Category: Culture

National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women

By , on December 6, 2010

Today is National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women, which also com­mem­o­rates the anniver­sary of the Montréal Massacre in 1989. I am hon­oured to have been asked to read one of my poems at the Toronto Candlelight Vigil to mark the anniver­sary of this tragic event.

The fact is that vio­lence against women is an everyday reality for mil­lions of girls and women around the world. There are many kinds of vio­lence. The word “vio­lence” is related to the word “vio­la­tion” – and each time a woman’s right to be a full, self-determining human being is vio­lated because she is a woman, vio­lence against women is com­mitted. From media and adver­tising depic­tions of women as vapid damsels in dis­tress worthy of little more than objec­ti­fi­ca­tion for men’s plea­sure, to domestic abuse, work­place sexual harass­ment, date rape, mar­ital rape, the misogyny of reli­gious fun­da­men­talisms, and sexual assault and gender-based vio­lence, women, girls and trans people are still much more likely to be at the receiving end of vio­lence and vio­la­tion. These prob­lems are usu­ally worse for women who are not white, not from the upper-middle classes, and those of us who straddle mul­tiple social-cultural iden­ti­ties as immi­grants and chil­dren of immi­grants. Continue reading ‘National Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women’»

“Pretty” ~ a poem by Katie Makkai">Pretty” ~ a poem by Katie Makkai

By , on October 27, 2010

This spoken word video has been going around the social net­works. If you haven’t had a chance to watch it yet, here it is:

Coke Studio

By , on October 5, 2010

It is the most amazing thing to come out of Pakistan in recent years, IMO. Here are my favourite songs from this show, pro­duced by Rohail Hyatt:

To see more videos, check out Coke Studio’s YouTube channel, and offi­cial web­site.

Dancing around the world

By , on August 3, 2010

Came across this sweet little video recently. Check it out for your­self :)

Bicycling in Toronto ~ Lovin’ the ride

By , on August 3, 2010

Earlier this summer, my partner and I bought these cute, func­tional, folding bikes that have already become our pri­mary mode of trans­porta­tion. I used to bike when I was a wee teenager, growing up in New Jersey, while my partner had never biked before.

So lately, we have been going out biking almost everyday, get­ting used to the rules and routes of the city, it’s a whole other world when you’re on a bike. I noticed that when I first started dri­ving years ago too – your per­spec­tive of the space you inhabit changes based on your mode of trans­porta­tion – sub­ways make me con­sider the under­ground routes to get from one part of the city to another, cars make me con­sider the high­ways, the one-way streets, the alter­na­tive smaller streets I can take to avoid heavy traffic. And now, biking is teaching me to notice even more things like where the ramps are, where the road is most uneven, where there are long blocks versus short blocks, and where the road is on an incline and where it’s on a decline, where cars tend to cluster and where there are bike lanes in the city.

I love noticing this shift in per­spec­tive, and I would encourage everyone to try dif­ferent modes of trans­porta­tion in what­ever area you’re in, to get an idea of the per­spec­tive shift – try walking around for a week instead of dri­ving to wher­ever you nor­mally go in your neigh­bor­hood. Or take the train or the bus, instead of dri­ving to a dis­tant des­ti­na­tion. Most of us are so hooked on cars and high­ways and parking lots, that we rarely just walk, or bike any­where. I urge you to try it some­time, espe­cially if you live in a part of the planet where it’s the later half of the summer season now. Just go, go out, and walk, or bike if you can get a bicycle (hint: they’re also a lot cheaper than cars!). You’ll love it!

On a related note, check out this site to see how Toronto is becoming more and more bike-friendly.

The Burqa/Niqab ban controversy

By , on July 17, 2010

This was written as part of a response to Martha Nussbaum’s opinion piece found here: http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/11/veiled-threats

I’d like to share my per­sonal view on the burqa (face mask) con­tro­versy. My views are not based on the black-and-white, binary, false dichotomy pre­sented too often by both sup­porters of the face-mask ban and those who wish to defend the garb.

Continue reading ‘The Burqa/Niqab ban controversy’»

A cool painting: Influential people, past and present

By , on May 12, 2010

…appar­ently, Discussing the Divine Comedy with Dante. [with Wikipedia Links & Mouse-over Tags]

It’s got 103 of the most inter­esting fig­ures of his­tory jux­ta­posed together, and in some cases, inter­acting with each other, in a time­less image. From Bill Gates to Plato, Bruce Lee to the Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Ramses II, Margaret Thatcher to Audrey Hepburn, Adolf Hitler and Saddam Hussein, Sigmund Freud to Jack Kevorkian, Albert Einstein to Che Guevara, Charles Darwin dressed as Noah, to Osama Bin Laden and the 72 Houris. Check it out!

