Washington Report, March 2006, pages 54-55
Northern California Chronicle
Egyptian Dancers Dazzle in Benefit for Children’s Cancer
Hospital
By Elaine Pasquini
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| Mohamed Nayel performs the Tannourah at
San Francisco’s Palace of Fine Arts (Staff photo P. Pasquini). |
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EIGHT dancers from Egypt’s Al-Anfoushi dance troupe dazzled
audience members at their San Francisco debut performance Nov.
25. In a lively folkloric style, and with energetic leaps and pirouettes,
the dancers brought to life the local traditions and customs of
their native Alexandria. Artistic director Alaa El Din Ahmed’s
original and witty choreography—portrayals of a fish market
along the sparkling Mediterranean, a rousing wedding party, and
a celebration of the seventh day in the life of a newborn—delighted
the Palace of Fine Arts Theatre audience.
“Tannourah” (colored skirt), a popular Turkish dervish
dance from the Fatimid era flawlessly performed by Mohamed Nayel,
drew a standing ovation after the breathtaking whirling ended.
Depicting the ancient Egyptian belief of mental healing through
rhythm and dance, “El-Zar,” with its angular modern
dance movements, was a crowd-pleasing dramatic conclusion to the
ensemble’s presentation.
Since its creation in 1985, Al-Anfoushi, a troupe of 38 dancers,
25 musicians and a chorus, has entertained audiences in Europe,
Asia and the Middle East with its unique blend of folk-
lore and modern dance extolling the culture and way of life of Alexandria and
other Egyptian regions.
Al-Anfoushi’s performance was made possible through the
efforts of Consul General Abderahman Salaheldin and the Egyptian
American Society, with the assistance of the Center for Middle
Eastern Studies, Life Dance Theatre artistic director Lorna Zilba,
and Hala Dance Company director Hala Fawzi, among others. Event
sponsors included Dr. Adel and Mrs. Amany Ghanem, Dr. Ossama Hassanein
and family, Mr. Emile Kishek, the Razouk family and the Eltoukhy
Family Foundation.
Proceeds of the event benefit the building of the first Children’s
Cancer Hospital in Cairo, a project of the Egyptian National Cancer
Institute. To make a donation, send a check to the Egyptian American
Society, 10075 Tuzza Court, Elk Grove, CA 95757.
An Evening with Lenin El-Ramly
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Egyptian filmmaker Lenin
El-Ramly (Staff photo P. Pasquini). |
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“Lenin El-Ramly is a visionary and someone who calls for
enlightenment and the acceptance and respect of others,” said
Consul General Salaheldin, introducing his guest of honor at the
Egyptian Consulate Nov.17. The famed Egyptian filmmaker and award-winning
playwright was in San Francisco to conduct a seminar in conjunction
with ReOrient 2005, Golden Thread Productions’ annual festival
of short plays exploring the Middle East which ran Nov. 11 through
Dec. 4 at the Magic Theatre.
Noting that he had “never been employed by nor received
funding from any governmental entity,” El-Ramly, through
translator Mona El-Sherif, discussed the history of Egyptian theater
and the problems facing writers and playwrights today, including
the high rents and shortage of small theaters, and censorship of
subjects dealing with religion and sex.
Due to his flair for modern comedy and penchant for taking risks,
El-Ramly is a popular screenwriter and filmmaker. Guests enjoyed
a screening of “The Terrorist,” his controversial 1994
film which is considered the first artistic challenge against terrorism
in Egypt. Ironically, during the film’s run in Egypt armed
policemen guarded the theaters, fearful of an attack against filmgoers.
S.F. Mayor Appoints First Arab American to Immigrant Rights Commission
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| Jamal Dajani in his Link TV studio office
(Staff photo P. Pasquini). |
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On Nov. 17, surrounded by friends and family at San Francisco’s
City Hall, Jamal Dajani was sworn in by Mayor Gavin Newsom as the
first Arab-American member of the city’s Immigrant Rights
Commission. The 48-year-old Palestinian Muslim from East Jerusalem
is Link TV’s director of Arabic programming, and producer
of the award-winning “MOSAIC” news show (see following
item).
