damascus to discuss the crisis with the government, said he fully endorsed a Syrian military offensive to regain control of the camp.

Majdalani blamed the hard-line Islamists in control of the camp of exploiting the plight of Palestinians to their own ends.

"They (radical Islamists) have tried to use the camp as a launching pad to expand their scope of clashes and their terror activities inside and outside the camp," said Majdalani, a former minister in the Western-backed Palestinian Authority.

Majdalani said the Syrian army alongside local Palestinian groups had some success in pushing back Islamic State and had so far secured 35 percent of the camp.

The sprawling Yarmouk camp was home to some 160,000 Palestinians before the Syrian conflict began in 2011, refugees from the 1948 war of Israel's founding, and their descendents.

Majdalani said there were just 17,500 residents left, with around 2,000 evacuated since the latest round of fighting.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict from Britain, earlier said that Islamic State controlled 90 percent of the camp after defeating fighters mainly from Aknaf Beit al-Maqdis, a Syrian and Palestinian militia opposed to Assad.

Islamic State, the most powerful insurgent group in Syria, is now only a few kilometres from Assad's seat of power. The Palestinian official echoed the Syrian government line that the only way to rid the camp of the ultra-radical militants was through force.

"What we have agreed with our Syrian brothers and factions is that the options that existed for a political solution were closed by the fighters of Daesh," he said, using a derogatory term for Islamist State.

"The crimes they have committed ... left us with no choice except a security one that respects the partnership with the Syrian state," he told a news conference in Damascus.

The Observatory has said Syrian air force jets had been waging a bombing campaign on militant hideouts in the camp almost daily since Islamic State fighters infiltrated from the adjacent, rebel-held Hajar al Aswad neighbourhood.

The United Nations has said it is extremely concerned about the safety and protection of Syrians and Palestinians in the camp. Civilians trapped there have long suffered a two-year government siege to force rebels to capitulate that has led to chronic food shortages and disease.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon told reporters in New York the camp was beginning to resemble "a death camp" with its residents facing "a double-edged sword: armed elements inside the camp and government forces outside."

Ban warned that any "massive assault on the camp and all civilians would be yet one more outrageous war crime for which those responsible must be held accountable.
"We simply cannot stand by and watch a massacre unfold," he said.


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#Yarmouk resembles 'death camp': UN Secretary General #YarmoukRefugeeCamp.: image via SBS News @SBSNews, 9 April 2015
 
Left to their fate


Destroyed buildings in the Yarmouk refugee area of Damascus, Syria
: photo by Youssef Badawi/EPA via The Guardian, 10 April 2015

'Yarmouk is being annihilated': Palestinians in Syria are left to their fate: Close to Damascus, refugees who survived a siege by Bashar al-Assad’s forces and assault by Isis endure merciless shelling and have ‘no food, electricity or water’: Kareem Shaheen in Beirut, The Guardian,10 April 2015

If they are lucky, Ahmad and his family in the Yarmouk refugee camp will have one meal today: two plates of rice cooked with undrinkable water. Others will have to do with less, perhaps a bowl of spiced water that doubles as a form of soup that will do nothing to ease the all-too-familiar hunger pangs.

“We are being killed here, Yarmouk camp is being annihilated,” said Ahmad, a resident of the Palestinian camp just a few miles from the centre of the Syrian capital who was given a pseudonym to protect his identity.

Yarmouk, once a bustling southern suburb of Damascus of 200,000 people, has been starved for two years in a relentless siege by Bashar al-Assad’s regime, which has also blocked water supplies for months, a tactic that activists say constitutes the use of water as a tool of war.

Now the remaining 18,000 residents, many of whom suffer from ailments ranging from malnourishment to liver disease and illnesses linked to consuming tainted water, are mired on the frontline of the latest offensive of the terror group Islamic State, which has seized the majority of the camp.

“The situation inside the camp is catastrophic,” said Ahmad. “There is no food or electricity or water, Daesh [Arabic acronym for Isis] is killing and looting the camp, there are clashes, there is shelling. Everyone is shelling the camp.

“As soon as Daesh entered the camp they burned the Palestinian flag and beheaded civilians,” he said.

Activists from the camp say that between 2,000 and 4,000 residents have fled, seeking refuge in nearby villages such as Yalda, Babila and Beit Sahem in the Damascus countryside, but those who stayed inside face a grim future.

Food prices have rocketed, with a loaf of bread costing more than $10 (£6.80). Malnourished residents have to walk miles to buy food on the road to Yalda, whose residents are benefiting from a local ceasefire deal between the regime and the opposition. But most residents choose instead to remain in their homes to avoid being killed in the crossfire of clashes, snipers or barrel bombs.

Nearly 200 people are believed to have died in Yarmouk in 2014 due to hunger. Medical supplies are also badly needed, with a lack of equipment, antibiotics and painkillers to treat the wounded, said Salim Salamah, head of the Palestinian League for Human Rights-Syria and a former Yarmouk resident.

Activists from Yarmouk said that prior to the Isis offensive, camp residents and those who fled recently had experienced numerous cases of jaundice, in addition to malnourishment, dehydration and psychological illnesses including depression and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. 



Palestinians with a placard reading ‘Yarmouk camp ... we need you to stop the barrel bombs’ demonstrate in a refugee camp near Sidon, Lebanon: photo by Mohammed Zaatari/AP via The Guardian, 10 April 2015
 
“After Daesh entered, the situation worsened because they stole the remaining medical supplies and [there was an] increase in the arbitrary bombings with mortars, rockets and barrel bombs,” said Sameh Hammam, the pseudonym of an activist who fled to the camp’s outskirts in the latest assault.

There are only two hospitals in the camp, with a tiny number of doctors. One of them, the Palestine hospital was hit with a regime barrel bomb on Thursday, activists said.

But beyond the humanitarian crisis, many Palestinians from Yarmouk feel abandoned by the Arab world and the international community at large, bridling at the lack of concern for residents who endured two years of siege. Thousands of their compatriots had fled in the past, including to neighbouring Lebanon where they have extremely limited rights.
Many have perished as they tried to make the journey by boat to Europe, and some have secured homes in exile through resettlement in places such as Sweden, Denmark and Germany.

“What I feel and most of the people who left and survived feel is complete disappointment and absolute sadness, and a feeling of betrayal … most importantly from the international community,” said Salamah, saying the lack of concern for the suffering of the Palestinians in comparison to the alarm at the rise of Isis showed disregard for the lives of civilians starving to death in the 21st century.

“There’s a serious crisis of morality and humanity about what’s going on in Syria, from north to south, not only in Yarmouk,” he said.

A Palestinian academic who visited Yarmouk six months ago on a humanitarian mission said some locals were reduced to consuming water mixed with spices, adding that the Palestinians were paying the price “of struggles that they are not a part of”.

“I’m not just angry but indignant at this frightening silence,” he said. “Decisions are taken at the security council that are worthless and not enforced. The whole world is lying to us.

“I think sometimes that we do not belong to this world, that the Palestinian people are not part of humanity,” he added. “I don’t think there’s a light for the Palestinians at the end of the tunnel, except if the tunnel leads to Stockholm or Berlin.” He said that the Palestinians now needed a saviour or messiah, one who could save them from being deprived of even the basic necessity of existence.
 
“Is there anything worse than dying of hunger?” he asked.

Isis closes in


The population of Yarmouk has fallen from 200,000 to just 16,000 since the Syrian government’s siege began. An estimated 600 Isis fighters now control most of the camp
: photo by AP via The Guardian, 10 April 2015

Isis closes in on Damascus after seizing Yarmouk refugee camp: Theterrorist group’s capture of the beleaguered site means it now controls territory only six miles from the centre of the Syrian capital: Martin Chulov and Kareem Shaheen in Beirut via The Guardian,10 April 2015

For more than 50 years, Yarmouk refugee camp was used as a showpiece of Syrian support for the Palestinian cause.

Now, after three years of war and siege, jihadists of the Islamic State (Isis) stalk its ruins, the regime bombs the buildings that still stand and the few remaining residents must choose between abject misery if they stay and likely death if they flee.

More than anywhere else in Syria, the fight for Yarmouk –- especially since Isis stormed the camp on 9 April -– has captured the shifting allegiances and, at times, cynical complexities that now define the myriad battlefields across the ruined country.
 
Most of the 200,000 or so Palestinians who lived in Yarmouk until late 2012 are now second-time refugees, either elsewhere in Syria, across the border in Lebanon or in Jordan.

Their leaders, meanwhile, remain deeply factionalised, unable to ease the regime siege or to stem the flow of the jihadists, who stormed the camp after four months of organising on the doorstep of Damascus, potentially changing the face of the fight for the capital.

Activists, diplomats and former camp residents contacted by the Guardian said recent events may end up proving decisive in the fight for central Damascus, only six miles north of the camp, which is in effect a suburb of the city.

With the shock of the jihadist incursion subsiding, the narrative of the regime siege is starting to change. Syrian officials have offered to rescue civilians, to whom they had denied safe refuge for more than two years. The jihadists are also attempting to claim a relative moral high ground by insisting that only they can break the blockade, after the failure of the armed opposition and the Palestinian leaders to do so.

“They are now casting themselves as saviours of the Palestinians after besieging them for all that time,” said a western diplomat in Beirut of the regime of Bashar al-Assad. “They want to be seen as liberators, not persecutors, and this cause has worked very well for them in the past.”

Activists said that Isis, although present in the Hajar al-Aswad neighbourhood south of Yarmouk for at least the past six months, was not seen as a threat to the militant groups opposing the regime from within its borders, or to its estimated 16,000 residents.

The neighbouring Yalda area had remained relatively calm for the past year as a result of a locally negotiated ceasefire between regime and opposition forces, as had the surrounding area, despite Isis’s attempts to slowly gain a foothold.
 
Most of the estimated 600 Isis fighters who now control up to 80% of Yarmouk are local men who were previously aligned to other opposition groups, camp insiders say. Some of the militants had previously been exiled, and most of those who returned were smuggled in by the al-Qaida-aligned Jabhat al-Nusra, which remains a staunch foe of Isis in northern Syria.

“They mostly had a bad reputation and were known for thievery,” one activist said of the jihadists now in control of Yarmouk. In northern and eastern Syria, foreign jihadists led predominantly by veterans of the Iraqi civil war are immersed in more of an ideological fight.

“[Isis] is coming back today to take revenge from the civilians who evicted them, but people were unable to stand up to them because of their savagery and the fact they were well armed with medium and light weapons,” said the activist who fled to the camp’s outskirts.

Over the past five days, Syrian helicopters have dropped up to 12 barrel bombs on the camp, while reinforcing its borders to the west. Now that Isis controls the area, which is roughly five miles square, its fighters appear to be as hemmed in as the remaining civilians.

“They’ve walked into a trap from which there is no escape,” the diplomat said.

The Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) has maintained a low profile throughout the siege, which has repeatedly been described by the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNWRA) as an atrocity. Throughout the past two years, the UN body has only been able to secure piecemeal access to starving residents, some of whom have died from hunger and thirst.

“The violence that began in Yarmouk on 9 April is not just continuing, it has intensified,” said UNRWA spokesman Chris Gunness. “Yarmouk is at the lower reaches of hell. It must not be allowed to descend further.”

“The situation is different now,” said Fathi Aboul Ardat, the PLO official in Lebanon, describing the arrival of Isis inside Yarmouk as a dangerous and unprecedented step.
When asked whether the PLO could deal with the regime, which has imposed a two-year siege on Yarmouk, he replied: “We deal with a state.”

A Palestinian academic from Yarmouk who visited the camp late last year said the PLO’s overtures to the regime are part of an internal competition between Fatah, which dominates the PLO, and Hamas, which fell out with Assad after it declared its support for the original uprising.

“All of the Palestinian organisations have been unable to rescue the Palestinians,” he said. “We need salvation. We are in the 21st century and Palestinians are dying of hunger.
 
“It’s not that they are selling out the Palestinians. They are incapacitated. The Palestinian organisations are like the former Ottoman Empire; they are the sick man.”


 
A Palestinian fighter in the Yarmouk camp, south of Damascus, on Thursday. About 18,000 people are trapped there: photo by Youssef Badawi/European Pressphoto Agency via New York Times, 10 April 2015

The Worst Place


Palestinian refugees in Yarmouk, Damascus, queueing for food: photo by AP, 31 January 2014 via The Guardian, 10 March 2015

How Yarmouk refugee camp became the worst place in Syria: Yarmouk, near the centre of Damascus, prospered as a safe haven for Palestinians. Under siege, it is now a prison for its remaining residents, who survive on little food and water, with no hope of escape: Jonathan Steele, the Guardian, 5 March 2015

On 18 January 2014, barely five miles from the centre of Damascus –- with President Bashar al‑Assad’s office complex visible in the distance –- a small crowd of desperate people emerged from a seemingly uninhabited wasteland of bomb-shattered buildings. News had spread throughout Yarmouk, a district of the capital that is home to Syria’s largest community of Palestinians, that the government and rebel groups had agreed to allow a delivery of food, briefly opening a crack in a year-long siege that had starved the area’s civilians and caused dozens of deaths.

Families had sent their strongest members to collect the newly arrived supplies, and the hungry throng filled the entire width of a street, throwing up dust in the morning light. The relief workers making the delivery recalled one woman, gaunt with malnutrition, who fell down and was too weak to rise. She died on the spot. The scenes were such that some of these experienced aid workers needed trauma counselling when they returned to headquarters in Damascus.

There was only enough food for a few hundred families. Thousands of disappointed people staggered home empty-handed. But officials from the UN Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA), established to aid Palestinian refugees throughout the Middle East, hoped that the delivery had set a precedent. They had not publicised it in advance -– there was concern that excessive attention would anger the Syrian government –- and were reluctant to invite journalists to observe a mission that might have been aborted for security reasons. Four days earlier, an attempted delivery had been abandoned after a mortar exploded very close to the convoy.

After the successful delivery on 18 January, UNRWA officials decided discretion was no longer the best policy. On 31 January, a convoy delivering food to Yarmouk was accompanied by a local photographer, who took a picture of the vast crowd surging through a street lined with the ruins of destroyed buildings. This image quickly became an emblem of the Syrian conflict. To draw attention to the plight of the besieged civilians UNRWA launched a social media campaign (#LetUsThrough) in which millions clicked on a petition to put the image on two of the world’s highest-profile billboards. In Times Square, New York and the Shibuya district of Tokyo people stood in front of giant screens taking selfies, which were then beamed back to Yarmouk as a show of solidarity.

This was how Yarmouk entered the world’s consciousness: a refugee camp designed as a safe haven for the Palestinian diaspora that had become the worst place on earth. No electricity for months. No piped water. No access for food. Worse still, no chance for people to leave or return, except for a handful of emergency medical cases or the few who had the means to pay people-smugglers to get them through the multiple checkpoints. Some called it Syria’s Gaza, but its plight was even worse, because the siege was more comprehensive; Yarmouk was a prison from which there was no escape.

But notoriety can be short-lived. When Gaza came under Israeli bombardment in July 2014 and the world’s media rushed to report the carnage, Yarmouk slipped back into obscurity. The opening in the siege that UNRWA had negotiated in January 2014 applied only fitfully throughout the year: food deliveries were only possible on 131 days, and often less than half the amount required got through. Since 6 December, the siege has once again become impassable. UNRWA reports that it has not been able to deliver any food at all for the past 12 weeks. “We are getting new reports of people dying of malnutrition and of women dying in childbirth, but nothing can be confirmed,” said Chris Gunness, UNRWA’s spokesperson. Unlike in Gaza, where UNRWA has several offices, the organisation cannot enter Yarmouk at all.



For Yarmouk to become a spectacle of suffering far worse than Gaza marked an indelible stain on the mantle that Bashar al-Assad inherited from his father.Hafez al-Assad: photo by Enric Marti/AP via The Guardian, 5 March 2015
 
As Syria’s civil war enters its fourth year, other towns and villages are suffering long sieges, usually by Assad’s forces but sometimes, as in the case of Nubul and Zahra, two Shia villages north-west of Aleppo, by anti-Assad rebels. Still, Yarmouk stands out, partly because of the large number of trapped civilians – estimated to be around 18,000 -– but also because of its political significance. Hafez al-Assad, who ruled Syria for three decades before power passed to his son on his death in 2000, cast his country as the cornerstone of the Arab “axis of resistance” against Israel. This required that he be seen as the supreme defender of Palestinian rights; a leader who would ensure that Palestinian refugees in Syria lived better than those anywhere else in the Middle East. For Yarmouk to come under the control of anti-Assad rebels, and then be bombarded by government forces -– to become a spectacle of suffering far worse than Gaza –- marked an indelible stain on the mantle that Bashar al-Assad inherited from his father.

***

Before the Syrian civil war began, Yarmouk was home to 150,000 Palestinians. Though people still refer to it as a “camp”, tents were replaced with solid housing soon after its founding in 1957. In time it became just another district of Damascus. As well as being home to Syria’s largest community of Palestinian refugees, it also housed some 650,000 Syrians.

Nidal Bitari, a co-founder of the Palestinian Association for Human Rights in Syria, fled the country at the end of 2011 after being tipped off that he was wanted by the Assad regime’s security services. But, like most of the Palestinians in Yarmouk, he wanted to stay neutral when the uprising began. As Bitari wrote in a detailed account of Yarmouk's recent political history published in 2013, Palestinians in Syria lived under better conditions than in any other Arab state: “By law they enjoy almost all the rights and benefits of Syrian nationals except citizenship and the right to vote. They have full access to Syrian schools and universities on the same basis as citizens … And because their numbers are tiny compared to the general Syrian population (less than 2%), the refugees were never perceived as a threat, and the degree of integration between Palestinians and Syrians –- through work, education, and intermarriage –- has no parallel in the Arab world.”

When I first visited Yarmouk in March 2003, it was a hotbed of anger towards the American invasion of Iraq, which had just began. While other Arab countries muted criticism of US policy or quietly supported George W Bush and Tony Blair, the Syrian state media was full of denunciations. Scores of young Palestinian men from the camp had crossed into Iraq to fight the Americans, often disappearing without telling their own families.

I came across a wake in one narrow back street. It was the third day of mourning for a young man named Issam. He had telephoned home for the first time as he was about to cross into Iraq. In a bus from Damascus with other volunteers from half a dozen Arab countries, the young Palestinian told his father that he and two cousins were going off to war. Six days of silence followed, as his family watched TV footage from Iraq even more intently than before. Then one of the cousins phoned: Issam had never even reached Baghdad. Less than five hours after calling his parents, he died in a hail of fire from a US helicopter. Thirteen other unarmed men in the three buses were killed. The cousin escaped with minor wounds.

When Syrians began to rise up in protest against the government of Bashar al-Assad in March 2011, the situation threatened to unsettle the relatively stable position of Palestinians within the country. Palestinian groups were closely monitored by the Syrian security services and they were expected to remain uninvolved in the nation’s politics. 

According to Bitari, the trigger for Yarmouk’s entrapment in the intensifying conflict came from the Syrian government rather than the opposition. In May 2011, during the preparations for Nakba Day, which commemorates the expulsion of Palestinian refugees during the creation of Israel in 1948, representatives of the Assad regime began to promote the idea of a demonstration at the Israeli border on the Golan Heights.

Bitari and his friends were wary, suspecting that the regime wanted to divert attention from the internal uprising. He described their decision to form a “youth coalition of Palestinians” in Yarmouk to coordinate decisions pertaining to the camp, which included representatives from each of the Palestinian political factions inside. The group’s first meeting concerned the Nakba Day protests, and a majority opposed any participation. But on the morning of Nakba Day the government supplied buses, which hundreds of people got on. At the border, the Syrian army let the buses through the demarcation lines and several protesters climbed the fence that blocks access to Israeli-controlled territory. Israeli troops used tear gas and live rounds. Three people died.

A month later, on Naksa Day –- the anniversary of the defeat of Arab armies by Israel in the 1967 six-day war -– minivans sent by Syrian security took about 50 Yarmouk residents to the border, where they were joined by several hundred other young people. Syrian state TV cameras were on hand to film what happened. Again people tried to scale the fence, and this time 23 were shot dead by Israeli forces -– 12 of them from Yarmouk, according to Bitari.

Though the Israelis fired the bullets, “the rage was almost as great against the factions for not doing anything to stop the bloodshed”, as Bitari said. The next day the funeral of the victims was attended by 30,000 people.

Angry mourners surrounded the headquarters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine -- General Command (PFLP-GC). A small faction led by Ahmed Jibril, which rejected the Oslo accords, the PFLP-GC was a firm supporter of the Syrian government and was seen by many residents as the regime’s enforcer in the camp. When a PFLP-GC security guard shot and killed a 14-year-old boy, the crowd stormed the building and set it on fire. Jibril had to be rescued by the Syrian army.

This event embarrassed Bashar al-Assad and encouraged Syrian opposition groups to see Yarmouk as a potential support base for the uprising against him. Yarmouk’s geographical position, wedge-shaped with its apex pointing at the heart of Damascus, gave it strategic value. The district was bordered by two poorer Syrian suburbs, al Hajjar al Aswad and Tadamon, which were already being infiltrated by opposition fighters. To the south was open countryside, which was easy for them to move through.

Bitari and his friends still hoped to keep Yarmouk neutral. They were alarmed when the Syrian government, shaken by the anti-PFLP-GC protest and the threat of rebel advances, gave Jibril’s men the right to parade with weapons. This escalation encouraged the Free Syrian Army -– at that time the main opposition group, backed by western governments -– to plan to move into the camp and seize it from Syrian government control. The Palestinian youth coalition’s efforts had failed. The group disbanded in despair. Civilians who wanted to avoid their district being militarised and dragged into conflict found themselves isolated. The same dynamic was affecting most of the rest of the country.

***

For the Free Syrian Army, Yarmouk was a particularly valued prize after Khaled Meshaal, the leader of Hamas in exile who had lived in Damascus for more than a decade, moved to Qatar in February 2012. Meshaal felt unable to accede to the Syrian government’s pleas that he condemn the anti-regime uprising. Instead, he accepted an invitation from Qatar, one of the armed opposition’s main financial backers. It was a severe blow to Assad’s credentials as leader of the axis of resistance.

In December 2012 the FSA and the al-Qaida affiliate, Jabhat al Nusra were ready for a concerted attack to capture Damascus and topple Assad. Yarmouk was the gateway to the capital, closer to the centre than any of the other suburbs where the regime was losing control. The crisis came to a head on 16 December, when a Syrian air force plane bombed Yarmouk in what the government later claimed was a mistake. Dozens of civilians were killed. Brigades from the FSA and Jabhat al Nusra seized the opportunity to enter the camp –- and in response, the government launched a hail of artillery shells, turning most buildings on the edge of the district to rubble.



A girl receives soup from Kafaf, a charitable foundation, in Yarmouk: photo by Reuters via The Guardian, 10 March 2015

Within a few days most of the PFLP-GC, the main Palestinian faction supporting the Assad regime, had fled Yarmouk; some defected to the rebels who went on to gain full control. Hundreds of thousands of civilians left. The Syrians of Yarmouk mainly went to relatives and friends in central Damascus or other cities, or moved to Lebanon and Jordan. Palestinians fled to what they hoped would be safer areas inside Syria. Although rebel efforts to capture the rest of Damascus failed, Yarmouk remains in rebel hands today. Some 18,000 civilians still live there, including anywhere between 1,000 and 4,000 Syrians. Still, it is clear that Yarmouk has reverted to being a largely Palestinian enclave.

Assad’s government responded to its defeat in Yarmouk by putting the area under siege. 

For a few months food could still be brought in from the rural areas to the south, though profiteering was intense. In July 2013 the government tightened its grip and the siege became almost total. Inside Yarmouk fighting erupted between the FSA and Jabhat al Nusra, the latter of which had set up sharia courts. Spasmodic attempts were made to relieve the suffering of Yarmouk’s civilians. In the spring of 2013 Mahmoud Abbas, the Palestinian president, even proposed that all of Yarmouk’s 150,000 Palestinian residents move to the West Bank or Gaza. In November 2013, Abbas sent a team to Damascus to discuss humanitarian relief and a ceasefire between the rebels and the government. The idea was to open a safe corridor for the movement of supplies and displaced civilians, but no deal was ever reached.

In September 2014, I met Abu Akram, a member of the PFPL-GC leadership, in a flat on the edge of Yarmouk. A tall older man with one arm in a brace, who moved to Yarmouk from Lebanon in 1994, he had taken part in the abortive ceasefire negotiations with the Syrian opposition, whose breakdown he blamed on the Islamists. A tough, battle-hardened figure firmly allied to the Assad regime, he showed no embarrassment in defending the siege. It was a legitimate tactic, he claimed, in part because the food from UNRWA that was allowed into Yarmouk ended up in the hands of the rebel fighters, for their own use or for sale on the black market.

“We saw that the armed groups were taking food from civilians,” he said, then claimed that boxes of aid meant for Yarmouk could be seen for sale in a nearby district. He even criticised the decision to relax the pressure in early 2014. “It was a mistake to break the siege,” he said. “If we had continued by another week, hunger would have forced them to give up.”

The barbaric nature of sieges has remained unchanged for thousands of years. The aim is to starve the trapped civilians into submission, in the hope they will turn against whatever armed faction controls the territory and persuade them to surrender. The armed faction, in turn, wants to keep the civilians inside so as to make it less likely the besieging army will bring destruction upon the captives. Now, in the 21st century, the very same tactics are being deployed not only in Yarmouk but in several other parts of Syria.

***

Sieges fuel a war economy in which those who man the checkpoints can run a lucrative business selling permission to leave or return. They encourage smuggling of people and food, and keep prices in the camp’s few markets artificially high. When I visited Yarmouk’s northern entrance in September 2014, I found nothing but bleakness. Syrian government soldiers stood guard near a crossroads known as Batikha -– “watermelon” –- Square, so named for a green monument of a globe that stands amid a clump of palm trees in the middle of the street. The only route into the camp required a walk through a narrow alley between two five-storey buildings that had most of their windows blown out. The neighbouring alley was shielded by huge white padded sheets strung from the upper floors of buildings on either side –- makeshift screens intended to stop rebel snipers from targeting anyone walking in the square.

A young woman in hijab was standing near the entrance, weeping as she and a male companion talked with the officer in charge of the checkpoint. After a few minutes of conversation that ended on what looked to be a frustrating note, the woman and her friend pulled back, then wandered up and down the street, apparently debating whether to try another tack to convince the officer or just give up and leave.



Palestine refugees in Yarmouk queue for food distributed by UNRWA: photo by HOPD/AP via The Guardian, 10 March 2015

“I am trapped,” the woman, named Reem Buqaee, told me. She had been given permission to leave Yarmouk three months earlier with her three teenage daughters. The oldest one was pregnant. Owing to malnutrition, she was suffering from anaemia so severe that she was at risk of losing her baby. The other two girls also had medical problems. But leaving the camp had meant splitting the family. The husband of the pregnant woman could not leave the camp, nor could Reem’s husband, or her 16-year-old son. Rebel groups were eager to keep people in the camp, she said, particularly men and boys. Their departure was seen as defection from the opposition cause as well as potentially making it easier for government troops to enter the camp by force and regain control.

