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Welcome to the sixth newsletter of Hummus For Thought, a monthly collection of thoughts and recommendations, curated by Elia Ayoub (hello) from Geneva, Switzerland. It comes out on every first Sunday morning of the month.
Click here to subscribe (or just scroll to the bottom of the page).
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This is the last month using this format. As of April 2021 I will be using a newer and nicer style!
Initial Reflections
In last monthโs newsletter I announced that Iโm not going back to Lebanon. Following the assassination of Lokman Slim by Hezbollah and the lack of accountability that we all knew would follow, I decided that this is the best course of action. Iโm not exactly happy about it, but Iโm comforted by what I have right now โ loving support group, loving partner and a loving dog. For now, thatโll do.
I wonโt hide for you though that Iโm anxious. Iโm anxious about where Lebanon is heading, the depth of the abyss created by fear and misery, and what my own role is in all of this. Itโs easy to think that you can always do more to change things, especially as it is sometimes true, but other times you have to contend with the fact that you are too exhausted. This is the dilemma, and it is one that I know many people are going through. Just how much do you invest when youโre not just met with indifference, but active hostility? There is no easy answer here, but it remains a question on my mind.
To be clear, I am not โgiving upโ. That doesnโt mean much to me either. It is also not a matter of having or not having hope, being optimistic or not. I tend to be pessimistic about the short-term future but this doesnโt mean I donโt work for the long-term. Quite the contrary: it is what allows me to focus on what could be. But right now, I am more focused on the fact that I may never see my grandmother anymore, that I may never see our eldest dog Queen (the previously-eldest dog, Yamcha, passed away last November and I shared photos in the newsletter), and so on. Who knows what my neighborhood will look like when/if I do go back one day. Iโm trying my best not to be too influenced by what happened to Iraqi, Palestinian and Syrian friends in the hope that Lebanon does not follow such a devastating path, but the signs are there.
Many friends are also trying to migrate to north America so I also donโt know when Iโll be seeing them next. It would be easier โ for them and for me โ if they migrated to Europe but hey, Fortress Europe canโt handle too many black and brown people or else itโll have 12 more identity crises by the end of the decade so weโre left with figuring out how to maintain social bonds across a billion time zones. You can add that to the long list of things those of us โin betweenโ worlds tend not to have much say in.
It ainโt all grim folks, but there is no point pretending there isnโt a lot of darkness out there today. I say this with not just our region on my mind but also Myanmar and Hong Kong, Thailand and Ethiopia โ Hell, even Texas.
This is part of why I am going to try and invest more of my time in solarpunk stuff. For those who donโt know wtf that is, hereโs a good primer. Iโll be back with more of that in future newsletters.
The James Baldwin Corner
Well, this is kind of cheating but my monthly James Baldwin Corner recommendation is actually a conversation between myself and queer writer Saleem Haddad on the podcast. I mean, the podcast is named after a Baldwin book so that counts right? We spoke about Baldwin quite a bit.
What Iโve Written
My essay ‘Hezbollahโs Resistanceโข against resistance’ is now available on my Medium blog. I re-post my articles there if you want to follow those and/or my personal blog too. I would still highly recommend buying the issue if you can! It’s genuinely good, and not just because I’m in it (this was my monthly quota of self-praise).
Following Lokman Slim’s assassination which led me to decide not to go back to Lebanon anymore – ie I am now in exile, which is great, everything’s fine in Lebanon, nothing to see here – I wrote a piece on LโOrient Today arguing against the de-politicization of Lokman’s murder, which has already happened. Aussi disponible en franรงais sur LโOrient-Le Jour.
I’ve also made public two essays I wrote a while ago:
- Black-Palestinian Solidarity: Towards an Intersectionality of Struggles
This is a book chapter I wrote as part of โSocial Justice and Israel/Palestine: Foundational and Contemporary Debatesโ, edited by Aaron J. Hahn Tapper and Mira Sucharov.