Originally painted by three Chinese artists: Dai Dudu, Li Tiezi, and Zhang An, in 2006; oil on canvas.

http://cliptank.com/PeopleofInfluencePainting.htm

Nazanin — “Someday”

By , on May 3, 2010

Came across this beau­tiful, artic­u­late and tal­ented Iranian-Canadian singer and activist, Nazanin Afshin-Jan:

and a *MUST WATCH* inter­view with her from AlJazeera English:

The best analysis of the Aafia Siddiqui case.

By , on February 12, 2010

If you haven’t seen this yet, here’s your chance :) It’s a well researched crit­ical analysis of this cur­rent hot-button issue.

Aafia Siddiqui VS (Jews, Zarina Mari, Shazia Khalid and others) by Anas Abbas

Scientists think dolphins deserve “non-human person” status

By , on January 4, 2010

Thanks to a Facebook friend, I came across this article in the Times Online which reports on zoo­log­ical find­ings that dol­phins’ brains, cul­tural and emo­tional com­plex­i­ties, and behav­iours are close to those of humans. I think this is sig­nif­i­cant because there are more and more people waking up to the real­i­ties of how we treat non-human ani­mals, and what that implies for us and our humanity, as well as the cor­re­la­tions between cru­elty towards other ani­mals and cru­elty towards humans. If you know me at all, you know this is one of the most impor­tant fields of study, reflec­tion and activism to me. Some excerpts from the Times Online article:

The researchers argue that their work shows it is morally unac­cept­able to keep such intel­li­gent ani­mals in amuse­ment parks or to kill them for food or by acci­dent when fishing. Some 300,000 whales, dol­phins and por­poises die in this way each year.

Many dol­phin brains are larger than our own and second in mass only to the human brain when cor­rected for body size,” said Lori Marino, a zool­o­gist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, who has used mag­netic res­o­nance imaging scans to map the brains of dol­phin species and com­pare them with those of primates.

<snip>

In one study, Diana Reiss, pro­fessor of psy­chology at Hunter College, City University of New York, showed that bot­tlenose dol­phins could recog­nise them­selves in a mirror and use it to inspect var­ious parts of their bodies, an ability that had been thought lim­ited to humans and great apes.

In another, she found that cap­tive ani­mals also had the ability to learn a rudi­men­tary symbol-based language.

Other research has shown dol­phins can solve dif­fi­cult prob­lems, while those living in the wild co-operate in ways that imply com­plex social struc­tures and a high level of emo­tional sophistication.

<snip>

Researchers have found that brain size varies hugely from around 7oz for smaller cetacean species such as the Ganges River dol­phin to more than 19lb for sperm whales, whose brains are the largest on the planet. Human brains, by con­trast, range from 2lb-4lb, while a chimp’s brain is about 12oz.When it comes to intel­li­gence, how­ever, brain size is less impor­tant than its size rel­a­tive to the body.

What Marino and her col­leagues found was that the cere­bral cortex and neo­cortex of bot­tlenose dol­phins were so large that “the anatom­ical ratios that assess cog­ni­tive capacity place it second only to the human brain”. They also found that the brain cortex of dol­phins such as the bot­tlenose had the same con­vo­luted folds that are strongly linked with human intelligence.

Such folds increase the volume of the cortex and the ability of brain cells to inter­con­nect with each other. “Despite evolving along a dif­ferent neu­roanatom­ical tra­jec­tory to humans, cetacean brains have sev­eral fea­tures that are cor­re­lated with com­plex intel­li­gence,” Marino said.

There was a time when women, black people, men­tally ill people, chil­dren, were all in var­ious ways regarded as “sub human”, as inan­i­mate objects, to be used, abused, and dis­carded. Today, we still have some seg­ments of pop­u­la­tions arguing for the lack of any rights of non-human ani­mals. This will change, in time, and our cur­rent prac­tices of cruel fac­tory farming, animal testing, breeding for enter­tain­ment, etc., will, I can say with a some con­fi­dence and a lot of hope for the sake of humanity, become more obso­lete, and become as illegal and socially unac­cept­able as slavery, child labour, ped­erasty, misogyny and eugenics are now.

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