Buqaee’s daughter had safely given birth and the other girls had regained their strength, so she wanted to take them back into Yarmouk. “I had to choose between living in a prison under siege but alongside my husband and son, or stay outside Yarmouk separated but free,” she said. On this particular day, she had come to the camp entrance to see whether her request to return had been granted, but the officer told her he had not received orders to let her and her daughters and baby grand-daughter inside. “Our house is only 100 metres from here, just inside the camp. It’s so near but very far,” she said.

The next day, I visited Buqaee at an overcrowded flat in the Dummar suburb of Damascus, where a distant relative had given her and her daughters temporary shelter. A thick atmosphere of fear surrounds any discussion of Yarmouk. This affects everyone from UNRWA officials to Yarmouk residents. People worry that their families will suffer if they publicly attribute blame to the regime or the rebels for the siege, the collapse of ceasefire talks, and the impossibility of escaping. UNRWA officials are concerned about losing the minimal access they have to Yarmouk if they say anything that might be misinterpreted by one side or the other. When I spoke to residents who had left the camp for other parts of Damascus, but who talk regularly with siblings and parents still inside, they refused to be quoted, explaining that people are scared of reprisals from both the regime and the anti-Assad forces inside the camp.

Buqaee, however, described the horrors of the siege without hesitation: women dying in childbirth, infants killed by malnutrition. There was no anger or hysteria in her voice, just a calm recollection of facts. “You couldn’t buy bread. At the worst point a kilo of rice cost 12,000 Syrian pounds (£41), now it is 800 pounds (£2.75) compared to 100 Syrian pounds (34p) in central Damascus. It was 900 pounds (£3.10) for a kilo of tomatoes, compared to 100 here,” Reem recalled. “We had some stocks but when they gave out we used to eat wild plants. We picked and cooked them. In every family there was hepatitis because of a lack of sugar. The water was dirty. People had fevers. Your joints and bones felt stiff. My middle daughter had brucellosis and there was no medication,” she said. In October 2013, in a sign of how bad things had become, the imam of Yarmouk’s largest mosque issued a fatwa that permitted people to eat cats, dogs and donkeys.

The relaxation of the siege in January last year was limited and insecure, she said. UNRWA’s food deliveries were regularly cut short by mortar explosions and sniper fire. No one was sure who began firing or why. She remembered one incident vividly: “It was March 23. I had gone to collect a food parcel and was on the way back when a mortar went off. Twenty-nine people were killed. My daughter’s husband had come to help carry the boxes. He was hit by shrapnel and cannot walk now. It’ll take him another three or four months to get better.”

For most of 2014, both sides were willing to allow some humanitarian supplies to enter the camp on an ad hoc basis, UN officials told me, even if the amount was far below what was needed. Every day, UNRWA would check whether there had been exchanges of fire in Yarmouk. Sometimes the agency’s minivans never left the warehouse in central Damascus, on other occasions, delivery convoys were turned back. “We never say we’ve had access. All we say is that they’ve given us some opportunities to provide aid,” one UN official said.

UNRWA has not yet been able to enter the camp to conduct a needs assessment. Since the graphic scenes of starving masses early last year, the agency developed a more orderly process, with lists of people who are allowed to cross the no man’s land at the edge of the camp once each month to collect food parcels. Each parcel contains five kilograms of rice, five kilograms of sugar, five kilograms of lentils, five litres of oil, five kilograms of powdered milk, one kilogram of halva, one and a half kilograms of pasta and five 200g tins of luncheon meat. This is designed to feed a family of eight people for 10 days. In other parts of Syria where displaced Palestinians are living, UNRWA provides cash so that people can buy food for the rest of the month, but in Yarmouk that has not been not possible.

Providing medical supplies is sensitive, since the Syrian government fears they will go to wounded fighters. Initially it only gave permission for rehydration salts and basic painkillers. UNRWA eventually managed to operate a mobile health clinic at the food distribution point, which provided basic treatments for communicable diseases and other infections, as well as conditions such as diabetes and hypertension. Tests conducted in 2014 on a random sample of patients found that 40% had typhoid.

Education has been dramatically affected by the siege. According to residents inside the camp, all of Yarmouk’s 28 schools have been closed, and volunteer teachers hold informal classes in 10 “safe spaces”, including the basements of mosques. The lack of electricity means children have to do their homework by generators if their parents can afford the fuel for them, or by candlelight. The spotlight that the UNRWA has tried to keep on Yarmouk may have acted as some restraint on government forces – the area has not been bombed as heavily as other rebel-held districts of Damascus. But this is only a crumb of comfort. “Conditions are far worse than Gaza,” said one UN official. “Palestinians always had dignity, hope, resilience. Now after four years of war I see people giving up. They find it hard to accept there are no options”.

***

The latest attempt to reach a ceasefire and end the siege of Yarmouk was last June, when the armed groups inside the camp and some civilian representatives signed a pact with 13 representatives of the Assad government, which would have seen gunmen leave Yarmouk after the creation of a new security force to defend the camp. The deal was never implemented.

Nidal Bitari now lives in the United States, where he remains in daily contact with friends in Yarmouk by phone and Skype. He lobbied at UN headquarters in New York for western governments to support the June ceasefire agreement, and blames them, along with supporters of Jabhat al Nusra, for letting the deal collapse. “I suppose this initiative went against the wishes of France, UK and USA,” he said, “as their policy is based on supporting the interim government in exile, and they believe such truces give legitimacy to the regime.” Talal Alyan, a Palestinian-American writer and researcher who lives in the US, recently wrote that Jabhat al Nusra controls 60% of the camp, and suggested the group had attempted to ban singing and force women to wear the veil.

Since our conversation, Reem Buqaee has managed to go home to Yarmouk, even though it meant returning to siege conditions. When no response came from the Palestinian authorities who shared control of the camp’s northern entrance with regime forces, she decided to use an unofficial channel. A friend in the air force, one of the pillars of Assad’s regime, persuaded his commander to contact officers at government checkpoints in Beit Sahem, a village to the south of Yarmouk, to let them cross the frontline. Inside the camp, the water supply has still not returned, six months after pipes were damaged by fighting in September 2014. This has forced the residents to rely on untreated groundwater and a single well.

To add to the horror of the siege, the shadow of Isis has fallen across Yarmouk. When the group announced the establishment of a caliphate last year, Bitari said, some Jabhat al Nusra fighters in Yarmouk switched their allegiance and threatened to kill anyone who supported the ceasefire agreement. Isis is not yet in Yarmouk in full force, according to Bitari, but it was in nearby suburbs and had threatened to enter the camp at any time.

Nidal Bitari is gloomy in exile. When it became clear the US was about to strike targets in Syria in September, he coordinated an appeal from activists back home. They feared Obama would attack Isis positions in Yarmouk. “Here in Washington I’m surrounded by people from the Syrian National Coalition [the western-supported opposition] who tell me they want Obama to bomb Damascus. It would be a political more than a military action, aimed at warning Assad that the opposition has powerful friends. I told them it would cause a high number of casualties and there’s no way for Palestinians in Yarmouk to flee,” he said.

The appeal condemned the Syrian government for mounting a brutal siege but said any coalition air strike on Damascus would create an even greater humanitarian disaster. In his view the reimposition of a total siege since early December was a tactic by the Assad regime to drive Yarmouk’s people to despair and have them press the armed groups to accept a truce under the regime’s conditions. It would amount to a surrender like those the government achieved in the city of Homs and the Damascus suburb of Muadhamiya last year. The armed groups would have to give up their weapons and submit to interrogation, with the risk of torture or execution.

In spite of the siege, Bitari feels that in one way Syria’s Palestinians who have escaped abroad may be worse off than those left behind. “We heard much about the Nakba from our parents and grandparents, about their suffering when forced to leave their country, at having lost everything,” he wrote. “They worked hard to build their lives in Syria, and what they built is destroyed. And now we, the third generation, are experiencing this also, of starting from zero in other countries.”



Yarmouk: cartoon by Mohammed Saba'aneh, 7 April 2015 (via Mohammed Saba'aneh)

Laila Benalal: life and death in Yarmouk camp: 'We want our freedom back'



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye
 
On Monday, it was reported that fighters were due to withdraw "within hours" from the refugee camp, following a truce struck on Saturday evening to end deadly fighting. These were the type of harrowing accounts of life in the Yarmouk camp heard by photographer Laila Benallal during a visit there before this week's ceasefire:  "We want our freedom back";  "We want these crimes against us to stop"; "I haven't seen my parents in more than a year, I don't have any idea where they are or if they are still alive"; "We are going from place to place, from camp to camp; this is a second Nakba! (catastrophe)"; "We want to get out of this cage.""I haven't had a drop of water for days"; "My wife has cancer and is dying slowly without any medical care"; "I saw my neighbour dying last week, he hadn't had food for weeks like many of us, you must have seen the photo of  him, it went viral on social media"; "Hunger shouldn't be used as a weapon against us." -- MEE



Life in the Yarmouk camp in Damascus is a daily struggle for survival for the abandoned Palestinians there. Hundreds have died since a siege on the camp began: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye
 

Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye
 


Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye


Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye
 


Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye


Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye
 


Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye



Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye


 Yarmouk: photo by Laila Benallal, 24 June 2014 via Middle East Eye

Meditation: Cat Dancer

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Shanghai, China. A woman plays a game with a kitten: photo  by Carlos Barria/Reuters via the Guardian, 12 April 2015

My heroic partner, who keeps things going in this ancient falling-down house, managing the practicalities, while the other inhabitants, her crippled husband and the pack of four orphan-of-the-storm felines also currently residing, contribute little beyond their variously engaging presence and unending need, seems never to run out of necessary survival-directed tasks. But as demanding as all that labour is upon her, she has probably spent at least as much of her time, over the past thirty-odd years, whenever there comes a respite in the household chore burden, at playing games with the cats, who love her for it, in their way: indeed adore her as though she were, in cat cosmology, a major goddess; and this veneration is moreover no more than is right and fit -- even, or maybe especially, in a crumbling hundred-year-old dwelling, a fragile and precarious structure which lately seems to have been mysteriously drifting, all but imperceptibly, yet inexorably, farther and farther out of the implacable orbit of the world as known.


REUTERS/China Daily
 
A nail house, the last house in this area, stands in the centre of a construction site which will be developed as a new apartment zone in Chongqing Municipality, 4 February 2009. The owners of the house insist on seeking more compensation before agreeing to the demolition of their home, local media reported
: photo by Reuters/China Daily via National Post, 22 November 2009


The photo at the top here, the woman in Shanghai playing with her cats, reminded me of one of those games. Several feline generations back, a simple toy called Cat Dancer -- "...the original interactive cat toy. Spring steel wire and rolled cardboard create an irresistible lure..." -- proved a big hit with certain of our street-rescue cats. That is, the younger ones,the ones who had not yet lost their enthusiasm for and interest in play.

You can still buy one of these primitive Cat Dancer contraptions for $3.50. The lady in Shanghai has fashioned her own homemade variant, a branch and a couple of feathers, even more of a bargain. For her, it appears the exercise is a meditative experience. After all, a healthy young cat will leap repeatedly into the air, attempting to catch the lure over and over, until eventually exhaustion sets in. For the cat, that is. Exhaustion, not boredom. For the human on the other end of the toy, however, no matter the delight that accompanies the first two or three dozen dangle-and-leaps, the sheer repetitiousness of the thing cannot but become tiresome.

The mistress of the dance here, retired from such duties over the last few decades as our rotating cat population, like us, has grown older and older, and less and less interested in or capable of the requisite wild leaping- about, has lately been seduced back into the game, by a newcomer -- a young, large, ragged, very hungry and nonetheless quite vigorous stray female coon cat, whose extended period on the streets has evidently honed her skills at catching rats and mice; when one day the Cat Dancer was brought out of mothballs, it was, for this newcomer, as though there had arrived a direct summons from Cat Heaven; immediately, she wanted nothing more than to leap and play all through the livelong day. The added miraculous bonus of not having to worry about failing to actually capture and consume the elusive mechanical prey, as instinct commanded, was compensated, for this quite intelligent animal, by the increasingly certain knowledge that, now, when she is hungry, she will, miraculously enough, be fed anyway. Happiness all round then, except for the tedium inevitably experienced by the incredibly patient human mistress of the dance, who has had to come up with her own strategies for keeping the mind occupied while the limbs repeat the required rote behavior.  But those remain her secret.

For now, it's just -- reach for the sky!

This is what a life given over to cat dancing is all about: leap, rest a bit, maybe a brief pause to accept due admiration, then a quick drink and -- leap some more!
And what is it really but cat ballet?

    
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d7/Cat_dancing_in_the_snow-Tscherno.jpg/1024px-Cat_dancing_in_the_snow-Tscherno.jpg

Cat dancing in snow, Tscherno: photo by Matthias Zirngibl, 26 February 2006



"Swan Lake", Ballets Russes (1), ca. 1936: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)



Sono Osato in Francesca da Rimini costume, sometime in 1940
: photographer unknown
(Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)



Tamara Grigorieva pictured backstage with a dog, ca. 1936. [Tamara Grigorieva (1918–2010): "A member of the Ballet Russe and former director of Ballet Estable del Teatro Colón. Born in Leningrad, Grigorieva was trained by the legendary Olga Preobrajenska in Paris. After briefly dancing with Balanchine’s Les Ballets 1933, she joined Colonel de Basil’s Ballets Russes de Monte Carlo (later the Ballet Russe) in 1933, where she performed the Nymph in Nijinsky’s Afternoon of a Faun, and the Polovtsian Woman in Fokine’s Prince Igor.  She left the company in 1944 to settle in South America, where she continued to dance as a guest ballerina with companies in Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay. She became director, ballet mistress, and choreographer of Teatro Colón in 1961, a position she held for more than 20 years." -- Dance Magazine]: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)


 
Tamara Grigorieva in "Pavane", original Ballet Russe, 1940. Choreograehed by Leonide Massine: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)



Portrait of an unidentified female dancer backstage, Ballets Russes Australian tour, ca. 1938: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)


"Aurora's wedding" with Tamara Toumanova, Michael Panaieff, Anton Vlassoff and Oleg Tupine, 1940
: photographer unknown
(Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)




"Aurora's Wedding" with Genevieve Moulin and David Lichine in the Bluebird pas de deux, ca. 1936. [Geneviève Moulin (b.1921) was a French ballerina who performed with the Original Ballet Russe. She also used the Russian stage name of Lubov Zlatina.]: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia)


Les Sylphides, featuring Marguerite Gontcharova, Galina Razoumova, Anna Volkova, Phyllida Cooper, Therese Moulin and Sonia Orlova, ca. 1936 [1].Dancers: Lydia Couprina also known as Phyllida Cooper; Natasha Melnikova (?) also known as Therese Moulin; Sonia Gronau also known as Sonia Orlova: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia) 


Les Sylphides, featuring Marguerite Gontcharova, Galina Razoumova, Anna Volkova, Phyllida Cooper, Therese Moulin and Sonia Orlova, ca. 1936 [2].Dancers: Lydia Couprina also known as Phyllida Cooper; Natasha Melnikova (?) also known as Therese Moulin; Sonia Gronau also known as Sonia Orlova: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia) 



Les Sylphides, featuring Marguerite Gontcharova, Galina Razoumova, Anna Volkova, Phyllida Cooper, Therese Moulin and Sonia Orlova, ca. 1936 [3].Dancers: Lydia Couprina also known as Phyllida Cooper; Natasha Melnikova (?) also known as Therese Moulin; Sonia Gronau also known as Sonia Orlova: photographer unknown (Geoffrey Ingram collection of ballet photographs from the Ballets Russes Australian tour, 1936-1940, National Library of Australia) 

At length, when the whirling acrobatic action grows too intense, and threatens to engulf the moment in flames of hyperactivity, meditation becomes simply impossible.




cat aclysmic 01: photo by Stuart Crawford, 10 July 2009



cat aclysmic 03: photo by Stuart Crawford, 10 July 2009



cat aclysmic 04: photo by Stuart Crawford, 10 July 2009

Finally, it's all just too much for everybody. And so, good night... sweet dreams... 


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white cat by shimaai_yuki: image via Yuriusu @Yuriusu, 24 October 2013

...while outside, all around the reverie-haunted abode, beyond the ephemeral bubble that contains this eternal whirring fire dance of memory and dream, Time and Progress and Development and Growth trundle gracelessly, relentlessly on, water or no water... toward Oblivion, or Junk Removal, or Terminal Desertification...



A partially demolished nail house on a construction site in Hefei, Anhui province, in 2010: photo by Jianan Yu/Reuters via the Guardian, 15 April 2014


Owner Zhao Xing collects water near his partially demolished nail house at a construction site in Kunming, Yunnan province, in 2010.
Water and electricity supplies to his house had been cut: photo by Reuters via the Guardian, 15 April 2014

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#CaliforniaDrought Let @JerryBrownGov know you want to #unfrackcal #CAdrought cc @MadBitcoins
: image via Hattori Hanzo @Oni_n_Hanzo, 3 April 2015
 
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#CaliforniaDrought water restrictions don't apply to thirsty #frackerss: image via simon boxer @simonboxer, 3 April 2015

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SMDH!! RT @michaelallenmar:
California used 70 million gallons of water in Fracking in 2014s: image via TheRedWineGal @TheRedWineGal, 3 April 2015

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What California drought? #StanfordInvite: image via Kevin Liao @RunLiao, 3 April 2015


A home swimming pool in Rancho Mirag
e
: p
hoto by Damon Winter/The New York Times, 4 April 2015


A golf course in the Sun City Palm Desert community for older adults sits near barren land about 10  miles east of Palm Springs: photo by Damon Winter/The New York Times, 4 April 2015



Footprints and a tire in dried mud along the banks of the Salton Sea: photo by Damon Winter/The New York Times, 4 April 2015


A housing development in Cathedral City, near Palm Springs: photo by Damon Winter/The New York Times, 4 April 2015 


The dried up Lake Meade in Colorado, US.A former fish cleaning station, a pier to nowhere, and a sign alerting visitors to safe swimming practices are relics of its past, before climate change and overuse of the Colorado River caused it to rapidly shrink. Scientists predict the Lake will disappear completely by 2021: photo by Nina Berman/Noor/Everydayclimatechange via the Guardian, 20 January 2015


Jilin, China. Smog along the banks of the Songhua river as temperatures reach minus 14C. The air quality index in north China’s Jilin province has risen to 260, indicating high pollution
: photo by ChinaFotoPress via the Guardian, 22 January 2015


In Bangladesh, a woman searches the riverside in Dhaka for any plastic she can sell for recycling. Around a third of the city’s 15 million residents live in poverty
: photo by Munir Uz Zaman/AFP via the Guardian, 13 December 2014


The encroaching desert surrounds homes in the golf resort city of Rancho Mirage, southern California. A fourth year of drought has prompted state governor Jerry Brown to order a 25% cut in domestic water consumption
: photo by Damon Winter/New York Times/Redux/Eyevine via the Guardian, 11 April 2015


Every one of the neighbours has a special exemption as well or so it seems from all those wet lawns in the morning
 
but it's

every

over

developed

cemetery

or golf course

or intensive agricultural

unit

for itself, now

and soon enough, not a drop left for man or beast or tireless dancer to drink



Jodhpur, India. This city in Rajasthan is known as the blue city, as the highest caste of priestly Hindus painted their houses that colour and later the rest of the population followed suit: photo by Adnan Abidi/Reuters via he Guadian, 10 April 2015


Diyarbakir, Turkey. Boys play football in Dagkapi Square during a duststorm: photo by: Ilyas Akengin/AFP via The Guardian, 10 April 2015


Homes in Rancho Mirage, California, in the Coachella Valley. Gov. Jerry Brown has ordered a 25 percent statewide reduction in non-agricultural water use
: p
hoto by Damon Winter/The New York Times, 4 April 2015


Nanking. A ‘nail’ house blocks the road outside a residential block. ‘Nail houses’ is the term for buildings whose owners refuse to accept relocation compensation
: photo by Feature China/Barcroft Media via The Guardian, 11 April 2015


 
Zheng Meiju [to right of photo, not seen] outside her nail house in Rui'an, Zhejiang province, in July 2013. She has been living in the partially demolished home for nearly a year, even though the water and electricity supply were cut: photo by China Stringer Network/Reuters  via the Guardian, 15 April 2015


 
Zheng Meiju outside her nail house in Rui'an, Zhejiang province, in July 2013. She has been living in the partially demolished home for nearly a year, even though the water and electricity supply were cut: photo by China Stringer Network/Reuters  via the Guardian, 15 April 2015

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What Climate Change? #CaliforniaDrought: image via Mike Garrett @THEMike Grarrett, 3 April 2015

Pay-To-Play Killer Cop: The Death of Eric Harris, the Black Holocaust and 'Bad' History in Oklahoma

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0
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Eric Harris was shot by a 73-year-old reserve deputy who said he thought he was using his stun gun instead of his service weapon when he opened fire
: photo by AP via The Guardian, 13 April 2015

Oklahoma officer charged in killing of black man after Taser 'mistake:'Sheriff’s office found fatal shooting of Eric Harris by deputy Bob Bates was ‘a mistake’ but family says: ‘This is simply evil’: Tom Dart, The Guardian, 13 April 2015

A 73-year-old insurance salesman and reserve sheriff’s deputy has been charged with second-degree manslaughter after he appeared to accidentally fire his gun instead of his Taser and shot dead an unarmed man, Eric Harris. 

Harris, 44, died on 2 April after a sting operation designed to catch him selling a gun went wrong. He fled on foot but was caught and wrestled to the ground. 

In video released by the Tulsa County sheriff’s office, the deputy, Bob Bates, yells “Taser”, then a shot is heard and he says: “I shot him, I’m sorry.”

A gun is visible on the ground next to Harris, who cries out in pain: “Oh God, he shot me, I didn’t do shit.”


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WOW. RT @deray: in his hand: type of gun that killed  #EricHarris --  on table: gun type sheriffs lied & said was used: image via Coach Kitty @CameraOnAmazon, 13 April 2015

On Monday the district attorney, Steve Kunzweiler, told the Guardian the sheriff’s office had provided him with the findings of its investigation on Friday afternoon.

In filing the charges on Monday, he said: “Oklahoma law defines culpable negligence as ‘the omission to do something which a reasonably careful person would do, or the lack of the usual ordinary care and caution in the performance of an act usually and ordinarily exercised by a person under similar circumstances and conditions.”

Harris’ brother, Andre Harris, told reporters at a news conference on Monday that officers from the sheriff’s department tried to discourage him from hiring an attorney.

He said he did not believe the shooting was “a racial thing. I don’t think this has anything to do with race. It might have a hint there somewhere. … This is simply evil.”

“When you’re the law, I guess you feel like you can do things and get away with it and not get exposed. Well, we’ve come to expose it. We’ve come to pull a mask off the evil.”

Bates, a wealthy insurance executive in the Oklahoma city, was named the department’s reserve deputy of the year in 2011. He worked for the Tulsa police department for a year in the mid-1960s and is one of 130 volunteer reserves in the sheriff’s department, according to Tulsa World, which said he had donated equipment as well as $2,500 to the re-election campaign for sheriff Stanley Glanz in 2012.


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Did the 73-year-old man who shot and killed #EricHarris pay to be a cop in his spare time?: image via CNN International @cnni, 13 April 2015

Glanz, 72, told Tulsa World he had not given his friend and fishing companion special treatment and that the sheriff’s office once had an 81-year-old deputy. Bates simply “made an error”, Glanz said. “How many errors are made in an operating room every week?”

On Sunday, the Harris family issued a statement which said they “do not believe it is reasonable for a 73-year-old insurance executive to be involved in a dangerous undercover sting operation” and added: “We do not believe it is reasonable -- or responsible -- for [the sheriff’s office] to accept gifts from a wealthy citizen who wants to be [a] ‘pay to play’ cop.”

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History lives in the present. Never forget that fact. America's slave patrol police. #ericharris #walterscott: image via chauncey devega @chaunceydevega, 11 April 2015

In the video of events in Tulsa, which came from a police body camera, officers continue to try to subdue Harris, one shouting: “Shut the fuck up ... You ran, motherfucker, do you hear me, you fucking ran.”

When the 44-year-old says “I’m losing my breath,” an officer replies: “Fuck your breath.”


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kneeling on his head, left hand grabbing neck, right hand clenched ready to punch #ericharris #firstaid: image via Mike Spangenberg @MikeSpangenberg, 11 April 2015

I am a Black woman with asthma. I cannot even engage with "f--k your breath" as something that one human being says to another human.

-- tweet via Ebony Elizabeth @Ebonyteach, 13 April 2015

The unimaginable cruelty of a world where a cop says "f*ck your breath" as you lay dying. Have mercy, God.

-- tweet via Yolanda Pierce @YNPierce, 13 April 2015
 
Hollow. I don't have words for #EricHarris. My words won't form. His last words - and his murderers' vile answers - keep ringing in my ear.

-- tweet via Ava DuVernay @AVAETC, 13 April 2015

There's not much more barbaric than continuing to physically/mentally terrorize someone as they lay dying, screaming in fear. #Eric Harris

-- tweet via Jesse Benn @JesseBenn, 13 April 2015

"F*ck your breath" is the experience.

-- tweet via StLNYC @StLnNYC, 13 April 2015


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Westworld – Onde Ninguém Tem Alma | Retrospectiva #Westworld #MichaelCrichton: image via A Fábrica @Fabdeexpressos, 9 March 2015

Harris died in hospital.

In their statement, Harris’s family said: “Perhaps the most disturbing aspect of all this is the inhumane and malicious treatment of Eric after he was shot ... No human being deserves to be treated with such contempt. These deputies treated Eric as less than human. They treated Eric as if his life had no value.”
At a press conference last Friday, the Tulsa sheriff’s office said its own investigation had concluded that Bates had made a mistake and had not committed a crime. It brought in a Tulsa police sergeant, Jim Clark, as a private consultant.

Tulsa Police Sgt. Jim Clark (right), acting as an independent consultant for the Tulsa County Sheriff's Office, and Sheriff's Capt. Billy McKelvey listen to a question during a press conference about the shooting death of a suspect by a reserve deputy: photo by Cory Young/Tulsa World, 11 April 2015

Clark told reporters that Bates was “a true victim of ‘slips and capture’”, a term used to describe a mistake when someone thinks he or she is taking one course of action but is following another.

It was an argument used by former Oakland police officer Johannes Mehserle to explain why he shot dead Oscar Grant at a Bart station in 2009 when, Mehserle said, he had planned to use his Taser.

Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter. The incident inspired the 2013 film Fruitvale Station.


