Egypt ‘Turns off’ the Internet?!

January 28, 2011

My oldest and dearest friend has been living in Northern Africa in Tunisia with her family for the last year. Into the new year she was giving us regular updates on the unrest in the country, as the 23 yr Presidential dictator declared a state of emergency when protestors spoke out about the rising unemployment and claims of government corruption; he dissolved the government and then fled the country while the Prime Minister declared power. I learned of evening curfews, gunshots and looting in the streets nearby. I was worried for her and her family, sleeping together in one room and debating evacuation for safety.

All along I was watching the comparisons between the situation in Tunisia and in Egypt as journalists mused over how nearby Egypt would deal with similar challenges of dissent, political upheaval and demonstrations about their authoritarian regime with President Hosni Mubarak’s 30-year rule.

It was the topic of conversation in our office this morning as we learned Egypt had effectively closed its mind to the 21st century and ‘turned off’ the internet last night to reduce the ability for protestors to mobilize and allow both their own citizens and the rest of the world know what was happening. No twitter, no Facebook, no Blackberry service, no internet. From what I understand this is censorship stronger than when any other country has blocked access to information. I didn’t even know it was possible.

The shock turned to gratitude for the freedom of speech and expression we enjoy in Canada. Sure there was the firm handling of the G8 protests or frustrations with some access to information, but I can’t ever imagine the country blocking any type of 21st century communication, in attempt to stop unrest. This can only make citizens more frustrated and angry with the government, non? When the people are united, they will find a way. And what they are asking for – solutions to poverty, reduction in food prices, corruption, and need for communication – is worth speaking out for.

These protests caused me to revisit earlier discussions I’ve had with GSA speaker and veteran activist Judy Rebick, who believes in the power of building a movement from the bottom-up and who studied the rise of participatory democracy in Bolivia. Author of Transforming Power: from the personal to the political, Rebick shares: “what emerges from the new political directions around the world is that transforming power at every level is what is common and central to progressive social change in the 21st century. Envisioning and creating a new world in the soil of the old is critical to building movements for change…”

She notes the power is in the process that ‘brings communities of people together to produce something new; building a movement from the bottom up; emphasizing co-operation and consensus over confrontation and political partisanship, and spreading ideas and actions through local and global networks.’

The voice of the people is struggling to be heard and they will find a way to communicate and spread their message, even if the internet goes dark.


I Shall Not Hate

January 18, 2011

Elie Wiesel famously stated:  “the opposite of love is not hate, but indifference.” Better to feel passionately one way or the other, than to feel nothing at all.

When we met with Dr. Izzeldin Abuelaish this past fall, we were moved by his intense love for his family, and understood that while there is anger towards those who took the lives of those he loves, there is not hate. Dr. Abuelaish makes a personal distinction between hate as a fire that burns you from the inside, and anger which can fuel your passion for positive change.  Both men agree that indifference is not the answer in the face of challenge, and both have suffered incomparable tragedy.

As Izzeldin Abuelaish prepared for one of his regular media interviews on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict on January 16, 2009, Israeli shells hit his home, killing three of his daughters and his niece before his eyes – Besan, 20, Mayar, 15 and Aya, 14 – and Nour, 14.  His painful cry was heard round the world as he faced this tragedy head on, live in the media.  “It opened the eyes of the Israeli public. The secret about the war in Gaza was disclosed,” he says.

Two days later, the Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, announced a ceasefire.

This weekend is the anniversary of the tragic deaths of his daughters, and marks the consummation of an Israeli statute of limitations. As a result, Abuelaish filed a lawsuit against the Israeli government in December for an apology and compensation. The compensation would go towards his Daughters for Life Foundation, in his daughter’s memory.

Abuelaish, “The Gaza Doctor,” has built his reputation as an advocate for a peaceful coexistence between Israeli and Palestinian people with mutual respect for each other, both before and after the tragedy of his family.

Dr. Abuelaish was born and raised in poverty in a refugee camp. Fortune and hard work earned him scholarships, degrees in Cairo, London, and subsequently his Masters in Public Health (Health Policy and Management) from Harvard University. He specializes in infertility and fetal medicine, with a strong belief in health healing in many ways, and has been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. The attack on his home happened just months after Dr. Abuelaish lost his wife and his daughters their mother, to leukemia.

