news from Tigris Woods project |
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Date: Fri, 9 Apr 2004 09:09:09 +0200 (CEST)
dag dag, zoals ge ziet ben ik on line hierbij aangehecht mijn dagboek/verslag van afgelopen 24 uur Full Moon in BaghdadIt is 23' past midnight, the last day (8th of April) has brought more fighting and more tension in every house. The streets of baghdad are getting more and more empty, especially when the sun is gone, and the full moon has taken over. I am writing in the house of the Zayer family. Head is Ismael Zayer, founder and editor-in-chief of Iraq's biggest newspaper Al Sabah, which means "morning", a newspaper caught between two fires: the Americans and the muslim extremists, especially of mister Muqtada Al-SSsadr. His wife Anneke van Ammelrooy is a free lance journalist from the Netherlands and chief of Civil Pillar, an agency that supports upcoming civil society projects, NGO's etc.I just made a good interview with Anneke in Dutch and now I am coaching Dhafer doing her first recordings on my MD recorder. We are all in door, and the guards come by every 15 minutes to check. Ismael today noticed a car with four armed men of Muqtada Al-SSsadr's men in black circling the house. Other cars with men armed with rocket launchers on their shoulder stopped in broad daylight in front of the Al Sabah building, provoking, showing their manhood. In the press of Muqtada the attacks on Al Sabah, the threats become more violent. For them Al Sabah is the voice of evil, of the new Moguls. Ismael tells me they have infiltrated in the print shop and half of the workers did not show up at all today, just like 6 of the journalists. So the question becomes: will they be able to produce an issue at all? After a few tries I talked with Sanja on the phone, to discuss what she can do to improve communication ( in the chatroom?). She will inform Herman of AIDA (www.aidainternational.nl) of my whereabouts, and Yvonne Towikromo (the only editor willing to give me an assignment to make a radiodocument for the NMO (Dutch Muslim Broadcaster) and, why not, our Ministry of Foreign Affairs. (The pioneer ambassador in Baghdad is not very communicative and we simply don't have time to go out of our way to visit him. Anneke send him an E-mail months ago but never received a reply.) I went with Anneke to civil pillar, feeling comfortable in Ahmeds fast car (carrying a gun and measuring 1.91 but also taking his responsibility very seriously). I took photo's of the six rooms and 2 balconies and talked about the plans for a Media Training Centre here (to be directed by a woman called Media!) We had lunch with the other Ahmed (Rekabi who misses Den Haag) and bought a mobile phone for Salam. We received the news that a general strike has been called for saturday 10th, all shops, schools and workplaces are called to close by the Baathists and some Mujahedeen. At 4 in the afternoon I went with Salam (see: iraqiartist.com) to meet with Mufid Al-Jazairi who happens to be the Minister of Culture. He wanted to see me about radio. His communist party is starting broadcasting and he as a Minister wants to start a cultural radio as well. To encourage people to express and perform their culture, to reflect everyday life. In fact people in Iraq need to learn again how to do these things because the terror of saddam has destroyed normal habits of communication between humans. While I look at his face I am reminded of another Minister of Culture (briefly), who wrote a famous book,called the long road (?) about his transport to Buchenwald. Anyway, I try to explain my approach and experience about community radio in places like Afghanistan and Kosovo, but also as a representative of alternative media culture in Amsterdam. And I bluntly put to him that I don't think that a ministry of culture is the proper agent to start a radio station, but should only facilitate it. He completely agrees. He sees his role as encouraging, creating an example, a model. And he thinks that creating a station needs a lot of money, a lot of people and a big building to serve the nation. I tell him my approach is rather to create 100 or 1000 small radio station, with not so many people and not more than 10.000 or so dollars per What is needed is training of cadres and year. It is really time to get a team of technicians together for classic broadcasting and for streaming. On Al Jazeera I watch how some Japanese hostages are being man handled with knives to force to confess that Allah really is the greatest. It seems that they also took two Dutch soldiers hostage like this in As-Samawa, but you in Holland will probably have more details on this. I wonder if Mustafa Oukbih is in baghdad for Radio 1, and whether or not the delegation of the Socialist Party will come over in two days. I think they should if they can afford the risk. In this situation the presence of foreigners is quite important, and like I have written before, it is a rteal pleasure to feel the warmth and love of so many people here. Maybe in autumn it will be possible to organize international volunteer camps to come and help with NGO and other activities... (Following a good tradition from Croatia and Bosnia). It is really good to be able to do something positive and not just sit around waiting for the enemy to show up or rely on guards I don't know. I checked between 2.25 and 2.30 but I didn't see them. A truck is standing in front of the neighbors' house. I hope it's not explosive. The Al Nidar Mosque is calling us for our morning prayers, so I will kiss you all good night. (dog barking in the background f.o.) Oops, now it's 4.30 a.m. and the first Helicopter flies over. 4.47 some more helicopters flying over near and low the birds start to sing. Jo van der Spek, for http:///www.radioreedflute.net
Date: Tue, 6 Apr 2004 16:31:20 +0200 (CEST)
At the writers' association building some would-be
writers were getting drunk and started to yell and fight. Nice live theatre!