BART Trial Oscar Grant  Johannes Mehserle

Oscar Grant, shortly before being fatally shot by San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit officer Johannes Mehserle, New Years Day, 2009: photo by Associated Press


The deputy that shot and killed #EricHarris is an insurance executive who pays to play cop: image via AlexMedina @mrmedina. 13 April 2015

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After the K.K.K. take off their hoods they go back to being your police, prosecutors and judges #EricHarris #firstaid: image via Frank Clark @menes676, 11 April 2015

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#MichaelCrichton Writer Series continues with #Westworld (1973): image via Motion State Review @motion_state, 8 April 2015

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You are afforded the right to remain silent. #WalterScott #EricHarris: image via BlackHistoryStudies @BlkHistStudies, 13 April 2015

Steven W. Thrasher: Oklahoma and "Bad" History


If history teachers banished lessons on “bad” American history, what would be left?: photo by PhotoQuest via The Guardian, 19 February 2015

Sorry, Oklahoma. You don't get to ban history you don't like: Going after history classes that don’t teach “American Exceptionalism” is anything but patriotic: Steven W. Thrasher, The Guardian, 19 February 2015


Oklahoma House Republicans on the Common Education Committee voted on Tuesday to ban advanced placement US history courses, because they think [such courses show] "what is bad about America". If I were Oklahoma, I’d want to forget about “what is bad about” American history, too, especially in my corner of it!

In its “good” history, Oklahoma can boast being the basis of Rodgers and Hammerstein musical and the home of Oral Roberts University. But if Oklahomans were to purge all their local stories which reflect “what is bad about America”, their history pages would be wiped as white as a Tulsa klansman’s hood. Oklahoma was the extremely violent home to a number of lynched African-Americans, as chronicled by America's Black Holocaust Museum; the Native American men, women and children slaughtered at what is now the Washita Battlefield National Historic Site; and the white people who killed them and likely went to church that very week. It is where Timothy McVeigh committed the largest domestic act of terrorism in recent years and blew up, killed and wounded hundreds of people in the Alfred P Murrah Federal Building. Oklahoma is chock full of former reservations where Native Americans were forced to relocate. It’s where, just last year, a botched execution took 45 minutes and left condemned Clayton Lockett "a bloody mess". And it’s where the violent fracking of its natural resources may be the reason why Oklahoma has gone from having “one or two perceptible earthquakes a year” to “averaging two or three a day.”

Just last month, Education Week gave the state a D- on education and ranked it 48th in the nation. Clearly, Oklahoma could move up from being third dumbest, fourth most incarcerated, and sixth fattest state if it just ignored its unpleasant history, right?

Nationally, if history teachers were to banish everything “bad” about America from our classrooms (i.e., the three-fifths compromise, Jim Crow, the lack of women’s suffrage for a  century and a half, the genocide of Native Americans, the annexation of Mexico through war, the sexual assault of one in three women in her lifetime, the apartheid of imprisoned African Americans, Ronald Reagan, the internment of Japanese Americans, McDonald's, the colonization of Puerto Rico, the Chinese Exclusion Act, exporting chemical warfare, Three Mile Island, Applebee's [without drones], TGIF’s [with drones], killing kids with drones, selling drones to foreign countries, and Ryan Secrest, to name just a few national disasters), and to instead only teach about what was truly exceptional about America, what would be left to give lessons on? 


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Who knew THIS SHIT could be topped by #FuckYourBreath: image via Steven Thrasher@hrasherxy, 13 April 2015


National Republicans seem to agree with what the Okies are doing here: when it comes to focusing too much on “bad” history (ie, not propagating white superiority or creationism enough), Oklahoma Republicans are in good company. Republicans in Arizona have already banned ethnic studies in public schools. Wisconsin governor Scott Walker wants to burnish his White House creds by cutting $300 mn from his public university system. Louisiana Republican Governor Bobby Jindal is also eyeing 2016 by trying to gut $300 mn from his public university system, but from a state which “has already cut more money, on a per-student basis, from higher education than almost any other state in the country.”

National Republicans aren’t any better: they blocked Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren’s bill to lend [money to] college students at the same interest banks get. Senator Marco Rubio currently opposes President Obama's plan to make community college free because he says it doesn’t give “options” and will make the poor feel “pressured to attend community college” just “because it’s the one option paid for by the government.”

This latest anti-education effort, which will only punish really smart kids (who are the ones who want to earn college history credits while in a high school AP course) came about because Republicans think the coursework   doesn’t shill for “American exceptionalism” enough. But why would Oklahoma Republicans -- who embrace education "options" -- want to rob all of their brightest high school seniors of the choice to inexpensively earn college history credits just because their history lessons may be critical and not necessarily full of pro-American propaganda?

If America is exceptional for anything, it was exceptional for the process its founders set in motion at the moment of its birth, when they put their plans into the tangible words of the Constitution. It was an imperfect document to be sure (that "three-fifths thing”, for example), but words were a vastly improved repository for nationhood than a crown.

That Constitution gave us the impetus to place both our nation and our history -- wretched and glorious alike – in writing, in a document which could be amended, but would never be erased. We write shit down and improve on it: that is the American exception. The written word records our history, all of our history, in a way oral history alone can not, especially not with the centuries-long holocaust of Americans of color.

Republicans’ efforts -- in Oklahoma and otherwise -- to bury the past and replace it with a prettier version are outright un-American -- in addition to being 100% ahistorical. Holding our children’s futures hostage by refusing them the opportunity to learn both the good and the bad is simply an effort to secure future votes, not help children learn ... and you can’t hide the truth from kids forever, as any parent who welcomed Santa Claus into their home knows all too well.


Negro drinking at

Negro drinking at "Colored" water cooler in streetcar terminal, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
: photo by Russell Lee, July 1939 (Farm Security Administration Collection, Library of Congress)


Unappeased: The 1921 Tulsa race riot:  "It really destroyed my faith in humanity"


Olivia Hooker, 99, is one of the last survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Riot. While her family home survived the destruction, the family lost everything else they had -– including her father’s department store. Hooker, who was only 6 at the time of the riot, had never experienced racism before the mobsters burned down Greenwood. After she witnessed white Tulsans loot her town, her perceptions of race were dramatically altered: "It really destroyed my faith in humanity". After 93 years of fighting for restitution, Hooker admits it is not likely she’ll ever receive anything: photo by Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

Survivors of infamous 1921 Tulsa race riot still hope for justice: Witness to the destruction of their world, they are dying before reparations can reach them: Dexter Mullins, AlJazeera America, 19 July 2014

TULSA, Oklahoma -- They called it Black Wall Street.


Tulsa race riots

The Greenwood neighborhood of Tulsa, Oklahoma, after the 1921 Tulsa race riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

It was only a 1-square-mile area on the north side of Tulsa, but for blacks in the 1900s, Greenwood was everything the South was not. Filled with black lawyers, doctors and business owners, flush with prosperity, here was an area where African-Americans finally had a chance to make something of themselves, escaping the harsh racism of a nation that deprived them of even the most basic dignities.

A dollar would circulate 19 times before leaving Greenwood, a byproduct of the segregation laws, which kept blacks from shopping anywhere else but also united the community financially. There was affluence and education in Greenwood not seen anywhere else in the country for African-Americans, and each day more people were coming to carve out a piece of the dream for themselves, adding to the prosperity of the neighborhood.


Tulsa race riots

African-Americans taken prisoner during the riot. An armed white man rides on the running board of the truck: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014


This was the town Olivia Hooker was born in, the place she called home as a little girl, an African-American child oblivious to the racism plaguing the country until the day in 1921 when all of her neighborhood would be wiped off the map in the space of a day: the bank, the elegant brick homes, the Red Wing Hotel, Mann’s Grocery, the Dreamland Theatre, even her father’s department store, the Sam D. Hooker Store at 124 Greenwood Avenue.

On May 30, 1921, a young black man was accused of assaulting a white woman. That accusation was the tipping point for a town already reeling from racial tension, and would turn into the worst 24 hours in the city’s history, known as the Tulsa Race Riot.

Hooker is 99 now, a retired teacher living in White Plains, New York. But when the riot happened, she was 6, exposed for the first time to the brutal realities of discrimination and hatred. She was devastated.

“And so when this terrible thing happened, it really destroyed my faith in humanity,” she said. “And it took a good long while for me to get over it.”

There are fewer than a dozen survivors of the riot, which Hooker refers to as “the catastrophe.” And for nearly a century now, the survivors have been seeking reparations for the destruction of their homes and businesses. Despite their best efforts, they have come up empty-handed.

Experts and historians may have differing accounts of what happened, but they all agree on one thing: It’s likely that the survivors will die before they receive what they are seeking.

Tulsa race riot

Thousands of families were left homeless from the fire that raged through the 35 blocks of Greenwood during the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014
 


Tulsa wasn’t the first city to experience a race riot, and it would not be the last. Racial disturbances were commonplace at the time, as the nation struggled to grapple with its rapidly changing culture.

During the "Red Summer of 1919," there were more than two dozen race riots across the country. In Chicago, tensions mounted over housing, job prospects and which race had use of certain recreational areas, resulting in a bloody riot. 

Washington, D.C., experienced its own unrest after a white woman fabricated a story of being raped by two black men, a common lie of the time that was then inflamed by the white press, kicking off yet another riot.

There were similar eruptions in Knoxville, Tennessee, and Omaha, Nebraska, that summer. And even after Tulsa, a rape accusation was the cause of a riot in Rosewood, a black community in Florida that was burned to the ground in 1923. In Tulsa, it all started because of an incident between Dick Rowland, a black man, and Sarah Page, a young white woman, in an elevator at the Drexel Building. It’s not exactly clear what the chain of events was -- even the state’s official report lists a variety of stories surrounding what happened -- but most credible accounts agree on the basic facts.

On May 30, 19-year-old Rowland was riding in an elevator operated by 17-year-old Page.Rowland tripped as he was exiting the elevator and grabbed Page’s arm in an attempt to steady himself. She screamed, and he fled the elevator as a white clerk from a nearby store came to investigate the noise. He assumed Page, apparently distraught from the incident, had been assaulted by Rowland and called the police.

Like a game of telephone, the story became more inflammatory with each retelling, and spread rapidly. Rowland hid in Greenwood, terrified he’d be lynched for allegedly raping a white girl. He was arrested the next morning and taken to the courthouse, where a vigilante mob had arrived to demand that police turn him over to the crowd.


Tulsa race riots

Armed white men ride with a few black men in the car during the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

A group of black men, many of them World War Iveterans, armed themselves and went to the courthouse to protect Rowland, determined that a black person would not be lynched in their town.

More than 75 of them twice arrived at the courthouse to offer their services to defend Rowland against a mob of thousands of angry whites. They were twice denied. Their departure from the courthouse the second time would be the tipping point.

According to the official report, a white man approached one of the black men, who was armed with a revolver.

“Nigger, what are you going to do with that pistol?” he said.

“I’m going to use it if I need to,” the black man replied.

The white man demanded he hand it over, and he refused. When the white man tried to disarm him, the gun went off and the riot began.

Over the course of 24 hours, Greenwood would be looted, set ablaze and literally burned off the map. All 35 blocks were gone.

When the smoke cleared on June 1, more than $1.5 million in damage (about $20 million in contemporary dollars) had been done; as many as 300 people, black and white, had been killed; and thousands of black families were left homeless, with nothing but rubble and ash to call home.


Tulsa race riots

The damage to the Williams Dreamland Theatre in Greenwood: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014


Even then, there were people who wanted to pay restitution.

According to a 1921 New York Times article, Judge Loyal J. Martin, a former mayor of Tulsa who chaired the first race riot committee -- the Tulsa City Commission -- just days after the attack, said in a mass meeting that the city could redeem itself and move forward only “by complete restitution and rehabilitation of the destroyed black belt.”

"The rest of the United States must know that the real citizenship of Tulsa weeps at this unspeakable crime and will make good the damage, so far as it can be done, to the last penny,” he said.

But that never happened. Insurance companies denied claims from African-Americans, leaving them with nothing but the clothes on their backs, forced to start over or leave. Blacks tried to sue the city and state for damages but had their claims blocked or denied, according to the official report.

On June 14, just two weeks after the riot, Mayor T.D. Evans addressed the commission, telling it that the incident was “inevitable” and that the victims “should receive such help as we can give them.”

But then he said something else: “Let us immediately get to the outside fact that everything is quiet in our city, that this menace has been fully conquered, and that we are going on in a normal condition.”

In other words: The city should move on. And for 90 years, that’s what happened.

After an initial flurry of reports, with articles appearing as far away as the London Times, news of the “troubles” in Tulsa vanished.


Tulsa race riot

A Tulsa man is detained during the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

Greenwood did rebuild, bigger and better than it was before. But desegregation claimed Greenwood just as it did every black town in the United States; given the opportunity to spend money outside their own neighborhood for the first time, and the chance to live in areas previously off limits to them, African-Americans slowly but steadily moved away from the area, and the businesses left with them.

The Greenwood of today looks nothing like the once famous area. A highway overpass cuts right through the middle of the neighborhood. The sidewalks along Greenwood Avenue and Archer Street are lined with hundreds of plaques that each list the name of a business that was destroyed in the riot and whether or not it was rebuilt. Many were not.

But just behind the businesses on Greenwood Avenue is a shiny new baseball stadium, and across the street is a new luxury condominium building. A large chunk of Greenwood is now home to the Tulsa campuses of both Oklahoma State University and Langston University.


Tulsa race riot

 An armed man during the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

From the time of the riot, whole generations of Tulsans have grown up never hearing a word about the darkest moment in the city’s history.

Damario Solomon-Simmons, an African-American attorney in Tulsa, is one of them.

A native of North Tulsa, Solomon-Simmons attended Carver Middle School -- on Greenwood Avenue -- and still didn’t learn about Greenwood and the riots until he took an African-American studies course at the University of Oklahoma.

All of it -- the business district and the homes, the sudden destruction -- left him flabbergasted. He argued with his professor, telling him, “You’re wrong! I’m from Tulsa, I’m from North Tulsa, I’ve never seen or heard of anything like that.’’

Marc Carlson, a historian and archivist at the University of Tulsa who oversees the school’s race riot collection, said many of his students don’t know either, not even the ones from Tulsa.

“I don’t know why that is,” he said, adding that the state Legislature requires schools to include the riot in their curriculum.

Oddly, there is more awareness of the event in other countries than in the U.S.

Michelle Place, executive director of the Tulsa Historical Society, said requests for information about the riot are the society’s No. 1 inquiry.

"About a month ago I talked to someone in New Zealand. I’ve talked to Tokyo, I’ve talked to London,” said Place.

She can understand why city leaders might be reluctant to put it in school textbooks. But why, she wondered, didn’t the tale survive orally?

“The fact that it’s not just one of those things that we all knew took place,” she said and paused, “… takes my breath away, brings me up short.”


Tulsa race riots

A dead body in the street, June 1, 1921: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

Despite suffering massive losses from the riot, many people in the black community did not and still do not know about it, said Mechelle Brown, program coordinator at the Greenwood Cultural Center.

Many whites were ashamed of the incident, she said, so it would make sense that they wouldn’t want to talk about it. But it was also hushed up in the black community. Why, she wondered, wouldn’t they want people to know what happened to them?


Tulsa race riot

Firefighters extinguish the flames during the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014


“But blacks, we asked years ago, ‘Why did you not talk about it?’ And they said that after the race riot, when they came back here and there was absolutely nothing to come home to, that they felt those same feelings of anger and resentment and bitterness and fear,” Brown said. “But they had to think about the next day, and the day after.”

Brown understands why they wouldn’t want to relive that pain, she said. At the same time, she sees it as a missed opportunity.

“It robbed us of something. It robbed us of our history. It robbed us of where we come from.”


Tulsa race riot Ku Klux Klan

A Ku Klux Klan gathering in Drumright, Oklahoma, 1922. The Klan's presence in Oklahoma increased after the riot: photo courtesy of Tulsa Historical Society via Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014


In 2001, 80 years after the destruction of Greenwood, the Tulsa Race Riot Commission recommended in a 178-page report that survivors be paid reparations, calling it a “moral obligation.”

“Justice demands a closure as it did with Japanese Americans and Holocaust victims of Germany,” the report reads. The issue is not if reparations are to be paid, but “which government entity should provide financial repair to the survivors and the condemned community that suffered under vigilante violence?”

Paying reparations was just not something Oklahomans were interested in entertaining.

Brown said that almost as soon as word got out about the possibility of reparations, the Greenwood Cultural Center began to receive hate mail and angry, anonymous phone calls from people who did not support paying out. A lot of the calls were similar: “I wasn’t here, my parents weren’t involved in it.”

The Oklahoma state Legislature accepted the report and the “moral responsibility on behalf of the state and its citizens” but flatly refused to pay any type of reparations.

More than 200 people sued the state, seeking recourse for damages. The survivors weren’t asking for individual checks for themselves or their descendants; they wanted educational benefits such as scholarships for students in the area to attend historically black colleges and universities and health benefits for descendants who remained in Greenwood.

Unfortunately, Oklahoma law requires that civil rights lawsuits be filed within two years of an event, and District Judge James O. Ellison noted that the clock began ticking right after the riot. The U.S. Supreme Court said the same.


Tulsa race riot

Thousands of families were left homeless from the fire that raged through the 35 blocks of Greenwood during the riot: photo by Dexter Mullins for Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

For Solomon-Simmons, an attorney who worked with the victims’ legal team, having the case denied by the nation’s highest court just added insult to injury.

“I felt like we were right. We had the facts on our side. I think we should have had the law on our side,” he said. “I still get exceedingly, if I’m frank, pissed off, just thinking about the fact that we were not able to get redress for the survivors and their descendants.”

Tulsa did construct the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park in the middle of Greenwood, a memorial to the destruction and a tribute to the survivors. It’s one of two monuments in the area -- the other is in front of the Greenwood Cultural Center and was built with money raised exclusively by the center several years before the reconciliation park.


Tulsa race riots

The Mabel B. Little Heritage House, one of the few homes to survive the riot, is maintained by the Greenwood Cultural Center. The home is filled with items typical of a home in 1920s Greenwood: photo by Dexter Mullins for Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014


Despite articles appearing in publications over the years, most people in the U.S. still have no idea the event even occurred. There is a major push from the Tulsa Historical Society, the Greenwood Cultural Center and the University of Tulsa to fix that.

The historical society has digitized its riot archive and put the collection onto an app, hoping to satisfy the seemingly unyielding demand for information about the riot, and to reach new people.

The app launched in May for $9.99, and as more material comes in, it will update so people can see the latest information. UT is also digitizing the cultural center’s archives so the information can be shared online.

The survivors may not have won their case, but at least now people may finally learn about the prosperity they once had.

After they lost their appeals, not much has happened in the way of paying the few remaining survivors. Old age and time has claimed the lives of many of them, and more die every year without any restitution.

There are some efforts in Congress to try and help. Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., introduces a bill every year on the floor of the House to remove the statute of limitations in the Greenwood case to allow the survivors’ lawsuit to go forward. 
But that bill -- along with the one Conyers presents each year to study reparations for slavery -- is not likely to ever get further than that introduction, especially in today’s divided Congress.

“We thought we might live long enough to see something happen, but even though I’ve lived 99 years, nothing of that sort has actually happened,” Hooker said. “You keep hoping, you keep hope alive, so to speak.”

After all, it did take 80 years before the survivors of the riot even got an official apology from the city of Tulsa. Mayor Kathy Taylorheld a “celebration of conscience” and honored with a medal each of the survivors the city could contact.

But Hooker,who was the first African American woman to serve in the Coast Guard and went on to earn a doctorate's in psychology, remains optimistic.

“We’ll just keep right on trying, never giving up. Never, never giving up.”

Solomon-Simmons, on the other hand, isn’t nearly as hopeful.

The collective failure to act, to pay the victims, to set up a scholarship fund or make a real attempt at restitution is a “stain on our nation,” he said.

“And it’s sad to know that they’re probably all going to die without receiving anything,” he added. “Unfortunately, black life in America is still not worth that much.”


Tulsa race riot

Sculptor Ed Dwight created three statues to convey the hostility, humiliation and hope experienced by the Greenwood neighborhood. Found in the John Hope Franklin Reconciliation Park, this statue represents humiliation: photo by Dexter Mullins for Al Jazeera America, 19 July 2014

Private moment: If you could read my mind

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Having been asked to read with British prime minister David Cameron, six-year-old Lucy Howarth has a ‘head/desk’ moment at the Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Primary School in Westhoughton
: photo by: Stefan Rousseau/PA via the Guardian, 11 April 2014
 

"This fat twat could do with a boot / clarinet / bit of UXO up the backside"




Members of a music band rest before the procession of ‘Nossa Senhora da Boa Viagem’ in Constancia, Portugal. The event has been held annually for 200 years: photo by: Rafael Marchante/Reuters via the Guardian, 11 April 2014


If you could read my mind, love
What a tale my thoughts could tell
Just like an old-time movie
'Bout a ghost from a wishin' well
In a castle dark or a fortress strong
With chains upon my feet
But stories always end
And if you read between the lines
You'll know that I'm just tryin' to understand
The feelings that you lack
I never thought I could feel this way
And I've got to say that I just don't get it
I don't know where we went wrong
But the feeling's gone and I just can't get it back

Gordon Lightfoot: from If You Could Read My Mind (1970)


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An unexploded rocket in a field near the village of Dmitrivka, Ukraine. As a tenuous ceasefire brings respite after the year-long conflict between pro-Russian rebels and Ukrainian troops, the danger of landmines now threatens lives, particularly on once-rich agricultural lands: photo by Dimitar Dilkoff/AFP via the Guardian, 11 April 2014


The woman in red: MG Metro, Norton Folgate, EC2, May 1987: photo by Chris Dorley-Brown from Drivers in the 80s via the Guardian, 14 April 2015


Honda 90 Moped, Mare Street, E8: photo by Chris Dorley-Brown from Drivers in the 80s via the Guardian, 13 April 2015


Mercedes-Benz W115 Series, London Bridge, EC4: photo by Chris Dorley-Brown from Drivers in the 80s via the Guardian, 13 April 2014
 

Carrie Fisher’s Princess Leia was an angry heroine ‘whose anger was ultimately sublimated to affection’: photo by Allstar via the Guardian, 1 December 2014


Carrie Fisher and her stunt double sunbathe on the set of Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
: photo by Peter Mayhew, 1982 via the Guardian, 16 January 2014



RT StarWarsTHX: Jabba the Hutt and Slave Leia at #MadameTussauds getting their final touches by the artists.#StarWars: image via Because Geek @BecauseGeek 13 April 2015
 
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@digitalspy: The #JabbatheHutt and #PrincessLeia waxworks at Madame Tussauds are incredible": image via Lee-Filming-ACS/2015 @MylifeinwordsUK, 13 April 2015
 
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RT @lwlies At last. Jabba the Hutt and Princess Leia united in wax. #starwarsexperience #madametussauds by lwlies: image via Colin Richdale @MondayRemedy, 13 April 2015
 

RT StarWarsTHX: Jabba the Hutt and Slave Leia at #MadameTussauds getting their final touches by the artists.#StarWars: image via Because Geek @BecauseGeek 13 April 2015
 

RT StarWarsTHX: Jabba the Hutt and Slave Leia at #MadameTussauds getting their final touches by the artists.#StarWars: image via Because Geek @BecauseGeek 13 April 2015
 

London, UK. A waxwork artist applies the finishing touches to Princess Leia, with Jabba the Hutt behind her. Madame Tussauds’ new Star Wars attraction will open to the public on 16 May
: photo by Lauren Hurley/PA via the Guardian, 13 April 2015


London, UK. A waxwork artist applies the finishing touches to Princess Leia, with Jabba the Hutt behind her. Madame Tussauds’ new Star Wars attraction will open to the public on 16 May
: photo by Lauren Hurley/PA via the Guardian, 13 April 2015


A giant caterpillar moves through the crowd on the first day of the Coachella Music Festival
: photo by Robyn Beck/AFP via the Guardian, 11 April 2015


A couple hugs in front of the iconic Coachella ferris wheel: photo by Lucy Nicholson/Reuters via the Guardian, 11 April 2015


Paris Hilton proves that while selfie sticks are banned at Coachella, selfies are here to stay
: photo by Matt Cowan for Coachella via the Guardian, 11 April 2015


Melissa Gasia, 24, dances in front of artwork on the Coachella grounds: Papilio Merraculous, by Poetic Kinetics
: photo by Lucy Nicholson/Reuters via the Guardian, 11 April 2015


Mø: in favour of selfie sticks: photo by Felix Clay for the Guardian, 13 April 2015


MØ crowd-surfs in the audience at Coachella: photo by Matt Cowan for Coachella via the Guardian, 13 April 2015

Edwin Denby / Weegee: In Public, In Private (In the Tunnel of Love and Death)

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Fotógrafos @CINEBLOG: #Weegee: 1943 - 'Lovers with 3-D glasses at the Palace Theatre'
#Weegee @classicepics #3D: image via Cineblog.net @CINEBLOG, 3 March 2015
 

They laugh when the fouled champion throws in the towel
They laugh when the gored horse stumbles in his guts
When the bulb breaks on the movie actress they howl
But never so loud as when a man loses his nuts.
 
And laughter being a token of happiness
Conclude what happy animals humans are
For an accident one imagines a real distress
When it happens rockets our pleasure way up over par.
 
But the joy we feed our liquid body with is dreaming
(A policed forest where lean hunters poach)
Bring home our love's face mangled and screaming
Or if we're the victim, looking at us in reproach.
 
This happy drug no public doctor cures us of
Each is a private addict to pleasures of love.