Prizes: Association of Jewish Libraries โ Commended in 2020; Judaica Reference and Bibliography Award awarded by The Association of Jewish Libraries โ Commended in 2020 - The Perfect Day Will Never Come: Restlessness in โA Perfect Dayโ and โHere Comes the Rainโ
This is the third excerpt of the book chapter I wrote as part of the book โThe Social Life of Memory: Violence, Trauma, and Testimony in Lebanon and Moroccoโ edited by Norman Saadi Nikro and Sonja Hegasy and published in November 2017.
The section is the last one after โThe Ghosts of Lebanonโs Presentโ and โSleepless nights: confessing without the confessionโ in addition to the conclusion.
Spotlight of the Month
“Where to, Marie?” is an excellent website on the history of feminisms in Lebanon in Arabic and English. From what I can see, they’re intersectional and anti-authoritarian, and include the struggles elsewhere in the region too.
Here’s an interview with The Public Source, another site you should be checking out.
https://twitter.com/ThePublicSource/status/1368171777780748294
I loved the comic especially. It’s available for free as PDFs. Here’s a brief extract:
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They also have a very useful bibliography here.
Documentary of the Month
Since I’ve Been Down a film by Gilda Sheppard
In Americaโs backyard, a community held captive by policies targeting gangs and drugs, sacrifices their youth for a false sense of justice, and safety. Nearly forty years later, a true path to justice and healing is led from inside their prison walls.
โThe culture of punishment and its consequence is our shared reality in America today. Especially in these times of legislated violence and fear of difference, who better to show us the triumph of the human spirit than those caught behind bars for life?โ
Gilda Sheppard
I haven’t managed to watch it myself yet, but it was recommended in a seminar by Angela Davis (more below) which I think you’ll agree is a good endorsement.
To newsletter readers, this may be a good introduction on prison abolitionism which I haven’t really addressed here so far.
Book of the Month
The book of the month is Cultural Dementia: How the West has Lost its History and Risks Losing Everything Else by David Andress. It will be the topic of my conversation with him on The Fire These Times which will come out later this month.
Dr Andress is a professor of modern history at the University of Portsmouth who specializes in French History. In fact, he is the President of the Society for the Study of French History.
This book however goes beyond France to include the US and the UK as well. Andress looks at how these three former great powers “have abandoned themselves to senile daydreams of recovered youth” which, he argues, is due to “an abandonment of political attention to history, understood as a clear empirical grounding in how we reached our present condition.”
Recommended Webinars
There is a very moving and thought-provoking conversation between adrienne maree brown and Angela Davis that is available to watch on the UCLA website. I highly recommend it.
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The Fire These Times episodes of February 2021 + upcoming ones
+ the one with Saleem Haddad that I linked above.
Upcoming ones
Coming Soon: @ProfDaveAndress on his book "#CulturalDementia: How the West has Lost its History, and Risks Losing Everything Else"
— The Fire These Times Project (@FireTheseTimes) March 2, 2021
YouTube: https://t.co/uRWLB74vCM
Podcast Apps: https://t.co/tsqkaEE9Pc
Patreon: https://t.co/vuqLJKSQ6h pic.twitter.com/kcXZlMDTYN
Coming soon: Yassin Al Haj Saleh @Yassinhs on 'the impossible revolution' in Syria, ten years on.
— The Fire These Times Project (@FireTheseTimes) March 1, 2021
Book 'The Impossible Revolution' with @HurstPublishers: https://t.co/Fl9KWlAulm
YouTube: https://t.co/uRWLB74vCM
Blog: https://t.co/zLPrIfd1ZD
Patreon: https://t.co/vuqLJKSQ6h pic.twitter.com/hxiLGe76Go
Coming soon: Anne Kretzschmar of @staygroundednet on "A Rapid and Just Transition of Aviation: Shifting towards climate-just mobility".
