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Saturday 28th of July,
7.30 pm
(AICafé)
Panel
discussion: The political situation in Palestine. Analysis
and alternatives by the democratic forces.
Hasan Abdel Jawad from the PFLP and Maher
Al Wahsh from the DFLP will give the perspective of the democratic
forces. Where is the left wing movement? Why do we hear only from Hamas and
Fatah? Why is the left wing movement so weak? What are the ideas of the PFLP
and the DFLP?
The debate
will be moderated by the writer and AIC board director, Dr. Nassar
Ibrahim.
Arabic
spoken and English translation.
Tuesday 31st of July
AICafé,
7.30 pm
Movie
Screening: 'I Cento Passi' ( The Hundred Steps)
After a
brief introduction on Italian Mafia brought by Laura Conti, an Italian
Journalism student which serves as intern in the AIC will be screened the movie I Cento
Passi, winner of 8 “Donatello’s David” Cinema Awards.
Whenever
people hear about Mafia they automatically think of the ‘God Father’ movie,
shootings between gangsters and other clichés
Mafia is, however, something quite different. It is a kind of hidden
cancer in the contemporary society. Mafia is either an attitude towarsd life,
an attitude that we can find even in our
own country. Do you want to know something more about how in the history Mafia
has always operated affecting the life of thousands of people and how there
were people who have given their life to oppose to this criminal movement?
Followed by
a traditional vegetarian Sicilian meal: Pasta ch’i Mulinciani i Ricotta,
Pasta with eggplants and Ricotta cheese for just 15 NIS.
The Movie:
Director:
Marco Tullio Giordana
Lenght: 114 min.
Release Date: 1 September 2000 (Italy)
Genre:
Crime / Drama
"I
cento passi" (one hundred steps) was the distance between the Impastatos'
house and the house of Tano Badalamenti, an important Mafia boss, in the small
Sicilian town of Cinisi.
The movie is the story of Peppino Impastato, a young left-wing activist that in
the late seventies (when almost nobody dared to speak about Mafia, and several
politicians maintained that Mafia did not even exist) repeatedly denounced
Badalamenti crimes and the whole Mafia system using a small local radio
station, with the arm of irony.
Peppino was
born in Cinisi, into a Mafia family. His father Luigi Impastato had been sent
into internal exile during the fascist era, and was a close friend of Mafia
boss Gaetano Badalamenti. His father's brother-in-law, Cesare Manzella, was an
important mafia boss who was killed in car bomb attack in 1963. As an
adolescent, Peppino broke off relations with his father – who kicked him out of
the house – and initiated a series of political and cultural Antimafia
activities. He was killed during the election campaign on the 8th of May
by a charge of TNT placed under his body. His life
became an example of fight against the Mafia.
You can
find a small trailer on You Tube here .
Saturday 4th of August
AICafé,
7.30 pm
"The
Global Refugee Problem: States' Irresponsibility's".
AIC's own
Anahi Ayala Iacucci and Amali Tower will share their personal and professional
experiences working with refugees in Thailand
and Kenya,
and will discuss the durablesolutions
offered to refugees.
Anahi Ayala Iacucci is an intern with the AIC, serving
in human rights
monitoring
with AIC's Settlement Violence Project. She has worked in
Kenya with People for Peace in Africa, providing primary assistance to
resettlement
refugees from Somalia, DRC,
and Sudan.
Anahi has a
degree in International Political Science, and is
currently
finishing a specialization in Human Rights, in Padova,Italy.
Anahi is a seasoned traveler, who
herself has lived in refugee camps
in Western Sahara.
Amali Tower also serves with the AIC, serving
as a researcher for the
"Economy
of the Occupation." She has worked
in Chiang Mai, Thailand,
working
with Karen and Kachin refugees from Myanmar. She has also
worked in
areas of refugee resettlement, with political asylees and
victims of
torture and human trafficking.
Amali has a
degree in International Development Studies, focusing on
Sub-Saharan
Africa and the Middle East. Currently, she is pursuing a
Masters in
International Affairs in Human Rights at Columbia University.
Both
lifelong travelers, Amali and Anahi have each traveled to over 30
countries
around the world in pursuit of cultural understanding and humanitarian
interests.
Tuesday 7th of August
AICafé,
7.00 pm
Movie
Screening : 'The Olive Harvest'
The Director, Hanna Elias
will be there to talk about the making of this film and how the Israeli crew
cooperated with a
Palestinian cast.
Writer/director
Hanna
Elias chose to work with an Israeli crew as a statement that Israelis
and Palestinians can and ought to work together. "By working together we
establish not only professional working habits, but we also build trust and mutual
respect. This is the best way to deal with a conflict that has engulfed all of
us in a hundred years of violence. The only way to change it is to create ways
for us to work together and learn about each other, so we can see each other as
human beings and create new possibilities in our region."
The movie:
Upon his
release from an Israeli prison, older brother Mazen develops romantic feelings
for his childhood friend, Raeda. However, Raeda is already engaged to Mazen's
younger brother Taher, their love kept a secret because of the tradition for
the eldest brother to wed first.
The two
brothers become estranged soon after reuniting as they struggle to win over
Raeda's heart. Mazen, with his romantic poetry and simple love for the olive
groves that provide his community and family with their livelihood, shares in
Raeda's dreams to remain in the village and harvest the olives. Taher, on the
other hand, prefers to live in the city and ambitiously seeks to contain the
growing Jewish settlement of the territories as a member of the Palestinian
Legislative Counsel. Although his love for Raeda is strong, Taher's devotion
toward this cause leads him to neglect his commitment to her. Unsure of her
true feelings, the beautiful Raeda is forced into making a decision by the
feuding brothers and by her authoritative father. Each of the three central
characters find themselves painfully torn between conflicting choices in this
tale of love and loyalty to family, to those that they love, and to the land
that they are connected to.
More than a
mere love story, The Olive Harvest explores the dynamics of human relationships
- between brother and brother, woman and man, father and daughter, sister and
sister, and person to land.
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