Edwin Denby (1903-1983): "They laugh when the fouled champion throws in the towel", from In Public, In Private (1948)


Weegee (Arthur Fellig): In the Dark / Addicted to Love


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 Happy Valentine's Day, photolovers! "Lovers at the Palace Theatre" (c.1945) by the one and only #Weegee: image viaHoward Greenberg @HGreenbergGllry, 14 February 2014

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#Weegee: image viaJarry @Henry_Jarry, 30 September 2014


Boy with finger in his mouth: photo by Weegee/International Centre of Photography via The Guardian, 9 January 2015
 
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#WEEGEE: image via Cheryl Georgette @BOHEMIANFOREST. 6 February 2015


 #Weegee
dans l’obscurité des cinémas via @LaBoiteVerte #photographie #cinema image via Margaux Duquesne @MduqN, 3 March 2015


  #Weegee dans l’obscurité des cinémas via @LaBoiteVerte #photographie #cinema image via Margaux Duquesne @MduqN, 3 March 2015

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L'américain #Weegee a parcouru les #cinemas américains avec son appareil  #photo, un flash et un filtre infrarouge: image via Kel Expo @KelExpo,. 23 March 2015


Boy looking through binoculars: photo by Weegee/International Centre of Photography via The Guardian, 9 January 2015
 

Anni '40, buio in sala: i segreti li svela #Weegee #LaRepubblica_it #fotografía: image via Jorge Rodriguez @jrdelalamo, 30 January 2015


Girls laughing at movie: photo by Weegee/International Centre of Photography via The Guardian, 9 January 2015


Boy eating out of a paper bag: photo by Weegee/International Centre of Photography via The Guardian, 9 January 2015
 

Anni '40, buio in sala: i segreti li svela #Weegee #LaRepubblica_it #fotografía: image via Jorge Rodriguez @jrdelalamo, 30 January 2015
 

Anni '40, buio in sala: i segreti li svela #Weegee #LaRepubblica_it #fotografía: image via Jorge Rodriguez @jrdelalamo, 30 January 2015
 
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#Weegee, c. 1950: image via Jarry @Henry_Jarry. 1 February 2015
 
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#Weegee: image via Jarry @Henry_Jarry. 1 February 2015
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Lady, I like the way you ask a favor. #BNoirDetour #Weegee: image via John Drummond 4 @eyesJohnny. 15 March 2015

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 "@ArodSpainMedia: "megusta esta #fotgrafía de #Weegee "Chico encuentra chica" De su libro Naked Hollywood.": image via Cristina Romero  @cris_rome, 21 January 2013

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Some Halloween sweetness from #Weegee: Boy meets Girl from Outer Space, New York City, 1955. Happy Halloween ya'll: image via Anderson Co. Library @andersonsclib, 30 October 2013
 
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Para mi, una de las mejores fotos de #Weegee (Boy Meets Girl from Mars, 1955): image viaAtacart @AtacArt, 1 August 2014

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 Como era de esperar, #Weegeeestá equipado de serie para cualquier eventualidad epidémica.#protocolografía: image viaCasa de la Imagen  @casadelaimagen, 9 October 2014

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Jeudi 3 Avril #Weegee - la photographie noire - débarque @Bleu du Ciel Lyon: image viaLe Bleu du Ciel @BleuduCielLyon, 27 March 2014

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Story on #photography #legend #weegee at the #circus in #NewYorkCity with pics by © @ICPhotog: image viaBoo York City @booyorkbooyork, 21 May 2014

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Photos that changed the world - How  #Weegee's The Critic ushered in tabloid #photography: image viaPhaidon @Phaidon, 18 September 2014

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 #ArthurFelligOne of my faves by photographer #Weegee a NewYork dancer taking a break.... #Goddess: image viaGoddess Of The World @World_Goddess, 30 June 2013

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 #throwbackthursday Lot #157, #WEEGEE
Stripper in a Dressing Room, c. 1950: image viaSanta Monica Auction @SMAAuctions, 17 April 2014

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#Weegee's spirit lives on in the upcoming film #Nightcrawler. @StevenKasher @newyorker: image viaphotograph magazine @photographmag, 17 December 2014

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#Weegee
drunk on the bowery 1943: image viaBarry Dissinger @bdissing, 1 January 2014

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#Weegeedrink coca-cola 1950: image viaBarry Dissinger @bdissing, 10 September 2014

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#Weegee
joy of living 1942: image viaBarry Dissinger @bdissing, 2 January 2014

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#Photography by Arthur Fellig #hot #dance #BlackAndWhite #weegee: image via caroline rath @luckyrio21, 20 July 2013

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#Weegee#Fotomaton: image viaJarry @Henry_Jarry, 18 November 2014

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A travelogue for the hip, the hung & the damned. #Weegee: image viaTheodora T. Calavera @TeddyCalavera, 29 January 2014

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 Photo by #Weegee for your Wednesday morning: image via Ms. Rebecca Knox @Ms. Rebecca Knox, 22 January 2013

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#Weegee, 1942: image via Jarry @Henry_Jarry. 31 March 2015
 
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La Paramount le fichó para que retratara sus salas y el hijoputa se dedicó a hacer fotos de besos furtivos. #Weegee: image via Atacart #Atacart, 16 November 2013 

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Ancora un po' di tempo per la #Mostra di #Weegee  Fino al 14/7 Palazzo Magnani #ReggioEmilia: image via Sara Filippi @filisara, 9 July 2013

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Who ya gonna call? "@adalbertoasf: "Henry_Jarry @HenryJarry #Weegee NY 1945" via UweSteiner": image via Richard Pye @Rich_Pye, 29 December 2013 Hackney, London

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«At an East Side Murder», 1943. #Weegee percorre la New York degli anni Trenta e Quaranta raccontandone i bassifondi: image via Rosario Pavia @ RosarioPavia, 18 April 2013
 
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“¡Pobre del amor al que la fantasía abandona!" #ArturoGraf #Weegee: image via Nina @mascarada19, 8 April 2015
 
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Their First Murder. #Weegee: image via fluxions @fluxions, 22 June 2013

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Weegee was one of the best photojournalists of all time. See: "Simply Add Boiling Water" from 1937. #weegee #amazing: image via Magic Transistor @magictransistor, 28 January 2013

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© #Weegee (Arthur H. #Fellig / *1899 - 1968 / #USA) | Warming Up on Canal Street, 1938.: image via Daniel Churechawa @DanielChurechaw, 18 March 2015

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Mapping the Mid-Century Murders & Gritty Life of New York: #Weegee #Photographs: image via Cynthia Wenslow @WenslowPhoto, 14 April 2015


Act of Love at the Astor Theatre, Times Square, 1954.After moving to Hollywood in 1947, Weegee devoted most of his energy to making 16mm films and photographs for his "Distortions" series, a project that resulted in experimental portraits of celebrities and political figures. He returned to New York in 1952 and lectured and wrote about photography until his death on 27 December 1968: : photo by Weegee/International Center of Photography via The Guardian, 31 March 2015


The Ham n Egg on Broadway, 1953/4. International Center of Photography's s retrospective exhibition in 1998 attested to Weegee’s continued popularity: photo by Weegee/International Center of Photography via The Guardian, 31 March 2015
 

Under the Third Avenue Elevated, 1938: photo by Weegee/International Center of Photography via The Guardian, 31 March 2015

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[Times Square, 1957] This @AP photo essay matches mid-20th century photos of #NYC by #Weegee w/ contemporary ones: image via Spencer Museum of Art @SpencerMuseum, 10 April 2015

Gag Reflex: Federico García Lorca: Paisaje de la multitud que vomita (Anochecer en Coney Island)

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Champion eater Joey Chestnut eats hot dogs as he participates in Nathan's Famous Fourth of July eating contest in Coney Island
: photo by Peter Foley /EPA via the Guardian, 4 July 2014

Prelude: Gag Reflex at Playtime: Fun Has Nothing To Do With It
 

Joey Chestnut competes in the 2012 Nathan’s Famous Fourth of July International Eating Contest at Coney Island in Brooklyn
: photo by Eric Thayer/Reuters via The Guardian, 5 July 2012

Joey Chestnut

Joey Chestnut wins the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating contest with a total of 69 hot dogs and buns
: photo by John Minchillo/AP via the Guardian, 4 July 2013

Joey Chestnut downs record 69 hot dogs at Coney Island eating contest: Winner of Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest is frank: 'I'd do this for nothing': Associated Press in New York via The Guardian 4 July 2013

Joey Chestnut ate 69 franks, devouring his own record in the men's Nathan's Famous Fourth of July International Hot Dog Eating Contest on Thursday. Sonya Thomas defended her title in the women's competition.

Chestnut, who is from San Jose in California and is known as Jaws, ate one more wiener than his previous record to capture the mustard-yellow champion's belt. He said afterward that he was motivated by the prestige, not the $10,000 prize money. "I'd do this for nothing," he said.

Thomas, a 100lb dynamo known as the Black Widow of competitive eating, wolfed down nearly 37 wieners to narrowly win the women's title.

Chestnut, 29, is a seven-time winner who set the old record -– 68 hot dogs and buns in 10 minutes -– in 2009 and tied it in 2012. Thomas, 45, powered through 45 dogs to take the women's championship last year and also won in 2011, the first year women competed separately.

Chestnut, who weighs 210lb, had said his pace was uneven in the past, but "this year I'm trying to eat a little more gracefully, conserve my energy". The second-place finisher was Matt Stonie, who chomped down 51 hot dogs. Chestnut has now bested his rival, Takeru Kobayashi, who won six times. Kobayashi competed in a different eating contest Thursday.

Thomas went toe-to-toe with Juliet Lee for the $5,000 women's prize. Thomas finished with 36 and three-quarters dogs; Lee ate 36 wieners. Thomas said the challenge of shoveling down dozens of franks is actually "more mental than physical". "I have to fight with myself, so I'm going to try to really focus," said Thomas, of Alexandria, Virginia, where she manages a fast-food restaurant.

Now in its 98th year, the contest draws crowds of thousands to marvel at contestants cramming frankfurters down their throats. Ginger Perry, 47, of Obion County, Tennessee, said she and her family planned their New York City City vacation around the contest, after watching it on TV in past years. Perry was impressed that Coney Island has recovered so well from being slammed by Hurricane Sandy last October. "It's amazing to be here and that they rebuilt so quickly," she said.

The hot dog contest took place despite concerns about a swaying, shuttered observation tower that spurred the closure of parts of the nearby amusement park. The shutdown didn't affect Nathan's, but Coney Island's famous Cyclone roller coaster and other rides were closed. Workers were using a crane to dismantle the tower.

Young Contender No Joke

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That #Stonie guy is no joke. Got close to #joeychestnut #NathansFamousHotdogEatingContest
: image via Bets & Broads Bruh @kixstagram, 4 July 2014

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Family hotdog eating contest watch party because this is America. #joeychestnut
: image via Elizabeth Lloyd @lloyd_says, 4 July 2014 Point Pleasant, NY

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Watching #Nathanshotdog eating contest at the restaurant: image via René Argüello @Rennnyrunner, 2 July 2012 

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My lunch :) #NathansHotDog
: image via Jazmine @yooojazz, 8 September 2012

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Hahaha not even surprised #Murica: image via Karl Armstrong @farmboy8400, 18 April 2015

Rain or Shine, Nothing Can Stop the Vomiting Multitudes ("Expect dangerous rip currents... I love your hat, by the way")


New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio watches as Sonya 'The Black Widow' Thomas (left) and challenger Miki Sudo face-off during a weigh-in ceremony
in the women's competition at the Nathan's Famous Fourth of July eating contest in Coney Island
: photo by Don Emmert via the Guardian, 4 July 20144

Transcript: Mayor de Blasio Hosts Nathan's Famous 4th of July Hot Dog Eating Contest Weigh-In Ceremony: City of New York, NY press release via noodls, 3 July 2014

Mayor Bill de Blasio: Thank you so much. Thank you George.

[Applause]

Thank you for your leadership of this important enterprise. I love your hat, by the way. High fashion.

Well, it is an honor to be here to help kick off a great New York tradition, the annual Nathan's Famous Hot Dog Eating Contest in Coney Island. Now tomorrow -- this will be at the Nathan's original location, a place that is sacred to all New Yorkers, the original site that is imbued in all of us, a part of our culture, something that is quintessentially New York, a place I love to visit. And this is, of course, the contest is a one of a kind New York summer tradition. It dates back at least 42 years. Now, there is a historical bone of contention. There are reports that trace it back to July 4, 1916. Historians are still working on this matter.

As a proud Brooklynite, I am particularly honored to be a part of this. My family loves Coney Island, we've loved it for years. And we go down there and have a great time. And a Nathan's hot dog is obviously always a part of the experience. And all of us feel a special bond this year with Coney Island because of the role that my children played in the Mermaid Parade. Dante as King Neptune, Chiara as queen of the mermaids. Chirlane and I got caught up in the excitement, got dressed up too. It seemed like the natural thing to do. We had a great time. And I must say, on top of all else, I just personally love Nathan's hot dogs and look for every opportunity to have one. So this is a very good day here at City Hall. A lot of very enthusiastic City Hall staffers today, buying the hot dogs.

I want to thank Nathan's Famous's president, Wayne Norbitz, for his leadership, and all he does for New York City, and for preserving -- being a real force in preserving what's great about Coney Island, and what is obviously a -- Nathan's Famous, that original location, one of the great iconic locations in this city. Nathan's Famous started nearly 100 years ago as a nickel hot dog stand, and became a beloved staple -- first in Coney Island, then all over the city, then all over the whole New York area. The famous green and mustard yellow sign is a symbol beloved by all New Yorkers. And on top of that, Nathan's is very, very generous to their fellow New Yorkers, donating over 100,000 hot dogs a year to the Food Bank for New York City. And we deeply appreciate that.

Now, tomorrow, rain or shine, tens of thousands of people will descend on Coney Island to relish the great hot dog contest. That was my first attempt at a pun -- to relish it. Get it, everyone? This is a big deal. More than a million fans will be watching on ESPN. So, the eyes of the nation will be on Coney Island. And this is an extraordinary event, and it's very, very competitive. It's highly competitive. People train all year. Some might say it's so competitive it's a dog-eat-dog atmosphere.

I got great writers. I'll be here all week.

[LAUGHTER]

So tomorrow, we'll find out if the legend, Joey "Jaws" Chestnut can continue his streak. And we'll find out more about the rookie phenom, Miki Sudo. And, we'll see what the returning female champion Sonya Thomas can do, and she is known as the "Black Widow" -- obviously, a formidable competitor. The winner will not only get fame and renown, but the coveted and bejeweled mustard belt. There's one for the men's category, one for the women's category. The eyes of New York City are on this competition. And I'm looking forward to the weigh-in. We're going to have this important moment, and then I'm going to come back when we finish with this and talk to people about the weather dynamics we'll be facing in the next few days in this city. But, first and foremost, I want to wish everyone a very happy Independence Day, a wonderful weekend -- and it will be kicked off with this great event. And now, we're ready for the formal weigh-in.

BREAK

Mayor: This will just take a quick second, but I want to make sure everyone is up to date. We've obviously been watching the weather situation very carefully for tomorrow and for the whole weekend. Situating my Nathan's hot dog here for a moment.

So, the Office of Emergency Management has been tracking this weather system for several days, and remains in close contact with the National Weather Service to monitor the storm. The latest is Hurricane Arthur is currently about 300 miles southwest of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina. It is expected to turn northeast today, and is forecast to pass well southeast of New York City on Friday. According to the National Weather Service -- and we're going to emphasize in all the briefings we give from this point on that everything is as of the time of the last National Weather Service report. So at this moment, the -- thankfully New York City will not experience storm surges and will not experience particularly high winds. We will continue to monitor the storm constantly and vigilantly, but the report at this moment is we will not be hit by a surge or by particularly high winds.

What New York City will experience, based on the reports we're receiving now, is heavy rainfall and strong tides. So we saw some flooding last night. We can expect heavy rains, some flash flooding as a result. And we will see that starting this afternoon, going through Friday afternoon. Want to remind people to be very careful in any areas that are prone to flooding and be mindful of the possibility of very fast flooding, flash flooding. So particular caution while driving in areas prone to flooding.

Now, another thing we do expect is dangerous rip currents. So this will be particularly true, obviously, for folks who are out at the ocean beaches, tomorrow and over the weekend. We expect these rip currents-they're to be taken very seriously. No one should take lightly these currents, they're very dangerous. All beachgoers should only swim in areas monitored by lifeguards. I want to emphasize that. With these kinds of currents, they are much stronger than is visible. No one should take them lightly. If there are not lifeguards around, you should not be swimming there. Also it's crucial to heed the instructions of lifeguards. If lifeguards are telling people to get out of the water, they should take that seriously. They should honor that immediately. And please pay close attention to any flags and posted signs indicating danger.We will see some lightning, most likely. Obviously lightening in open areas can be dangerous. When lightening occurs people should take cover. Get indoors if at all possible.

So, we'll keep a close eye on the situation. We'll have other updates as we go along. So far, thank God, some of the worst possibilities are passing us by, but we still want to take this very seriously and we will keep everyone updated. And despite this we know the contest goes on rain or shine, and we're hopeful for a great holiday weekend for everyone. That's the update, thanks everyone.


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#JoeyChestnut
1/1 out of @Leaf_Cards pulled @finestboxbreaks #FinestBoxBreaks #Leaf: image via Josh Patterson @Josh Patterson, 28 March 2015


 
Coney Island: photo by James Jowers, 1966 (George Eastman House)
 
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 I'll miss #ConeyIsland too. This was my brunch one day. It was 10:15am: image via Paul @RedSoxPatsPens, 18 April 2015

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@FamousNathan doc screens at Westchester Jewish Film Festival in April #Nathans #ConeyIsland: image via Coney Island History @Coney Island History, 6 April 2015
 
Federico García Lorca: Paisaje de la multitud que vomita (Anochecer en Coney Island)

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and another photo of me! Not taken by me, still pretty handsome! #35mms #bird #crow #brooklyn #coneyisland #blackandwhite: image via Black Crow @FartingCrow, 31 March 2015


La mujer gorda venía delante
arrancando las raíces y mojando el pergamino de los tambores
la mujer gorda
que vuelve del revés los pulpos agonizantes.
La mujer gorda, enemiga de la luna,
corría por las calles y los pisos deshabitados
y dejaba por los rincones pequeñas calaveras de paloma
y levantaba la furia de los banquetes de los siglos últimos
y llamaba al demonio del pan por las colinas del cielo barrido
y filtraba un ansia de luz en las circulaciones subterráneas.
Son los cementerios, lo sé, son los cementerios
y el dolor de las cocinas enterradas bajo la arena,
son los muertos, los faisanes y las manzanas de otra hora
los que nos empujan en la garganta.

Llegaban los rumores de la selva del vómito
con las mujeres vacías, con niños de cera caliente,
con árboles fermentados y camareros incansables
que sirven platos de sal bajo las arpas de la saliva.
Sin remedio, hijo mío, ¡vomita! No hay remedio.
No es el vómito de los húsares sobre los pechos de la prostituta,
ni el vómito del gato que se tragó una rana por descuido.
Son los muertos que arañan con sus manos de tierra
las puertas de pedernal donde se pudren nublos y postres.

La mujer gorda venía delante
con las gentes de los barcos, de las tabernas y de los jardines.
El vómito agitaba delicadamente sus tambores
entre algunas niñas de sangre
que pedían protección a la luna.
¡Ay de mí! ¡Ay de mí! ¡Ay de mi!
Esta mirada mía fue mía, pero ya no es mía,
esta mirada que tiembla desnuda por el alcohol
y despide barcos increíbles
por las anémonas de los muelles.
Me defiendo con esta mirada
que mana de las ondas por donde el alba no se atreve,
yo, poeta sin brazos, perdido
entre la multitud que vomita,
sin caballo efusivo que corte
los espesos musgos de mis sienes.
 
Pero la mujer gorda seguía delante
y la gente buscaba las farmacias
donde el amargo trópico se fija.
Sólo cuando izaron la bandera y llegaron los primeros canes
la ciudad entera se agolpó en las barandillas del embarcadero.

 
New York, 29 de diciembre de 1929

Federico García Lorca (1898-1936): Paisaje de la multitud que vomita (Anochecer en Coney Island), from Poeta en Nueva York, 1930
 

 
Coney Island Cyclone: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005


Kid, Sand, Bottles (Coney Island)
: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Kids in Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005


Girls on Beach (Coney Island)
: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island Bench: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Romantic Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005
 

 
Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005
 

Federico García Lorca: Landscape of A Vomiting Multitude (Dusk at Coney Island)

The fat lady came out first,
tearing out roots and moistening drumskins.
The fat lady
who turns dying octopuses inside out.
The fat lady, the moon's antagonist,
was running through the streets and deserted buildings
and leaving tiny skulls of pigeons in the corners
and stirring up the furies of the last centuries' feasts
and summoning the demon of bread through the sky's clean-swept hills
and filtering a longing for light into subterranean tunnels.
The graveyards, yes the graveyards
and the sorrow of the kitchens buried in sand,
the dead, pheasants and apples of another era,
pushing it into our throat.

There were murmurings from the jungle of vomit
with the empty women, with hot wax children,
with fermented trees and tireless waiters
who serve platters of salt beneath harps of saliva.
There's no other way, my son, vomit! There's no other way.
It's not the vomit of hussars on the breasts of their whores,
nor the vomit of cats that inadvertently swallowed frogs,
but the dead who scratch with clay hands
on flint gates where clouds and desserts decay.

The fat lady came first
with the crowds from the ships, taverns, and parks.
Vomit was delicately shaking its drums
among a few little girls of blood
who were begging the moon for protection.
Who could imagine my sadness?
The look on my face was mine, but now isn't me,
the naked look on my face, trembling for alcohol
and launching incredible ships
through the anemones of the piers.
I protect myself with this look
that flows from waves where no dawn would go,
I, poet without arms, lost
in the vomiting multitude,
with no effusive horse to shear
the thick moss from my temples.

The fat lady went first
and the crowds kept looking for pharmacies
where the bitter tropics could be found.
Only when a flag went up and the first dogs arrived
did the entire city rush to the railings of the boardwalk.

Federico García Lorca (1898-1936): Landscape of A Vomiting Multitude (Dusk at Coney Island), translated by Greg Dictionary Simon and Steven F. White, 1988



Coney Island Fisherman: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005


Coney Island Fisherman: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island Fisherman: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Pail of Fish (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island Pier
: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island Pier: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Girl on the Beach (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Seagulls in Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005




Holy Tortillas (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



The Sax Player (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



 Coney Island Drunk: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005




Man on the Boardwalk (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Woman in Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Man on Coney Island Beach: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Couple Swimming (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Beach (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Twilight in Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005



Cha Cha Bar in Coney Island: photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005

Playtime In the Realm of the Fleshapods


Weegee, 1940, by Red Grooms
, features in the Wadsworth Atheneum’s new exhibition – Coney Island: Visions of an American Dreamland, 1861-2008: photo by Wadsworth Atheneum via the Guardian, 30 January 2014

athen coneyislandcrowd

Afternoon Crowd at Coney Island, Brooklyn, July 21. 1940
:
photo by Weegee, 1940  courtesy Wadsworth Atheneum via Artes Magazine, 16 April 2015

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Les plages sont déjà bondées sur #weegee
: image via Shop Majestic Richard Pye @
ShopMajestic, 10 May 2013



Circa 1945: A huge crowd of people in swimsuits on the beach at Coney Island, with the ferris wheel and Cyclone rides visible in the background
: photo by Hulton Archive via the Guardian, 30 June 2012

Coney Island, 1945

Escape to Coney Island, 1945.  Mildred Jacobs and Fred Massaro, seemingly oblivious to the crowd of almost 1.5 million people who flocked to the beach on the day before the US air force dropped the atomic bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima, enjoy each other's company on the beach at Coney Island, Brooklyn, New York on 5 August 1945. A crowd of 1,499,998 people was recorded as visiting the beach on the first pleasant Sunday in almost a month: photo Paul Bernius courtesy  of New York Daily News Archive via The Guardian, 4  July 2013


Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014


Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014


Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014


Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014
 

Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014
 

Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014


Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014
 

Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014
 

Untitled, Coney Island
: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014
 

Untitled, Coney Island: photo ©Aaron Rose from the exhibition In a World of their Own: Coney Island Photographs 1961-1963 courtesy Museum of the City of New York via The Guardian, 15 May 2014

Playtime for the Fleshapods: That Was Then: The Cyclone

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 Largest crowd in @AFThunderbirds history was 1983 at #Coneyisland.  2 million people!: image via Coney Island History @ConeyHistory, 11 April 2015 Brooklyn, NY


People ride the Cyclone roller coaster at Coney Island. In celebration of its 85th year of operation, the wooden coaster cost 25 cents for the first 85 minutes it was open on Saturday
: photo by Eric Thayer/Reuters via the Guardian, 30 June 2012
 

Thrillseekers get a hair-raising ride on the roller coaster in August 1944
: photo by Marie Hansen/Time & Life Pictures via The Guardian, 30 June 2012


A girl raises her arms in the air at the first drop on the Cyclone at the 80th anniversary celebration of the rollercoaster in 2007
: photo courtesy of New York Daily News Archive via the Guardian, 30 June 2012


The famous rollercoaster sits idle on the snow covered ground in January 2005
: photo by Stephen Chernin via the Guardian, 30 June 2012


People ride the Cyclone on the first day of its reopening in March 2005
: photo by Spencer Platt via the Guardian, 30 June 2012


Passengers enjoy the Cyclone's descent
: photo by Mary Altaffer/AP via the Guardian, 30 June 2012



 A maintenance worker applies a decal commemorating the Cyclone's 85th anniversary while people wait in line to buy tickets: photo by Mary Altaffer/AP via the Guardian, 30 June 2012
 


It's old and rickety, but people head to Coney Island every year for its most popular attraction: photo by Mary Altaffer/AP via the Guardian, 30 June 2012


A miniature Cyclone featured in the Coney Island Mermaid Parade
: photo by Mary Altaffer/AP via the Guardian, 30 June 2012 
 
Oh No! Breakdown at the Summit! Opening Day yet... and the Playtime Cyclone Slips a Cog!

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Oh no RT: “@AOL: Riders evacuated from famed roller coaster": #ConeyIsland: image via Doug Bearak @dbearak, 30 March 2015

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Scary opening day for #ConeyIsland Cyclone riders.... whoopsy: @EricAdamsBP2013: image via New York Filmmaker @fimsbyAmy, 30 March 2015

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#NewYork #rollercoaster
mishap briefly strands riders #ConeyIsland: image via New Straits Times @NST_Online, 29 March 2015

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Still working out early season kinks? #ConeyIsland's Cyclone gets stuck on 1st day. (Via @NY1
): image via Jon Dougherty @JonDTWCNews
, 29 March 2015

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 MT #ConeyIsland's @TheCyclonegets stuck on track. Riders walk down (Photo MGonzalez): image via Thelmo Cordones @TCordones, 29 March 2015

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#ConeyIsland's #cyclone got stuck on #openingday! Check out this pic from viewer, Miguel. I'll have more on @news12bk
: image via Amanda Plasencia @AmandaPlasencia, 29 March 2015

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#ConeyIsland Cyclone
roller coaster gets stuck today, stranding passengers at top of ride: image via Connor Ryan @connortryan, 29 March 2015

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Visitantes se quedan atrapados en la montaña rusa de #ConeyIsland #cyclone: image via NY1 Noticias @NY1noticias, 29 March 2015

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Luna Park Cyclone on #ConeyIsland breaks down during its first ride of the season. Hear from riders at 9 on @WLNYTV, image via Valerie Castro @VCastroTV, 29 March 2015

That slippery slope -- it was always going to be a long way down at the end of Playtime...


An abandoned "Giant Slide" at Coney Island: photo by Arthur Tress, May 1973 for the Environmental Protexction Agency's Documerica project (US National Archives)


An abandoned "Giant Slide" at ConeyIsland: photo by Arthur Tress, May 1973 for the Environmental Protection Agency's Documerica Project (US National Archives)

So why does it always look like Playtime's so much more fun somewhere else, like in places where they don't have to throw up to celebrate things... for example Thailand... or the deep fantasy past?


