Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Racism In Sudan

I am deeply concerned by what is happening in Sudan in the recent years. One of the issues that deepened this concern was the gradual, ubiquitous increase of the daily encountered feeling of racial discrimination between Sudanese people.

Racism in Merriam-Webster dictionary is a belief that race is the primary determinant of human traits and capacities and that racial differences produce an inherent superiority of a particular race. And if we note that one definition of race in the same dictionary: a family, tribe, people, or nation belonging to the same stock, then the following “sensitive “ question can be formulated:

Is what is going in Sudan is Racism?

The question is sensitive from the prospect of the alleged superior race or tribes, not from the view of those who have been oppressed and enslaved in both the ancient and recent history.

Sensitive as it touch again one of the taboo subjects in the northern Sudan culture which used to be dealt with in the locked rooms and I do think its time to be discussed in the open air with loud voice in the hope that the illusions and mal conceived ideas that what is going on is not racism will vanish.

It might be also sensitive because of the strong link between the denied histories of salivary in Sudan and what is going today.

Tuesday, March 27, 2007

The Witch of Portobello





it is just that i feel excited that the new novel by Paulo Coelho, with the above title, has been published last month (Feb 2007). the first translation will come out by mid May. marvellous!

http://www.amazon.com/Witch-Portobello-Paulo-Coelho/dp/006133880X/ref=sr_1_4/104-5400249-4144751?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1174981560&sr=1-4


for free downloads of some of Coelho's work follow the link: http://www.paulocoelho.com/engl/dow.shtml#ingles

Thank you, President Bush / Coelho _March 2003

Thank you, President Bush

March, 11 2003

Thank you, great leader George W. Bush.

Thank you for showing everyone what a danger Saddam Hussein represents. Many of us might otherwise have forgotten that he had used chemical weapons against his own people, against the Kurds and against the Iranians. Hussein is a bloodthirsty dictator and one of the clearest expressions of evil in today's world.

But this is not my only reason for thanking you. During the first two months of 2003, you have shown the world a great many other important things and, therefore, deserve my gratitude.

So, remembering a poem I learned as a child, I want to say thank you.

Thank you for showing everyone that the Turkish people and their Parliament are not for sale, not even for 26 billion dollars.

Thank you for revealing to the world the gulf that exists between the decisions made by those in power and the wishes of the people. Thank you for making it clear that neither José María Aznar nor Tony Blair give the slightest weight to or show the slightest respect for the votes they received. Aznar is perfectly capable of ignoring the fact that 90% of Spaniards are against the war, and Blair is unmoved by the largest public demonstration to take place in England in the last thirty years.

Thank you for making it necessary for Tony Blair to go to the British Parliament with a fabricated dossier written by a student ten years ago, and present this as 'damning evidence collected by the British Secret Service'.

Thank you for allowing Colin Powell to make a complete fool of himself by showing the UN Security Council photos which, one week later, were publicly challenged by Hans Blix, the Inspector responsible for disarming Iraq.

Thank you for adopting your current position and thus ensuring that, at the plenary session, the French Foreign Minister, Dominique de Villepin's anti-war speech was greeted with applause - something, as far as I know, that has only happened once before in the history of the UN, following a speech by Nelson Mandela.

Thank you too, because, after all your efforts to promote war, the normally divided Arab nations, at their meeting in Cairo during the last week in February, were, for the first time, unanimous in their condemnation of any invasion.

Thank you for your rhetoric stating that 'the UN now has a chance to demonstrate its relevance', a statement which made even the most reluctant countries take up a position opposing any attack on Iraq.

Thank you for your foreign policy which provoked the British Foreign Secretary, Jack Straw, into declaring that in the 21st century, 'a war can have a moral justification', thus causing him to lose all credibility.

Thank you for trying to divide a Europe that is currently struggling for unification; this was a warning that will not go unheeded.

Thank you for having achieved something that very few have so far managed to do in this century: the bringing together of millions of people on all continents to fight for the same idea, even though that idea is opposed to yours.

Thank you for making us feel once more that though our words may not be heard, they are at least spoken - this will make us stronger in the future.

Thank you for ignoring us, for marginalising all those who oppose your decision, because the future of the Earth belongs to the excluded.

Thank you, because, without you, we would not have realised our own ability to mobilise. It may serve no purpose this time, but it will doubtless be useful later on.

Now that there seems no way of silencing the drums of war, I would like to say, as an ancient European king said to an invader: 'May your morning be a beautiful one, may the sun shine on your soldiers' armour, for in the afternoon, I will defeat you.'

Thank you for allowing us - an army of anonymous people filling the streets in an attempt to stop a process that is already underway - to know what it feels like to be powerless and to learn to grapple with that feeling and transform it.

So, enjoy your morning and whatever glory it may yet bring you.

Thank you for not listening to us and not taking us seriously, but know that we are listening to you and that we will not forget your words.

Thank you, great leader George W. Bush.

Thank you very much.

Paulo Coelho

© Translated from the Portuguese (Brazil) by Margaret Jull Costa


*Copyright 2003 by Paulo Coelho
All Rights Reserved