— The Fire These Times Project (@FireTheseTimes) March 1, 2021
Read the paper here: https://t.co/FF4VZsC6Av
YouTube: https://t.co/DcoaoaHrRu
Blog: https://t.co/DZiNNsiLPt
Patreon: https://t.co/vuqLJKSQ6h pic.twitter.com/Aandzf4bDh
Coming soon: Aida @hozic on the entrenched โmanlinessโ of ethnic power-sharing peace agreements. I'll try and bring in post-Ta'if Lebanon in this convo on Bosnia and Herzegovina, Dayton and women, peace and security (WPS)
— The Fire These Times Project (@FireTheseTimes) February 20, 2021
Read her piece here on @LSE_WPS: https://t.co/wNEsiVvrBo pic.twitter.com/iPMW71I2kN
Coming soon: @JGKaram on his book #TheMiddleEastin1958. We'll be going through that important year in our regional history and examine its legacy(ies) today.
— The Fire These Times Project (@FireTheseTimes) February 17, 2021
YouTube: https://t.co/DcoaoaHrRu
Blog: https://t.co/zLPrIfd1ZD
Patreon: https://t.co/vuqLJKSQ6h pic.twitter.com/b3LndEyjeX
Recommended Podcasts
Due to a problem with WordPress, I’ve archived this section of the newsletter. If you had gotten this by email, you can still view the original there. I’m making some changes so this shouldn’t be an issue with future newsletters.
Recommended Readings
Repeated Quick Pro-tip: I use Pocket to save and archive articles โ no, Iโm not being sponsored by them (if you work at Pocket and want to sponsor me I am, ahem, available) โ and I had the amusing honor of reaching their top 1% of readers in 2018.
Repeated Disclaimer: me sharing an article does not mean I agree with everything that is written. It just means I find it interesting.
- A Photographerโs Poignant Love Poem to Home by Ming Ye
- Hopepunk and Solarpunk: On Climate Narratives That Go Beyond the Apocalypse by Alyssa Hull
- Until the End of the World: Notes on a Coup by Soe Lin Aung
- Dilnur Reyhan โ Feminism & Uyghur Resistance by Matt Dagher-margosian
- The Tyranny Lingers On by Hisham Melhem
- On New York City Beforeโand One Day, AfterโCOVID-19 by Molly Crabapple
- Cancel Culture Is Real, But adrienne maree brown Says We Should Be Careful About Throwing People Away by Nylah Burton
- Neither here nor there: Syrians in Turkey, suspended in time by Alex Simon
- โAm I going to regret it?’: forever chemicals dilemma for breastfeeding mothers by Sarah Hurtes
- Dayton, WPS and the entrenched โmanlinessโ of ethnic power-sharing peace agreements by Aida A. Hoziฤ
- Political Scientists Turned a Blind Eye to Americaโs Democratic Failures by Paul Musgrave
- How Instagram Celebrities Promote Dubai’s Underground Animal Trade by Foeke Postma
- Hip Hop Finds Its Groove in North Africa by Danny Hajjar
- Bosnian director Jasmila ลฝbaniฤ: ‘A film is more than a film. It is lifeโ by Rachel Cooke
- On the British Empire: โGrowing up, I was fed the idea that I was a novel social experimentโ by Sathnam Sanghera
- Book Review: The Hidden History of Female Agency in the Sikh Empire by Sapan Maini-Thompson
- Opinion: Pursuing Diplomacy With Iran Doesn’t Mean Ignoring Its Bad Behavior by Firas Maksad
- Mothers, Daughters and Language by Anna Gvelesiani
Voila!
So this the sixth newsletter folks. The next one will be on the first Sunday of April 2021. If you want to get in touch please send me an email to j [dot] ayoub26 [at] gmail [dot] com.
Last point and this is the bit that no one really likes doing, but:
If you find any of my work useful, whether it be Hummus For Thought, The Fire These Times, my articles or even my archiving and commentary work on Twitter, please consider making a one-off or a recurring donation on Patreon, PayPal or BuyMeACoffee.
If you canโt afford it, you can still help by leaving a review of The Fire These Times wherever you listen to podcasts and/or share with your friends and family.
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