Ban Hat Sieo, Thailand. A Thai Buddhist monk-to-be wearing a colourful traditional costume tumbles as he rides an elephant to bathe during an annual procession at Yom river: photo by Pongmanat Tasiri/EPA via the Guardian, 7 April 2015

  File:The Dragon's Gorge, Luna Park, Coney Island, NY.jpg

The Dragon's Gorge (an enclosed roller coaster), Luna Park, Coney Island, New York: photographer unknown, n.d.; image by Hugh Manatee, 2009

File:Shooting the Chutes at Luna Park, Coney Island, NY.jpg

Shooting the Chutes at Luna Park, Coney Island, New York: photographer unknown, postcard published by Hamlin and Moskowitz, 1907; image by Hugh Manatee, 2009

File:Helter Skelter, Luna Park, Coney Island, NY.jpg

Helter Skelter slide, Luna Park, Coney Island, New York: photographer unknown, postcard published by the Illustrated Postal Card Company, 1906; image by Hugh Manatee, 2009

File:Luna Park, Surf Avenue, Coney Island, NY.jpg

Luna Park, Surf Avenue, Coney Island, New York: photographer unknown, postcard published by C.S. Woolworth and Company, 1913; image by Hugh Manatee, 2009

File:Elephant Ride in Luna Park, Coney Island, NY.jpg

Elephant ride in Luna Park, Coney Island, New York: photographer unknown, 1906; image by Hugh Manatee, 2009



Abandoned parachute jump at Steeplechase Park on ConeyIsland: photo by Arthur Tress (1940-) for the Environmental Protection Agency's Documerica project, May/June 1973 (US National Archives)


Entrance to abandoned parachute jump at Steeplechase Park on Coney Island
: photo by Arthur Tress for the Environmental Protection Agency's Documerica project, May/June 1973 (US National Archives)

Dancing to the End of Love at Playtime

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Beautiful. Woman with man with leopard print jacket. #ConeyGala #ConeyIsland Brooklyn 2015 #leicaimages: image via Garret Kalleberg @dadalavida, 4 April 2015

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Beautiful. Woman between two dancers. #ConeyGala #ConeyIsland Brooklyn 2015 #leicaimages
: image via Garret Kalleberg @dadalavida, 4 April 2015
 
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The dolls, how they are, doubled, and doubled. #ConeyGala #ConeyIsland Brooklyn 2015 #leicaimages: image via Garret Kalleberg @dadalavida, 4 April 2015
 
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The sparkle & glow of beautiful things in the night.. #ConeyGala #ConeyIsland Brooklyn 2015 #leicaimages: image via Garret Kalleberg @dadalavida, 4 April 2015

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#coneyisland MT @NYPDDetectives: Recognize this tattoo? help ID a female found dead in the @NYPD60Pctto: image via Yaelbt @taelbt, 16 April 2015

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#ThrowbackThursday #ConeyIsland 2008: Watch Her Dance to the End of Love: image via Miss Coney Island @Miss Coney Island, 2 April 2015

Morphogenesis: Life's a Beach at Playtime

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morphogenesis selected for group exhibition other world @ph21 budapest. #nancyoliveriphotography #coneyisland: image via nancy oliveri @NancyOliveri, 7 April 2015

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 Life's a beach.....in the rain! #ConeyIsland: image via Dawn Hardwick @Dawn Hardwick, 3 April 2015
 
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 #lagiostra #coneyisland: image via negramaro @Negramaro, 1 April 2015

...and as the long day at Playtime closes, the ocean wind comes up, and blows the stink away... until tomorrow...
 


Wind (Coney Island): photo by MamboZ, 19 July 2005

Foreigners

$
0
0
.

A foreign national holds a knife following clashes between a group of locals and police in Durban amid ongoing violence against foreign nationals
: photo by AFP via The Guardian, 14 April 2015



 XENOPHOBIA. Elle se cache en nous, elle a toujours été là. La peur de l'autre: image  by Christopher Dombres, 12 January 2014


Johannesburg, South Africa. A Mozambican man lies in the street after he was reportedly stabbed by a mob in Alexandra township, Johannesburg, during fighting between locals and foreign nationals
: photo by Kevin Sutherland/EPA via the Guardian, 18 April 2015

Frantz Fanon: The Pitfalls of National Consciousness: from The Wretched of the Earth (1961)

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Viva la revolucion #FrantzFanon
and the coming of a second Fanonian movement #Algeria: image via AfricaSpeaks4Africa @AfricaSpeaks4, 6 April 2015


We have said that the native bourgeoisie which comes to power uses its class aggressiveness to corner the positions formerly kept for foreigners. On the morrow of independence, in fact, it violently attacks colonial personalities: barristers, traders, landed proprietors, doctors and higher civil servants. It will fight to the bitter end against these people ‘who insult our dignity as a nation’. It waves aloft the notion of the nationalization and Aricanization of the ruling classes. The fact is that such action will become more and more tinged by racism, until the bourgeoisie bluntly puts the problem to the government by saying ‘We must have these posts’. They will not stop their snarling until they have taken over every one.

The working class of the towns, the masses of unemployed, the small artisans and craftsmen for their part line up behind this nationalist attitude; but in all justice let it be said, they only follow in the steps of their bourgeoisie. If the national bourgeoisie goes into competition with the Europeans, the artisans and craftsmen start a fight against non-national Africans. In the Ivory Coast, the anti-Dahoman and anti-Voltaic troubles are in fact racial riots. The Dahoman and Voltaic peoples, who control the greater part of the petty trade, are, once independence is declared, the object of hostile manifestations on the part of the people of the Ivory Coast. From nationalism we have passed to ultra-nationalism, to chauvinism, and finally to racism. These foreigners are called on to leave; their shops are burned, their street stalls are wrecked, and in fact the government of the Ivory Coast commands them to go, thus giving their nationals satisfaction. In Senegal it is the anti-Sudanese demonstrations which called forth these words from Mr Mamadou Dia:

“The truth is that the Senegalese people have only adopted the Mali mystique through attachment to its leaders. Their adhesion to the Mali has no other significance than that of a fresh act of faith in the political policy of the latter. The Senegalese territory was no less real, in fact it was all the more so in that the presence of the Sudanese in Dakar [was] too obviously manifested for it to be forgotten. It is this fact which explains that, far from being regretted, the break-up of the Federation has been greeted with relief by the mass of the people and nowhere was a hand raised to maintain it.” (Mamadou Dia: Nations africaines et solidarité mondial, Presses Universitaires de France, p. 140.)

While certain sections of the Senegalese people jump at the chance which is afforded them by their own leaders to get rid of the Sudanese, who hamper them in commercial matters or in administrative posts, the Congolese, who stood by hardly daring to believe in the mass exodus of the Belgians, decide to bring pressure to bear on the Senegalese who have settled in Leopoldville and Elizabethville and to get them to leave.

As we see it, the mechanism is identical in the two sets of circumstances. If the Europeans get in the way of the intellectuals and business bourgeoisie of the young nation, for the mass of the people in the towns competition is represented principally by Africans of another nation. On the Ivory Coast these competitors are the Dahomans; in Ghana they are the Nigerians; in Senegal, they are the Sudanese.

When the bourgeoisie’s demands for a ruling class made up exclusively of Negroes or Arabs do not spring from an authentic movement of nationalization but merely correspond to an anxiety to place in the bourgeoisie’s hands the power held hitherto by the foreigner, the masses on their level present the same demands, confining, however, the notion of Negro or Arab within certain territorial limits. Between resounding assertions of the unity of the continent and this behaviour of the masses which has its inspiration in their leaders, many different attitudes may be traced. We observe a permanent see-saw between African unity, which fades quicker and quicker into the mists of oblivion, and a heart-breaking return to chauvinism in its most bitter and detestable form.

“On the Senegalese side, the leaders who have been the main theoreticians of African unity, and who several times over have sacrificed their local political organizations and their personal positions to this idea, are, though in all good faith, undeniably responsible. Their mistake -- our mistake -- has been, under pretext of fighting ‘Balkanization’, not to have taken into consideration the pre-colonial fact of territorialism. Our mistake has been not to have paid enough attention in our analyses to this phenomenon, which is the fruit of colonialism if you like, but also a sociological fact which no theory of unity, be it ever so laudable or attractive, can abolish. We have allowed ourselves to be seduced by a mirage; that of the structure which is the most pleasing to our minds; and, mistaking our ideal for reality, we have believed it enough to condemn territorialism, and its natural sequel, micro-nationalism, for us to get the better of them, and to assure the success of our chimerical undertaking”. (Mamadou Dia, op. cit.)

From the chauvinism of the Senegalese to the tribalism of the Yolofs is not a big step. For, in fact, everywhere that the national bourgeoisie has failed to break through to the people as a whole, to enlighten them, and to consider all problems in the first place with regard to them -- a failure due to the bourgeoisie’s attitude of mistrust and to the haziness of its political tenets -- everywhere where that national bourgeoisie has shown itself incapable of extending its vision of the world sufficiently, we observe a falling back towards old tribal attitudes, and, furious and sick at heart, we perceive that race feeling in its most exacerbated form is triumphing. Since the sole motto of the bourgeoisie is ‘Replace the foreigner’, and because it hastens in every walk of life to secure justice for itself and to take over the posts that the foreigner has vacated, the ‘small people’ of the nation -- taxi-drivers, cake-sellers and shoeblacks -- will be equally quick to insist that the Dahomans go home to their own country, or will even go further and demand that the Foulbis and the Peuhls return to their jungle or their mountains.

It is from this view-point that we must interpret the fact that in young, independent countries, here and there federalism triumphs. We know that colonial domination has marked certain regions out for privilege. The colony’s economy is not integrated into that of the nation as a whole. It is still organized in order to complete the economy of the different mother countries. 

Colonialism hardly ever exploits the whole of a country. It contents itself with bringing to light the natural resources, which it extracts, and exports to meet the needs of the mother country’s industries, thereby allowing certain sectors of the colony to become relatively rich. But the rest of the colony follows its path of under-development and poverty, or at all events sinks into it more deeply.

Immediately after independence, the nationals who live in the more prosperous regions realize their good luck, and show a primary and profound reaction in refusing to feed the other nationals. The districts which are rich in ground-nuts, in cocoa and in diamonds come to the forefront, and dominate the empty panorama which the rest of the nation presents. The nationals of these rich regions look upon the others with hatred, and find in them envy and covetousness, and homicidal impulses. Old rivalries which were there before colonialism, old inter-racial hatred come to the surface. The Balubas refuse to feed the Luluas; Katanga forms itself into a state, and Albert Kalondji gets himself crowned king of South Kasai.

African unity, that vague formula, yet one to which the men and women of Africa were passionately attached, and whose operative value served to bring immense pressure to bear on colonialism, African unity takes off the mask, and crumbles into regionalism inside the hollow shell of nationality itself. The national bourgeoisie, since it is strung up to defend its immediate interests, and sees no farther than the end of its nose, reveals itself incapable of simply bringing national unity into being, or of building up the nation on a stable and productive basis. The national front which has forced colonialism to withdraw cracks up, and wastes the victory it has gained.


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“Each generation must, out of relative obscurity, discover its mission, fulfill it, or betray it.” #FrantzFanon: image via QM Pan-African Soc @QMPan, 16 February 2015
*
The political party in many parts of Africa which are today independent is puffed up in a most dangerous way. In the presence of a member of the party, the people are silent, behave like a flock of sheep and publish panegyrics in praise of the government of the leader. But in the street when evening comes, away from the village, in, the cafes or by the river, the bitter disappointment of the people, their despair but also their unceasing anger makes itself heard. The party, instead of welcoming the expression of popular discontentment, instead of taking for its fundamental purpose the free flow of ideas from the people up to the government, forms a screen, and forbids such ideas. The party leaders behave like common sergeant-majors, frequently reminding the people of the need for ‘silence in the ranks’. This party which used to call itself the servant of the people, which used to claim that it worked for the fail expression of the people’s will, as soon as the colonial power puts the country into its control hastens to send the people back to their caves. As far as national unity is concerned the party will also make many mistakes, as for example when the so-called national party behaves as a party based on ethnical differences. It becomes, in fact, the tribe which makes itself into a party. This party which of its own will proclaims that it is a national party, and which claims to speak in the name of the totality of the people, secretly, sometimes even openly organizes an authentic ethnical dictatorship. We no longer see the rise of a bourgeois dictatorship, but a tribal dictatorship. The ministers, the members of the cabinet, the ambassadors and local commissioners are chosen from the same ethnological group as the leader, sometimes directly from his own family. Such regimes of the family sort seem to go back to the old laws of inbreeding, and not anger but shame is felt when we are faced with such stupidity, such an imposture, such intellectual and spiritual poverty. These heads of the government are the true traitors in Africa, for they sell their country to the most terrifying of all its enemies: stupidity. This tribalizing of the central authority, it is certain, encourages regionalist ideas and separatism. All the decentralizing tendencies spring up again and triumph, and the nation falls to pieces, broken in bits. The leader, who once used to call for ‘African unity’ and who thought of his own little family wakes up one day to find himself saddled with five tribes, who also want to have their own ambassadors and ministers; and irresponsible as ever, still unaware and still despicable, he denounces their ‘treason’.

We have more than once drawn attention to the baleful influence frequently wielded by the leader. This is due to the fact that the party in certain districts is organized like a gang, with the toughest person in it as its head. The ascendancy of such a leader and his power over others is often mentioned, and people have no hesitation in declaring, in a tone of slightly admiring complicity, that he strikes terror into his nearest collaborators. In order to avoid these many pitfalls an unceasing battle must be waged, a battle to prevent the party ever becoming a willing tool in the hands of a leader. ‘Leader': the word comes from the English verb ‘to lead’, but a frequent French translation is ‘to drive’. 

The driver, the shepherd of the people no longer exists today. The people are no longer a herd; they do not need to be driven. If the leader drives me on, I want him to realize that at the same time I show him the way; the nation ought not to be something bossed by a Grand Panjandrum. We may understand the panic caused in governmental circles each time one of these leaders falls ill; they are obsessed by the question of who is to succeed him. What will happen to the country if the leader disappears? The ruling classes who have abdicated in favour of the leader, irresponsible, oblivious of everything and essentially preoccupied with the pleasures of their everyday life, their cocktail parties, their journeys paid for by government money, the profits they can make out of various schemes -- from time to time these people discover the spiritual waste land at the heart of the nation.

Frantz Fanon (1929-1961):  from The Pitfalls of National Consciousness, in The Wretched of the Earth / Les damnés de la terre: François Maspéro éditeur, 1961; English translation Macgibbon and Kee, 1965



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#FrantzFanon at #AfrikaTown #Oakland: image via Dave Id @David, 3 April 2015

“Of course killing people is wrong, but we still want them out of the country”

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“Of course killing people is wrong, but we still want them out of the country” #Xenophobia
: image via Azad Essa @azzadessa, 20 April 2015


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”RT @Mr_Bata: The South African map of Africa. @zapiro at his best! #Xenophobia: image via Rachael Akidi @rakidi, 20 April 2015

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Cartoon for today ...#ZuluKing goes all out to quell the flames of #xenophobia: image via SAcrimefighters @SAcrimefighters, 20 April 2015


Emmanuel Sithole, the Mozambican victim who died after multiple stabs. #Xenophobia: image via Flavafm87dot7 @flavafm87dot7, 21 April 2015


Emmanuel Sithole, the Mozambican victim who died after multiple stabs. #Xenophobia: image via Flavafm87dot7 @flavafm87dot7, 21 April 2015


Emmanuel Sithole, the Mozambican victim who died after multiple stabs. #Xenophobia: image via Flavafm87dot7 @flavafm87dot7, 21 April 2015

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Kill thy neighbour: Alex attack brings home SA's shame #xenophobia: image via Sunday TimesVerified account @SundayTimesZA, 19 April 2015


Emmanuel Sithole, the Mozambican victim who died after multiple stabs. #Xenophobia: image via Flavafm87dot7 @flavafm87dot7, 21 April 2015

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Really?? "Uchez2: He should die" @ewnreporter: #Xenophobia A man grimaces in pain after being shot with a rubber [bullet]": image via Aduke @Foxy_Siren, 21 Aprll 2015

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#Xenophobia: Over 1,500 Zimbabweans cross Beitbridge Border: image via Eyewitness News @ewnupdates, 20 April 2015 Sandton, South Africa


Until something is done. Some kids will grow up thinking it's their culture to rob foreign-owned shops.#Xenophobia: image via R U That Xenophobic? @MrBasabose, 18 April 2015


Until something is done. Some kids will grow up thinking it's their culture to rob foreign-owned shops.#Xenophobia: image via R U That Xenophobic? @MrBasabose, 18 April 2015


Until something is done. Some kids will grow up thinking it's their culture to rob foreign-owned shops.#Xenophobia: image via R U That Xenophobic? @MrBasabose, 18 April 2015


Until something is done. Some kids will grow up thinking it's their culture to rob foreign-owned shops.#Xenophobia: image via R U That Xenophobic? @MrBasabose, 18 April 2015

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 #SouthAfricaXenophobia Unbelievable !!!: image via Dr Nsangou Mouchili @DrNsangouMouchili, 15 April 2015


#Xenophobia in #SouthAfrica unbelievable: image via Michelle Demisevich @demisevich, 17 April 2015 Istanbul, Türkiye


#Xenophobia in #SouthAfrica unbelievable: image via Michelle Demisevich @demisevich, 17 April 2015 Istanbul, Türkiye


#Xenophobia in #SouthAfrica unbelievable: image via Michelle Demisevich @demisevich, 17 April 2015 Istanbul, Türkiye


#Xenophobia in #SouthAfrica unbelievable: image via Michelle Demisevich @demisevich, 17 April 2015 Istanbul, Türkiye
Tribal

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#Zwelithini will 1 day be judged for this.. @SakinaKamwendo @Chriseldalewis @Debora_Patta @positivego @Noeleen3Talk: image via 25Apr_RuffAwards_EL @RumbuCyarumbu, 14 April 2015

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ZuluKing #Zwelithini & Jacob #Zuma's son #EdwardZuma are responsible for fueling attacks on foreigners. #Xenophobia: image via Tinonenda Samukange @tinosank, 16 April 2015


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Human Rights Commission wants King #Zwelithini to clarify comments on foreigners: image via Rand Daiily Mail @rdm_za, 17 April 2015

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@263Chat @BBCAfrica @CNNInsideAfrica @TheSunNewspaper The man behind #xenophobicattacks in SA, Zulu king #Zwelithini: image via Chofamba Sithole @Chofamba, 17 April 2015

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 Foreigners must go home – King #Zwelithini: image via The Citizen News @TheCitizen_News, 25 March 2015


One man can change the nation... #Mandela...& One foolish man have killed that nation...#Zwelithini: image via SayNoToXenophobia @MtheGift, 15 April 2015









One man can change the nation... #Mandela...& One foolish man have killed that nation...#Zwelithini: image via SayNoToXenophobia @MtheGift, 15 April 2015

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How much value does King #Zwelithini really add? | GREG ARD @Gregarde: image via Rand Dail Mail @rdmza, 15 April 2015

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 King #Zwelithini to set the record straight today: image via The Citizen News @TheCitizen_News, 19 April 2015

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 Atrocities of King Shaka will not be tolerated now! ~~>“@PILLAY_CGLM: #XenophobicSA #zwelithini: image via Shakamantic @ChiboliS, 19 April 2015

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 The #Genocidal Kingof Goodwill #Zwelithini #XenophobicAttacks copyroght Zapiro: image via tawanda chivese @TChivese, 17 April 2015
"They are hunting us like dogs"

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#Zulu king denies triggering South #Africa attacks #xenophobicSA
: image via Daily Monitor @Daily Monitor, 20 April 2015


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Q:Is there no #Zulu on this ship to Europe A: possibly more than one So why kill your other foreigners?: image via Patrick Boateng, M.D. @pabttt 21 April 2015

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#Zulu king's name is godwill but #southafrica xenophobia is not our God's will but maybe his god's will: image via OWM @owm4xst, 21 April 2015

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#Zulu warriors out in hunt for African immigrants!: image via Abdirizak Adan @Abdirik, 16 April 2015

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Shame #Shame #XenophobicSA #Africa: image via @HumansInAfrica@HumansInAfrica, 11 April 2015

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A man's burnt alive in #SA #Xenophobic SA #shame #humanity forgotten: image via @HumansInAfrica@HumansInAfrica, 11 April 2015

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 "@HumansInAfrica: A man's burnt alive in #SA #Xenophobic SA #shame #humanity forgotten'" Stupid terrorists #Zulu: image via PR-esident @OkoechLS, 11 April 2015



 #Xenophobia
At the stadium in Durban where the King of the Zulus is expected to speak shortly: image via Karen Allen @BBCKarenAllen, 20 April 2015


 #Xenophobia
At the stadium in Durban where the King of the Zulus is expected to speak shortly: image via Karen Allen @BBCKarenAllen, 20 April 2015

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Foreigners tell of being ‘hunted like dogs’ in S.Africa #Xenophobia: image via Capita lFM Kenya @CapitalFM_kenya, 21 April 2015

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 So cruel #barbaric #NoToXenophobia #No2Xenophobia #ewn: image via Lenice Pretorius @LeniPrett, 15 April 2015

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 #southafricaxenophobia: image via Blackeve24 @sweetblackrose, 18 April 2015

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 Images coming out of #SouthAfrica
Xenophobia are heartwrenching. I feel like we are not far behind.#Spiritual: image via Chef Jennifer Zavala @foxyladychef, 16 April 2015


"...our brothers are being butchered in South Africa..."


A demonstration against migrant workers outside a hostel in Johannesburg
: photo by Marco Longari/AFP via The Observer, 19 April 2015

South Africa faces backlash over xenophobic attacks on migrant workers: Protests grow across continent with cars stoned, clashes outside embassies and companies threatened with closure: David Smith in Johannesburg for The Observer, 19 April 2015


South Africa is facing a backlash from the rest of the continent over the targeting of immigrants in a wave of xenophobic violence.

South African vehicles were pelted with stones in Mozambique on Friday and South African companies are reportedly being threatened with closure in Nigeria. Protests have been held at various South African embassies across the continent, and several South African musicians have been forced to cancel concerts abroad.

The tit-for-tat measures follow a surge of attacks on foreigners in Durban, Johannesburg and other parts of South Africa, in which at least six people have been killed, more than 5,000 displaced, and shops looted and razed. Most of those affected “are refugees and asylum seekers who were forced to leave their countries due to war and persecution”, the UN high commissioner for refugees said.

President Jacob Zuma on Saturday cancelled a state visit to Indonesia to deal with the crisis and visit one of the camps in the Durban suburb of Chatsworth, where more than a thousand foreign nationals are sleeping in tents and relying on volunteers for food. Many were boarding buses to return to Malawi, Zimbabwe, and other home countries.

Zuma told a crowd that those who wanted to go home would be helped but his message to those remaining was: “We are firstly going to stop violence and then allow them to stay here in peace.

“It is not every South African who says go away, not at all. It is a very small number who say so. We don’t want the countries in the region where the citizens are going to look at each other in a hostile manner. We want to live as sisters and brothers.”

The rest of Africa is increasingly questioning this assertion, however. There are some who already regard South Africa, which has a unique history and the continent’s most developed economy, with envy or suspicion.
The xenophobic mayhem has sharpened a sense of “us and them”, causing bitterness among nations that hosted thousands of South African exiles during the struggle against apartheid.

In Mozambique last week, a group of about 200 protesters blockaded the southern Lebombo border and stoned South African vehicles. Moamba district police commander Alfonso Rocco told the Agence France-Presse news agency: “Demonstrators blocked the road for half an hour, refusing to allow cars with South African registration plates to pass.”

Sasol, an energy and chemical giant, evacuated 340 South Africans from Mozambique over fears for their safety. In Zambia, a privately owned radio station has stopped playing South African music in protest.

Businesses from South Africa could face closure in Nigeria unless it takes swift action to stop the violence, according to the eNews Channel Africa. An official with Nigeria’s newly elected All Progressives Congress party handed a memorandum to the South African embassy threatening to shut down leading companies, it said.

In the Zimbabwean capital Harare, there were clashes with police as more than a hundred people marched outside the South African embassy with a petition that said: “We, the people of Zimbabwe standing in solidarity with our brethren in Africa, strongly condemn and denounce the cruel, senseless and gruesome xenophobic slaughter of foreign nationals and the looting of their properties in South Africa.” Gilbert Mutubuki, president of the Zimbabwe National Students’ Union, was quoted as saying: “Right now we have South African businesses such as Pick n Pay operating freely here, but our brothers are being butchered in South Africa … It’s high time we should do the same to all South African businesses here until they stop all this nonsense.”

The Economic Community of West African States has also condemned the “barbaric, criminal and xenophobic murder of innocent foreigners”.

The South African government hastily convened a meeting of Africa ambassadors and high commissioners last week in an attempt to provide reassurance that it was taking their concerns seriously. But Jeff Radebe, minister in the presidency in South Africa, conceded that the country’s companies that operate in the rest of Africa could be at risk of reprisals. “The impact of these attacks has far-reaching implications for our economic and social relations with the continent and the world,” he said.

“South African companies who are running successful businesses on the continent who help to contribute to our revenue and sustaining our economy may suffer the same fate.

“Recently, South African artists who were to showcase their craft outside the borders of our country, such as BigNuz in Zimbabwe, Kelly Khumalo and Cassper Nyovest in London, have had their concerts cancelled as a result of these attacks.”

Parts of Johannesburg remained tense on Saturday after police detained more than 30 people following overnight violence in which small groups attacked shops in several areas around the commercial capital. Police also used rubber bullets to disperse the looters in Alexandra township.

The latest outbreak of anti-immigrant violence has been widely blamed on a speech last month by King Goodwill Zwelithini, traditional leader of the Zulu ethnic group, in which he linked foreigners to crime and said they must “take their bags and go”. The king has since claimed his words were misconstrued.

Estimates of the number of foreign nationals in South Africa vary from two to five million, among a population of more than 51 million.

Scapegoating amid a climate of high unemployment and inequality is nothing new. In 2008, 62 people were killed in xenophobic violence across Johannesburg's townships. In January this year, six people died as looters rampaged through Soweto township.



A man holds up his hands as a South African riot officer raids the kitchen of a hostel in Benoni. Local residents are suspected of having acted against foreign-owned shops in the area, throwing stones at the trucks bringing in stock and forcing them to shut down. South African president Jacob Zuma appealed for calm as an eruption of xenophobic violence spread to Johannesburg, raising fears that the country’s dire economic troubles could spark widespread unrest
: photo by Marco Longari/AFP
via the Guardian, 18 April 2015


South Africa police fire rubber bullets and teargas on anti-immigrant protest: Police disperse 200 protesters in Johannesburg after at least four people killed in xenophobic violence that started two weeks ago in Durban: Reuters in Johannesburg via The Guardian, 15 April 2015


South African police have fired rubber bullets and teargas to disperse a crowd of anti-immigrant protesters in eastern Johannesburg, a witness has said.

About 200 protesters, shouting that they wanted immigrants to leave, had pelted passing vehicles and police with rocks on Thursday, triggering the show of force.

At least four people have been killed in a wave of anti-immigrant violence that started two weeks ago in Durban.

Johannesburg was the centre of xenophobic attacks in 2008 that killed more than 60 people.

The South African president, Jacob Zuma, has called for the killings to stop.

“What is happening in our country is not acceptable,” he told state broadcaster SABC in remarks broadcast on Wednesday night.

The authorities have erected safe camps in Durban, a key port, for fleeing immigrants -– including Ethiopians, Nigerians, Malawians and Pakistanis –- whose shops were looted and set of fire.

South Africa is home to an estimated 5 million immigrants. High unemployment, widespread poverty and massive income disparities add to environment in which outbreaks of anti-immigrant violence are common.

The official jobless rate is 25%, but economists say in reality it is much higher.