It could be a daily ritual. I went out with Hamid to make a phonecall at
a public phonebooth. It was hard to pass the number to the guy inside just
when 2 tanks passed by: believe me, that makes a lot of noise. They were
probably on their way to Al Thoura, or Ssadr City (before known as Saddam
City, poor and mostly shiite), where big fighting was going on all day.
We don't know how many were killed yet, tens of people, maybe 100 in all
of Iraq and many wounded. Only one US Marine got killed and one from El
Salvador..(source "Stars and Stripes" of Monday 5-4, I guess they will
have their US numbers correct:) It seems Muqtada Al-Ssadr has mobilized
heavily against the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA). One of his aides
was arrested so he has reason to feel provoked, and also Shiites are walking
to Karbala to do a religious celebr! ation. We some thousands of them walking
on one half of the Motorway, waving black, red and green flags, and pink
too. All along the road stalls and tents are set up for refreshments, a
peaceful sight and I really admire there perseverance to walk 300 miles
in the sun, the wind and the dust. And on the 9th of April it is one year
after "libaration"/occupation of Baghdad. So big time for Al-Ssadr. But
he is only head of a small faction of the Shiite majority, and he does
not have a lot of cash. Iran prefers to sponsor Sistani and other more
moderate/controllable/responsible Shiite organizations it seems.
I enjoyed sunrise on the roof with the birds and
then the cars. I waited to record the call for morning prayers, but it
didn't come. Why I don't know. At 8 I went straight to find Anneke van
Ammelrooy. I arrived at Al Sabah, the newspaper that many believe to be
the voice of CPA, but according to Anneke is going to break all ties with
the CPA, USAID, etc. very soon.
Talking about crisis media, the rumours are going round like always in situations like this. The governing council is flying down and up to Kuwait every siongle night to party. Saddam has been moved to New York, or even Israel. The Mossad has bought 200 square kilometers of land in Kurdistan. Impossible, since it is impossible to buy land in Iraq at this stage. Property rights, both of land and real estate are very very unclear and floating. From Al Sabah I wen with Anneke van Ammelrooy to her home, where I can put my excited and tired body to slep (thanx), and then on to her Civil Pillar office not far from here in the south (Ssadr City is in the North, so don't worry). Civil Pillar is a node in a network of initiatives, projects and small enterprise. It is a meeting place, that Annke tries to coordinate, help with fundraising, training, advice, exchange etc. So she organizes a meeting with (radio)journalists who are into free media, networking, creating content and use internet for publishing, activism, alternative media and, of course, the Tigris Woods project. Anneke has this crazy idea to reclaim the island in the Tigris and has approaced Al Jazeera for sponsoring. Al Jazeera means Island in Arabic u know, and it would give this satallite TV station an opportunity to improve it's image among the citizens of Baghdad. They don't like al Jazeera for being anti-American or sth. Anyway, one island helping the oth! er to come to life sounds like a brilliant idea. So what about Vlieland, Fiji, Trsitan da Cunha and Pampus??? It would be a very nice place to land the Tigris Woods project too. Oops, I still have lots of photo's to download, compress and mail to David for the website (thanx David). So I better stop now. p.s. this was written in wordpad on a computer configured for Arabic, so it may appear a bit funny here and there, right to left, a nice exercise in the higher art of Kellek (thank u Marnix) Right now, or rather aside from this, I am writing
a mailinglist of all friends and relations to send this to, (thank u Sanja,
my snake:). This may again lead to confusion, but then, this is Baghdad
u know. (no u don't)
Date: Sun, 4 Apr 2004 09:59:29 +0200 (CEST)
sorry David, I need more guidance.