His story is overwhelming and incredible.  He has faced a life that is remarkable in its success and pain.  And yet he continues not to hate, but to have faith and hope in a better world for all.   And what can we do?  Abuelaish states:

You can do a lot. You can support justice for all by speaking out loudly to your family, friends, community, politicians and religious leaders. You can support foundations that do good work. You can volunteer for humanitarian organizations. You can vote regressive politicians out of office. You can do many things to move the world toward greater harmony

I know that what I have lost, what was taken from me, will never come back. But as a physician and a Muslim of deep faith, I need to move forward to the light, motivated by the spirits of those I lost. I need to bring them justice… I will keep moving but I need you to join me in this long journey.”

Dr. Abuelaish is currently on tour with his recently released book:  I Shall Not Hate, garnering rave reviews for his honest personal story and approach to peace, and raising money for his Daughters for Life Foundation. The foundation began in memory of his daughters, to provide education and health access to women and girls in Gaza and the Middle East to support their leadership development.

Read more about Dr. Abuelaish and media coverage of the tour.


Education in Haiti and at Home

January 13, 2011

It’s the one year anniversary of the devastating earthquake in Haiti and we wanted to give thanks to those who are committed to helping with the reconstruction in the country and focused on education to help rebuild.

Those Canadians bringing us the stories include:

The United Nations Special Envoy to Haiti and Canada’s Governor General 2005-2010, Rt. Hon Michaëlle Jean, who notes that in Haiti,  “If we want to see a change … we need to start working differently now…and move from the logic of assistance to the logic of investment. What Haiti needs is investment in people’s capacities, in governance, investing in education.”

Michaelle Jean in the streets of Port-au-Prince. Photo: The Canadian Press / Tom Hanson

Michaëlle Jean moved to tears.

Michaëlle Jean on the logic of investment.

From Free the Children’s Craig Kielburger
We remember when Craig Kielburger travelled to Haiti just a week after the earthquake last year, distributing aid and reconfirming his organization’s projects there.  He returned again this past December with Mia Farrow, coinciding with the results of the highly-contested election, and has been updating Canadians on the status in Haiti, in the media and on his special on CTVs W5.

Kielburger agrees with Mme Jean’s focus on education: “That’s the thing about schools – an earthquake might knock down the walls, but education can build them back stronger.”   Kielburger’s organization was recently completing their 11th school in Haiti.

Kielburger in the Toronto Star with his Global Voices column.

He encourages us to stay involved: “A year post-earthquake, we, like most others, are frustrated by the lack of progress in Haiti. Emotion drove millions to donate last January. Frustration needs to drive us to demand sustainability and efficiency a year later.”

A 3-year old teaching Craig to dance at opening ceremony for a new Free The Children school in Haiti

MTV’s Aliya-Jasmine Sovani travelled to Haiti recently in advance of the one year anniversary and returned with a special for Daily Planet on the Discovery Channel with inspiring stories from Haiti. You can see her reports this week at 6:26 p.m. on MTV NEWS. A full video diary of her journey will air Sunday, February 20 at 6 p.m. on MTV NEWS PRESENTS: IMPACT.  Sovani is also on special assignment for Discovery Channel’s Daily Planet, which reports airing all this week, at 7pm ET looking at future risks and surprising innovations including employment opportunities, reducing risks associated with earthquakes, and new construction techniques.

Aliya-Jasmine & Jared Leto doing an interview in Haiti for MTV News Canada

More on Canadian media coverage of the recovery in Haiti.

There are so many moving pictures from Rt. Hon Michaëlle Jean‘s & Craig Kielburger’s numerous trips to Haiti we wanted to share a couple more.

Rt. Hon. Michaëlle Jean dances in her childhood town of Jacmel during a visit to Haiti in 2006. Press File Photo.

 

Rt. Hon. Michaëlle Jean hugs Maile Alphonse in Jacmel, Haiti. Alphonse lost her mother Magali in the earthquake who was the godmother of Jean's daughter Marie-Eden. The Canadian Press/Paul Chiasson

 

Craig Kielburger & Mia Farrow in the streets of Port-au-Prince

 

Craig giving a boost from behind the crowds at the school opening ceremony

 


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