Row of closed shops in Johannesburg’s central business district
: photo by Marco Longari/AFP via The Guardian, 15 April 2015

Johannesburg's foreign shop owners close up early amid threats of violence: Anonymous texts and emails have warned of xenophobic attacks in South Africa’s commercial capital in wake of unrest in Durban: David Smith in Johannesburg for The Guardian, 15 April 2015 (updated 16 April 2015)


Scores of shops in Johannesburg have pulled down their shutters after anonymous emails and text messages fuelled fears of xenophobic violence.

In the central business district of South Africa’s commercial capital -– where looters ransacked foreign-owned shops earlier this year -– a text message warned, “Zulu people are coming to town ... to kill every foreigner on the road”, Reuters reported.

It comes in the wake of recent unrest in the coastal city of Durban, where two foreigners and three South Africans have been killed. The dead included a 14-year-old boy who was allegedly shot during looting on Monday night. Thousands of immigrants have taken refuge in safe camps.

In Johannesburg’s normally bustling Jeppe Street on Wednesday, many stores were shuttered amid a febrile atmosphere. Michael Ene, 34, from Ghana, said he had closed his wig shop because of the threats. He said: “There’s no violence but people are scared. There are rumours people are coming but we see nobody. We are just vigilant.”

By late morning, Joyce Tankau, 30, from Cameroon, was cautiously reopening a shop selling furniture, washing machines and other household products. She explained: “In the morning they said people were going to attack the foreigners so you must close your shops. Nothing happened so I just reopened. I don’t know why this is happening now. The police don’t do anything.”

A South African shop owner, who gave his name only as Muhammad, 27, kept all but one of his shutters down. He said: “There is a big risk. The whole street is closed and most of the shops are owned by foreigners. Everybody is worried for their own safety. The government should deploy the army; this morning I’ve only seen one police car drive by.”

South African news websites published a video from Johannesburg showing a taxi driver attacking an Ethiopian man who lay in the middle of a street before another man intervened. But the eNews Channel Africa reporter Nickolaus Bauer said he has spoken to witnesses and “it was nothing to with xenophobia; it was a road rage incident”.

Bauer also tweeted: “Journalists need to be extra vigilant then it comes to #Xenophobia. Don’t be the one who cries wolf and ignites violence.”

Tensions remain high in and around Durban, where angry mobs attacked foreign-owned shops and foreign nationals took up arms to fight back on Tuesday. South Africa’s Times newspaper reported that the violence spread to Verulam‚ to the north‚ later that night when five foreigners were stabbed and assaulted, and there were further incidents in Premaritzburg. 

More than 800 police officers have been deployed to the area. Colonel Jay Naicker, a spokesman, said 74 arrests have been made since the trouble began in late March. He said: “Spreading false information on the number of deaths and attacks, the different areas that are being attacked, and hate speech aimed at foreign nationals not only causes undue panic in communities but also has the potential to fuel the violence.”

South Africa, which has a population of about 50 million people, is home to an estimated five million immigrants. In 2008, xenophobic violence broke out around Johannesburg townships, killing 62 people.

The latest violence has been condemned by the governing African National Congress and opposition parties. Nelson Mandela’s grandson, Mandla Mandela, a traditional council chief, said: “We hang our heads in shame as we recall how Madiba [Mandela’s clan name] visited these African states after his release from incarceration acknowledging our burden of debt towards them.

“Now we repay them in the most vile manner by attacking their sons and daughters, threatening their lives, robbing them of their hard-earned livelihoods, looting, ransacking and burning their businesses. This all on our home soil that should be a place of refuge, safety, hope and dignity for all.”




A taxi driver is pushed around during a wave of attacks on foreign nationals in Johannesburg on Wednesday
: photo by Marco Longari/AFP via The Guardian, 16 April 2015

Xenophobic violence in South Africa leaves at least five dead: Hundreds forced to flee their homes amid unrest that has killed two foreigners and three South Africans, including a 14-year-old boy: Associated Press in Johannesburg via The Guardian, 14 April 2015 (updated 17 April 2015


At least five people have been killed and hundreds forced to flee their homes in one of South Africa’s worst outbreaks of xenophobic violence in years, authorities said on Tuesday.

Most of the recent unrest occurred in and around the coastal city of Durban, where police said two foreigners and three South Africans were killed. The dead included a 14-year-old boy who was allegedly shot during looting on Monday night and died at a hospital, police colonel Jay Naicker said. Some 34 people have been arrested for possession of unlicensed firearms and other crimes in the last two days, he said.

“Police are deployed and in high alert in most of the areas where there are foreign nationals,” Naicker said in a statement emailed to the Associated Press.

Despite the increased police presence, authorities are hard-pressed to stop unrest that recalls similar violence in South Africa in which about 60 people died. In January this year, four people died during a week of looting of foreign-owned shops and other violence in Soweto and other areas of Johannesburg.

Some South Africans have accused immigrants of taking jobs and opportunities away from them. The latest violence followed reported comments by Zulu King Goodwill Zwelithini, an influential figure among the Zulu ethnic group, that foreigners should “pack their bags” and leave. The king has since appealed for an end to the unrest.

The southern African nation of Malawi plans to repatriate at least 400 of its citizens following the attacks in South Africa, said Kondwani Nankhumwa, Malawi’s information minister.

Malawi is currently in discussions with South Africa to arrange temporary travel papers for stranded Malawians because most lost their passports in the chaos, Nankhumwa said.
“Most of them fled with literally nothing to safe camps,” the minister said. “The numbers will swell since some Malawians are in hiding.”

South Africa president Jacob Zuma condemned the violence and assigned several Cabinet ministers to work on the problem with officials in KwaZulu-Natal province, which includes Durban.

The government is addressing South African citizens’ “complaints about illegal and undocumented migrants, the takeover of local shops and other businesses by foreign nationals as well as perceptions that foreign nationals perpetrate crime,” Zuma’s office said in a statement.

It quoted the president as saying that many foreign nationals are living legally in South Africa and are contributing to economic development.

On a visit to South Africa last week, Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe thanked South Africa for hosting many Zimbabweans and said Zimbabwe would work with South Africa to improve border security. It is estimated that as many as 3 million Zimbabweans are living in South Africa, many as illegal immigrants.

The violence against immigrants is “an expression of a terrible failure of memory by South Africans” who endured racial intolerance under apartheid, two South African foundations said. The foundations are named after anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela, who died in 2013, and Ahmed Kathrada, another campaigner against the white racist rule that ended in 1994.

In a statement, the foundations welcomed efforts by Zuma and other senior leaders to stop the unrest, but said: “For too long, South Africans in leadership positions have either ignored the crisis or stoked the fires of hatred."



A foreign boy wearing a hat in the colours of the South African flag queues to register at a camp in Chatsworth, south of Durban
: photo by Rogan Ward/Reuters via the Guardian, 17 April 2015


Xenophobia in South Africa: 'They beat my husband with sticks and took everything' : For many Africans, South Africa represents a land of opportunity and a haven of tolerance, but a wave of violence has tarnished this image and sent foreigners fleeing for safety: David Smith in Durban for The Guardian, 17 April 2015 (updated 19 April 2015)





They came to South Africa in search of a better life and, for a while, found the promised land. Fungai Chopo got work as a builder, his wife, Memory, was hired as a maid, and they shared a decent house with their two children. The hunger, joblessness and poverty of their home in Zimbabwe was banished.

This week all that changed for the Chopos and for many like them. One night just before midnight about 15 men burst into the family home, clubbed Fungai until he bled, threatened to kill the family and stole all they had, including the HIV medication that keeps Memory alive.

Now the Chopos are among roughly 3,500 immigrants sleeping rough in crowded tents in heavily guarded transit camps not in a Congolese or South Sudanese warzone but in 21st-century South Africa.

Foreigners have fled for safety from a recent eruption of xenophobic violence in which at least five people have died, shops have been looted and torched, and South Africa’s reputation as a haven of tolerance for the tired, the poor, the huddled masses of a turbulent continent has been shaken. “The fabric of the nation is splitting at the seams; its precious nucleus -– our moral core -- is being ruptured,” the Desmond and Leah Tutu Legacy Foundation said this week.

Worst hit is Durban, South Africa’s third-biggest city, to where the Chopos moved three years ago. “They beat my husband with sticks, they took everything, money, food, clothes for the baby,” said Memory, 31, wearing her last remaining T-shirt and protecting her children Mercy, four, and one-year-old John. “They said ‘if you don’t give us these things, we will kill you. We want your shoes, remove your T-shirt.’ They took everything, even passports and IDs. The police came but they didn’t do anything because they are afraid of those boys.”
  



Xenophobia in South Africa: 'They beat my husband with sticks and took everything': image via th anonymous @ori_no_co, 17 April 2015

The Chopo family fled to a transit camp erected just over a week ago off Florence Nightingale Road in the suburb of Chatsworth. By Thursday it was offering sanctuary to about 1,200 immigrants, with eight tents in an area roughly the size of a football pitch, surrounded by armed guards and steel crowd-control fencing draped with drying blankets and clothes. There was a hubbub of voices as people formed orderly queues to register or take a lunch of bread and beans provided free by volunteers. Litter was strewn on the grass that turned muddy as rain fell.

The government-run camp provides medicine and will allow Memory to resume antiretroviral drug treatment for HIV. But she and her children are sleeping on the cold floor of a crowded tent. “The conditions here are basic. We are in mixed tents with men, women and children; some are taking clothes off. The toilets are few and very dirty and people are getting sick,” she said. “I feel scared. I can’t sleep at night because the dreams are very bad, always seeing these visions from that night. They don’t have ears, they don’t have eyes.”

Their aspirations in tatters, the Chopos plan to take a bus back to Zimbabwe. “I came to South Africa for a better life and I worked for everything,” Memory said. “But we are going home empty-handed, without funds, without passports, without the kids’ birth certificates. Now we have to wait for the transport provided by the government to take us home.”

Alongside her stood a compatriot, Joanna Moyo, 32, with a sick, sleeping baby tied to her back. She said: “I was robbed and now I don’t have anything, only my kids. I’m still worried those guys will come here and attack us. We want to go home. Even though there is nothing there, our lives are more important. I don’t think South Africa will welcome us again –- they hate us now.”



Immigrants shelter at the Chatsworth football grounds south of Durban
: photo by Rajesh Jantilal/AFP via the Guardian, 17 April 2015

South Africa is to many Africans what America represents to many around the world: an escape, a fresh start, a land of opportunity. When gold was discovered in Johannesburg in 1886, it was soon being mined by men from a dozen African nations. Today the country is a magnet for Congolese, Ethiopians, Malawians, Mozambicans, Nigerians, Somalis, Zimbabweans and others fleeing conflict or seeking to improve their lot. Estimates of immigrant numbers vary from 2 million to 5 million, out of a population of 51 million.

But the recent wave of xenophobia has tarnished this image and fuelled resentment among those who accuse South Africa of an arrogant exceptionalism that looks down on the rest of the continent.

Paul Manhica, 34, a car mechanic from Mozambique, said: “I chose South Africa because the living conditions are better than any other country. I believed in the rainbow nation and the peace created since the apartheid system failed. It’s a shock for me that it’s not the democratic country that I thought. I’m disappointed that an African brother could do this. It’s a lack of love in their hearts.”

On Thursday Manhica was among about 100 Mozambicans who, in a stark image that few thought they would see in democratic South Africa, boarded a coach for home because their safety could no longer be guaranteed. He had lived here for 13 years was leaving behind a South African wife and child. “I came here for work to pursue a better life for myself and my family,” he explained. “I got a small business, but it has all stopped since the attacks began.

“A group of people shouted at me: ‘There’s one of them. Catch him and torture him.’ Some of them were people I’ve known many years. But I believe the Lord looked after me: I ran to the mall and phoned the police. Later the attackers went from home to home and there was great destruction. I couldn’t sleep. At 1am I heard neighbours being tortured, screaming and running for their lives.”

The Chatsworth camp has many such tales of disillusionment. Aaron Lavu, 39, a Zimbabwean who migrated 15 years ago and opened a small business, said: “South Africa is close to us and we were looking for greener pastures than the regime of Robert Mugabe. At first South Africans were friendly and we thought we would integrate. Then last week eight guys came and hit me with a hammer. They said: ‘You must pack your things and go home. We don’t need you here.’ It makes you feel lost, you can’t do anything any more, you’re not part of the society. We feel hurt because we thought we were going to our brothers.”



A child from Mozambique in a makeshift bed at a camp in Chatsworth, south of Durban
: photo by Rogan Ward/Reuters via the Guardian, 17 April 2015


Searching for an explanation, analysts point to South Africa’s status as one the most unequal societies in the world, the violent legacy of racial apartheid and an unemployment rate recorded officially as one in four, and reckoned to be more accurately one in three. There have been frequent explosions of xenophobic violence over the past decade, notably in 2008 when 62 people, including 21 South Africans, were killed and more than 150,000 displaced.

Ingrid Palmary, associate professor at the Wits University African Centre for Migration and Society, cited a lack of faith in state institutions, easy access to handguns and a perception that foreigners are to blame for hardship. “It takes a small trigger to spark a deep level hostility,” she said.

In Durban’s impoverished Bottle Brush informal settlement, brick homes sit alongside shacks fashioned from metal sheets, wood planks and chipboard behind fences topped by razor wire. Foreign nationals were chased out last week and few residents were willing to talk, but Nana Mkhonde, 29, was frank: “Our citizens took action because they wouldn’t leave and they were being told they must leave. They came with nothing, they can go with nothing as well. I feel bad because they left crying, but we have no choice.

“They should go because we have no jobs. I’m a citizen and want to work for 150 rand a day but foreigners will do it for 70 rand a day. In the kitchens and the factories they are taking over our jobs. They bring cheap goods and we don’t know where from. They leave their countries with a lot of skills and we have nothing. Our education is not good enough.”

The governing African National Congress has condemned the violence but Mkhonde, an unemployed single mother, responded: “The government says it’s wrong because when they give jobs they help themselves. If you don’t have friends in the ANC, you get nothing. What about us? Our government is doing nothing for us. The reason we’re fighting foreigners is because of our government.”

The Zulu king, Goodwill Zwelithini, stoked the fires by calling for foreigners to pack their bags and leave, while the government is still wrestling with how to define the problem. 
The police minister, Nathi Nhleko, described the attacks as examples of "Afrophobia", not xenophobia. “What you don’t see is you don’t see Australians being chased on the streets, Britons being chased on the streets and similar demands being placed on them that they should be leave the country and so on,” he said.

“What you effectively see is largely Africans against one another in a sense now. That’s why I’m saying it represents a certain type of political problem that has got to be dealt with by ourselves as South Africans. In a sense, what we are witnessing are actually Afrophobic kind of activities and attacks, resembling all elements of self-hate among Africans.”

But such comments have been met with scorn. Bishop Paul Verryn, who for years gave shelter to thousands of migrants at Johannesburg’s Central Methodist Church, said: “It’s semantics in the face of disaster. It’s eating cake while the world goes hungry. There’s been a thunderous absence of good leadership.

“The profound shame that xenophobia brings on this nation is the same kind of shame that apartheid brought on the people of this land. What is so shaming is it alienates us from our neighbours and calls into question the integrity of our entire constitution. It exposes the systemic violation of injustice: today it is foreign nationals and tomorrow it will be Indians and after that it will be whites. There is anger and hatred growing among us.”

Yet amid the gloom hovering over Chatsworth camp there was a shaft of light. Volunteers from the local community turned up with carloads of bedding, blankets, clothes, food, nappies, toilet rolls, toothbrushes, toothpaste and other essentials. Iqbal Ismail, 49, a businessman organising breakfast, lunch and supper, said: “I’ve been here since the first day. After seeing the conditions of the place, sleeping without shelter, I didn’t have the heart to go back to work.”

Sue Clark, 50, from a property company that gathered donations via a Facebook post, mused: “At the beginning of the week I was saying I’m no longer proud to be South African, but now I’m saying I’m truly proud to be South African. This is hope. Just so many people want to make a difference.”




Xenophobia in South Africa: 'They beat my husband with sticks and took everything': image via th anonymous @ori_no_co, 17 April 2015
The Foreigners

Embedded image permalink

That no one has every been convicted for these sickening recurring acts of xenophobia in #SouthAfrica is the problem
[Abdikadir Ibrahim Danicha: photo by Ihsaan Haffejee via Al Jazeera English]: image via Kathleen Ndongmo @Kathleen Ndongmo, 1 March 2015

No Place Like Home: Khadija Patel and Azad Essa, Al Jazeera English, 19 April 2015


Running small convenience stores in the townships is a dangerous business for foreigners. 

Often serving their customers through locked gates, they are accused of spreading disease, stealing jobs and sponging off basic government services like electricity, running water and healthcare.

But as violence against them continues, the South African government insists that criminality is behind it, not xenophobia.

*
In a haze of violence in late January, an angry mob approached a convenience store belonging to Abdikadir Ibrahim Danicha. They pried open its iron gates and looted everything inside. Even the large display refrigerators were carried away.
Danicha's life was upended.
 
"South African people don’t like us," Danicha, a 29-year-old Somali national, told Al Jazeera, while sitting on his bed in a small room he shared with three others in Mayfair, a suburb popular with foreign nationals in Johannesburg.
 
The violent outburst that led to the looting of Danicha’s store began in Snake Park, in the western reaches of Soweto, when 14-year-old Siphiwe Mahori was allegedly killed by another Somali shop owner, Alodixashi Sheik Yusuf.

Mahori, a South African, was allegedly a part of a group of people who attempted to rob Yusuf’s store on January 19. His death sparked a week of mob justice, which appeared to be inflamed by xenophobia. 

Scores of people were injured and hundreds of stores were looted. As the violence spread to nearby Kagiso, a South African baby was trampled to death. 

For the foreign nationals affected by the violence, the actions of the mob were inexplicable. 

"I don’t even have clothes … I lost all my things," said Masrat Eliso an Ethiopian national, four days after his shop in Protea Glen, a suburb of Soweto, was looted. "I don't have money. I don't have anything and I'm scared for my life".

Calm was eventually restored and most foreign-owned stores reopened. Shelves were restocked and customers returned, poking their arms through the closed metal gates of the stores to buy a loaf of bread. Groups of children clamoured to buy lollipops, while tired looking men eyed the fridges for energy drinks. 

It appeared to be business as usual, but to the foreign nationals who returned to their stores in Soweto, there was a shared fear that they may soon be the subject of another attack. 

Danicha returned to his shop in Mofolo, another suburb of Soweto, three weeks after the violence subsided. 

"I don’t feel safe," he said in early March, outside his partially restocked shop. 

He is one of a few hundred thousand Somali refugees in South Africa who have found some measure of success in operating small stores in townships around the country. He is also one among thousands of foreign nationals here who report multiple incidents of persecution. 

But Danicha's life in South Africa has been filled with hardship. And the scars, which run across the entire left side of his body, act as a stark reminder.

In June 2014, he and a friend were running a small store in the Johannesburg suburb of Denver, selling groceries and basic cosmetics when their store was set upon by an angry mob.

"The first day, a group of people came to the shop. They wanted to loot us. We closed the doors but then they started stoning us," he said. "Then, on the second day, they just came and threw a petrol bomb at the shop.

"I was inside the shop."




Four Somali Nationals burnt in Denver-Jhb 2 sustained less injuries 2 severely burnt fighting 4 lives @Jhb Hospital: image via Somali South Africa @SCOBSA, 3 July 2014

Danicha was one of four people who sustained severe burns in Denver on that day.




Four Somali Nationals burnt in Denver-Jhb 2 sustained less injuries 2 severely burnt fighting 4 lives @Jhb Hospital: image via Somali South Africa @SCOBSA, 3 July 2014


"Everywhere, everywhere I am burned," he said. "I was in hospital for three months."



Four Somali Nationals burnt in Denver-Jhb 2 sustained less injuries 2 severely burnt fighting 4 lives @Jhb Hospital: image via Somali South Africa @SCOBSA, 3 July 2014



After being treated at the Charlotte Maxeke public hospital, Danicha was then forced to rely on the Somali community in Johannesburg for assistance.

“A brother of mine helped me out by giving me a share in a shop in Soweto.”

Two months later, another mob attacked his store.

"Unless I have the capital to start another shop, I don’t know what I can do."

Estimates suggest that more than 50,000 Somalis have fled to South Africa since their home country erupted into civil war in 1991.

Many of them have settled in townships across the country, operating small businesses among the poorest South Africans.

While the store in Mofolo has reopened, and Danicha helps his co-owners periodically, he has not been able to contribute to the capital needed to get the store sufficiently restocked.

"It is very difficult to start again and again," he said.

From Soweto and Kagiso the violence in January spread to Sebokeng in the Vaal delta, Eden Park in Ekurhuleni and Alexandra, in northern Johannesburg.

As researchers begin to unpack the stories of yet another bout of violence against foreign nationals in urban South Africa, many of the victims are beginning to feel that the pain caused was not just the loss of goods, earnings and trading days.

“We came to South Africa because we needed to save our lives,” Mohamed Rashad, an Ethiopian national from the Oromo community says. He runs a store in Snake Park and is angered by the lack of justice in cases involving foreign nationals.

“The law is forgetting us so soon we will also forget the law,” he warned.

Back at the store in Mofolo, Danicha watches as his co-owners serve customers through a gate. He is not sure what the future holds for him.

“At first I had a plan but the plan has been destroyed two times now,” he said.

With Somalia still reeling from conflict, he has nowhere else to go.

Despite the ongoing violence, South Africa is home.



Foreign-national shopkeeper in South Africa: photo by Ihsaan Haffejee via Al Jazeera English, 2015 
2: The History

In May 2008, 62 people were killed in a wave of xenophobic attacks across townships.

Foreign nationals, mostly migrants from Somalia and Ethiopia, were dragged through the streets of Alexandra, barely a few kilometers from Johannesburg’s plush Sandton suburb, and “necklaced” --  a throwback to the summary execution tactic used in the Apartheid days.

A rubber tyre, filled with petrol, is forced around a victim's chest and arms, and set alight.

In an instant, the story of South Africa’s much-touted rainbow nation of black, white and brown people happily living together, fizzled away in an outburst of vengeance.

Tens of thousands of people were displaced, forced to seek refuge in churches, mosques and even police stations. In the end, it took military intervention to quell the violence.




De deur camp refugees. Exiles find themselves out in the open again after several displaced families were evicted from a shelter in the vaal, south africa: photo by Tawe/Zplit, 1 October 2009

South Africa is a nation of multiple ethnicities, languages and nationalities. 

From the Zulu and Xhosa, to the Dutch and the British. Somali and Tutsi to Indian Tamil and Gujarati, Chinese and Zimbabwean. 

However divided, unequal, and structurally flawed, South Africa is home to a very diverse population of people. A country with deep pockets, it remains attractive as a home for migrants, some of them seeking greener economic pastures, others safety and security.

The economy relies heavily on migrants, be it to make up for a massive skills shortage or as cheap labour in farms and mines.

Despite the violence meted out to foreign nationals, tens of thousands continue to seek asylum there, as many as 60,000 to 80,000 per year.

According to the UNHCR, there were almost 310,000 refugees and asylum seekers in the country as of July 2014. By the end of 2015, this number is expected to top 330,000.

Xenophobia in South Africa is not new. Some, like Michael Neocosmos, Director of Global Movements Research at the University of South Africa (UNISA), recall anti-migrant sentiment in the early nineties, when the new government was in the midst of planning new economic policies and politicians of all stripes began drumming up anti-immigrant sentiment.

“It is important to recognise that xenophobia can exist without violence. And it’s not sufficient to simply recognise it when people start killing each other,” he said.

A survey in 1997 showed that just six percent of South Africans were tolerant to immigration. In another survey cited by Danso and McDonald in 2001, 75 percent of South Africans held negative perceptions about black African foreigners.
In a most painful of ironies, many South Africans associate foreign black Africans with disease, genocide and dictatorships.

The ills of Apartheid: skin colour, complexion and passes, in this case citizenship, are still the determinants of a better life, or discrimination.
Little illuminates this disparity more than the infamous Lindela Repatriation Centre, built in 1996 for undocumented foreign nationals entering the country. Lindela, outside Johannesburg, has been a scene of abuse, corruption and incessant overcrowding. But the undocumented are also held at police stations, even army bases.

“There is evidence that even in 1994, the records have shown that foreigners were thrown out moving trains because they are killed of bringing diseases, taking jobs, the same rhetoric we hear today,” Jean Pierre Misago, a researcher at the African Centre for Migration and Society at the University of Witwatersrand, said.

“It didn’t start or end in 2008. It had been building up,” he said.



De deur camp refugees.
Exiles find themselves out in the open again after several displaced families were evicted from a shelter in the vaal, south africa
: photo by Tawe/Zplit, 1 October 2009

And build up it did. In 1998, three foreign-nationals were killed on a train, between Johannesburg and Pretoria. In 2000, a Sudanese refugee was thrown from a train on a similar route. The reasons were all the same: blaming foreigners for a lack of jobs, or economic opportunity. In 2007, a shop in the eastern Cape was set alight by a mob.

The violence that escalated in 2008, was distinctive and decisive. It affected black, African foreign nationals; poor and disenfranchised South Africans; in the townships, but there is no evidence to suggest white Europeans were attacked,  or those from the Indian subcontinent. 

A very particular demographic paid the price, but researchers remind us that at least one third of the victims were actually South African. Xenophobia is not a problem unique to South Africa.

With so many economies battling recession for the better part of the past decade, the deadly triad of competition-survival-blame has seen fear of the foreigner rise across the globe.

“Xenophobia is experienced in the north and the south, in the Southern African Development Community (SADC) regions and other countries. It’s a worldwide phenomenon,” Misago said.

But, contrary to popular belief, xenophobia in South Africa is not just a problem of the poor.

A national survey of the attitudes of the South African population towards foreign nationals in the country by the South African Migration Project in 2006 found xenophobia to be widespread: South Africans do not want it to be easier for foreign nationals to trade informally with South Africa (59 percent opposed), to start small businesses in South Africa (61 percent opposed) or to obtain South African citizenship (68 percent opposed).

The violence of 2008 was still shocking.

The country fell into mourning; South Africans understood that the innocence of democratic transition, purposefully packaged in cotton and celebrated with confetti, had finally been taken. The mask had fallen.

This was a country now reverberating under the internal schisms of rising dissent and desperation. The South African government, for its part, refused to label the violence as ‘xenophobic’.

Then President Thabo Mbeki, at the very end of his second term in office, said those who wanted to use the term were “trying to explain naked criminality by cloaking it in the garb of xenophobia”.

"When I heard some accuse my people of xenophobia, of hatred of foreigners, I wondered what the accusers knew about my people, which I did not know ... and in spite of this reality, I will not hesitate to assert that my people are not diseased by the terrible affliction of xenophobia which has, in the past, led to the commission of the heinous crime of genocide."