Did you notice any streaming yesterday? I did it with dynebolic.org 1.2, just a looped music piece u nor Jaromil were online, I am afraid. But the guys in Radio 2 Rivers were quite excited. I gave them a copy, making sure they include it in their proigram on onternet, AND explaining that it is for free. So nobody goes about selling the shit. Today, Sunday, time of writing 10.20 AM. It is cloudy and there's a serious wind blowing from the south, from the Gulf. This brimgs an occasional drop of rain, but mostly dust. So I got one piece of cloth from a chambermaid, sitting on the floor of the landing in hotel Merbed. I tried to accomodate it on my head, to serve as a disguise. But she told me not to, coz the cloth is dirty. I went outside where Salam was interviewing Salah Hassan for his weekly Arban program on Radio Lora Zuerich. I helped him to cover the mike with the cloth. MD's don't like dust. And besides, it is not bad to hide your elctronics from evil eyes. There is some tension in town. Yesterday an angry mob of joibless people invaded the post office and looted the place. Today it seems there's another demonstration. And I am told that we cannot go out. Not even by taxi. Everybody is afraid of primitive, islamic, extremist, anti-western, anti-intellectual, anti-whatever. They are not after your goods, but after you. They might follow you until they can isolate you and beat you up. In fact they are more afraid trhan I am, which is understandable. Iraqi's tend to be scared, that's how they've lived for years. And they also feel very responsible for my well-being. So we hang around in the lobby. Very boring, I hate prisons. Personally I would prefer to go out and join the demonstration, disappearing in the crowd. But I tell myself I should not embarrass my hosts. I am overwhelmed by the attention, the gifts and the love I receive from the young and the old. Salah Hasan walks in a T-shirt of Amnesty. His white hair makes hium suspicious. He somehow looks more Dutch than Iraqi. I have chosen a nichname: Aziz Shati, meaning precious river. I had a hair cut in Amman (Jordan) and I hope to find a woollen cap to look even more like an Iraqi. We just have to go out. I got permission to walk
one block to the next hotel to write this report. But Salah has business:
the container with books from Holland is on a ship now and should arrive
the 25th. So he has to make sure that it arrives in one piece at the University.
We must find the prof, maybe find a shipping agent. I have to go to CPA
where Clare Baxter has arranged gfor my Canon battery to be charged (I
left my charger in Baghdad....). And I need a massage... I just about broke
my back yesterday, when it took me 2 hours to send 3 pics from the poetry
festival.
Yesterday afternoon I spend at the radiostation
2 rivers to give and try the streaming software of Jaromil (dyne.org).
Then dinner with Yousef who went with me to be presented to Shakir Al-Serraf,
the retired engineer and founder of NGO. Yousef is a bright and quiet guy,
who served with Washington Post (watching ther looting of the Sheraton
Hotel on the bank of Shat Al Arab (that's the name of river here, actually
it is Eufrate and Tigris together).
Then I had a very emotional exchange with a guy who wanted me to see his diary.A story of terror and love. Salam had to cry when he saw the cloth with flowers and writing the mother of the authjor had brought to him while in jail. Say no more. Then we went to the room of Muafak Muhammad, 54,
from Babylon. He invited me to come to his house. To walk around, see the
farms, have traditional breakfast and go to the bath house (Hamam).Then
we recorded poetry, discussion and singing. Eating lovely nuts, drinking
beer and Arak (of Dades).
At breakfast (sorry I try in vain to keep some sort of chronology...) we looked at photo's of paintings of Ryadh Al-Fuad. Really beautiful. I hope to visit his atelier and take shots pof his work. So much to see, so much to do, so much intensity. shukran habibi Aziz Shati (p.s.David, u can publish this, please include
pic of Muafak)
Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2004 10:10:33 +0200 (CEST)
here short in Dutch: ik ben met de bus vol schrijvers in Basra aangekomen.
Logeren in hotel Al Marbed, tel. 00.964.40.611652, room 125. Het is geweldig,
iedereen vind het geweldig dat ik er ben, en ik hoor prachtge verhalen.
Bijvoorbeeld de ene schrijver die door de andere is veroordeeld. Want die
ene is communist en de andere WAS rechter.
En zondag gaan we met onze drie bussen naar de boom van adAdam, waar de Eufraat en de Tigris samenvloeien. Jo van der Spek
Date: Wed, 31 Mar 2004 17:32:34 +0200 (CEST)
don't worry
I am in Baghdad
Baghdad is crazy
I arrived at 10
went out to find Hazim
took lots of shots of Tigris
all phonelines are out of order
don't know where I will sleep
we will see love Jo van der Spek
Date: Tue, 30 Mar 2004 22:20:53 +0200 (CEST)
Welcome to cloudy Amman. It is an ugly city, really. All buildings are
grey. Nobody bothers to paint it, not even whitewash.
I stay at Hotel merryland, which has a juicy nightclub in the basement. So lots of dirtyArabs around. One of them advised me to put my dollars in my socks. Which I already did. I hope he doesn't send his cousin to catch me on the way to B.... I had an exciting haircut by a Palestinian hairdresser (most people in Jordan, esp. Amman are Palestinian (or Iraqi, only now Iraqi's don't get residence unless they have 80.000 dollars on their account). Anyway, this hairdresser used a special kind of strong black thread to do epilation, taking off my criminal eyebrows and ear hairs. The catch was of course how to get a safe ride
to baghdad. You take off around midnight, after 5 hours you come to the
Iraq border, so in daylight you do ca. 600km to Baghdad.
Exciting news about connectivity was told by Raed
Jarrar (he is an architect, who specialized in post crisis urbanism). In
Baghdad they had a system called Senau, a wireless phone system. And now
they are ISP offering wireless connectivity. I am sure we can work out
a way to do local broadcasting and streaming with them.
so Allah is with me. <
Jo van der Spek
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