“This is an important appointment for the Arab-American
and Muslim community,” Dajani told the Washington Report in
a pre-ceremony interview. “For the first time, the City of
San Francisco is having someone from our community on the commission
and I look forward to contributing in a positive way.”
“M0SAIC” Celebrates 1,001st Broadcast
Link TV staff members, friends and viewers celebrated the 1,001st
broadcast of ”MOSAIC: World News From the Middle East” at
the station’s San Francisco studio Dec. 2. The news program,
which debuted Nov. 11, 2001, received the Peabody Award for its
broadcasts of unedited English-translated newscasts from Middle
Eastern stations in 2004.
The 1,001st program featured France’s refusal to give Algeria
maps pinpointing where landmines were planted during France’s
occupation of Algeria, and AIDS in Lebanon, two subjects rarely
covered by American television.
In another report, associate producer Jalal Ghazi expertly juxtaposed
a Nile TV report on the high turnout of women voters in Egypt’s
parliamentary elections against an Abu Dhabi report on police violence
during the elections. For program scheduling visit <www.linktv.org>.
Palestine Children’s Relief Fund Benefit
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Hamza Jneidy (c), shot
in both legs and arms by Israeli occupation forces in Gaza
City, received medical treatment in San Francisco with the
help of (l-r) Hesham Alalusi, Nabila Mango, PCRF founder
Stephen Sosebee, and Dahlia Biazid (Staff photo P. Pasquini). |
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In December 2004, Hamza Jneidy was shot in both legs and arms
by Israeli soldiers as he made his way home from school in Shujiya,
a poor area of Gaza City. One year later the 13-year-old Palestinian
boy, surrounded by new friends and well-wishers in Foster City,
CA, was the honored guest at a fund-raising luncheon benefiting
the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund (PCRF), the organization
that paid for his transportation from Palestine to the U.S. and
arranged for his free medical treatment. Dr. Kyle Bickel, the San
Francisco plastic surgeon specializing in micro-hand surgery who
operated on Hamza’s paralyzed left hand, sat at the head
table with his patient, along with Dr. Karim Canoun, Dr. Ziad Saba
and Stephen Sosebee, founder and president of PCRF. Local Arab
community leaders, including Hesham Alalusi, Nabila Mango, Rima
Qaru and Dahlia Biazid, among others, coordinated the event.
“I firmly believe the road to peace in the Middle East—for
Jews, Muslims, Christians, Arabs, Israelis—is to bring justice
to the Palestinians,” Sosebee told the large audience. Helping
injured children, however, is not a political issue, he pointed
out, but a humanitarian issue regardless of religion or nationality.
While PCRF’s missions to the area have helped many children,
Sosebee said, some health problems are increasing, such as chronic
malnutrition in Gaza, a condition which will detrimentally affect
an entire generation of children.
Due to the numerous military checkpoints, traveling throughout
Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories has always been
difficult, Sosebee noted, but Israel’s apartheid wall which
cuts through the Holy Land is a major obstacle to medical teams
trying to treat needy patients, because Israeli soldiers prevent
some children from crossing through the wall.
Kaiser Permanente plastic surgeon Dr. Karim Canoun described his
work last February in Jenin. There, Canoun recalled, working with
one local physician, an anesthesiologist and the local hospital
staff, his small team performed 36 operations on 32 children in
five days.
Founded in 1991 to provide advanced medical care to Palestinian
children, PCRF now also provides treatment for children throughout
the Middle East, including Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, Egypt and Iraq.
The organization is not supported by government grants or foundations,
but instead relies on donations from individuals. Readers wishing
to help may send tax-deductible donations to PCRF, P. O. Box 1926,
Kent, OH 44240. For more information, call (330) 678-2645, e-mail <PCRF@pcrf.net> or
visit its Web site, <www.pcrf.net>.
Elaine Pasquini is a free-lance journalist based in the San Francisco
Bay Area.
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