-- former President Thabo Mbeki



De deur camp refugees. Arine Tusenge from Burundi is among refugees that found themselves out in the open again after several they were evicted from a shelter on the vaal, south africa.They had been moved to the shelter after 2008's Xenophobia related attacks. They fear re-integration into society and prefer to stay in the open: photo by Tawe/Zplit, 1 October 2009

The government attempted to reduce the perception of the terror meted out on foreign nationals as benign, unexceptional acts of criminality. If they were orchestrated attacks, they said, ‘a third force’ was behind the violence, apartheid parlance for acts perpetrated by outside forces, or intelligence agencies. 

“Of course violence against foreign nationals is criminal. But it can be criminal and xenophobic, it doesn’t have to be either or,” Misago said.

And even before the onset of the latest wave of violence in 2015, there was more to come.

In early 2013, a young Mozambican man named Mido Macia was tied to a police van and dragged through a street close to Johannesburg by officers. He had parked his taxi on the wrong side of the road.



When SA police dragged this Mozambican to his death, I couldn't keep quiet about it at OR Tambo #XenophobicSA
: image via Robert ALAI @RobertAlai, 10 April 2015

The violence was captured on video and spread across social media. Resounding condemnation from the middle classes in South Africa and the international community followed. President Zuma himself condemned the incident, but there was still no acknowledgement that these incidents constituted ‘hate crimes’.

When the riots broke out in Soweto in January 2015, it surprised no one.


Embedded image permalink

That no one has every been convicted for these sickening recurring acts of xenophobia in #SouthAfrica is the problem
: image via Kathleen Ndongmo @Kathleen Ndongmo, 1 March 2015

3: The Mob

On a busy Monday morning in mid-March in Soweto, Mphuti Mphuti, the acting head of the South African Spaza and Tuckshop Association, appeared on national TV, waving his South African identity document.

“Your government is saying this document means nothing. They are saying foreigners are equal to you,” Mphuti said. 

In the weeks following a wave of attacks against foreign-owned businesses in 

Soweto earlier this year, groups similar to this association and claiming to represent some 3,000 businesses, have been particularly vocal about the presence of foreign nationals in the townships.

“There is tension, there is anger, especially amongst those who fear competition from the so-called foreigners,” said William Veli Sithole a 56-year-old food vendor in Dobsonville.

But while the gall of the mob shocks other South Africans, their activities have also managed to escape censure.

However, business owners in the country are not likely to be found hurling petrol bombs, or rocks, at foreign owned shops. Often it is a mob, made up of the township mainstay of unemployed youth that form the front lines of service delivery protests, vigilante justice, and repeated attacks against foreign nationals.

“At the time of looting the mob rule takes over, you do not have time to reason; you (only) have time to do what others are doing,” Sipho Mamize, a representative of the NGO Afrika Tikkun's Wings of Life Centre, in Diepsloot, told the national broadcast.

Mphuti, however, said that at the heart of these township battles is the dereliction of government’s duty to its people that has spurred the resentment of foreign nationals here, culminating in the violent looting of foreign owned stores in January.

The people expect a lot from the government, he said.

For others, like Cynthia Khanyile, a street vendor in Jabulani, the blame lies elsewhere.

“I hate foreigners. I really don’t like them. They take business away from us. 
 We work hard, but then the foreigners come and take our business and our jobs,” she said

According to 2015 figures released by Statistics South Africa, 21.7 percent  of all South Africans live in extreme poverty. At least 53.8 percent survive on less than $75  a month.

It is the politics of survival.

The close knit structures of migrant communities which foster micro-lending and bulk buying schemes popular among Somalis, for example, has only served to disempowerment among locals. The upward mobility of those “from the outside” amidst local inertia is frustrating.

“As South Africans, we still cannot speak about the fruits of this democracy,” Mphuti said. 

Sociologist Devan Pillay said that despite the redistributive rhetoric of the ruling-party, the new South Africa has “unleashed a socio-economic system of market violence against the majority of the population.”

Here, the perpetrators of xenophobic acts are victims of the violence meted out by the market.

“Whereas in other instances this might have taken a gendered form, or an ethnic form, in this instance, the convenient scapegoats were easily recognisable foreign nationals,” Pillay writes in “Go Home or Die Here”.

South African townships are a scene of daily pandemonium with residents protesting against poor service delivery, low levels of development or improvement to their lives. Twenty years on, the majority of  South Africans continue to live on the margins.

It is this desperate level of inequality, social scientists have warned, that continues to drive resentment and instability.

The attacks on foreigners do not happen in a vacuum, nor can they be explained simply by hatred of all things foreign. This, after all, is a country still searching for social and economic reconciliation.

"We have seen very little government intervention and upliftment of small businesses in the township," said Mphuti Mphuti.

“And that’s why we are saying before government can say we are equal with foreign nationals, government must empower small South African businesses. 

But the critical thing is, South Africans must in the interest of people who carry the ID book, the green ID book is our license to get preferential treatment from government.”
 
Days later, a formal agreement between foreign traders and South African business leaders was eventually reached.
 
The drama of Mphuti’s TV soliloquy was perhaps necessary to assert the will of a subdued population. He understands the discontents in Soweto, and he also knows how those discontents spill out onto the streets.





Salvaged remains of foreign-owned shops seen in  the parking lot of a Somali-owned wholesaler outside Johannesburg: photo by Ihsaan Haffejee via Al Jazeera English, 2015
4: The Officials


Mxolisi Eric Xayiya, an aide to Gauteng Premier David Makhura, took photos of the fridges and assortment of goods covered in thick plastic at a Somali-owned wholesaler in Mayfair.

He was being ushered through the area west of the Johannesburg city skyline days after foreign traders were attacked in Soweto some 20 minutes away.


Foreign owned stores were looted, foreigners were attacked and their lives threatened.

There, the parking lot of Awash Cash & Carry appeared to be overrun with the salvaged remains of foreign-owned stores.

“We only saw the foreigners leaving but we didn’t know where they were going,” Xayiya said in late January.

At the time, police were still battling to contain the violence and more than 100 alleged looters had been arrested. The violence threatened to spread even further.

And in an impassioned address to more than 500 affected migrants that day, Makhura condemned the violence, but insisted that it should not be seen as anything other than an act of criminality.

“What we have seen happening, ladies and gentlemen, is not xenophobia, it’s criminality,” Makhura told the crowd. “We have gone out to the community to talk, telling our community members that nobody in our communities must try to defend criminality.”

As Makhura continued to condemn the violence, he also commended the police for moving migrants out of what he called “difficult areas”.

A day after Makhura addressed migrant traders, flanked by senior police officials, the City Press made a shocking allegation.

The Johannesburg-based Sunday broadsheet said that people arrested in connection with looting foreign owned stores in Soweto that week claimed local police had spurred them on.

“Cops told us to loot,” the headline said.

Ten Soweto residents in various parts of the township, who had admitted to looting, told the paper that the police had either join in the looting, or looked on while they helped themselves to goods and fridges from foreign-owned stores, while victims raised allegations of police complicity, corruption and neglect.

Two days later, speaking on SAFM, a talk radio station owned by the public broadcaster, Lieutenant General Solomon Makgale, spokesperson for the South African Police Services vehemently rejected City Press’ claims. He said all allegations had to be registered as complaints to be investigated.

However, Makgale admitted that one particular police officer who had been caught looting toilet paper in a widely disseminated video had been identified and action had been taken against him.

“Unlike previous administrations, we don’t brush things under the carpet,” he said. “Any complaints of misconduct by police officers will be investigated without prejudice.”

The South African Human Rights Commission said its research has shown that “negative perceptions of and attitudes to justice and the rule of law abound at the level of affected communities”.

This then points to a “poor relationship between communities and the police and wider judicial system”.

Attacks against foreigners have continued. Researchers say recent bouts of violence against foreign nationals have already outstripped the carnage of 2008. 
Still no official mention of ‘hate’, or ‘xenophobia’; the language carefully coiled.

In fact, language goes to the heart of the problem, with South Africa conflating rights with nation-state citizenship, despite the promises of the Constitution, to protect all. When the South African government speaks of justice, rights or solutions, the emphasis on citizenship is marked. In so doing, Zuma’s administration, time and time again descend to the very games engendered to create outrage on the street.

In February, following January’s attacks, President Zuma spoke of a “need to support local entrepreneurs and eliminate possibilities for criminal elements to exploit local frustrations.”

And even as Minister of Small Business Development Lindiwe Zulu, recently established a Task Team to look at the underlying causes of the violence against foreign-owned businesses, her point of departure left observers beleaguered. 

Zulu was reported to the Human Rights Commission for inferring that foreign-business owners in South Africa’s townships could not expect to co-exist peacefully with local business owners unless they shared their trade secrets.

“Foreigners need to understand that they are here as a courtesy and our priority is to the people of this country first and foremost,” she was quoted as saying.

Minister Zulu later clarified her remarks, but the damage it seems, had already been done.


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"@News24: LIVE: Police standoff w/2000 people in #Durban #SouthAfrica b/t locals, foreigners": image via HUMNEWS @HUMNEWS, 14 April 2015

5: The Activists

Addressing a group of around 300 migrant traders in early March, Amir Sheikh, the chairperson of the Somali Community Board in South Africa, appeared confident. Weeks after violence against foreign nationals erupted in Soweto, he was relating news of progress.

"We have had three meetings with the Minister of Small Business Development and we have given her a briefing of the challenges you face in the township, and what we think is the cause and the solution," Sheikh said.

"We know that things are much better now but we don’t want this to happen again."

Most of the displaced foreigners had been restored to their stores and a fragile calm had been negotiated. Representatives from both the community and the South African business community in Soweto continued to meet with government to negotiate sustainable conditions for foreigners and South Africans to coexist. Sheikh told the assembled migrants that a cohort of lawyers had offered to take up the case of traders who were affected by the violence in Soweto earlier this year.

The victims of the Soweto violence certainly have a case.

The South African Constitution, along with various international treaties ratified by the South African government, ensures the protection of all persons who reside within the country from violations to the right to liberty and security of person.

And when it comes to cases of violence against foreigners, the state is particularly obliged to protect the victims from individuals who perpetrate the violence.


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#BREAKING: Police in Standoff with 2000 People in #Durban CBD: #0811NR #South Africa: image via Australia0811NR @Australia0811NR, 14 April 2015 

This time, however, legal redress is not being sought.

Sheikh said its the safer, more practical option. He said that two years ago, Ethiopians, Somalis and Bangladeshis were attacked in Duduza in Nigel (east of Johannesburg).

“They actually interdicted the councillors, and the chairperson (of ANC Youth League), and these people were even all detained for up to one week .… But today you go to Duduza and and there is not even a single shop belonging to us there.”

Foreign nationals are reluctant to seek legal redress because of the consequences court cases often inspire. After all, how does justice protect the returning migrant looking to reintegrate into a society already hostile to foreigners?

Lessons learned, leaders of the migrant communities are now determined to prevent a mass exodus of foreign traders from Soweto. With more than 1000 foreign-owned shops in the township, Sheik says: “As long as we can co-exist and agree on certain terms, we don’t want to go the legal route.”

A South African Human Rights Commission report in 2010 found that “the judicial outcomes for cases arising from the 2008 violence have limited the attainment of justice for victims of the attacks and have allowed for significant levels of impunity for perpetrators”.

About 180 people were arrested in connection with the looting and violence in January. It’s unlikely any of these will result in convictions.

Neocosmos says that the lack of convictions in cases of violence against foreign nationals in South Africa strips the government’s approach through the criminal justice system of any efficacy.

“I know one person was convicted for throwing a guy off a balcony in Durban. How many people are in prison now as a result of those murders? These are murders that were committed on camera in front of everyone. How many people have been convicted?”

The best known case of xenophobic violence in 2008 is of “The Burning Man”, Mozambican national, Ernesto Alfabeto Nhamuave, who was burned alive in the Ramaphosa settlement in full view of the world’s media.


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#Xenophobia in #SouthAfrica": image via Gerrie Claasen @gerrieclaass, 14 April 2015

The case was closed in October 2010 with the conclusion that there were no witnesses and no suspects. According to the Sunday Times newspaper, a single sheet of paper indicates detective Sipho Ndybane's investigation.

"Suspects still unknown and no witnesses.” The lack of political will screamed through the short conclusion.

Just over a month after January’s violence against foreigners in Soweto, reports emerge of a petrol bomb thrown at a foreign-owned store in Doornkop.  This time, it’s an Ethiopian national that has incurred severe burns. Police say they arrested nine people in connection with the incident.

Two months later this man is still in hospital. No word about his belongings or livelihood. The work of ‘a mob.’

Meanwhile, Abdikadir Ibrahim Danicha,the Somali national who was burned after his shop was petrol bombed in Johannesburg last year, is determined to have his case solved in court.

“I’ve been to court six times already for the one case about public violence and damage to property,” he said. “But the other case, about me burning, I’ve not yet been called to court about it.”

Danicha was one of the traders in the crowd that was addressed by Sheikh and the leaders of the newly-established “Township Business Development-South Africa” group. He is confident that the route chosen by the leadership, the choice of negotiations with government and Soweto business leaders is the right option.

“We have to try to work together,” he said. “Because there is nowhere else we can go.”



Kwanele Godfrey Gumede in Dobsonville: photo by Ihsaan Haffejee via Al Jazeera English, 2015 
Voices: Dobsonville: Kwanele Godfrey Gumede


The trouble started in Snake Park and the violence spread everywhere. We were here in the city, and each and every shop is owned by the Somalians. You see what started this, we don't want these people here.

I was born in Soweto, I know what is going on here. There is a way of dealing with this problem. I don’t want to blame government but people are hungry. Me too, I’m hungry. And people will do anything when they are hungry.

Because when we see lots of shops owned by this people and when we see the shops that was owned by our peoples have been closed.

Each and every shops that was owned by our people has closed. Our brothers our sisters had shops, but when these people come, nobody was buying from our shops, for example: you can sell less price, our people will seek products that's high cost prices, so we feel it's not fair.

I looted their shops, I took the stuff from the shop. We were many, many people, young people, older people, men and women, everybody was angry. There was no leader, it was just us fighting them. We broke their shops and took everything. We were all over Soweto. We went this side, and then go another side, finish that side and go another side.

We were busy looting  all over the place.

I didn’t get caught by the police but some of my friends were locked up. Then the police released them after two, or three days.

But now the Somalians are all back and we feel angry, angry, angry, we feel the law is failing the citizen. Because all of them they do business, and we know for sure they don't pay taxes, because they pay taxes to the police. The police they come here and they demand cold-drinks, biscuits, snacks, sweets, and cigarettes from them. The police are involved in everything, because the police they come here and they demand.

I was working before  but this year I don't have a job.

In this township there are a lot of young guys who have a matric certificate but no jobs.  I don't have a matric, but when I see my friends, there are many people living here who are not employed. So I’m staying here, each and every day I can see things are not the same. All of my life I was staying here in Soweto. There are a lot a lot of people without work, I can't say that they don't want to work, but many of them they are trying, but, there is no change. I can't see change.

I can say even if one shop, they hire maybe two, or three people, it will make a big change in our country, I can't say in our country in our city. Because in our city there is full of them.

Yes, when I can see our people they don't have enough strength to open their shops again because everyone buys from the Somalians shops. Yes, I also still buy bread, milk and airtime from the Somalians’ shops.

I can buy the bread from South Africans shops for R12, for example, but the bread by the Somalian people is  R11. Everyone will go to Somalian people, because of what, one rand. That's it.



Foreign-national shopkeeper in South Africa: photo by Ihsaan Haffejee via Al Jazeera English, 2015

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#Xenophobic attacks forcing Somalis to vacate their shops, Philippi #SouthAfrica #xenophobia #Somalia #looting: image via Mabel Gasca @mabelgasca, 25 February 2015

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#Displaced foreign shop owners pick up the pieces after #Soweto  #looting #SouthhAfrica #EU #ANC: image via Mario @Go_Mario, 23 February 2015

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#SouthAfrica | #Xenophobia shame: 'burning man' case shut via @TimesLIVE: image via Makamba Online @MakambaOnline, 19 February 2015
 
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#SouthAfrica
| #Xenophobia
shame: 'burning man' case shut via @TimesLIVE: image via Makamba Online @MakambaOnline, 19 February 2015

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Is #SouthAfrica becoming nothing more than a #xenophobic battleground? #Xenophobia: image via TheSouthAfrican.com @TheSAnews, 4 February 2015

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Graffiti or not, this person's got their head on straight #Xenophobia #SouthAfrica #DamnStraight: image via Elaine Lehman @Lainishy, 1 February 2015

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Reports hv emerged dat police helped locals loot foreign owned shops in Soweto. Shameful!!! #xenophobia #southafricar: image via prince @ThingsPrinceSay, 25 January 2015


A foreign national holds a knife following clashes between a group of locals and police in Durban amid ongoing violence against foreign nationals
: photo by AFP via The Guardian, 14 April 2015


Johannesburg, South Africa. A Mozambican man lies in the street after he was reportedly stabbed by a mob in Alexandra township, Johannesburg, during fighting between locals and foreign nationals
: photo by Kevin Sutherland/EPA via the Guardian, 18 April 2015

Little Girl

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Galanthus rivalis 2 [Snowdrop], Slovenia: photo by tsiegretlop, 7 April 2012


White as a snowdrop
tiny and sweet and bright
abandoned early after departure of her first friends
stuck it out in her own territory
a cold bare stone fence
braved those many long hard years alone
out there on mayhem street
all weathers exposed
sleeping in grease under cars
found her way in here after all that
a joy every minute since
so undemanding of life yet so full of life
before the cancer came
left the world this morning
.................................sorely
missed
........lived
..............and died
on this block
of nothing but strangers and passersby
 


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white cat: image via Yuriusu @Yuriusu, 24 October 2013



Galanthus rivalis [Snowdrops], Slovenia: photo by tsiegretlop, 7 April 2012

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The enchanting #snowdrop. Pure beauty emerging from sleep pushing towards hope, dreams and magic, as nature intended.: image via Evolving Spaces @shuiway, 5 April 2015

Baltimore

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Diapers, chips and sweet tea. One scary thug, alright. (Cropped to protect his identity.) #Baltimore #BaltimoreRiots: image via Only Human @leahmcelrath, 27 April 2015

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Mondawmin teacher asked for this to be shared. Pass it along.#Baltimore: image via Sarah Pinsker @SarahPinsker, 27 April 2015

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This obese adult was captured throwing rocks at high school students today in #Baltimore: image via Ferrari Sheppard @stopbeingfamous, 27 April 2015

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Malcolm X on "riots". Critical. #Baltimore
: image via zellie @zellieimani, 27 April 2015

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Stunning photo from #baltimore today by @byDVNLLN sums up #FreddieGray: image via Smell the Tea @SmellTheTea, 25 April 2015

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If they cant hear you scream louder if they don't feel you make them feel you #ripfreddiegray: image via KnownNobody @byDVNLLN, 26 April 2015
 
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Standoff. Police keep pepper spraying this unarmed man. And he remains still. Mondawmin: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015

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Officers, alley. Baltimore: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015
 
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SWAT just rolled up. That was wild. Baltimore: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015

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It's smoke everywhere at North and Pennsylvania. Baltimore: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015

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Gay and Federal. Baltimore: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015

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This: image via deray mckesson @deray, 27 April 2015

A protester rides his bike in front of a police line at North and Pennsylvania avenues on Monday. (Algerina Perna/Baltimore Sun).

A protester rides his bike in front of a police line at North and Pennsylvania avenues on Monday: photo by Algerina Perna/Baltimore Sun via Washington Post, 27 April 2015
 
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Gas mask on, fist in the air. Riot police behind plumes of smoke. (by AJ+'s @Darielm) #BaltimoreRiots #Freddie Gray: image via AJ+ @ajplus, 27 April 2015

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Wow...this picture #Baltimore #FreddieGray: image via Brittany Lewis @Buttercup_B, 27 April 2015

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Jesus Christ this photo #Baltimore #FreddieGray
: image via Stephen Belcher @sycobuny, 25 April 2015

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Such a powerful shot. #Freddie Gray: image via Washed McGee @_CaptainJohnson, 26 April 2015
 
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To #Baltimore soldiers: Stand tall. stand strong. Protest is necessary for an answer: What happened to #FreddieGray?: image via Raqiyah Mays @RaqiyahMays, 25 April 2015
 
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#BREAKING Photo: Looters steal billions of dollars, destroy businesses, leave thousands homeless: #Freddie Gray: image via Rs=2GM/c2 @AnarchoPhysics, 27 April 2015

Origami

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Origami Dwarf, designed by Eric Joisel, folded by Strongpaper from uncut square of VOG crumpled paper: photo by Strongpaper, 17 August 2013

"They had him folded up like he was a crab or a piece of origami... He was all bent up."
-- eyewitness to Freddie Gray arrest by Baltimore police

What Went Down With Freddie Gray? Rev. Jesse Jackson and Lawrence Bell, former Baltimore City Council president: Democracy Now! 28 April 2015
 
For the second time in six months, National Guard troops have been deployed in response to police brutality protests. Baltimore erupted in violence Monday night over the death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old African-American man who died of neck injuries suffered in police custody after he was arrested for running. Police say at least 27 people were arrested as cars and stores were set on fire, and at least 15 officers were injured. 

Baltimore public schools are closed, and a weeklong curfew is in effect from 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. Also Monday, thousands gathered to pay their respects during Freddie Gray’s funeral, including our guest, Rev. Jesse Jackson, civil rights leader, and president and founder of the Rainbow PUSH Coalition. Jackson says the violence "diverts attention away from the real issue" that West Baltimore is an "oasis of poverty and pain" where residents have long suffered from police abuse and economic neglect. We also speak with Lawrence Bell, former Baltimore City Council president. He grew up in and represented the impoverished area where Freddie Gray was arrested, and argues the "chickens are coming home to roost."

AMYGOODMAN: We’re on the road in The Hague in The Netherlands, but we begin today’s show in Baltimore, Maryland, where National Guard troops have been deployed following violent protests over the death of Freddie Gray, the 25-year-old African-American man who died of neck injuries suffered in police custody after he was arrested for running. His family has said his spine was "80 percent severed" at the neck. Police say they arrested at least 27 people on Monday night. At least 15 police officers were injured during the uprising. Overnight, cars and stores were set on fire, including a CVS and a portion of an historic Italian deli that’s been in the city since 1908.

Following Ferguson, this marks the second time in six months the National Guard has been called to restore order after police brutality protests. This time, protests erupted in the West Baltimore neighborhood where Gray was first arrested for making eye contact with a lieutenant and then running away. On Monday night, Maryland Governor Hogan declared a state of emergency. Today, Baltimore’s public schools are closed, and a week-long curfew is in effect from 10:00 p.m. to 5:00 a.m. Baltimore Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake addressed the city Monday night.
MAYORSTEPHANIERAWLINGS-BLAKE: What we see tonight that is going on in our city is very disturbing. It is very clear there is a difference between what we saw over the past week with the peaceful protests, those who wish to seek justice, those who wish to be heard and want answers, and the difference between those protests and the thugs, who only want to incite violence and destroy our city.
AMYGOODMAN: Earlier on Monday, thousands gathered to pay their respects during Freddie Gray’s funeral, including Maryland Democratic Congressmember Elijah Cummings, a delegation from the White House, and the family of Eric Garner, the Staten Island man who died after a New York City police officer put him in a banned chokehold. This is Gray family attorney Billy Murphy.
WILLIAMMURPHY: You know, most of us are not here because we knew Freddie Gray, but we’re all here because we know lots of Freddie Grays. Let’s don't kid ourselves. We wouldn’t be here today if it wasn’t for video cameras. Instead of one cover-up behind that blue wall after another cover-up behind that blue wall, and one lie after another lie, now we see the truth as never before. It’s not a pretty picture.
AMYGOODMAN: Baltimore police say they expect to present a report on Gray’s death to the state’s attorney’s office by Friday, but officials have not said when the report will be made public. Six officers involved in Gray’s arrest have been suspended with pay.

Well, for more, we go to Baltimore, where we’re joined by two guests. The Reverend Jesse Jackson is with us, civil rights leader, president and founder of Rainbow PUSH Coalition. He spoke at Freddie Gray’s funeral Monday. And Lawrence Bell rejoins us, former Baltimore City Council president. He represented West Baltimore, which is the area where Freddie Gray was arrested.

We welcome you both back to Democracy Now! Reverend Jackson, let’s begin with you. Your reaction to what took place last night, as well as your message in the funeral of Freddie Gray?

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Well, what happened last night was very disturbing. It was a expression of hopelessness and self-destructive violence, which diverts attention away from the real issues. For example, Fred Gray was the 111th [inaudible] killed by a policeman since 2011 -- one-one-one, not just the first one. Secondly, in that same area, unemployment is 30 percent. There are 18,000 vacant homes or abandoned lots, because government -- because banks ran subprime lending and predatory lending on people. The banks got bailed out; the people got left out. So the abounding poverty, because you have the most people in that area who have been to prison who come out and can’t vote and then can’t get the job because they’ve been to prison. So you have -- you really have this oasis of poverty and pain, and you must, beside last night, address the structural crisis in Baltimore and urban America, period.

AMYGOODMAN: Lawrence Bell, the area that you represented when you were in the City Council is the area where Freddie Gray was arrested -- arrested, again, according to the lieutenant, she made eye contact with him, and he ran away, and that was grounds for arresting him. Can you talk about this community where—that you have represented for so long?

LAWRENCEBELL: Well, in fact, I was actually born a few blocks away from where the incident occurred, so it really touches me personally. You know, I think that there have been years of neglect, not only of West Baltimore, but all over the inner city of Baltimore. And I think that the chickens are coming home to roost. I mean, this is a tale of two cities. This has been going on for a long time, not only the police abuse, which escalated in the early 2000s under the zero-tolerance policy of Martin O’Malley, but also just the economic violence that has been committed against a people. And you have a lot of young people, many of whom have already been arrested because of the mass arrests that have gone on in Baltimore City. They see no hope. They see no way out. And they’re acting out, unfortunately, and it says that we’ve got to wake up and do something.

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Amy, I think also, we were in church yesterday, where governor noticed that the gangs were coming together, and they want to shoot a police. Immediately there was a kind of panicky move to do a lockdown on the city. There were several schools, when the public transportation stopped, did not have a way home. You had thousands of kids on the streets with no way to get home, because when the city went to lockdown rather than a policeman get shot, transportation stopped, businesses closed, and kids had nowhere to go. In that environment, the whole thing exploded.


Clearing protesters
 
Baltimore City police in riot gear clear protesters gathered at North and Pennsylvania avenues to enforce the 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew Tuesday night, one day after a riot and wide spread looting resulting from the Freddie Gray protest: photo by Kenneth K. Lam/Baltimore Sun, 28 April 2015

AMYGOODMAN: I want to go to Maryland Governor Larry Hogan. This is just after he announced the state of emergency and activated the National Guard to respond to unrest in Baltimore.
GOV. LARRYHOGAN: Everybody believes we need to get to the answers and resolve this situation, the concern everybody has about what exactly happened in the Freddie Gray incident. That’s one whole situation. This is an entirely different situation. This is lawless gangs of thugs roaming the streets, causing damage to property and injuring innocent people, and we’re not going to tolerate that.
AMYGOODMAN:"Lawless gangs of thugs," Reverend Jackson. Your response?

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Well, I think such language does not aid the situation. For example, those people, those bankers who engaged in subprime and predatory lending and took people’s homes and drove them out of the middle class into poverty, what is their name? Or 111 killings in three years in one area, what do you call those who did the killing, when there was no camera? When you look at 30 percent unemployment, TIF money spent downtown for the big new Baltimore, and pension money and banking money. So you have, as Brother Bell says, you have downtown blossoming, booming Baltimore, and then you have the rest of them. Now, we did not engage in name calling on that matter, but we do know that that strategy does not work. And we really need to look at, Amy, the Kerner Commission Report of 50 years ago. It says when you have this radical racial divide and economic divide, there must be some remedy, not just reaction.

AMYGOODMAN: Reverend Jackson, can you also respond to Freddie Gray’s arrest? This issue of -- this is according to the police, that he made eye contact with the lieutenant and ran away, that’s what they allege. The attorney for the Fraternal Order of Police, the police union, said running in a high-crime area is grounds for arrest.

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Well, you know, it’s interesting enough that police here and firemen have the right to work in the city and live in the suburbs. Some live as far away as York, Pennsylvania. And so they come in as an occupying force, not as neighbors. So, often people are afraid of them, because they’re not taxpaying neighbors whose children go to school with their children. So there is this gap between police and people. And you really ought to have residential requirements for policemen and firemen. Those who get nectar from the flower should sow pollen where they pick up nectar.

AMYGOODMAN: Baltimore Orioles chief operating officer John Angelos, who is the son of the owner, Peter Angelos, took to Twitter this weekend to defend the Baltimore protests after they were attacked on local sports radio. He wrote, quote, "my greater source of personal concern, outrage and sympathy beyond this particular case is focused neither upon one night’s property damage nor upon the acts, but is focused rather upon the past four-decade period during which an American political elite have shipped middle class and working class jobs away from Baltimore and cities and towns around the U.S. to third-world dictatorships like China and others, plunged tens of millions of good, hard-working Americans into economic devastation, and then followed that action around the nation by diminishing every American’s civil rights protections in order to control an unfairly impoverished population living under an ever-declining standard of living and suffering at the butt end of an ever-more militarized and aggressive surveillance state." Again, so wrote Baltimore Orioles chief operating officer John Angelos, who is the son of the owner, Peter Angelos. Reverend Jackson?

REV. JESSEJACKSON: You can’t get any better than that, because you have this combination of guns in, drugs in, jobs out, and alienation between those who live in the surplus and those who live in the deficit. So there are some causal factors that must not be ignored. We regret that there was the expression of street violence last night, because, one reason, it’s not redemptive; two, it diverts attention from the agenda put on that letter. We should be discussing today the Kerner Report as opposed to what happened last night. But there is a cause-effect relationship. But we should do well not to panic in the face of last night, and move toward the remedies. Since this is so close to Washington, why not make this an urban model for reconstruction?

LAWRENCEBELL: Let me also add to what Reverend Jackson just said. You know, back in the 1930s, my grandfather came from North Carolina to Baltimore with very little education and got a good-paying job at Bethlehem Steel. Now, those -- like the grandparents of many of those young people out there yesterday, those jobs have dried up. And this is a generation that -- where there are too many people seeking too few jobs in Baltimore City. They are disadvantaged. And then, on top of that -- and I do agree with the comments of Mr. Angelos -- you know, people on the street in Sandtown, in Mondawmin, in West Baltimore, they know already what happened to Freddie Gray. And the thing that concerns us is that if so many people know what happened, they know the officer that was involved, they know how he was killed, if they know, why don’t the police know? Why doesn’t the mayor know? Why doesn’t -- why isn’t that announced sooner? So it says something about the priorities in that area. And something really has to change soon.

REV. JESSEJACKSON: And this blue code of [inaudible], it means that police must -- will not police other police. They know who engage in violence and excessive force. And because police will not tell on police -- gangbangers will not tell on gangbangers, getting that model from adults. The corruption of the relationship between people and police, that corrupt relationship must end.


Past curfew
 
A woman runs for safety as police throw tear gas canisters while enforcing curfew in Baltimore, a day after unrest that occurred following Freddie Gray's funeral: photo by Patrick Semansky/AP via Baltimore Sun, 28 April 2015

AMYGOODMAN: This is a clip from a video report by The Real News Network titled "A Walk Through the Neighborhood Where Freddie Gray Lived and Died," in which reporter Stephen Janis follows reporter and former prisoner Eddie Conway and our guest, Lawrence Bell, as they visit a rundown basketball court in the Gilmor Homes housing project, where Freddie Gray was arrested.
LAWRENCEBELL: I have a lot of interest in this community, and I’m saddened to see how things have gone downhill.
STEPHENJANIS: This week, Bell joined The Real News correspondent Eddie Conway to talk about politics, crime and punishment, and what needs to happen to improve the city he loves.
LAWRENCEBELL: This city has been socially, economic and politically subdued and downtrodden so much in the last several years that people don’t even complain about it anymore. And they’re afraid to.
STEPHENJANIS: The discussion took place against a symbolic backdrop for both men: a dilapidated basketball court in the Gilmor Homes housing project in West Baltimore, left in disrepair by the city for nearly 17 years. Conway has raised money to fix the court, but the city has blocked his efforts.
EDDIECONWAY: So we’ve got a company that’s certified, that does this, that’s donating some of the stuff.
LAWRENCEBELL: OK.
EDDIECONWAY: And they’re going to be in from the beginning to the end to make sure it’s done.
STEPHENJANIS: The city told us the community was divided on whether they wanted the court rebuilt. But residents we spoke to said they supported fixing it.
GILMORHOMESRESIDENT: Look at it. This court ain’t been up since I was about three. I ain’t seen these goals up --
EDDIECONWAY: Yeah, yeah.
GILMORHOMESRESIDENT: From my own visual eyes, I ain’t seen them up yet.
AMYGOODMAN: That report from The Real News Network. Lawrence Bell, if you would like to elaborate further, and also, can you talk about the calls for the autopsy report to be released, and what more you feel needs to be done?

LAWRENCEBELL: Well, you know, the great irony is that that walk that I did with Eddie Conway happened just a few days before the incident. You know, it’s amazing.

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Before?

LAWRENCEBELL: Right before that happened. We didn’t know that was going to happen. We happened to be there. And it just underscored what we were talking about. People are very upset. There is a lack of interest in just valuing the people that live in the neighborhood. And it’s been exacerbated by this situation, because we think information needs to come out a lot sooner. You know, people have seen these shows like 48 Hours, where they’re told that within the first two days or so, law enforcement should have an idea of what happened in a homicide. And here we see, nearly two weeks after this incident -- everybody in that neighborhood and all the people in the street know. I’ve talked to people. I’ve talked to police officers. And as Reverend Jackson said earlier, one of the problems we have -- and this is something here in Baltimore and all around the country that needs to be dealt with -- is that even when we have African-American police and even well-intentioned white police officers, who see something that goes wrong, and they know somebody, as in this instance -- and matter of fact, in this instance, the primary perpetrator was known to be racist. He was known to be negative in that neighborhood. Everybody knew it over in Western District, and he was still -- he’s still been there. Now, when so many people know what’s going --

REV. JESSEJACKSON: Other incidents on tape.

LAWRENCEBELL: On tape. And there are people who saw it. They know where the paddy wagon stopped, when they took the young man out, they beat him up again. They have all these people who know this. Why has it taken two weeks to come out with a report, with an autopsy? If this had happened right after the incident, and someone was being fired immediately, OK, and people were let go, this would not have escalated to this point. So I think it’s a lesson for all of us here --

AMYGOODMAN: We just have 20 seconds.

LAWRENCEBELL: -- and throughout the country.

REV. JESSEJACKSON: That’s what the man in Charleston, South Carolina, did.

AMYGOODMAN: We have 20 seconds. I want --

REV. JESSEJACKSON: He moved quickly.

AMYGOODMAN: I want to thank you both for being with us. Reverend Jesse Jackson spoke at Freddie Gray’s funeral yesterday, founder, president of PUSH now. And thank you so much to Lawrence Bell for being with us, former Baltimore City Council president, represented West Baltimore, which is the area where Freddie Gray was arrested.

Ghost Ballpark

It might not seem fair, but Orioles rightfully take a back seat to security concerns throughout city
 
Camden Yards in Baltimore, where the Baltimore Orioles will host the Chicago White Sox on 29 April in the first major league baseball game ever played without admission of fans: photo via Baltimore Sun, 28 April 2015
 
John Angelos, chief operating officer and son of the owner of the Baltimore Orioles, rebutted a local sports talk show host's condemnation of the city's recent protests following the death of 25-year-old man who died of a severed spine while in police custody, Freddie Gray, in a series of tweets reassembled into a single text by the site Refinery29, 28 April 2015:




Baltimore protests: photo by Patrick Semansky/AP, 28 April 2015

Freddie Gray: childhood painted in lead

Gray family lead paint lawsuit

Freddie Gray, who died from injuries while in police custody, was raised with his sisters in this rowhouse. They filed a lawsuit alleging lead paint poisoning: photo by Kim Hairston/ Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015
Beginning of Freddie Gray's life as sad as its end, court case shows: Freddie Gray's childhood marred by lead paint, according to lawsuit:Jean Marbella, The Baltimore Sun, 29 April 2015
 
In a boxful of documents stored in Baltimore City Circuit Court, the outlines of an all-too-familiar inner-city childhood emerge.

The life ofFreddie Gray Jr., who died Sunday from a severe spinal cord and other injuries sustained in police custody, had a beginning as tragic, in a way, as his end.

As children, he and his two sisters were found to have damaging lead levels in their blood, which led to multiple educational, behavioral and medical problems, according to a lawsuit they filed in 2008 against the owner of a Sandtown-Winchester home they rented for four years.

With so much of its housing stock predating laws banning lead in paint, Baltimore continues to wrestle with the after-effects on thousands of children who have inhaled or ingested the toxic metal.

While the property owner countered in the suit that other factors could have contributed to the children's deficits -- poverty, frequent moves and their mother's drug use, for example -- the case was settled before going to trial in 2010. The terms of the settlement are not public.

The following year, Gray's sisters purchased a home on East Lorraine Avenue where the family has been living.

The case and the four fat volumes of documents it generated provide details missing from the current public snapshot of Gray, the 25-year-old man at the center of national furor over allegations of police brutality.

Gray was found unresponsive in the back of a prisoner transport van under circumstances that remain unexplained and died a week later. His death is being investigated by local and federal authorities.Included in the lead paint case file are photographs of a chubby-cheeked, smiling boy, his two sisters and a dog, as well as a deposition during which Gray acknowledged that he didn't particularly like animals. In the background of photos are the walls and windows with crumbling paint that is alleged to have poisoned them.

All three of the children -- Carolina, now 27, and twins Freddie and Fredericka -- were born "preemie," Gloria Darden said in a deposition.

"They were real small and they had to keep them inside the hospital for a couple months, like until they gained five pounds," Darden said of the twins. "I had them too early, had to have them like when I was seven months pregnant."

While the family lived in a number of different houses during Gray's childhood, the lawsuit focuses on 1459 N. Carey St., where he lived from ages 2 to 6. The"beat up" house, as Darden described it, had "peeling and peeling" paint in every room. The rent was $300 a month

"Regardless of who I represented, or what the issues were, I have nothing but sympathy for Ms. Darden and her other surviving children, and my heart goes out to them as a human being for what they're going through."

Neither Naugle, of the Bodie Law Firm, nor the Grays' attorney in the lawsuit, Cara O'Brien of the law offices of Evan K. Thalenberg, would discuss the details of the case or the amount of the settlement.

Among the evidence were the results of blood tests conducted on the siblings as children that showed all of them had lead levels above the 10 micrograms per deciliter (mg/dL) that state law defines as the threshold for lead poisoning. (Experts say there are no safe levels of lead, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention consider anything above 5 mg/dL cause for concern.)

Freddie Gray, for example, was tested as having between 11 mg/dL and 19 mg/dL in six tests conducted between 1992 and 1996, court documents show.

The siblings were treated for lead at Kennedy Krieger, the documents show. Family members said Darden and her partner, Richard Shipley, who is considered the children's stepfather, tried to ameliorate the lead problem.

Shipley said in a September 2009 deposition that the children should be on "certain diets" to help prevent lead absorption. (Iron- and calcium-rich foods, among others, help minimize the amount of lead absorbed by the body.)

"We kept them on a pretty nice diet," Shipley said. "I did because I did most of the food shopping."

He said they also were told to keep the windowsills clean.

"Gloria was an excessive cleaner," Shipley said.

The house had three bedrooms, for Darden, the two girls and Freddie. But in Freddie's June 2009 deposition, he said that because he was so young then, he mostly remembers sleeping with his mother.

"I used to end up in my mother's bed," he said. "She always used to say like I used to sleep with her. She used to call me 'the mama's boy.'"


Smoke canister
 
A protester kicks a smoke canister toward the police line at North and Pennsylvania avenues on Tuesday night, one day after a riot and wide spread looting resulting from the Freddie Gray protest: photo by Kenneth K. Lam/Baltimore Sun, 28 April 2015
 
As tends to happen in such litigation, the background of the plaintiffs and their family came under scrutiny.

One doctor, called by the defense, noted in her deposition that in 2002 the family came to the attention of Child Protective Services, which reported they were living in a house without food or electricity.

And Darden was questioned about her education, parenting and drug use in an April 2009 deposition.

She said she had never been to high school, and when asked if she had been told to leave middle school, responded, "Yeah, something like that." She also said she couldn't read, which hampered her ability to help Freddie and his siblings.

Darden said she helped her son learn to count, but "that's it, you know. I can't teach him nothing else. … I can't help him with nothing else but raise him."

Under questioning, she said she began "sniffing" heroin when she was 23, according to the deposition transcript. She said she had used it perhaps once a day but then entered treatment.

"Now I don't do it," she said. "Since I went into a program and I'm doing good now."

William H. "Billy" Murphy Jr., who has been representing Gray's family since his death, declined to comment or make them available for an interview.

During Freddie Gray's deposition, he talked about the peeling paint in almost all the windows. He said he had been diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. His sisters spoke of having to repeat grades and other problems.

As is common in lead paint cases, the defense argued that the children's troubles in school were not necessarily caused by lead poisoning. Rather, poverty, parenting issues and other socioeconomic forces might have come into play, the defense experts said.

But Ruth Ann Norton, a longtime Baltimore-based advocate for lead-poisoned children, said the science is clear on how exposure can damage the developing brain of a youngster.
"This is the toxic legacy of lead-based paint," said Norton, who heads the Green & Healthy Homes Initiative and is a founding member of the Maryland Lead Poisoning Prevention Commission.

"Our kids are ill equipped to stay in the classroom, finish school. They're very unlikely to go on to higher education. They're less likely to be able to hold a job," she said. "They're less equipped to be able to overcome the poverty and other circumstances that pull them down."

Norton said she is angered when people try to diminish the danger of lead poisoning and instead point to other factors. At high levels, doctors say, lead poisoning can cause damage to the brain and central nervous system.

"Children with lead poisoning will have defects, regardless of whether their parents are 'nice' or not," she said.

The Grays' case was scheduled to go to trial in February 2010. It had been postponed to that date because the Grays' lawyers had four different lead paint trials scheduled to begin in the first two weeks of December 2009. All were against Rochkind.

Lead paint litigation is "all we do," according to the website of Evan K. Thalenberg, whose firm represented the Grays. The site also says the firm has "recovered over $100 million for our clients and changed their lives." Thalenberg did not return calls for comment.

Naugle, the defense lawyer, recalled that he deposed Freddie Gray in prison. The case file showed a request that he be brought from the Maryland Correctional Institute in Jessup for the trial. He was then serving time for a conviction of drug possession with intent to deliver.

But both sides agreed to a settlement. It is not known if the Gray siblings received a monetary award, but a friend said the house on Lorraine Avenue was bought with lead paint money.

State property records show Carolina Gray and Fredericka Gray purchased the home in 2011 for $112,000.

Freddie's dead. What went down?

Freddie Gray taken into custody

Freddie Gray is seen being taken into custody by Baltimore Police on April 12 in this still from a cell phone video: photo via Baltimore Sun

The 45-minute mystery of Freddie Gray's death: Kevin Rector, The Baltimore Sun, 25 April 2015
 
When Freddie Gray briefly locked eyes with police at 8:39 a.m. on a corner of an impoverished West Baltimore neighborhood two weeks ago, they seemed to recognize each other immediately. As three officers approached on bicycles along West North Avenue, the 25-year-old Gray was on the east corner of North Mount Street chatting with a friend, according to Shawn Washington, who frequents the block.

"Ay, yo, here comes Time Out," a young man on the opposite corner yelled, using a neighborhood term for police.

Gray swore, taking off on foot as the officers began hot-stepping on their pedals to catch up. One officer jumped off his bike to chase Gray on foot, police said.

"That was the last time I seen that man moving," said Washington, 48.

Investigators with the city police and other agencies are still trying to recreate the events of the next 45 minutes, during which Gray sustained a severe and ultimately fatal spinal cord injury while in police custody.

But in its own investigation, The Baltimore Sun found that police missed the opportunity to examine some evidence that could have shed light on events. For example, by the time police canvassed one neighborhood looking for video from security cameras, a convenience store camera pointed at a key intersection had already taped over its recordings of that morning.

The Sun also found that accounts from residents conflicted with the official version of events, including a police account that Gray's arrest was made "without force or incident."

City officials have released a partial timeline of the events of April 12, and investigators have focused on his stop-and-go, roundabout trip through the city in the metal cage of a police transport van. A lieutenant, a sergeant and four other officers involved in Gray's arrest and transport have been suspended with pay pending the results of the police investigation.

Still, much of what happened to Gray on the cool, partly cloudy and breezeless morning of April 12 remains a mystery.

Officials have declined to provide 911 call recordings related to Gray's arrest or injury, citing the open investigation, and police have declined to provide dispatch recordings that would contain any conversations between officers and dispatchers while Gray was in custody. The timeline for when and where the van stopped remains incomplete, and no time has been provided for the van's last stop, back on North Avenue for another pickup before its arrival at the Western District police station.

Insights into the critical minutes between Gray's arrest and the call for paramedics can be gleaned from residents who said they observed several interactions the police had with him.

Taken collectively, they make clear that Gray's arrest and transport were perceived as being wholly out of the ordinary -- even in an area where the drug trade makes an arrest a common occurrence.

'Folded up'

The reason Gray was chased by police remains unclear. Police have said it came in part because he ran, raising officers' suspicions in an area known for drug dealing. A police report on the arrest states that Gray "fled unprovoked" and that an illegal switchblade knife was later found on him but provides no other reason for the pursuit.

Neighborhood accounts vary on where Gray ran before reaching Presbury Street and being apprehended by police.

Washington said Gray dipped into "the cut" just south of West North Avenue, an alley that breaks into several directions in the center of a partially boarded-up block of rowhouses. It's a place strewn with broken liquor bottles, adjacent to backyards where dogs still keep watch.

Others say Gray ran straight south down Mount Street.

Deputy Commissioner Kevin Davis said Friday that one officer on foot and two on bikes chased Gray "through several streets, several housing complexes," before arresting him. 
 "It's a foot chase and it's a long one."

Still, the arrest occurred just one minute after the initial contact, according to the police timeline.

Protest
Temporarily stopping traffic, protesters stretch a flag across a Mercedes on Light Street just south of Harborplace on a march by local residents on the eve of the expected large protest to City Hall over the recent death of local resident Freddie Gray, while in police custody. The march, done, they say, as a message that even a small group can cause large disruptions, began at Lexington Market, where about forty people walked in the streets through Harborplace, and finishing in Federal Hill before returning: photo by Karl Merton Ferron/Baltimore Sun

Community outrage over the arrest has been fueled by videos showing Gray -- listed on the police report at 5-foot-8 and 145 pounds -- on the ground before being dragged to the police van. Neighborhood residents and police agree that the videos don't show the whole story, though.

Kevin Moore, a 28-year-old friend of Gray's from Gilmor Homes, said he rushed outside when he heard Gray was being arrested and saw him "screaming for his life" with his face planted on the ground. One officer had his knee on Gray's neck, Moore said, and another was bending his legs backward. 

"They had him folded up like he was a crab or a piece of origami," Moore said. "He was all bent up."

Into the van

At 8:42 a.m., police requested a transport van at the scene.

At that point Gray, who had asthma, asked for an inhaler, but Moore said police ignored the request.

Batts has said Gray's trouble breathing was not given the proper attention at "one or two" of the van's subsequent stops.

As Gray screamed and word spread, residents began to pour out of nearby homes. Alethea Booze, 71, who has lived along Mount Street just north of Presbury all her life, said she was cooking in her kitchen when she heard Gray "hollering" outside. Booze, a retired Northrop Grumman production coordinator, had a stroke some years ago and moves slowly, but made it outside nonetheless.

A crowd had started to form, she said, and there was Gray, who used to call her "Mama" and run errands for her to the corner store, lying handcuffed on the ground.

Booze said she winced as police hoisted Gray. His legs appeared broken to her, though police have said Gray suffered no broken bones. Bystanders got more vocal. "Call the ambulance!" Booze remembers saying as police tried to disperse the crowd.

"Police were telling everyone to leave because they didn't want anyone taping," Booze said. "They got real smart and nasty."

At least three cameras mounted on the Gilmor Homes buildings overlook the location, along a low stone wall on the edge of a courtyard. Police have released some footage, but it showed little of the arrest.

In a bystander's video, Gray is shown being pulled to the van, his feet dragging, before standing briefly on his own as he's placed inside the van.

Police said he was upset -- but also breathing and talking.

Michael Robertson, 27, said his friend -- who had a record of drug arrests -- ran because he "had a history with that police beating him."

Placed in shackles

One block south and four minutes later, at 8:46 a.m. at Mount and Baker streets, the van stopped because Gray was acting "irate," police said. Police have also said that paperwork had to be filled out, though they have not provided more detail.

Gray was taken out of the van so officers could place leg shackles on him. Police have said he was not buckled into the van with a seat belt afterward, even though that is required by department policy.

Shouts at the scene brought Tobias Sellers and others running down the street.

Sellers, 59, who is Booze's brother and lives on the same block, said he was among those who started moving toward Gray, and saw police beating him. "They were taking their black batons, whatever they are, and hitting him," Sellers said.

From inside her Gilmor Homes apartment, which overlooks the street north of Baker, Jacqueline Jackson, 53, heard "a big commotion" as she was washing dishes.

She lifted her blinds and window and peered out, looking down on the van. Gray, she said, looked unresponsive. Officers were moving quickly to get him back in the van as people ran down the street from Presbury, Jackson said.

"They lifted him up by his pants, and he wasn't responding, and they threw him in that paddy wagon," Jackson said. "It wasn't like they took him out to see what was going on with him. … I said, 'Call the paramedics!'"

She added, "I could see everything. They're lying. The police are lying."

Police have said that a preliminary report on Gray's autopsy showed he had no injuries except to his spinal cord. No evidence of kicks, punches or other beatings. No evidence of broken limbs.

Police: Gray should have immediately received medical attention

Baltimore police come forward with new video and new information about Freddie Gray's arrest: still image from WJZ video

Four cameras mounted on the Gilmor Homes buildings overlook the Mount and Baker intersection, but footage released by police has shown little of the officers' interactions with Gray. Police have promised to release more video as it becomes available.

Clearing Mount

At 8:59 a.m., as the van headed toward Central Booking, the driver called for an officer to "check on" Gray.

Police said an officer did respond and had "some communication" with Gray at the intersection of Druid Hill Avenue and Dolphin Street, though they have not described that interaction in detail and have said there is no surveillance footage. Batts said officers called to the van had to "pick [Gray] up off the floor and place him on the seat," but he declined to elaborate.

Deputy Commissioner Jerry Rodriguez said police still need to determine what Gray's condition was at the intersection and whether the police response during the encounter was appropriate.

The intersection near McCulloh Homes is busy at times. Nearby, the G&A Food Market sits across the street from the Union Baptist Head Start; both have security cameras trained on the street.

One of the market's cameras points toward the intersection where police said the van stopped. Cindy Wang, 28, who works at the market, said police arrived there on Monday, April 20 -- the day after Gray's death but eight days after his arrest -- to inquire about the camera's footage.

By then it was gone.

"They were kind of late, because the camera only had a six-day record," Wang said. "If they came the second day or third day, they could have found it."

The camera on the Head Start building faces Druid Hill, not the intersection. Gayle E. Headen, director of the Head Start center, said a detective arrived there on April 20 and asked to review the footage, without giving a reason. "I didn't think anything of it," Headen said, noting that police have been interested in the footage for drug investigations in the past.

The detective asked to watch the footage from 8:55 a.m. to 9 a.m., and saw a police cruiser pass by at the 8:57 mark but no van, said Headen, who personally took the officer through the footage.

In fact, the footage shows a white van with a blue stripe down its side — like those on police vans — passing by at the 8:54:32 a.m. mark, according to The Baltimore Sun's review of the footage. The police cruiser, with its lights flashing, drives by about three minutes later.

Back to the Western

During the Druid Hill and Dolphin stop, a call came through asking the van driver to return to the 1600 block of W. North Ave. - not far from the spot where Gray and police first made eye contact -- to pick up another person. Such vans are divided by a metal barrier, and the second person was loaded into the section of the van not occupied by Gray.

Police have not described any interaction with Gray at this location. They have declined to identify the second person placed in the van, saying they need to "protect the integrity" of the criminal investigation into Gray's death, in which that person is now a witness.

After the pickup, the van headed south again -- but this time it was headed for the Western District police station rather than Central Booking. When Gray was taken out of the van, Rodriguez said, "he could not talk and he could not breathe."

Beyond damage to his spinal cord, Gray had a crushed voice box.

At 9:24 a.m., officers called a medic to the Western District station, reporting that Gray was in "serious medical distress." The Baltimore Fire Department said the call arrived at 9:26 a.m.

Paramedics responded, spent 21 minutes treating Gray at the station, and arrived at Maryland Shock Trauma Center -- where Gray would fall into a coma and die a week later -- at 10 a.m.

Of the six suspended officers -- Lt. Brian Rice, Sgt. Alicia White, and Officers William Porter, Garrett Miller, Edward Nero and Caesar Goodson Jr. -- five have provided statements to police officials. Police have not said which officer has refused. The police union has defended the actions of all those involved.

At recent protests, chants of "We want all six!" have rung out. People in Gilmor Homes are skeptical of any police review of the officers' actions.

Everette Wade, 54, said the "last time Baltimore was in the news" to this extent was more than a decade ago, when coverage broke out over a DVD that highlighted the "Stop 
Snitching" culture of violence against residents who provide information to police.
Wade said he feels today is not all that different.

"Police have a 'Stop Snitching' policy. The good boys in blue cover for each other," he said. 

"That's 'Stop Snitching' all over again, isn't it?"


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Black dolls hanging from trees on Fulton avenue in #Baltimore: image via Bondad @GoodnesstheBad, 27 April 2015
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